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| The First Snow of Winter, December 14, 2025 |
“Time moves
slowly but passes quickly.” These words by Alice Walker are ever so prescient
the older I become. As another year ends, and as the first snow of winter has come
and gone, I am astonished by the passage of time.
A few years ago, I boxed up my
dad’s papers from two old filing cabinets in the garage of the house he and my
mom shared during the final fifteen years of his life. In them were notes of
all my dad’s sermons from fifty years of ministry as a Lutheran pastor, several
folders of correspondence, news clippings that captured his attention, and a
collection of his letters to the editor that were published in the local
newspaper in Hendersonville, North Carolina, where my parents retired in the
summer of 1991.
I did not get around to looking
through these files until the day after Christmas, when my attention was immediately
drawn to several file folders that covered the years 1997 to 2008. My
dad apparently saved a copy of every letter he wrote and received during that
time frame. I imagine my dad sitting in his study for two hours each morning,
taking the time to draft just the right note of thanks, congratulations, friendly
advice, concern for one’s loss, or a simple note to say “I was thinking of you
recently” followed by three or four paragraphs of memories, updates, and encouragement.
While looking through these
files, it occurred to me that letter writing is a lost art. Entire books have
been written about the approximately one thousand letters that John and Abigail
Adams shared between them during their lifetimes, letters that expressed their
love for each other and documented the founding of a new country. The famous correspondence
between Jefferson and Adams during the final years of their lives from 1812 to
1826 allowed them to discuss the unfinished business between them and to
explain how and why they came to fundamentally different conclusions about the
meaning of the American Revolution. Great letter writers in history also included,
among others, Voltaire, Charles Darwin, Winston Churchill, Queen Victoria, and Emily
Dickinson.
Martin Luther King Jr.’s “Letter from Birmingham Jail” is one of the most impactful letters in American
history. In it, he explained why civil disobedience and nonviolent
demonstrations were so important to social and political progress in the
movement for racial equality. It also explained his frustrations with the
moderate white clergy who were sympathetic to the cause of integration but
unwilling to risk action. And it expressed King’s “hope that the dark clouds of
racial prejudice will soon pass away and the deep fog of misunderstanding will
be lifted from our fear-drenched communities and in some not too distant
tomorrow the radiant stars of love and brotherhood will shine over our great
nation with all of their scintillating beauty.” Fifteen months later, the Civil
Rights Act of 1964 became law.
I do not suggest that my dad’s
letter writing skill was equivalent to any of the historic figures cited above,
but he took it seriously. In reading these letters, I gained insight into his
thinking, his friendships, and the care and concern he had for so many people.
Each letter he authored provides a glimpse of his extraordinary outreach to the
people he knew and touched throughout his life.
The letters included
correspondence with his close confidants—the Lutheran pastors I met during my
high school years, when my dad was Bishop of the New Jersey Lutheran Synod. These
letters brought back memories of the people and places of my youth, meaningful conversations
about life, social concerns, and laughter. My dad laughed with special ease
when he was around his close friends and colleagues, who all made it a point to
include me and express genuine interest in me as a person. Today, sadly, so
many of these people, including my dad, are no longer alive. But their impact
on my life and development as a young man searching for guidance and answers to
life’s big questions stuck with me over time.
Many of my dad’s letters are
notes of thanks and encouragement, sent to people he had known over the years. It
is incredible, really, to see how thoughtful and careful he was with each
letter. With few exceptions, all were typed, single-spaced, filling most of the
page and sometimes more. In each letter, he made sure to uplift the other
person, impart his individual touch, and express his admiration for them.
I found a few letters to people my
dad met through me and, until now, I did not know he had ever independently
corresponded with them. One such letter expressed gratitude to a young woman who
had encouraged me to serve on the Board of the service organization she
directed. “You were indeed a major part in [Mark’s] motivation to serve in this
important way during the years he lived and worked in Washington. Thanks for
being that kind of ‘witness’ to him.”
Other letters discussed issues of
social and political importance, such as one he wrote in September 2008 to the
then Bishop of the Virginia Lutheran Synod: “This is just a quick note to
express my personal gratitude to you for your comments which I read on the ELCA
News Service last evening—as part of the ‘fighting poverty’ prayer vigil on the
Capitol steps.” Attached to the letter was an article quoting the Bishop’s
remarks as part of an interfaith coalition of Jewish, Muslim, and Christian
leaders calling on members of Congress to address poverty through enhanced
funding for food stamps, unemployment insurance, child support enforcement,
health care, and home energy assistance. My dad thanked him and said he had “needed
to hear some prophetic words from a bishop whom I know and respect.” Many letters
to others were similar expressions of thanks and gratitude for acts of service
and “witness” to people in need.
In the late 1990s, like many mainline
Protestant denominations in the United States, the Lutheran Church debated
resolutions that proposed making the church community more open and inclusive
to the LGBTQ community, and which eventually moved the Church to ordaining
openly gay and lesbian pastors and allowing clergy to perform gay marriages. My
dad heartily endorsed these resolutions, which caused at least three close
friends to consider leaving the church. One of these friends, who my dad had
known since they attended seminary together in the early 1950s, told my dad he
could not be friends with anyone who disagreed with him on this issue. In a
series of heart-felt letters to this person, my dad passionately defended the
necessity of the resolutions, shared deeply painful stories of two young men he
had counseled over the years who later committed suicide, in part due to their
inability to reconcile traditional church teachings with their sexual
orientation. In one case, my dad painfully acknowledged that he had mishandled
his counseling of the young man (in the early 1960s) and he blamed society’s
and the Church’s lack of compassion and misunderstanding of sexual orientation
for much of the suffering experienced by the LBGTQ community. He explained that he came to more
fully understand that one’s sexual orientation is pre-ordained and the application
of outdated biblical precepts was profoundly contrary to God’s love,
compassion, and understanding of all humanity. I am proud of my dad’s compassionate
advocacy for a more welcoming and inclusive church community and his
willingness to risk long-standing friendships over such a critical issue years
before the Lutheran Church and society fully evolved on the issue.
My dad also was a prolific writer
of letters to the editor, in which he sometimes praised and frequently
criticized an opinion expressed in the Op-Ed section of his local paper. The
theme underlying most of these letters was anger at insensitivity, injustice,
and self-righteousness, a genuine concern for humanity, and a lifelong pastor’s
frustration with people misunderstanding what Christian witness is all about, especially
in the Bible Belt South.
In one such letter, he responded
to a previous letter writer who claimed that “the choice between rich and poor
is ours for the making” and that those who “choose to be poor” deserve the
consequences they suffer. My dad would have none of it:
Can you imagine how those folks on the
lowest end of the economic scale feel when they read that kind of ideological
trash? Can you imagine how single mothers, working a 40- or 50-hour week at
minimum wage, struggling to pay for the children’s day care … and living in substandard
housing, must have felt when they read [that letter] in the Sunday newspaper?
What about the elderly living only on Social Security, struggling to pay rent
and medical bills? Imagine how the hardworking family breadwinners, also earning
just above minimum wage, wondering how they will pay the rent, feed their
family, and gas up the car to get to work, must have felt in reaching such an
insensitive letter?
God forgive us for our
self-righteousness in the midst of our plenty. …
On another occasion, my dad wrote
in response to a heartfelt commentary from one of the paper’s regular
columnists, who had courageously revealed his struggle with alcoholism. In a
letter praising the columnist that also reflected Dad’s frustrations with those
who had been critical of him, my dad wrote:
This letter is to express thanks to
[Stephen Black] for sharing, with both his admirers and his critics, his
struggle with alcoholism over these many years. He has truly shared with the
readers of the Times-News the story of God’s loving grace in a much more
convincing way than all of the nasty and self-righteous letters (often with
biblical quotes totally out of context) which often are printed in the
“Letters” section. He understands what it means to have been “through the
valley of the shadow of death”, and his expressions of gratitude to God, to his
family, to the medical community who ministered to him, and to his good friends
who stuck by him, are models of thanksgiving which all of us can imitate.
…Stick it to us, Steve, when we get too
pompous, too uncaring about our neighbors who may be different than we are, too
self-satisfied, too nasty or unloving toward those less fortunate than we. …
Please keep those columns coming!
The letters I most enjoyed,
however, were the personal ones that displayed my dad’s sense of humor. Upon
learning in May 2008 that his longtime friend and colleague, the Rev. Dr. Glenn
Rudisill, was about to celebrate his 90th birthday, my dad wrote:
Dear Glenn:
My mother taught me just a few years
ago that I had to treat my elders with respect. While I have never known anyone
quite as old as you are, this letter will be my attempt to communicate with the
elderly.
Actually, you are an amazing guy! … My
hope is that, thirty years from now, when I turn 90, I will be half as sharp as
you are.
Dad was two months shy of his 80th birthday when he wrote this. Of course, my dad spent the remainder of that
letter reminiscing and praising his good friend’s life, work, and “magnificent
family” who reflected his “love, graciousness and commitment,” adding that Glenn
had “been a marvelous colleague."
In an August 2008 letter to the
Rev. Dr. Herluf Jensen, an accomplished theologian, pastor, and prophetic
leader of the church during the volatile 1970s and 1980s, my dad wrote to
congratulate him on the 40th anniversary of his ordination. In prior
years, Jensen succeeded my dad, first as pastor of a church in Moorestown, New
Jersey, and later as Bishop of the New Jersey Synod. The letter reminisced about
their four decades of mutual counsel and respect, and recalled, with a tinge of
pastoral humor:
Following my resignation as [Bishop] of
the synod, what a delight it was for me to chair that meeting when you were
elected to be my successor again! When I escorted you to the rostrum amidst a
standing ovation, you asked me: “What do I do now?” My response was “Pray!”
Although he was a serious and highly
respected theologian, I imagine Jensen laughed when he read that.
A letter from my dad to Rev. John
Steinbruck in March 1997 also caught my attention. I have previously written
about Steinbruck’s life and theology (here and here). During his
time as senior pastor of Luther Place Church in Washington, D.C., Steinbruck
and his wife Erna established the N Street Village, a four-story complex of
shelters and clinics that offers food, clothing, housing, medical care, and
social and mental health services to homeless women and their children. Dad
wrote to congratulate Steinbruck on his impending retirement and to express
gratitude for Steinbruck’s life of service on behalf of the most vulnerable
members of society.
Your ministry … has been a gift for
which we are all thankful. Whether you realize it or not, you have been one of
my “heroes” in ministry. Indeed, led by God’s Spirit, you took what could have
been an average urban congregation and enabled it to become a servant people in
a city which has a reputation for taking itself too seriously. While I know
that you will shy away from such praise, you need to know of [my] gratitude for
the major role which you played in making this all happen.
There are so many more examples of letters and notes my dad saved that incorporated his experiences, concerns, and thankfulness for the people he had the opportunity to know over his 86 years of life. All his letters reflected his love for humanity, his caring nature, and his genuine interest in everyone to whom he wrote. I am thankful that he saved these letters, for they represent the memories, prayers, and laughter that filled my dad’s life. It is truly a gift to have them.
The digital age is upon us, and we have lost the special art of letter writing that more thoughtfully documents our friendships, appreciation, and concerns over our lifetimes. As we end one year and begin a new one, my wish to all of you is to enjoy life in all its dimensions. Let your friends and family know how much you care for them in written letters. Someday in the not-too-distant future, absent our letters, writings, and photographs, we will exist only in the memories of the people we have known and touched along the way. Peace to all and happy new year!
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| Edwin L. Ehlers circa 1990, McLean, Virginia |


Mark, thank you so much for sharing this. I loved your dad. I know our parents were very close. Linda and your mom were some of the first people to greet me when my parents adopted me. I’m sure one of his letters went to Lutheran Social Services when they completed their adoption process.
ReplyDeleteCarol Buck
DeleteThank you Carol. My parents were extremely fond of you and your parents. Have a joyous and peaceful new year.
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