Word from Father Kevin: Favorite Sermons of 2018

At the end of each year, I like to look back and select “Fr. Kevin’s Favorite Sermons” of the year. In case you missed these, you might want to stream or download one of these Top 3:

As I look back on this year, my heart fills with thankfulness for the many people who have preached at Savior this year. Truly we are blessed. Two of my favorite sermon series of the year featured 4 of our preachers who contributed:

  • Revelation: Visions for a church under pressure (starting August 18)

  • Blessed to Be a Blessing: practicing God’s presence in and for the world (starting Sept. 22)

Word from Father Kevin and Mother Karen

So we had this grand plan to send each of you a Christmas letter, filled with newsy updates from the Millers. Then life happened… So we hope you’ll feel the warmth in this simpler, shorter update.

We are calling 2018, in the words of Dickens, “the best of times, the worst of times.” The Best of Times included the joyous July wedding of our daughter to a godly man, Jordan; you will sometimes see them worship at Savior. The wedding also gave us time with family from across the country, including our son. The Worst of Times included Karen’s being in chronic pain and having 2 surgeries and spending 3 months unable to even sit up; and Kevin’s receiving the diagnosis of Parkinson’s. But those lead back to the Best of Times, as you friends of the Savior carried us with your prayers, encouragement, and homemade meals.

 At the end of a year like this, we feel more deeply how astonishing it is that Jesus entered our world, knowing what it would mean for him. But he came to be with each one of us and to save us. May you have a merry Christmas and find that, no matter what your circumstances, Jesus is with you.

On Longing for Christ's Return: An Advent Reflection

Today’s post comes from Savior’s ministry intern and youth ministry coordinator Ellen Vosburg.

I have never desired the second coming of the Messiah quite like I did during the three months before I took my graduate school comprehensive exams. The urgency of the end times was palpable. I could feel it in my bones — Jesus would definitely come soon and rescue me from my time of trial. I remember repeatedly hiding under my bed covers during the middle of the day and praying, “Lord, what are you waiting for?”

Clearly, this was not a pious longing, but I can still remember how this felt. This was a feeling full of anxiety and fear and uncertainty that is natural when faced with an exam that would not only affect the future but that also had the power to validate or invalidate two years of my work. But this feeling was also colored with something I had not yet experienced when contemplating the Second Coming: hope and excitement and desperation.

Before, when I thought about Jesus’ return, I was a child who was excited about the prospect of my earthly life. Jesus’ imminent return would put a huge wrench in my dreams of fame, fortune, and success. But during my second year of graduate school, with all my twenty-four years of maturity, I felt a new feeling; it was a strong desire to live fully in the presence of God and the glory of his Kingdom. I could almost taste the freedom. Instead of parsing the apostle Paul’s grammar for a grade, I would simply be able to ask him over the dinner table, “Paul, is that genitive in your letter to the Galatians subjective or objective?” Not only would my nerdy heaven fantasies be fulfilled, I would not have to face my fear of failing my exam.

While it seems silly now, the crisis of potential failure powerfully shaped my desire for the coming Kingdom of God. In the moment, I did not feel like I was being overly dramatic (I probably was). But years later, after I passed the exam and Jesus did not return, I am continuing to realize that God used that agonizing wait before my exam to shape how I wait for him today.

Every year during Advent, I am reminded of this time in my life. If Advent is a time when the church, traditionally, focuses on judgment, death, heaven, and hell, then Advent is a vitally necessary season to prepare us for moments of desperation. The intent of Advent is to shape us into a people who know how to wait because we know what’s coming — and we really want it. Advent can teach us how to orient ourselves away from the world and its fleshly longings and toward God’s Kingdom and its heavenly longings.

Fleming Rutledge put it this way: “Advent calls for a life lived on the edge, so to speak, all the time, shaped by the cross not only on Good Friday, but wherever and whenever we are, proclaiming his death to be the turn of the ages ‘until he comes’ (I Cor. 11:26)” (Advent: The Once and Future Coming of Jesus Christ, 7). While my eschatological longings were selfish, they led me to a place where I knew that my only possibility of release and rescue from my pain was Jesus Christ. I was on a precarious edge, and I responded in the way the church and Advent had taught me: I longed for Jesus’ return. He is our only true Savior.

I’d venture to guess that many in our church are experiencing the kind of suffering that makes us excited and hopeful and desperate for the return of Christ. We want Jesus to heal our wounds, raise our dead, and free us from our tests and temptations. We can readily read the news and ask, “Lord, what are you waiting for?”

Grief Resources for Children

Savior’s Coordinator of Youth Ministries, Ellen Vosburg, has suggested some activities and resources for helping children process grief. With the death of Marilyn Stewart and the grief our church family is feeling, we hope these resources can be helpful as we talk with the children of Savior.

Suggestions:

  • Spend some time over the next weeks and months sharing memories and stories that you and your children have about Marilyn. Share with one another the ways Marilyn influenced your lives and was a friend or spiritual mother or grandmother. Talk about how important she was to who we are today, both as individual families and as a church family.

  • Read Scripture about death and the resurrection together. Good passages to read and reflect on together are Isaiah 25:6-9, John 11:1-44, 1 Corinthians 15:1-58, and Revelation 21:1-7. Observe together what God thinks about death. Be open with one another about the way death makes us feel. Notice how God promises life eternal for his disciples and remember how we will all be with God together in our resurrected bodies. Imagine together what our resurrected bodies might be like.

Resources:

  • “Talking with My Kids about Death”​ (Christianity Today): In this article, the author recounts how her children responded to the death of their uncle. She gives good advice about how to lean into children’s questions, wonderings, and imaginings about death.

  • “Good Grief”​ (Fuller Youth Institute): This article discusses how to help students grieve any loss well. The article is aimed at youth workers, but the principles would be helpful for parents, too. It discusses some tendencies we have when people are grieving that are best to avoid, and then recounts some principles of memory sharing and hopefulness that help students grieve well.

  • “The Dos and Don’ts of Talking with a Child about Death”​ (Psychology Today): This article provides some helpful dos and don’ts about how your child or teen might react to death and provides suggestions for how to come alongside them in your own grief.

Savior member Alice Teisan also suggests the resources found at GriefShare.

In Memory of Marilyn Stewart

Marilyn_Portrait.jpg

On Saturday evening, around 6:49 p.m. — about the time we finished singing “May the peace of the Lord Christ go with you” in our worship service, which she was listening to — Savior member Marilyn Stewart passed away, surrounded by her loving family.

Marilyn was diagnosed with metastatic melanoma in October 2017. She is now face-to-face with Jesus Christ, receiving the goal of her entire life, for as the Bible says, “to be absent from the body is to be present with the Lord.”

Marilyn was a founding member of Church of the Savior in 2004, and she was a long-time staff member with her husband, Doug, leading spiritual formation. Marilyn also helped launch some of Savior’s most beloved traditions, such as the Epiphany Rosca and the Prayer & Picnic in the Park.

Marilyn will be remembered as a wife, mother, and grandmother; a spiritual mother, retreat leader, guide, director, counselor, prophet, truth-teller; and a person who welcomed and gathered and who became a second mother to many. I (Fr. Kevin) frequently meet people who tell me they would not be a Christian today, or would not be serving as a leader today, were it not for Marilyn.

The family will hold a visitation at Williams-Kampp Funeral Home, 430 E. Roosevelt Road in Wheaton on Friday, December 7 from 4 - 8 pm.

A memorial service will be held on Saturday, December 8th, at 1:30 p.m., at First Presbyterian Church, 715 N. Carlton Avenue in Wheaton.

In lieu of flowers, donations may be sent to the ministry Marilyn served for many years, International Fellowship of Evangelical Students: IFES USA (PO Box 436, Platteville, WI 53818-9920).

Please pray for Marilyn’s family as they grieve: husband, Doug; daughters Elizabeth (and Jamie), Mary (and Angel), and Helen; and grandchildren Daniel, Mariana, Isabel, and Emma.