January 29, 2025

Prayer of the Day

Almighty and ever-living God, your only-begotten Son was presented this day in the temple. May we be presented to you with clean and pure hearts by the same Jesus Christ, our great high priest, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever. Amen.

Upcoming Events

links to event info embedded if applicable

February 18

Church + Trees Webinar


March 1

Call to Allyship @ Calvary, Federal Way


June 13 - 14, 2025

Synod Assembly @ PLU

New resources are now available from ELCA World Hunger to enrich the life of your congregation during Lent. As congregations across the ELCA creatively find new ways to lean into the future, we are eager to equip leaders with ELCA World Hunger resources in the Easter season. ELCA.org/hunger/resources

ANNUAL TO-DO's

Attention Rostered Leaders: Annual Minister Reports are due!


Rostered Leaders -

Please make time to submit your Annual Minister Reports to the Bishop. This report allows us to learn about your year and enables us to offer you the best support possible.


Here are the links to the reports:


Minister of Word and Sacrament


Minister of Word and Service


Your reports can be emailed to swwsynod@plu.edu.

Attention Church Admins and Church Treasurers:


Tomorrow, January 30th ELCA Churchwide will open their portal (https://www.elca.org/about/congregations/annual-congregation-report) for you to file the Annual Congregation Report. You should have received mail from Sue Rothmeyer's office with instructions and your congregation's password.


Please make sure you take the time to file this report!


If you have any questions or need your password, please don't hesitate to contact Stefanie at the Synod Office at (253) 535-8300 or swwsynod@plu.edu. Thank you.

2025 SYNOD ASSEMBLY AND BISHOP'S ELECTION

2025 Synod Assembly -- June 13 & 14 -- PLU Olson Auditorium

Registration for the 2025 Synod Assembly will open early February. Please stay tuned!

If you need to find out how many delegates your congregation can send to the 2025 Synod Assembly, download this document for guidance: How Many Lay Voting Members Does My Congregation Get?

If you are a rostered minister of the SWWA Synod under the Retired, On Leave from Call, Retired under Contract, or Disability Status and would like to issue a Pre-Notification of Intent to Vote, please fill out the Pre-Notification of Intent to Vote Form and email it back to Stefanie at swwsynod@plu.edu. Deadline is April 1st, 2025.

Synod Friends,

 

Do you wish your congregation was more diverse?

Have you encountered conflicts because of cultural or racial differences and didn't know how you got there or what to do next?

 

Then this event is for you!

 

The Northwest Washington and Southwestern Washington Synods of the ELCA invite all congregations to join us for a special joint event sponsored by our anti-racism teams.

 

We will spend a day studying "Called to Allyship," a book written by ELCA rostered leaders of color from across the country. One of the authors, Rev. Priscilla Paris-Austin (pastor at Immanuel Lutheran in Seattle's South Lake Union neighborhood), will be helping to lead our discussion. Other discussion leaders are pastors and lay leaders from congregations who have read this book together.

 

The book can be purchased from major booksellers, preferably directly from Augsburg Fortress: https://www.augsburgfortress.org/store/product/9781506497761/Call-to-Allyship

 

Says one local congregation member: "This is an important anti-racism book for any congregation to read. Any congregation will benefit from it!"

 

Saturday, March 1, 10am-2pm | Cost is $40 | Lunch is included.

Register Now

FROM OUR CONGREGATIONS

Pastors Keith Marshall (Hope, Enumclaw), Eric Bostrom (Mountain View, Edgewood) and Adrienne Strehlow (Immanuel, Vancouver) at Thriving Leadership Formation's event "Executive Leadership Skills at Spirit in the Desert" beginning of January.


[photo courtesy of Pastor Keith Marshall]

Fun news from Agnus Dei, Lutheran Church in Gig Harbor


Their annual toilet paper drive for FISH, their local foodbank, is in full swing. Each January they build a "Mighty Fortress" of toilet paper in their narthex, a necessary but often overlooked donation item. FISH has come to rely on them to fill their shelves and has dubbed them the "Gig Harbor's TP Church." So far, they have collected 1,924 rolls!

FROM OUR FRIENDS AND PARTNERS

Women's Retreat March 2025

Spend a winter weekend at Holden Village for our annual Women’s Retreat. Through teaching sessions, group conversations, reflections, crafts, and outdoor adventures like snowshoeing and cross-country skiing, Women’s Retreat will provide opportunities to build new relationships, rejuvenate past relationships, reconnect with the self, and join other women in conversation and recreation.

https://www.holdenvillage.org/calendar/womens-retreat-march-2025/


Men's Retreat February 28 - March 3

Come to Holden Village for a weekend of spiritual renewal and recreation at our 2025 Men's Retreat. Connect with yourself and others through teaching sessions, drumming, nature, poetry, and conversation. Enjoy abundant snowshoeing and cross-country skiing, crafts such as pottery and wood carving, and relaxation in the solitude of the mountains.

https://www.holdenvillage.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/Mens-Retreat-PDF.pdf

Have you ever pondered Jesus’ words about visiting and freeing the prisoners? How do we as disciples faithfully follow those calls to action? One Parish One Prisoner offers a two year journey of relationship with one person coming home from prison. As this relationship brings us closer to the world of prisons, we glimpse resurrection.


Join us for our quarterly Zoom Office Hours to ask questions and learn more: Wednesday, February 26 at 5pm! Join here: bit.ly/OPOPoffice 

FROM CHURCHWIDE

Presiding Bishop Eaton Issues Pastoral Message on Executive Orders


Dear church,

 

On Monday, our nation witnessed the peaceful transfer of power central to our democracy, followed by sweeping actions by the incoming Trump administration. Facing such changes, we receive guidance through Martin Luther's words in the Large Catechism.

 

In the fourth petition of the Lord's Prayer, where we pray “Give us this day our daily bread,” Luther writes about the importance of praying for our leaders, asking God to grant them wisdom and strength. He also speaks to the responsibility of leaders to provide stability, sufficiency and equity, saying, “[I]t would be very proper to place in the coat-of-arms of every pious prince a loaf of bread instead of a lion, or a wreath of rue, or to stamp it upon the coin, to remind both them and their subjects that by their office we have protection and peace, and that without them we could not eat and retain our daily bread.”[1]

 

This past week has been one of rapid and cascading change, from the inauguration of a new president and vice president to the flurry of activity in government orders and regulations. The policies and decisions reflected in this week's executive orders and regulatory changes have the potential to profoundly impact our lives, the well-being of our neighbors and the future of the planet. Therefore, I am concerned about the ways that many of the executive actions have created uncertainty and fear in our communities among neighbors struggling to survive, neighbors struggling to provide for their children, and neighbors struggling to be seen.

 

As a church, we are called to speak up when the government distorts or denies the image of God in each person by endangering access to protection, peace and daily bread. Where harm or inequity occur, we are called by God to respond with love and advocacy.

 

Luther also writes that in asking for daily bread, we are to pray for our leaders. We should pray that they act wisely and justly, protect all people and not cause harm.

 

Prayer is not passive; it's an act of hope. Prayer reminds us to ground ourselves in God's promise. We pray for strength, to love unconditionally and to serve one another. As we lift up our petitions, we must also act—advocating for policies that affirm the dignity of every person and standing against actions that demean or exclude.

 

This church is committed to upholding the humanity of everyone, regardless of who we are or where we come from. We are a church called to love our neighbors and accompany all people in their joys and struggles. We must remain steadfast in this calling. As the ELCA, we will continue to proclaim the radical inclusivity of Christ's love. And we will deepen our local and global partnerships with those working to build a just and compassionate society, especially through our ecumenical and interreligious networks. 

 

I commend to you the social message “Government and Civic Engagement in the United States: Discipleship in a Democracy,” which states on page 7: “To evaluate how well agencies of government are doing their proper work of providing for the safety and well-being of those within their borders and/or jurisdiction, Lutherans ask one simple but all-encompassing question: Is the neighbor being served?”

 

I encourage our congregations to use the resources of the ELCA Witness in Society Team with advocacy networks on the state and federal level. And get involved with AMMPARO, the ELCA’s strategy toward just and humane policies affecting migrants. 

 

As we move forward, let us hold fast to our faith and to one another. Let us be bold in our witness to the gospel, steadfast in our prayers for those in authority and tireless in our efforts to seek justice for all.

 

May God grant us courage, wisdom and peace in these days.

 

In Christ,


The Rev. Elizabeth A. Eaton

Presiding Bishop

Evangelical Lutheran Church in America 

 

[1]The Book of Concord, Kold and Wengert, eds., page 450.

 

Presiding Bishop Eaton Issues Pastoral Message on Executive Orders

 

Job Opportunities

Office Manager - Christ Lutheran Church, Lakewood


Music Director - Holy Trinity Lutheran Church, Port Angeles

A Synod of the

Evangelical Lutheran Church in America

The Rev. Richard E. Jaech, Bishop


Synod Office Hours

9am - 4pm

Tuesday - Friday

Stay Connected


email swwsynod@plu.edu

phone (253) 535-8300

website www.swwasynod.org