Powerful Peacemaking

by Pastor Tim White

Jesus said, “Blessed are the peacemakers”. Notice that doesn’t say blessed are the peacekeepers. Peace keeping is courageous and much needed in our day and age. But this is more active than that, we are called to be peace makers. Jesus is directing us to take a high road in the midst of frustration, strife and conflict.

DeSean Jackson made a mistake on social media for which he apologized later. He praised Adolf Hitler and his view of Jewish people. And in response there was a flood of commentary slamming the talented NFL wide receiver. The bashing of Jackson continued until it seemed it would never end. DeSean had said in his apology that his comment was naive, and he did not really understand what he was saying.

NFL wide receiver Julian Edelman stepped in and said that he would be glad to take DeSean Jackson to the Holocaust museum and they could discuss it in a conversation. Edelman said, “I have a lot I would like to learn and understand about DeSean Jackson’s story”. I have been to the Holocaust museum and that would be a breakthrough conversation for everyone.

Julian Edelman is a great wide receiver, just like DeSean Jackson, and he is the only Jewish American player in the NFL. At this time he is a peacemaker. Jesus is right, our world needs more peacemakers. I challenge you to be a peacemaker in your family, at work, in the church and in the marketplace. Let there be peace on earth and let it begin with me.

Your friend for the rest of my life,

Pastor Tim White

I love America because I follow Jesus Christ.

Before you get all upset at that statement hear me out. The greatest point in my life was when I decided to become a follower of Jesus. And as a Christ follower I know that no nation or person is perfect. But that does not prevent me from loving them. The beloved apostle John wrote in his letter 1 John, Beloved let us love one another for love is of God and everyone that loves knows God. He that does not love does not know God because God is love. So beloved let us love one another.” 1 John 4:7-8
Do you have those verses memorized yet?

I love Kenya because Jackie and I have two children there that we sponsor through Orphan Outreach. We are sponsoring them until they graduate from college. Edinah is age 13 and she is in the sixth grade. And our new boy (our last boy graduated out) is Gedion he is only age 3. Jackie chose him because of his sweet face and his favorite food was milk. They both live in the second largest slum in the world. They have a well with fresh water and a new building because of Orphan Outreach and Washington Cathedral working together. When we sponsor a child there, it pays for their food, education, and medical attention. We have met with many mothers and the elders of the gang that rule the slum. We know the kids’ teachers and pastor. We correspond with them and pray for them daily. We hope to see them again in the next couple of years. Listen, we know Kenya is not perfect. Their medical system is good but needs improvement. They live in a democracy, but it exists in conflict. Kenya has drought, political unrest and needs both infrastructure and urban planning. Not perfect, but we love Kenya because we love its people. And we have friends in Tanzania, Uganda, DRC, Burundi, Somalia, and Ethiopia. Black lives matter. We love the people themselves, not just because they are black or African but because they are beautiful people made by our Heavenly Father. How can you not love Kenya if you love God? And the same is true of the United States. We love our friends and neighbors, police and prisoners because they are beautiful people. So, Sunday we celebrate the country we live in. Again, not perfect but we will work along with anyone trying to make it better. We can’t help loving America because we love God.

Join me in worship at 10:30am this Sunday on Facebook, at our website and YouTube.

The 6-Foot Freedom Fest has been canceled due to Governors rescinding
his previous orders until July 9th.

Your friend for the rest of my life,
Pastor Tim

By Pastor Tim

We live in a broken world that is desperate for peacemakers. When I think of Washington Cathedral, I think of this incredible family full of peacemakers. Nancy McJunkin has led, I don’t know how many, small groups. But behind the scenes she has helped many people struggling with deep hurts. I can feel the heart of Jesus when he says with such emotion and blessing – “blessed are the peacemakers…”

Rick and Karen Kammerer are both diligent peacemakers and Rick’s work, after being a veteran, has been helping stop forest fires, and helping at vital times in the church. Karen as a Seattle police detective was always an astonishing peace maker. Howard Blair and Tony Othieno are peace makers. They have raised their spectacular family with wisdom and good hearts that as a Christ follower they each stir deep hope for the future. How our society needs peace makers like them today. To laugh with them and share with them gives one peace. Doug and Carol Meckling who continue to reach out to people and help. Even after their 37th billion anniversary they are still there for family and friends turning tears to joy.

Blessed are the peacemakers for they shall be called the children of God.

Join me as we begin a new series this Sunday on the joyful journey of peace making.
Services are at 10:30 am Sunday on Facebook Live, You Tube Live, www.wacathedral.org, or on the WaCathedral App.

Your friend for the rest of my life,
Pastor Tim White

Happy Father's Day

By Pastor Tim White

Jackie and I were hiking in the Wallowa mountains with our family when our kids were teenagers. We had followed this same trail together when we were in high school. The kids kept running ahead and wondered if we were there yet. Jackie and I laughed and told them “when it looks like heaven we will be there.” In a short time, they came running back saying enthusiastically “this is heaven!” I set up the tent and built a campfire while we all prepared to swim in the sparkling, clear Wallowa River. Jackie started dinner and we caught some trout while warming in the sundown. We watched deer, elk, beaver, and bear feeling like we were a part of their family. The sun began to set as we put on our Jackets and we ate roasted trout which tasted like lobster. No fishy taste in the high Wallowa’s. We picked some huckleberries and tasty mushrooms. Jackie made fried potatoes with asparagus. It was a feast. And of course, we topped it off with some wild s’mores which we wrestled down at Safeway in Wallowa. It was quite a feast. We sat out on a 100-ton piece of granite to watch the ‘once in a generation’ meteor shower. It was spectacular. We were so high in the mountains it seemed like we were looking at the sky through a great telescope. While we were sitting there by the fire on the granite one of my kids asked me – “Dad, how can heaven be any better than this?” I paused as we enjoyed the cracking fire. Then I said, “let’s try and imagine.”

This Sunday is Father’s Day - don’t you want to enjoy it as we worship the God of the Universe together with our families?

Your friend for the rest of my life,

Pastor Tim White

What an amazing time we are living through! Pandemic, International protests about our nation, racism and conflict between families over our response to the times. And yet we are the church trying to survive.

I have received a lot of good-natured criticism in the last two weeks for speaking out on this subject. And to make it more fun God has allowed critics from both the left and the right. Many times, it is life-long friends who are authentically standing for the truth as Christian Conservatives. And then it’s from their kids who are just as sincere pushing for change on the left. In the midst of this I have said repeatedly that black lives matter and how we are trying to live it out as a Christ-followers. As we work together, we are continuing to be the Family of Christ - the Church.

For those who haven’t listened to me in the last few weeks or read my post to 23,000 people on social media I say again … The situation right now in our country is one where a huge percentage of our population is hurting, and they don’t feel safe. It would be as if a wife comes to her husband and says, “I am hurting, and don’t feel safe,” and wants to know if she matters to her husband. And the husband says, “All wives matter.” Of course, all lives matter to Christ Followers but our neighbors and friends need to hear us say that black lives matter. So, we say it boldly. I know that makes many others feel insecure and you also matter to me. But it is time to speak out to a segment of our population that has endured 300 years of slavery and injustice. They need to feel a part of the family. What a joy it is to be criticized by both sides it gives a strange sense of balance to this unusual experience.

I care about you and I do enjoy hearing your convictions and I am battling as usual to help the church to “seek first the kingdom of God and his righteousness.” It’s not easy but it is adventuresome.

Your friend for the rest of my life,
Pastor Tim White

What sets we Christ-followers apart from the rest of the world?  There is an old worship song called “They Will Know We Are Christians by Our Love”, that encapsulates how we are to be different.  Here are the lyrics:

We are one in the Spirit, we are one in the Lord
We are one in the Spirit, we are one in the Lord
And we pray that our unity will one day be restored
And they'll know we are Christians by our love, by our love
Yeah they'll know we are Christians by our love

We will work with each other, we will work side by side
We will work with each other, we will work side by side
And we'll guard each man's dignity and save each man's pride
And they'll know we are Christians by our love, by our love
Yeah, they'll know we are Christians by our love.

In the midst of the pandemic, when tensions are heightened and many of us are not the best version of ourselves, we need to remember who we are: We are God’s children, Jesus followers, who demonstrate the Love of God in our homes and community.  This verse sums it up:

“Since God chose you to be the holy people he loves, you must clothe yourselves with tenderhearted mercy, kindness, humility, gentleness, and patience. 13 Make allowance for each other’s faults and forgive anyone who offends you. Remember, the Lord forgave you, so you must forgive others.  Above all, clothe yourselves with love, which binds us all together in perfect harmony. And let the peace that comes from Christ rule in your hearts. For as members of one body you are called to live in peace. And always be thankful.” Colossians 3:12-15, NLT

In Pastor Tim’s 2-week series called “By Our Love”, we will be inspired to put our love into action, culminating in a joyful event on June 14th, from 2 to 4pm.  We hope that EVERYONE who is a part of the church in any way will bring non-perishable food items to the church. It will be a joyous parade, as our staff greets you and load your donations up to be taken to local food banks, who are in great need.

I’m excited about this opportunity.  Please come and be a part of showing we are Christians by our love!

Hearts Always Open

by Pastor Linda Skinner

The hottest topic in the church world today is the topic of churches re-opening their buildings.  I was talking to my nephew in Rocklin, CA, who is on staff at a large mega-church in that area.  They are wrestling with how and when to start having in-person services.

He and I both agreed that it was really unfair for people to talk about the church being closed.  Both of our churches only closed their buildings, but the ministries continued in whatever way we had available to us to do those ministries.  Our staffs have gone to hospitals and prayed with people (when we are allowed to do so) and (when not allowed to be in person), we prayed over the phone with them.  We’ve never missed a week of having a worship service, and those online services are reaching a broader congregation than we ever had in our buildings. 

At Washington Cathedral, most of our TLC groups starting meeting right away on Zoom, Teams or Go-to-Meeting.  As a staff, we’ve been doing counseling appointments and follow up phone calls to our entire mailing list.  Even our choir has been meeting weekly via Zoom to practice our songs, encourage and support one another.  The church is open even though the building is closed.  My nephew said he’s ministering to his Junior High groups via Zoom almost every night.  The church may have to go underground, online virtual or stealth, but it will never go away.  We are the Bride of Christ and our work will only be done when He comes to end it.  So please, never for a moment think that the church is closed.

At some point we are looking forward to opening up the building for people to come back together in fellowship.  However, we are only going to do so when we are allowed to do it, and it works for the health and safety of our congregation and staff.  Just this week, our governor announced that those counties who are going to Phase 2 next week, can gather again when some very strict rules and protocols are in place.  (We are in King County and our county has not been released to go to Phase 2 and no date has yet been given to us.)  However, we know that guidelines tell us our initial limit will be 50 people in the sanctuary.  So, how and when we do that we have still to ascertain.

One recent article said it so well. It is the same discussion Pastor Tim has had with us over the past weeks as a staff.   We know we have differing opinions in our congregation about when and how we should make the steps to open the doors of the building.  We also know that more important than anything else is that our “hearts for one another are always open” even if we don’t like or agree with what is happening. This point was made so well in the article that I’ve given you a brief recap of the main points of that article:

“Over the course of the last eight weeks, I have had a ton of conversations with pastors who are wrestling through what reopening their building looks like. In some ways, the conversations are encouraging: pastors are leaning into the hard work and thinking well through this process. In other ways, these calls are heartbreaking: the divided state of our nation has forced pastors into a no-win situation where regardless of what they decide, someone will let them know how stupid they are being.

Church, we are better than this.

We have three types of people right now: red light people are not ready to go back out, yellow light people are being cautious, and green light people have been back to normal for weeks. The Church needs to be better than anything I have heard so far:

"We are not a green, yellow or red light church. We are a Traffic Light Church with all lights on. We should honor one another's opinions."

Let that sink in. 

Regardless of when we go back, I am pretty convinced that God cares more about how we go back, how we treat people as we think through this, and how we care for those whose opinions differ from ours.”

Please pray for our staff and our leadership as we prayerfully consider how and when we begin in-person worship.  It is apparent it will be phased in very slowly, but we are committed to continuing to provide online options for those who cannot meet in person.  It is also, apparent, that it will be some time before we can have the kind of in-person fellowship we had before this pandemic.  So, lets vow to be patient with one another and with ourselves.

Blessings to all,

Pastor Linda

Memorial Day Memories

by Pastor Tim White

I feel like I had a magical childhood. Many of my summers were spent at a log cabin along the Wallowa River at the head waters of Wallowa Lake. With my grandparents watching us, we ran through the forest, swam in the lake, and fished in the river. One summer we discovered grandpa’s chest in the loft. We opened it and it was full of treasures -- keepsakes from WWI, WWII, and the Korean War including a Marine dress hat, KA-BAR knife, medals, and other memorabilia. We were not supposed to open that chest -- which made it even more magical to opening and handling all the family treasures. When we were caught, Grandpa sat us down and told us stories of the family patriotism that was beyond politics. They were stories from the heart. In those days, Memorial Day meant something. We would drive over to Eagle Valley and walk among the graves, hearing stories of the Saunders and decorating our relative’s graves. Grandpa Saunders would have a shot of whiskey and pour out a drink for his cousin. We thanked God for all of our family members and their role in preserving liberty in our nation. The right to choose and the right to dream, the right to equality and the right to faith. We learned that all these rights in the real world were only possibilities to be fought for. Make your Memorial Day memorable in 2020.

Your friend for the rest of my life,

Pastor Tim White

PS: Please join us for worship this Sunday at 10:30 am for our streaming service on Facebook, YouTube, or on our website or app. We’ll have a special Memorial Day prayer by Pastor David, a special musical guest Divine Cook, great worship with Eliot and Rhonda. I will be sharing with you a very important key to successful marriages and relationships — humor.

The Great Adventure

By Pastor Linda

On April 25th in the midst of “Stay Home Stay Safe” the Skinner’s celebrated their 50th anniversary. When my dad walked me down the aisle at Fair Oaks Presbyterian Church on that Saturday evening, I was 21 years old and I had not even a small inkling of what was in my future. I had all sorts of goals and dreams, but my mom always told me that sometimes God gets a good laugh at how small our thinking can be. I do believe God was chuckling and thinking – “Just you two wait, I’m taking you on the adventure that is beyond anything you could begin to imagine.” I say that because He does know how it all turns out, and it has been a great adventure. This small-town California chicken rancher’s daughter had no idea of living in Washington, D.C.; Philadelphia, PA; New York City, NY; Los Angeles, CA; Denver, CO; and finally settling down in Seattle, WA. Rich had his degree in Broadcast Journalism and who would have thought he’d end up in the Travel industry and we would be globe trotters going to all parts of this big beautiful world. Whether it was London, Paris, Rome, Dublin, Cambodia, Brazil or Spain, I was totally overwhelmed by God’s great creation. Believe me, we had our tough moments in our marriage. We had our disappointments and our frustrations with each other (and we still do). It was at about year 7 of our 50 years, that we made a renewed commitment to Jesus Christ. With that, for us, came a renewed commitment to each other. That was truly when the Adventure became Great. What a joy it has been to explore this world and this life with a person you deeply love and respect.

This week Pastor Tim is launching a new series on “Growing Marriage.” Marriage is not easy but boy is it worth, as they say, the “blood, sweat and tears” it takes to grow it. You would think at 50 years we’d either be tired of one another or have it all worked out. The truth is it takes working on it every day and that is what makes the Adventure Great. Invite your family and friends to join in this Sunday at 10:30 am on Facebook Live, our website or App, or Youtube. You’ll be glad you invited them. We hope to see you there (virtually, of course).

Love & blessings, Pastor Linda

Can a good mother be an angel?

by Pastor Tim White

The study of angels is a complex and controversial area of theology. Catholics, Lutherans, Jewish, Muslim, Pentecostals and Orthodox all have differing views of angels. I find all of them intriguing.  But the hands-down best book on Angels that I have read on the subject is “Angels” by Billy Graham.  This book is simplified, straight-forward, humble and helpful, plus it has stood the test of time. Angels are technically a separate being from humans. But they are literally messengers of God. And so many times in Scripture they are not unlike humans. When Phillip is guided by an angel to go south it seems almost a human messenger of God. When Abraham is visited by three angels, they appear as human. And all of us have stories of babies or seniors or strangers or loved ones who serve as messengers from God to our lives.

Of course, in this way good moms are messengers from God. Every time my mom speaks to me it is as a prophet speaking truth and grace into my life. Many of you know exactly what I am talking about. Why don’t you invite your mom or your family to watch our worship this Sunday at 10:30? My mom will be watching, and God is going to bless us.

Your friend always,

Pastor Tim White