News
Support H.R. 40
It’s another chance for you to contact your congressional delegation, urging co-sponsorship and support for HR 40, which would establish the first United States Commission on truth, Racial Health, and Transformation (TRHT).
Our national ELCA advocacy office is urging each of us to voice our support for this legislation, which would be charged with a study of the lasting impacts of slavery in the U.S. in order to develop a set of recommendations for advancing reparations for affected people of African descent. “As a moral issue, a matter of social justice, and expression of the ELCA’s commitment to advance racial equality,” our church has previously adopted various actions encouraging congregations to engage in a study of the “structures and rhetoric that empower and fuel racism and white supremacy and to take to heart the teaching of Scriptures so we may all be better equipped to speak boldly about the equal dignity of all persons in the eyes of God.”
Our own Calvin Schermerhorn gave a presentation at a forum earlier this year, sharing his own research as a historian specializing in slavery, and mentioning H.R. 40. Now, we have additional impetus to study the issue more fully, reading his books and utilizing the new ELCA resource, “How Strategic and Authentic is our Diversity”, and the National Council on Churches’, “Faith and Facts for H.R. 40.”
And, writing Congress in support of H.R. 40!
Ruth Wootten
Our Calendar
Young Adults
Our Young Adults Group at University Lutheran Church is a vibrant and welcoming community, whether you are a single adult, young professional, grad student, spouse, parent, pet owner, or even just a proud plant caretaker. Join our dynamic group of young adults for social and volunteering events.







University Lutheran Church, Tempe, Arizona

Fall 2025/Spring 2026 Young Adults Events Calendar
Aug 29 – Sep 1: Labor Day Weekend Retreat
Location: San Diego, CA
(Carpooling will be available.)
Sep 20: Game Night
Location: Gamer’s Guild @ 6 pm
2223 S 48th St
Tempe 85282
Oct 4: Scenic Gondola Outing
Location: Arizona Snowbowl (Flagstaff) @ 8 am
(Carpooling will be available.)
Nov 8: Mini Golf
Location: Castles-N-Coasters @ 6 pm
9445 N Metro Pkwy E
Phoenix 85051
Dec 5: Annual Christmas Party
Location: University Lutheran Church, Campus Center @ 6 pm
340 E 15th St
Tempe 85281
Jan 16-19: Winter Retreat
Location: Prescott, AZ
(Carpooling will be available.)
Look Into the Mirror

It seems no one can resist a funhouse mirror. You know, the kind that distorts your reflection. You may be smaller, taller, or wider. It may make you look like a Q-tip or a snowman/woman. Your eyes may bulge or you might have four of them. I’m talking about that kid of mirror!
Years ago in Denver’s Eltich Gardens, there was such a mirror just outside the playhouse located on the grounds of this large (currently a Six Flags) amusement park. There admiring herself was a woman whom I immediately recognized as actress Cloris Leachman. To be polite, I asked her, “Are you Cloris Leachman?” She gave a wry smile and said, “Maybe.” And I responded, “Well, if you were, maybe I’d tell you I enjoyed your work.” We shared a laugh, then she turned, gave a wave over her shoulder, and walked away. But notice, even the famous could not resist one of those mirrors.
The thing about fun house mirrors is that they reflect to us a person whom we do not recognize. They are, at best, a caricature of ourselves. We chose our clothing, comb or brush our hair in a particular way, and go out into the world hoping to make a good impression. We cannot see ourselves so we must be doing this for others. Then along comes a funhouse mirror as if to say, “Nice try. I know better. You are more than your well-crafted image.”

Are you who you think you are? Am I? Maybe. Partly? I wonder how God sees us. Sometimes I think God’s view of us isn’t too far off that of a wavy, funhouse mirror. I wonder if God looks at us and sees someone recognizable, but not the person whom God intended to create; certainly not fully the person whom God intended to create. Alas, God does not respond, “If you were, I would love you.” And God does not destroy our funhouse image of ourselves to create a perfect picture of us. God seems to prefer working with the warped reflection of who we really are.
I don’t know if Jesus would have gotten a kick out of one of these mirrors. Perhaps Jesus would have gotten a kick out of any mirror as there were no such things in Jesus’ day. Mirrors, as we know them, are only about 200 years old. Yet images distorted and real never seemed to deter Jesus. Jesus met people where they were. This is what gives me the ability to say this is how God operates. Distorted images are not a place from which God will distance God. They are places of invitation for God to come and do godly work. God can and does use both misshapen figures and misshapen characters. God is able to use even our noncommittal “maybe” as God works to turn it into becoming an “I am!”.
Working on our appearance and image is one thing. Striving to work on who we are as a child of God is quite another. Our true mirror is neither that of a funhouse nor that like we have in our homes. It is a cross. There we see who we are. There we see whose we are. There we see the hope we have to continue along the path of being a child of God. There are no maybes in the cross, only God’s emphatic embrace in Jesus Christ.
