Sunday, August 3, 2025

Amanda Scott
Senior Warden
Dear People of St Thomas,
Summer brings so many memories of the hope and promise of grand adventures, when you’re carefree and have no responsibilities. When I was in elementary school, my friends and I would wander about the neighborhood, feral, without boundaries, drinking from the hose, living off of freeze pops, and making sure we were home by 8:00. There was no real structure and days could be wiled away. When I was a teenager, I read Stephen King novels borrowed from the library, watched Baywatch, and made homemade caramel popcorn when a new miniseries was on ABC, CBS, or NBC in between my time working the drive-thru at the local McDonald’s. My brothers and I were raised by our mom and grandmother. Money was tight and dreams of fancy summer vacations were just that - dreams. We worked, we ate at the dinner table each night, and watched TV for entertainment. No grand adventures there and not too exciting to my teenage brain.
As I got older, I decided to become a teacher. An English teacher, to be exact. I’m sure reading well-beyond-my-years books had something to do with that! With the decision to become a teacher came a tight budget. Like my mother, I, too, was a single mom raising my boy on a small salary. So, again, summer was a time of dreams of far away places while hanging out in the backyard with a sprinkler and some popsicles, watching TV or the stars in the sky.
Fast forward to today and life still hasn’t seen me flying off to grand adventures or relaxing on a pink sand beach. My family comes first and there are college visits, taking aging parents to doctors for appointments, and visiting my mom in the Alzheimer’s Care Unit. Carefree still has not been a word in my vocabulary nor has money ever been free flowing. But you know what? That’s ok.
Our lessons for this Sunday speak about the treasures in heaven. Colossians 3:2-3 states “Set your minds on things that are above, not on things that are on earth, for you have died, and your life is hidden with Christ in God.” That is definitely as hard a lesson in today’s society as it was in Jesus’ time. We are bombarded with commercials about the next best thing, the newest iPhone, the brightest gadget, the far-away trips. It is so hard not to think we deserve all the things. I’ve had some time for introspection these last few months since my mom went to the Alzheimer’s Care Unit. I’ve come to know my time with her as a blessing - one that she may not remember from day to day, but one that makes her happy and comforted and lets me show her love in the small things.
There’s a beautiful line in the musical Les Miserables that I have found myself of late singing. “To love another person is to see the face of God.” God is all around us every day in the faces of our family and cherished loved ones. We do not need fancy clothes, trips to far off places, or nights out at the finest restaurants. We need love. We need the promise and hope that Christ Jesus has given to us. We need God in each other - in the summer nights of laughter, the popsicles and sticky faces, the stars above, and the memories of time spent together. These are not things that we buy and store up. They are everyday experiences and feelings that carry us through to the promise of what lies ahead and what awaits us in heaven.
I ask you to look to the last month of summer, before the hustle and bustle of the world creeps back in and find God in each other. Because as Dante says in his sermons, we are all beloved of God. See God in the people around you and know that they see God in you. Not in what you have, but in who you are.









