Council News & 2024 Annual Meeting

It’s hard to believe we are already talking about November, but Fall is here! The Council met this week to review and discuss Ascension’s budget, as we move into budget season and planning for next year. The Council had a good discussion about all of the incredible things happening inside, and outside, the walls of Ascension and how our budget can continue to support those things in the coming year. The next two steps in the budget process are a budget listening session on Sunday, Nov. 10. This is an opportunity for members of the congregation to ask questions and review the budget in more detail, before it is presented for a vote by the congregation at our annual congregational meeting on Sunday, Nov. 17. Both sessions will take place in between services. We hope you can join us.

Amanda Payne, President

Planning for 2025

How will God invite us to celebrate our ministry and prepare for the future in 2025? We invite you to join us in filling out the 2025 commitment card or submit your 2025 commitment online, prayerfully considering what God might be leading you to offer back to God through the mission and ministry of Ascension as we continue to step out in faith in 2025. Please remember, if you give online, please consider increasing your monthly offering if it has been a while since you set-up your online giving.

October Worship News

Just a reminder that on Sunday, Oct. 6, there will be no late service held at Ascension. Everyone is invited to Green Meadows Farm to celebrate worship with our BLAST families and Latino community. Registration is required. Register online at https://tinyurl.com/RSVPgreen. The cost is $15 per person (under 2 free) and includes sandwich, drinks and petting farm. Please also sign-up for a dish to pass, https://tinyurl.com/ALCGreen24. Please register and pay by Sept. 29. Questions? Contact Pastor Tony, tony@ascensionelca.org.

We’re beginning a new Youth Choir for students in grades 6-8 on Thursday, Nov. 7, 5:45-6:30. This is a short-term commitment with rehearsals on Nov. 7, 14, 21 and Dec. 5 and 12. The Youth Choir will then sing for the Advent Concert Worship services on Saturday, Dec. 14, at 6 p.m. and Sunday, Dec. 15, at 9:30 a.m. To sign-up, please contact Director of Music Ministries Vicki Taylor, vicki@ascensionelca.org.

Children’s Choir for children in grades K-5 returns on Thursday, Nov. 7, 5 to 5:40 p.m. Children’s choir will rehearse on Nov. 7, 14, 21 and Dec. 5 and 12 and will sing for the Advent Concert Worship services on Saturday, Dec. 14, at 6 p.m. and Sunday, Dec. 15, at 9:30 a.m. Email vicki@ascensionelca.org to join. 

Love to sing but not sure about a year-long commitment? Sing with the Ascension Choir for the Advent/Christmas season. Rehearsals are from 7:15-8:15 p.m. on Wednesday, Nov 6; Saturday, Nov. 9, 9 a.m. to 12 p.m.; Wednesdays, Nov. 13 and 20; Tuesday, Nov. 26; Wednesdays, Dec. 4 and 11. The choir will sing for the Advent Concert Worship services on Saturday, December 14 and Sunday, December 15. Please contact Director of Music Ministries Vicki Taylor, vicki@ascensionelca.org, with questions or to join!

Serving in October

Are you considering traveling to El Salvador or Tanzania with Ascension in the next summer or two? International travel not your thing, but you want to be a part of our partnership? Have you previously traveled with us?

We are meeting on Tuesday, Oct. 1, at 6:30 p.m. A few things on the agenda include: Rick Frowein’s upcoming trip to Tanzania with the coffee project, discussing financial requests from Pastora Blanca in El Salvador, making initial plans for our next trips and hosting, and hearing the latest on our exploration to begin a chocolate project in El Salvador. Contact Sarah Wehmeier Aparicio if you have any questions, or you are interested but you can’t make the meeting, sarah@ascensionelca.org.

Ascension had good participation in the Greater Milwaukee Synod Immigration and Refugee Task Force event in early September. The response was NOW WHAT? Ascension’s SOPHIA leadership team is taking on the challenge since the topic so closely links to SOPHIA’s goals. Join us on Thursday, Oct. 3, at 6:30 p.m. at church if you have questions about immigration and refugee resettlement and how to live out your faith in response. You are invited to attend whether you were at the synod event or not. We will learn together and prayerfully discuss our next steps. Contact Joan Mikecz, joanmikecz@sbcglobal.net, with questions.  

There will be a series of Did You Know? questions and answers on the Mission Outreach Facebook page beginning on October 1 to help us all have a clear understanding of terms and the myths and misunderstandings of the many aspects that impact refugees and immigration. The synod taskforce has provided some good resources that will guide us. Please follow us on Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/Ascension.ELCA.MO.

This annual event helps to end the stigma surrounding mental health and to help achieve the goal of mental health for all. NAMI has been an Ascension Community partner for many years. We support their work in areas that impact all of us at some point in life. 

Join Ascension’s team on Saturday, Oct. 5, to walk for NAMI at the Milwaukee County Zoo beginning at 9:30. Sign-up online https://www.namiwalks.org/team/68935 or https://www.namiwalks.org/participant/teamascensionchurch.

Are you aware that Ascension supports the ELCA World Hunger program each month as a part of our budget? When we work with the larger church body, so much more can be done than if we tried to conquer hunger on our own. Through ELCA World Hunger, 66 countries and 41states and territories received support in 2023. Here are ways you can participate in the celebration via the ELCA announcement.

  • World Food Day Celebrating 50 Years of ELCA World Hunger
  • When: Tuesday, Oct. 15, 7 p.m. Central time
  • Where: Zoom webinar. Register online.

Savor

Recently a friend who I haven’t seen in many years reached out wanting to reconnect. I was thrilled when he called, and it was so great to hear his voice. I’ve missed him a lot over the years. Then, just last week I spent some time away with my four siblings to celebrate my 50th birthday. We’re spread out around the country, so we aren’t all together regularly. But the days and nights together around the table, at the pool, on the couch, and out hiking were filled with great food, sharing stories, laughter, and reconnection and they were glorious.

Time is fleeting, or so I’ve heard from countless people over the past few weeks. But this old adage feels suffocating. I’m sure most of you can relate to life being busy, hurried, overstimulated, and overscheduled.

For quite some time I’ve been fascinated by the concept of savoring and it’s something I’ve been working on. This one word is changing me – more than I expected. To savor something means to taste it, to enjoy or appreciate it completely, especially by dwelling on it and being fully present to whatever is.

I want to do all these things, admittedly though I don’t always do it all that well. Like so many others I find myself multitasking or continually filling my schedule with more and more. I think most of us would say that we are rarely idle.  And I think herein lies the problem.

For many of us the daily norm is centered around productivity and trying to cram as much as we can into every minute until there’s nothing to spare.  But sometimes this makes it hard to even breathe. Savoring on the other hand involves delight, pleasure, relishing. There’s no hint of duty in savoring.

At times my life tends to be much more focused on duty than on savoring. My schedule revolves around “ought to do” more than “want to do.” And in these times duty looms large in the choices I make.

Of course, duty is important. But when life is all about duty, there is little room for delight. When a good day is defined by getting everything done on my to-do list, I leave little room for the important things – things that can’t be jotted down and crossed off a list. And this was never more evident than recently when my friend unexpectedly called and when I spent time away with my siblings.

Savoring means being fully present, and this can be in all areas of our lives not just in relationships. We can delight even in mundane things like fresh laundry, unexpected laughter, a delicious sandwich, or a sunset. There are so many things in life to savor, to delight in – if we’re willing to take the time to notice. I don’t necessarily live slow…but I’m learning.  And I wonder if you would like to as well.

Savoring, living slow, delighting – they’re all part of a conscious mindset. And truthfully, it all begins by taking time to savor God.  Taking time to recognize, dwell, and appreciate all that God has done, is doing, and will do in our lives is the first step. Savoring God involves being fully present and dwelling in his sacred presence. And when we lean in to God, practice his presence, pay attention to his voice, only then are we able to taste and savor the goodness God offers. And when we savor Jesus in our lives, we delight in God’s presence.

Jesus is not something we need to check off on our to-do-list and go on with our day. He is not an obligation; He is life. And the more time we spend with Him, the more spacious our life feels. Sitting unhurried with God, letting Him fill us, is the best way to savor Him. And I always find it interesting that when I am filled in this way, I also have more space than ever before.

Take a moment to reflect on the people and things in your life. Consider what it would be like if this were the last moment you had with them. If you knew this was the last time, would you appreciate them more, be more fully present in the moment, listen to them more intently, savor them more? I’m working on it, and I hope you will to. Both with God and with all that God has so graciously gifted to us.

Pastor Tony