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St. James Lutheran Church - Burnsville, MN

3650 Williams Drive
Burnsville, MN, 55337
952-890-4534

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St. James Lutheran Church - Burnsville, MN

  • Home
  • About St. James
    • Who We Are
    • Leadership
    • Contact us
    • St. James Early Education Center / Preschool
  • Worship
    • About Worship
    • Livestream
    • Weekly Faith Formation
  • Our Ministries
    • Great Give Away
    • Ministries
    • Volunteer Opportunities
    • Calendar
    • Weekly Faith Formation
    • Idunda, Tanzania
  • Give
    • Donate Online
    • Make My Intent

July 2—Week 5: Praying for In(ter)dependence Days

July 1, 2025 Kjirsten Pearson

Week 5: Praying for In(ter)dependence Days

Parades and picnics in the park. Fireworks and festivities with friends. Lake lounging and late nights. No matter how you observe the Fourth of July, it is a day of celebration commemorating the birth of our nation, the day of independence.

As Americans, we assert our independence not only on the Fourth of July, but on every day of the year. We love our freedom and independence. It guides our laws, our actions, and our beliefs. And yet, we are also people of faith. We depend on God’s grace, and we mutually rely on one another.

We are both free and bound.

As an American and as a some-what free spirit myself, I have struggled with interdependence. I want the freedom to be spontaneous. I want the freedom to make my own choices. But as it turns out, the freedom I want is not what I need. I need to be connected. God did not create us to be independent. We are created to be interdependent with God, with creation, and with one another.

The practice of Centering Prayer has helped deepen my dependence on God. By surrendering to God’s presence and action within me, I am becoming freed from my ego, connected to God, and opened to others.

We have a unique opportunity as dual citizens of both heaven and earth. While we live in a country that is quick to assert personal independence, we can choose to submit to God, mutually care for our neighbors and live out our interdependence in love on July 4th and every day.

Read this: Ephesians 2:13-22 and Philippians 2:3-11

Try this: Practice Centering Prayer to increase your capacity to listen to God’s will and depend on him. Download the Centering Prayer App from Contemplative Outreach for a step-by-step guide or click here.

Be Curious: Do you know someone who depends deeply on God? Ask them how they have experienced deeper faith. Ask them how they sustain their faith.

Pray: Pray for members of the armed forces of the United States of America. Give thanks for the gift of freedom. Ask God to increase dependence in him and interdependence with one another.

June 25—Week 4: Holy Rest in a Hurried World

June 24, 2025 Kjirsten Pearson

Week 4: Holy Rest in a Hurried World

When I am asked how I am doing, I often respond, “good—busy, but good.” Is this the same good that God declares when he made heaven and earth? God did not create us to be busy. God created us to worship him, to care for the earth, to love one another, and to rest.

From the very beginning, rest is holy. After creating the world, God rested (Genesis 2:2–3). Not from exhaustion, but to set a rhythm: labor and love, work and wonder, action and pause.

Jesus, too, honored rest. He withdrew to pray, took naps in storms, and moved at a pace attentive to God. His invitation still stands: “Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest” (Matthew 11:28).

In a world that demands busyness and rewards exhaustion, rest can feel like a guilty pleasure. But in the Christian life, rest is not only necessary—it is sacred. It is a command, a gift, and for many, an act of resistance.

Black theologians remind us that rest is not just personal—it’s political and spiritual. Theologian Howard Thurman once said, “There must be a place in the spirit where the energies of life can be re-ordered and redirected.”

That place is found in Sabbath rest, in Juneteenth joy, in moments where we dare to believe that we are beloved by God—not for what we do, but for who we are.

Last week, we marked Juneteenth, a day we remember the delayed freedom of enslaved Black Americans in Galveston, Texas—finally informed of their emancipation two and a half years after the Emancipation Proclamation. Juneteenth is not just a historical commemoration—it is a call to rest in the knowledge that true liberation includes the right to rest, to heal, to rejoice.

So this week, rest. Rest in your body. Rest in your God. As we celebrate freedom hard-won and still unfolding, let us claim rest as a practice of faith and a promise of God’s kingdom.

Read this: Genesis 1-2:4

Try this: Take a nap. Create something for no reason, no purpose other than creating (water color, draw, play an instrument). Check out this video by Julian Reid, theologian and musician who created Notes of Rest.

Be Curious: What keeps you from resting from work? What would resting in God look like for you? Ask how others find rest.

Pray: Pray for God to show you how to practice rest in your life. Pray for those who are overworked and those who don’t have enough work.

 

June 18—Week 3: Called to Community in a Time of Violence

June 17, 2025 Kjirsten Pearson

Week 3: Called to Community in a Time of Violence

Family, friends, and neighbors gathered at the McLellan’s home

In the wake of the tragic shooting of Minnesota Representative Melissa Hortman and Senator John Hoffman, our hearts are heavy. Violence has struck close to home, and it’s natural to feel fear, anger, or despair. It is tempting in times like these to retreat—to withdraw into safe spaces, shut our doors, and guard our hearts. But as followers of Christ and members of the ELCA, we are called to something deeper than fear. We are called to community.

In Acts 2:42, we are given a picture of the early church in uncertain and dangerous times:

"They devoted themselves to the apostles’ teaching and fellowship, to the breaking of bread and the prayers."

The early Christians didn’t retreat when the world shook around them. They leaned in. They listened. They prayed. They broke bread together. They practiced a radical kind of hope that lives in shared life.

This is our calling, too.

Christian community is not just about being together in easy times—it’s about standing with one another when the world grows dark. In the face of violence, we respond not with vengeance or bitterness, but with love, courage, and unity. Christian unity doesn’t erase grief, but it transforms it. When we gather at the table, stories are shared, burdens are carried, and Christ is known among us.

Family, friends, and neighbors gathered at the McLellan’s home

Let us be that kind of church—faithful, present, and grounded in hope.

Yours in Christ,
Pastor Jenny McLellan

Read this: Acts 2:43-47 and 2 Corinthians 1:3-4

Try this: Write letters of encouragement to your representatives. Start a small group—it can be anything: dog walking, book club, gaming, breakfast club, invite a friend to volunteer with you—anything that creates community shaped by the love of Christ.

Be Curious: Look around your home. Who are your neighbors, literally? Who lives next door? Across the street? Behind you? Do you know their name (first and last)? Do you know what their interests are? How about their hopes and fears? 

Pray: Pray for our leaders and for all who are hurting.

June 11—Week 2: Vacation from Work, not from Worship

June 10, 2025 Kjirsten Pearson

Week 2: Vacation from Work, not from Worship

All Saints Episcopal Church, Kapaʻa, HI

When I was 16, my family went on vacation in Kauai. Every time we drove into town, we passed a small church with a red door and welcoming sidewalk lined with palm trees. I asked my parents if we could go to the cute church on Sunday. They said we could go to church, but it would be a Lutheran church (not the cute Episcopal church). Even though I didn’t get to walk through the cute red door, I got to worship in my Lutheran tradition with the same liturgy, but it was also different. People wore Hawaiian shirts and flip flops instead of ties and dress shoes. They dipped their bread in the common cup instead of receiving communion in little plastic cups. Then on the way out, I saw pictures on the bulletin board from the ELCA Youth Gathering in Atlanta earlier that summer. I was there too! To think, I may have been sitting in the same row in the arena or served in the same neighborhood as these Lutherans in Hawaii and we lived two time zones apart. By worshiping on vacation, I came to see the people in Kauai as my peers and siblings in Christ, not just a place to serve me as I “get away.” 

We all need to take a break. We are not created to work non-stop. We are created to worship God and be in relationship with our Creator, our neighbors, and the world. When you take a break and head on vacation this summer, see the break as an opportunity to explore worship in a new place with a different community of believers.

Read this: Exodus 3:7-10 and Exodus 8:1

Try this: Worship some place new. Try informal worship outside or formal worship on a festival day. Explore other Christian denominations or another ELCA Lutheran church. Find a ELCA church here. Even if you aren’t going on vacation, you can try a different worship experience right in your city. Ask a friend if you can go to church with them (then invite them to come with you!) Don’t forget an offering to share.

Be Curious: What similarities and differences do you notice? What does this worship say about who God is?

Pray: Pray for the people, leaders, and ministries of the church you visited.

June 4—Week 1: Looking for God’s Fingerprints

June 2, 2025 Kjirsten Pearson

Week 1: Looking for God’s Fingerprints

Nature sightings at St. James

God’s beauty, design, creativity, and diversity is all around us. When was the last time you stopped to notice God’s beauty in nature? You don’t have to travel far to experience God. I stepped out of the office today and started looking around and listening.

I noticed the curling frond of an Ostrich Fern. I noticed a tall flower that looked like afirework (after googling, I learned it is a “Star of Persia”). I noticed bird calls from Red-winged Blackbirds, American Goldfinches, House Sparrows, and Black-capped Chickadees. I noticed the fragrant lilacs inviting pollinators to drink. I also noticed the lilacs are planted near the entrance of our sanctuary and I began to imagine lilacs as greeters of the church, inviting thirsty people to receive the nectar of God’s word.

What a beautiful world God has made! I can see his fingerprints everywhere: the exquisite attention to detail, the growing and dying and living together in interdependence. God is good! This is what I noticed in my 7-minute walk around our church parking lot.

Where have you noticed God’s fingerprints lately? Go out and explore today.

Read this: Psalm 8 and Proverbs 8:22-31.

Try this: Go outside. Look for 5 things you haven’t noticed before. It could be something you see, hear, feel, or smell. Take a picture or try to describe what you notice. Look it up with Google lens or use a nature app like Merlin (bird identification app.)

Be Curious: What can you compare it to? How do you notice God in this piece of God’s creation? What does it tell you about who God is?

Pray: Tell God what you noticed. Invite God to continue to reveal himself through nature and cultivate curiosity in you.

May 28, 2025

May 21, 2025 Kjirsten Pearson

Introducing Summer Series: Exploring Faith

No matter where you are this summer, God is there.

God is there playing in lake waters and blowing over fields. God is there giving rest to tired bodies. God is there working to redeem our hurting world.

This summer, my hope for you is that you may grow closer to God and more open toward others by exploring faith practices. Each week I will offer a brief introduction to a Christian faith topic and a challenge for you to try out and explore further.

Whether you have a spiritual routine or are just starting, I invite you to become curious this summer. Try out the challenges I recommend. Share it with your family and friends. Tell me what you discover about yourself and God and others.

No matter where you are this summer, God is there calling you to join him through play, rest, and the work of God’s kingdom.

Yours in Christ,

Pastor Jenny