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340 E. 15th Street, Tempe, AZ 85281-6612 (480) 967-3543

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News

Reintroduction Of The Afghan Adjustment Act (AAA)

July 26, 2023

After failing to pass last year, the Afghan Adjustment Act was reintroduced into Congress in both the House and Senate on July 13th. It was introduced in the Senate by Lindsey Graham (R-SC) and Amy Klobuchar (D-MN), and in the House by Rep Earl Blumenauer (D-OR) and Mariannette Miller-Meeks (R-IA). The effort is to attach the AAA bill as an amendment to the Senate National Defense Authorization Act, with the hope it will be able to advance through Congress.

The Afghan Adjustment Act was originally introduced in August of 2022 but did not make it to a floor vote. To recap, the AAA would provide a pathway to citizenship for Afghan nationals who came to the United States after the fall of Kabul. These Afghans are currently under humanitarian parole, which is set to soon expire. With the current backlog in the citizenship process, it is important that a permanent pathway to citizenship is created for those who worked alongside U.S. troops in Afghanistan and fled in fear of their lives.

PLEASE TAKE ACTION!

These bills are set to pass this week. We encourage you to contact your Congressional Representatives and urge them to support the Afghan Adjustment Act. LIRS (Lutheran Immigration and Refugee Services) has a quick and easy page to contact your reps. You can use the template.

At time of publication, three Arizona House of Representatives have signed on as co-sponsors: David Schweikert (R) District 1, Juan Ciscomani (R) District 6, and Greg Stanton (D), District 4. See full list of Congress sponsorship.

If your Congressional Representative was one of the three Arizona Representatives to sign on as a co-sponsor, please reach out and thank them!

Filed Under: News

Questions On Our Quest

July 25, 2023

Letter from Pastor Gary McCluskey

Tom Ridenhour was my first preaching professor. A life-long Lutheran, he did not fit any stereotypical mold for Lutherans. As a native of North Carolina his ethnic foods leaned more toward grits than lefse. No Minnesota or Upper Midwestern accent. His was a southern drawl. His college and graduate years were with the Methodists of Duke and the Congregationalists of Yale with a stop in between with some Lutherans at Southern Seminary in Columbia, South Carolina. (By the way, ULC member and pastor, Jacqui Pagel also had Tom as her preaching professor.)

In preaching class the first weeks were spent on discussions and lectures on everything from the theology of preaching to ways to write a sermon for better eye contact. Then came the sermons, preached in class, by each student. You sometimes think it is hard to make your way through one sermon on a Sunday morning? Imagine having to listen to four or more in a single setting!

While an anxious classmate was up front preaching, we co-classmates, diligently sat at our desks filling out printed sermon evaluation forms commenting on eye contact, delivery, content, and more.

At the conclusion of each sermon, Dr. Ridenhour would stride confidently to the front, turn, and begin the evaluation discussion with a question. Quickly we learned that first question revealed his evaluation focus. Questions were often, “Where was the Good News in that sermon? How was the delivery? Could you hear him well or did she have good eye contact or seemed to be reading the sermon. Most memorable and most feared was the question, “Was that a sermon?” Now he would have to add a new question for some, “How would that appear on live stream?”

I wonder if Tom checked out his old students and their preaching once everyone went online. Somehow I think he had heard enough preaching from his hundreds of protégé’s during his forty or so years of teaching. I shudder to think that he might have caught me in the act on live stream!

Dr. Ridenhour asked questions so the preacher could learn and so those answering the questions could reflect and learn. Much of scientific, engineering, and even music, the arts and writing accomplishments were because someone had a question. “What would happen if we….? How might we be able to…..? What if we did this and/or that?”

Unfortunately, people of faith seem to fear questions regarding faith. Too much faith remains stagnant because we are unable to ask questions of one’s self or of our faith. If our faith seems a bit out of touch with today’s life it may be because we haven’t asked questions of it or have asked the wrong questions. It is also faith to which we must turn when questions seem to lack a definite or certain answer.

Jesus wasn’t afraid of questions. “What must I do to inherit eternal life? How can one be born again? Where do you get that living water? Who is my neighbor?” These are just some of the questions that came to Jesus.

Jesus responded to some questions with parables, straight answers, a healing, or a theological revelation about God. He was unthreatened by people’s questions. This ought to give us release from out anxiety about asking questions of our faith, or, for that matter, of God. Yes, it may change our faith. It might also strengthen it as we understand how it now relates to some new chapter of our life.

Imagine, finishing a sermon in class to your peers and a professor and have the professor begin with, “Was that a sermon?” I can’t remember what questions he asked after my sermons. I probably blacked them out because of fear or embarrassment. Regardless, many who had that question asked of an early preaching masterpiece no doubt went on to learn from it and become adequate if not very good preachers.

What if we saw life as more than pursuing answers to our questions. What if we saw life as having a consistent practice of asking questions of us? Think of your life. Of course you understand much more now than in the past. The future will provide even more insight. Yet has not life questioned you in the past? Will there not be further questions asked in time to come? As followers of Christ we need to work on being more comfortable in asking questions and more comfortable in having questions asked of us. A life of following Christ is not a linear progression of further understanding. It is also a bumpy path of trying to navigate what comes to us.

Filed Under: News, Pastor's Notes

This Week at University Lutheran Church 7/23/2023-7/29/2023

July 21, 2023

Sunday, July 23

  • 9:00 am Sunday Worship (Sanctuary or via Live Stream)
  • 10:00 am Free Coffee & Refreshments (Campus Center)

Monday, July 24

  • 8:00 pm HAA (Campus Center)

Tuesday, July 25

  • 8:00 pm AA (Campus Center)

Wednesday, July 26

  • 6:00 pm Summer Connections (Pastor Gary’s home)

Thursday, July 27

  • 8:00 pm AA (Campus Center)

Friday, July 28

Saturday, July 29

Filed Under: News

A Welcome “Note”

July 20, 2023

We welcome Elizabeth Tomboulian as our new music director. Elizabeth comes to University Lutheran Church (ULC) from a lifelong journey of church music ministry in many denominations. She also engages in teaching voice and piano, practicing Quantum Energetics Structured Therapy and Quantum Sound Healing, and project work in publication design and marketing. She has experience in jazz, Brazilian, Uruguayan, Americana, folk, blues, rock, and pop music.

She enjoys mixing traditional hymns with African-American Spirituals and select contemporary worship songs to program a blended service, aspiring to assist as a carrier frequency for the messages of Christ to the hearts of the people. She is excited for the opportunity to bring her diverse musical background to interface with the congregation and community at ULC.

She will be leading the choir starting Sunday, September 10th. Welcome, Elizabeth!

Filed Under: News

LCM ALUM WORKING FOR LAMA

July 19, 2023

Autumn Byars, a recent ASU graduate and LCM student has been hired by Lutheran Advocacy Ministry of Arizona, a synod and ELCA program. Autumn was hired for the 2023-2024 year as Hunger Advocacy Fellow to do research, monitor legislative bills concerning hunger and creating awareness of hunger issues in Arizona and beyond for our Grand Canyon Synod Churches. Congratulations, Autumn!

Filed Under: LCM, News

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Our Staff

Arhiana Shek Dill

Interim Pastor
Arhiana Shek Dill

Elizabeth Tomboulian

Music Director
Elizabeth Tomboulian

Amanda Waters

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Amanda Waters

Dylan Weeks

Campus Ministry Associate
Dylan Weeks

Bryan Gamelin

Young Adult Coordinator
Bryan Gamelin

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