People Who Stood Up - by Ted Olsen

Note from Fr. Kevin: In my recent sermon on “Community,” I said that “justice requires a community” and mentioned one such community: the historic church, where many people stood up for justice. Helping us meet some of these people is Senior Warden Ted Olsen, who once served as an editor of Christian History magazine.

By Ted Olsen:

Memorable pioneers for racial justice include Harriet TubmanSojourner Truth, and John Woolman. Or meet Jarena Lee, the first African-American woman to preach the gospel publicly.

Further back, meet Gregory of NyssaSt. PatrickBartolomé de las Casas (big asterisk, of course, but still), and the abolitionists George Bourne (not well known, but as an editor and writer I’m a fan) and Thomas Clarkson. I also love Quaker radical Benjamin Lay (though I expect he’d be as critical of me as he was of everyone else!).

William Wilberforce and the Clapham Sect have received a lot of attention in recent years for their work against the slave trade and other injustices. I'm a big fan, too. But I am eager to remember that their efforts were imperfect and troubled. I don't find that discouraging but rather encouraging — even our heroes had trouble and faltered when it came to pursuing righteousness and justice. Nevertheless, they persisted.

But I'm most eager to emphasize the work of Black Christians who pursued justice. Some of those names: David WalkerFrederick DouglassQuobna Ottobah CugoanoNick Chiles (he was a new one for me), Henry McNeal Turner, and African Methodist Episcopal Church founders Absalom Jones and Richard Allen. Finally, I’ve been coming back time and again to the sermons of Francis J. Grimke, the Presbyterian preacher who helped to found the NAACP. 

 

Church of the Savior Senior Warden

Church of the Savior
Senior Warden

 
 
 

Prayer Support For The Saavedra Family

This week we lift up the dear Saavedra Family in our prayers. The Saavedra’s first came to Church of the Savior in Fall 2019, while on furlough from the mission field in Quito, Ecuador.

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The Saavedra family has lived as missionaries in Quito, Ecuador since 2007, with David working in education and Beth in the local church. We are grateful our furlough in the U.S. connected us to Savior, where we have found encouragement and rest. We invite the friends of the Savior to join us in prayer for Ecuador, which has been hard hit by Covid-19. 

Infections and fatalities are especially high among indigenous people groups, many of whom live in remote areas with limited access to medical care. Please pray with us for our friend, Pastor Manuel Chacaguasay, and his family, who work with Kichwa pastors, as well as running a holistic children’s drop-in center.


Another vulnerable population in Ecuador is Venezuelan refugees, many of whom have had no way to earn income during these months of quarantine. Our church in Quito has a large number of Venezuelans. We ask for prayer for Oscar and Camila Palma, our pastors, as they work in food distribution and providing social and spiritual support for the community.    

Finally, we ask for prayer for our school, Alliance Academy International, where David is currently teaching high school Bible. May community be built and spiritual growth happen, in the midst of the challenge of adapting to the required online format for all schools in Quito. 

For those who want to learn more about the Saavedra Family or to support their ministry, please visit here.

 

Meet The Barringer Family!

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This week we have the joy of sharing another “new Attendee” within Savior’s community. If you haven’t already met the fun and creative Barringer Family, join me in getting to know them! 


Who is in your family (children, pets, etc.)?  
Blade and Alyssa, and Auden (age 5) and Hazel (age 2). We have no pets, though a particular neighborhood squirrel is unsettlingly brave around humans and is trying to get us to adopt it. We’re staying strong.

Where do you live? Where are you originally from?
We live in Carol Stream. Blade is originally from Southern California, and Alyssa is from North Texas.

How long have you been coming to Church of the Savior? 
We started attending in February of this year.

In your time at Savior so far, what have you enjoyed most? 
Everyone has been very welcoming. We felt included right away. There’s been no sense of having to “earn” our place in the congregation or volunteer for a dozen ministries in order to belong.

Are you by chance related to another family who attends Savior? If so, who? 
Alyssa’s parents, Steve and Rhonda Keysor, started attending around the same time we did.

What are some fun and entertaining ways your children have participated in the church services? 
When we were in person, Hazel mostly participated by hollering at babies she was excited to see. Now that we’re online, Hazel still participates by hollering at other people’s babies and pets, and by echoing “Jesus!” every time she hears someone say His name. Auden loves the coloring pages and any time one of the readings is a parable. He occasionally dresses up in a lot of blankets and scarves, carries a book around over his head, and says he’s the deacon.

What do you do when your family is not at church? (Job, hobbies, etc.)
Blade works as a software engineer at Braintree Payments. He plays Magic: The Gathering with his friends (using a webcam, during the pandemic). Alyssa is a Latin teacher at The Greenhouse Coschool. She also teaches and performs at Westside Improv in downtown Wheaton. The kids mostly run around outside, color, and request that we read whole piles of picture books.

What has been a surprising gift to your family during this time of COVID? And what don’t you want to return to “normal”? 
Even in the winter, Auden had still not accepted Hazel’s presence in the family and would have liked us to return her to the hospital where she came from. Over quarantine, Auden and Hazel have become best buddies. Some of this is probably because Hazel learned to talk and play more in the past few months, but a lot of it is that they’ve spent so much time together while Auden has been home from school with no other kids around. We hope they keep this bond.

Summer Slowing of the Soul Retreat Booklet

A handful of you may have attended our Online Summer Slowing Retreat on Saturday, August 15. However, if you missed the retreat, Pastor Sandy Richter wanted to make the retreat booklet available afterwards.

During this season of COVID, we are living with change being forced upon us and our comfort levels that are tested daily. To put it simply, anxiety levels are high. Our souls need to find rest and shelter with the Lord. I encourage you to carve out some quiet time to reflect and walk through the retreat’s booklet (available here). In it you will find scripture passages, links to songs, and prayers to recite. May the Lord bring forth peace to your soul.


Art image:“Prayer 1”, © 2012 Forte Studios, www.wayneforte.com/picture/prayer-1/

Becoming People of Justice: Thoughts From Your Pastor

Fr. Kevin Miller shares:

This Saturday we start a new sermon series for Savior; I’ve entitled it “Becoming People of Justice: 5 resources for the lifelong journey.” Let me talk about those phrases and how each one speaks to us at Church of the Savior.

Becoming People of Justice

Sometimes white evangelicals have viewed racial justice as an option. There’s a way of thinking that can go like this: “Prayer is not an option. Worship is not an option. Giving is not an option. But when it comes to racial justice or economic justice, well, some churches do that; ours just doesn’t happen to.”

As Christians we can never see justice that way. There is no way forward in Christian formation without squarely making justice part of the journey. We follow this God: “… all his ways are justice. A God of faithfulness and without iniquity, just and upright is he.” (Deuteronomy 32:4). We follow the Savior who said, “The Spirit of the Lord … has sent me to proclaim release to the captives and recovery of sight to the blind, to let the oppressed go free, to proclaim the year of the Lord’s favor.” And from front to back our Scriptures say things like “Learn to do good; seek justice, correct oppression; bring justice to the fatherless, and plead the widow’s cause” (Isaiah 1:17). 

So “Becoming People of Justice” is almost a shorthand way of saying, “Becoming People of God.”

 

The Lifelong Journey

What a year it’s been! Ahmaud Arbery. Breonna Taylor. George Floyd. Mike Ramos. Asian-owned stores defaced with racist graffiti. Yet for Christians, becoming people of justice is not merely a response to news. We must never stop working on our bias and fighting for justice: this is not an event, it’s a journey.  

In our regular and recurring life at Savior, even if the news cycle moves on, we will be having sermon series like this one, book studies (White Awake, by Daniel Hill, coming soon) and giving (our Vestry has donated over $10,000 this year to help minority communities). The fact is, “Loving Others” is deeply part of our hearts, and it’s part of our mission.

Does all this mean that Savior will become a more diverse church? That’s an excellent question, but for me, it’s not the first one to ask. Sometimes groups start working on diversity before they’ve worked on listening, awareness, humility. So here’s what I’ll be looking for instead. Do we, as St. Benedict taught, continue to welcome every person as if he or she is Christ? (I love how you do that, friends of the Savior!) And when people come to Savior, are they increasingly able to say of us, “They are working on their stuff”?

Let us not despise the day of small beginnings. Let us take just one small step after another, praying that God’s kingdom would come on earth as it is in heaven.

 

Resources 

And finally, the word “resources”. As our culture awakens to its 400 years of racism, what can Christians uniquely bring to the longing for justice?  

We bring only what we have received from God: “Freely you have received; freely give.” But God has given us much: his Word, his Spirit, his hope, his people. I hope this sermon series will be prophetic and positive: if we join with God’s heart, He will bless us. As Isaiah promises:

“If you do away with the yoke of oppression, 

with the pointing finger and malicious talk, 

and if you spend yourself in behalf of the hungry 

and satisfy the needs of the oppressed, 

then your light will rise in the darkness 

your night will become like noonday. 

The Lord will guide you always, 

He will satisfy your needs in a sun-scorched land 

And will strengthen your frame."

I pray that through this series we will be given encouragement, and language, for our journey together, and that we will grow in our capacity to “Love Others.” 

 

PS

And finally, a request for prayer. Please pray for the preachers in this series (Linda Richardson, Esau McCaulley, and Al Hsu) and me. There is an emotional and spiritual weight that comes when we speak on matters of racial justice. 

Compounding that for me, as an “old skinny white guy” (wink), I feel my inadequacy: I’m starting later than many of you in learning about, and working for, racial justice. Much of my life experience and education did not prepare me. I’m finding comfort in Paul, who knew full well, “I’m the least of all the apostles; I don’t even deserve to be called an apostle” but that didn’t keep him from preaching; in fact, he said, “woe to me if I do not preach the gospel.”

Cover Art: Sherry Anast © August 2020


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Kevin Miller was editor and vice-president at Christianity Today for 26 years and then associate rector at Church of the Resurrection for 5 years. He has been the rector at Savior since January 2017, and is also the co-founder of PreachingToday.com and CTPastors.com.