• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

University Lutheran Church

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

​Give+

  • Home
  • Welcome
  • Worship
  • Connect
  • Campus Ministry
  • Young Adults
  • Donate
  • Contact Us

Slider - Home Page

Practice Your Serve

October 20, 2020

Letter from Pastor Gary McCluskey

Recently I read a story of a 1993 study of piano students done by psychologist Anders Ericsson. Purposely he studied students of differing abilities. Some played at elite levels, some were merely average, and many were somewhere in the middle. A key finding was that a major difference from those well-known, stage performing pianists, and those who played locally was the quality and quantity of practice. 

Since this study Ericsson’s study has been challenged and somewhat edited. Yet a general thesis seems to be affirmed for piano students to poker players: practice typically makes you better at things. This comes as great relief to me whenever I think about a doctor who “practices” medicine. 

So if practice makes one better at Tiddlywinks to chicken farming, can it make us better at following Jesus? In fact, can one actually “practice” following Jesus? Perhaps a good example is the response of the local Amish community after the school shooting of one room Amish school in West Nickle Mines, Pennsylvania. Five school girls were killed and five more severely injured. Yet shortly after the shooting the Amish family reached out to the family of the shooter to offer both comfort and forgiveness. They went so far as to set up a charitable fund for the shooter’s family. When asked how they could do such a thing following an attack of such horror upon their community, their response was both swift and confident.  “Do you think we just woke up and decided to do this?”, they asked,  “This is who we are, this is what we teach and believe and work to live out every day of our lives.”

Would it be disrespectful to say that what the Amish had done prior to this tragic event was “practice” their faith? I don’t think so. Most of us should be so disrespected for such practice of our discipleship. Now there are some critical things we can say about the Amish life and lifestyle, but my point is this: for the disciple practice might not make perfect, but it can make for growth and depth. 

Some pianists need to work on their left hand playing, some need to work at sight reading, while others need to think and reflect more upon the music for better interpretation. Some simply need to practice to learn and play a piece of music. What area of your discipleship could use some polish? What part of following Jesus might require a bit more thought out and practiced discipline on your part? 

The Christian life, or perhaps better put, a Christian life is not built by a momentary decision or even one well thought-out decision. It is a life-long practice. It is one step, one success, one failure, one uncertainty at a time. It is learning and re-learning, and it is practice. It is practice over time. 

Sometimes even the best strike a wrong note.  This only serves as a reminder that all need practice; even the best who became the best need more practice.  The Jesus whom we follow is okay with this. After all, the show must go on!

Pastor Gary

Filed Under: Pastor's Notes, Slider - Home Page

LCM Alumni – Brittany and Adam Hass

October 12, 2020

Former LCM students Brittany and Adam Hass reside in the Colorado area.  We love showing a bit of what Brittany’s handiwork is by show a launch of her updated web site PaperGlee.com  Brittany’s talents are on full display.  We send our cyber hugs to both of them.

Filed Under: LCM, Slider - Home Page, Where are they now?

The Rock Group at ULC and LCM

October 8, 2020

Be Joyful

When visiting the ULC and LCM campus, look for the various uplifting messages found throughout the grounds.  I’m wondering how they mysteriously appear? 

We think Art and Lynn Becker may have the answer.

Filed Under: News, Slider - Home Page

Iffy Speech

September 22, 2020

Letter from Pastor Gary McCluskey

Our words and language matter. Many times our words do not land on “deaf ears.” Others hear our words. Others often react to our words. They react by agreeing and going along with what we say even to the point of trying to live out our words. Or they react negatively to our words and try to live as they have or live out the exact opposite of our spoken or written words.

Our faith is communicated by words. Even our deeds which can communicate our faith are many times preceded by words.  Sometimes it is words of scripture, words of a sermon, words of prayer, words spoken in worship or sung to music, or the words of another that can strongly communicate our faith.

I sometimes think the most dangerous word used in “faith speech” can be the word “if.”If you love, if you believe, if you do or if you don’t do.  Grammatically, if is a conjunction. You remember those from the 3rd grade. I would also say if is a propositional word, a transactional word. It proposes a deal. If assumes then.  There will be a consequence if we act or fail to act in a particular manner. The consequence may be good or it may be bad.

We need to be careful when we use the word if in faith speech. Most times Christians use the word if it assumes a consequence from God. If we do something good, then God will love us and care for us. If we do something contrary to our faith, God will at the very least punish us in some way or, perhaps, even abandon us and cease to care for us. IF……

All of us who follow Jesus realize we have a great need to change. We have a need to change for ourselves, those in our lives, and we need to change to better align ourselves and our life to God’s will for us and for creation. But that if word messes with us. It gets there in our thought process, in our understanding of our relationship with God and even in our prayer life. We too often seem to think and act as though God will only truly and fully love us if  we change. We need to drop that little two letter word in such thinking. God does not love us if we change. We need to substitute another word for if…..the word that. God loves us not if we change, but instead, so that we can change. One small word change makes quite a difference!

There is a purpose to God’s love for us, indeed. But God’s love is not the carrot hanging on the end of a stick out in front of us, exhausting us as we naively pursue it. God’s love is instead the engine behind us pushing us, making even uphill travel easier than we have a right to expect.

Maybe if we drop or at least judiciously employ that word if in our thinking about God and God’s relationship with us, ….if we do that, our understanding and appreciation for God and God’s love will have a new and greater perspective. Perhaps there is a place for if after all!  That’s all, folks!

Filed Under: Pastor's Notes, Slider - Home Page

Looking for God

September 16, 2020

Letter from Pastor Gary McCluskey

People of faith always want to see God in their life and recognize God at work in the world. Certainly scripture affirms God’s presence in our life and that God is at work in the world. Yet how often do we fail to see or even sense God’s presence and handiwork?

Maybe we ought to ask ourselves what we expect to see. Do we expect grand and glorious activity that is hard to miss? Do we expect something more mundane like a neighbor bringing by a bowl of hot chicken noodle soup when we are ill?  God may indeed be at work in these and similar gestures of kindness and care. 

As I write this Hurricane Sally is wreaking havoc on the Gulf Coast while fires rage in the West Coast and elsewhere. Many fellow Christians see this as some act of judgement by God. “See! God is at work here”, we are told. Why do we only expect to see God at work in such great and horrific events? For what kind of angry, vindictive God must we be searching? Is this view consistent with the Jesus whom we see in the Gospels?  When we have a certain expectation of how God acts, we tend to see only this God.

Yet what I have seen most often is if we want to miss God, then we are fooling ourselves into thinking we know exactly what we are looking for, we will no doubt miss God when we know exactly what we are looking for.   Israel was looking for a king with armies. Many of them missed God. On the other hands lowly shepherds didn’t really know what to look for, but recognized the Messiah when they saw him. People of faith thinking they knew exactly what to look for, missed the Messiah and the star,  while pagan Wise Men who hadn’t a clue knew someone and something special when they saw it. Yes, if you want to miss God, know exactly what you are looking for.

Jesus calls us to places that are new and often strange to us and to people with whom we normally do not associate. The one who ate with tax collectors and sinners, the one who brought healing to foreigners and people of different faiths, calls us to imitate him in our following. To what strange places and to what very different people have you gone in your life because of Jesus ? Often these are not where or among who we expect to find God. Yet, there God is…exactly where we do not expect to find God.  Imagine of the church is where everyone is safe, but all are uncomfortable. 

Throughout my ministry I have always been part of ecumenical Christian groups. Many were quite different than me and us. Yet at times I caught a glimpse of God in these groups and in these people. I also noticed these experiences made me more Lutheran. 

Here at ASU and in Tempe we have interfaith groups: LDS, Muslims, Hindus, Buddhists, Bahai, and all walks of Christianity. We visit their places of worship, host them in our Campus Center, speak at some of their events and have some of them speak at our events. Again, I have seen God at work and I have seen my Christianity sharpened.

We don’t expect that. We are often too trapped in our own blinders knowing exactly what we seek and what we expect. God can come to those with blinders. But how much greater God can appear when we remove them and open our vision fully, no knowing what to expect.  I have to keep reminding myself, God does not always play by our rules or our conventions. That is in part what makes God, God.

Filed Under: Pastor's Notes, Slider - Home Page

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Go to page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Go to page 4
  • Go to page 5
  • Go to page 6
  • Go to page 7
  • Go to page 8
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Go to page 13
  • Go to Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

Search

Donate

Member Login

Manage Your Profile, Giving History, Directory

Donate Now

Credit Card or Checking/Savings

Text Giving to 480-878-7977

Download Mobile App

Manage your account from your phone! Look for either of these icons

Breeze - Android Breeze - Apple

Worship Services

Sunday

May 11, 10:30 am Worship with Communion
Starting May 18, Worship time changes to 10 am.

Wednesday

May 7
5:00 pm Student Bible Study
5:30 pm Student Dinner
6:30 pm Contemporary Service for All
Wednesday activities will resume in August.

Our Staff

Arhiana Shek Dill

Interim Pastor
Arhiana Shek Dill

Elizabeth Tomboulian

Music Director
Elizabeth Tomboulian

Amanda Waters

Secretary
Amanda Waters

Dylan Weeks

Campus Ministry Associate
Dylan Weeks

Bryan Gamelin

Young Adult Coordinator
Bryan Gamelin

Reconciling Works

Reconciling Works - Lutherans for Full Participation

Copyright © 2025 · University Lutheran Church and Lutheran Campus Ministry

We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue to use this site we will assume that you are happy with it.Ok