Eric Jurmu Rockford seurakunnasta Minnesotasta palveli Tukholmassa järjestetyissä Ruotsin Suviseuroissa. Eric Jurmu from Rockford congregation in Minnesota served at the Swedish Summer Services in Stockholm.
Pauliina Jensen
Eric Jurmu Rockford seurakunnasta Minnesotasta palveli Tukholmassa järjestetyissä Ruotsin Suviseuroissa. Eric Jurmu from Rockford congregation in Minnesota served at the Swedish Summer Services in Stockholm.
Pauliina Jensen
It is Saturday evening and communion service is about to begin in the beautiful German Church in Stockholm’s Old Town. Eric Jurmu, who serves as minister in the Rockford congregation in Minnesota, is due to assist during the Holy Communion. He is sitting in the front part of the church, waiting for the service to begin.
Our Opisto student completed his year Jämsä Opisto last spring. He was our first child to attend Opisto. With this minimal parental experience, I am happy to recommend Opisto to every young person.
Many people close to us may experience loneliness, though we may not even be aware of it. What could we do if we find that someone is struggling with loneliness? We can invite them over for a visit, a cup of coffee or sauna or suggest that they join a hobby group. It is often enough just to recognize them by greeting or smiling. People feel good when they are seen and spoken to.
I am sitting in the sheep barn, admiring the graceful skipping and bouncing of our little lambs. They are only a few days old, but they already follow their dams outside and run in and out of the barn as if playing tag. They will have friends to play with, because 20 of the lambs born this year are still alive.
My son poured out his mind: ”You never gave me a proper model of man. You cannot fix cars. You cannot build houses. You do not hunt, and you do not even have a snowmobile.” I tried to defend myself: ”But you know, I have written a couple of poems.” I had considered myself a moderately good father. My biggest concern had been my minimal contribution to household work. I had to travel for work, and I had been elected to some positions of trust, so the responsibility for the home often fell on my wife.
Often in discussions, presentations and speeches we are encouraged to confess our faith openly. That may seem easy when we sit among believers, but it is not so easy in real everyday life. We are afraid of how other people will react if we tell them about our faith.
When I think about the role of photographs in my family home, it seems they were part of our everyday life. Compared to the present time, families were less mobile and often lived in the same locality for a long time. When relatives from further away came to visit, old photos were an important topic of discussion.
We are told there is a lot of perfection around us. Advertisements encourage us to strive toward perfection. Media give instruct us on how to succeed perfectly well in various actions: ”This is the way to cook a perfect meal, set your table perfectly, fold your clean laundry, wash and polish your car, decorate your living-room, do your gardening, make coffee, and so on.” We can be perfect in many activities.
A few days ago I was biking around the town. There is nothing special about biking, but it was special that I was not wearing my earpods. I was only listening to my own thoughts and things I could hear around me. I heard so much birdsong that I did not even hope for anything more to listen to.
My memories often go back to the Christmas 30 years ago. We were expecting our third child, who was due to be born in about a month. I had just had a prenatal checkup, and everything seemed fine. On St. Stephen’s Day I began to think something might be wrong, and a doctor referred me to hospital. After some examinations it turned out our baby had died. I remained in hospital overnight, and my husband went home to see about our children.
In the morning it seemed like a perfectly ordinary day. I do not even remember how ordinary. Now, close to 20 years later, I feel I can think back to it and reminisce.
People are happy about many different things. Work is one thing that makes them happy and content. Work is more than just a source of income. It has multiple meanings to all of us.
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