St. Luke's Lutheran Church

St. Luke's Lutheran Church Join us for worship Sunday mornings at 9:00 a.m.

03/08/2025

SELINSGROVE — In the 2 1/2 years since fleeing their war-torn home in Odesa, Ukraine, Serhii and Nadiia Ovsova bought a house in Selinsgrove, started a new business and expanded

01/07/2024

Due to the weather, worship has been canceled for tomorrow, January 7th.

11/23/2021

Our Christmas Eve Candlelight service will be held at 7:00 PM. We will do the full sung liturgy. Because of a potentially higher attendance than on Sunday mornings, Masks will be highly suggested and encouraged.

Get vaccinated 🙂
05/03/2021

Get vaccinated 🙂

As Lutherans we believe that science and religion come from the same source and that source is God. Religion and science are both ways of knowing God’s creat...

https://youtu.be/BFZ-5_jCFGw
04/17/2021

https://youtu.be/BFZ-5_jCFGw

“The crucifixion was an act of violence meant to silence Jesus and his gospel of liberation and hope.” After witnessing acts of violence this week, particula...

From grief to joy
03/30/2021

From grief to joy

Imagine what it must have been like on that first Easter morning when there wasn't the knowledge of the resurrection. When, instead, it was all about death a...

In this time of world-wide crisis, congregations throughout this church are not able to gather for worship as the body o...
02/13/2021

In this time of world-wide crisis, congregations throughout this church are not able to gather for worship as the body of Christ. While we cannot be together in person, we can hear the word of God and hold each other in prayer. We offer this brief resource as an aid for prayer in the home.

Worship in the Home Ash Wednesday February 17, 2021 In this time of world-wide crisis, congregations throughout this church are not able to gather for worship as the body of Christ. While you cannot be together in person, we can hear the word of God and hold each other in prayer. We offer this brief...

https://youtu.be/QLie5YiRydw
01/06/2021

https://youtu.be/QLie5YiRydw

________________________________________________________________________________The Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA) is one of the largest Chris...

The room was spare and dimly lit. We sat on folding chairs in a circle—young Honduranwomen and some of us from the ELCA....
12/22/2020

The room was spare and dimly lit. We sat on folding chairs in a circle—young Honduran
women and some of us from the ELCA. We had come to Honduras to observe the work of
AMMPARO (Accompanying Migrant Minors with Protection, Advocacy, Representation and
Opportunities). This is the ELCA’s strategy to help youth who have been forced to flee
their home countries because of violence, abuse, extortion by gangs and extreme poverty.
Amparo is the Spanish word for shelter or refuge.
In this case, AMMPARO partnered with the Lutheran World Federation and the Mennonites to resettle returned migrants—
those who had tried to seek asylum in the United States but had failed or had been denied and deported back to Honduras.
One by one they told us their stories of fear and desperation. Not a one undertook the long and dangerous trek north on
a whim. They told us about the abuse they had suffered, about family members who had been killed by gangs, about the
inability to make a living because of the extortion by organized crime. They talked about the bitter sadness of leaving
home and family, and the uncertainty of the future.
I remember one young woman in particular. She was pregnant when she tried to migrate to the United States. She had the
baby somewhere along the way. She was far from home, mostly alone and desperately wanted her mother to be with her.
None of this is what she had hoped for when she was growing up. Circumstances beyond her control had forced her into
this new and strange existence. She and her baby were now back in Honduras—but not at home. Home was too dangerous.
Remember last Christmas? Remember all of the preparations, the travel to be with family? Remember the holy beauty of
the Christmas Eve liturgy and receiving Christ’s grace and forgiveness at his table? The shopping and Christmas caroling?
The in-person gatherings? All that has changed.
The pandemic hasn’t forced us from our homes but into our homes, sheltering in place, isolated. Not together, but
physically distanced. Not gathered with family and friends, but forced apart because of the threat of infection. Forced by
circumstances beyond our control into this strange existence. Oh, there will be Christmas carols piped into grocery stores
and other essential services, but they will be painful reminders of how life used to be.
We are reminded of the experience of the exiles in Babylon: “By the rivers of Babylon—there we sat down and there we
wept when we remembered Zion. On the willows there we hung up our harps. For there our captives asked us for songs,
and our tormentors asked for mirth, saying, ‘Sing us one of the songs of Zion!’ How could we sing the Lord’s song in a
foreign land” (Psalm 137)?
I told the young Honduran woman about another young woman who was forced to leave home because of a government
decree. She, too, was pregnant and made a long and difficult journey. She, too, was far from home and without her mother
when the baby came. She had to find shelter wherever she could. This wasn’t what she had hoped for when she was
growing up. Circumstances beyond her control had forced her into this new existence.
That young woman was Mary and the child was Jesus. Precisely in our distress, in our dislocation, the Lord shows up.
Emmanuel—God with us—makes his home in the very places we find foreign or isolating. The young Honduran woman,
and all of us, can find hope because of the birth of Mary’s child. There is no God-forsaken place and we are never alone—
not in hospital rooms, or sheltering in place, or Zoom calls or on dangerous roads.
Many of us will not be physically home for Christmas, but we are truly home in Christ.

Address

501 Catawissa Avenue
Sunbury, PA
17801

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 3pm
Tuesday 9am - 3pm
Friday 9am - 12:30pm

Website

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