Ginna Franke Interred

On Saturday, November 18, we interred the remains of Virgina (Ginna) Mollan Franke (May 9, 1925-June 5, 2023) in the Chapel of the Saints Columbarium. Ginna’s memorial service was celebrated at FELC on June 19, 2023. Close family and friends gathered for committal service as we commended Ginna to the everlasting love and tender mercy of God. Ginna and Merle Franke (third pastor of FELC) encouraged the building of our columbarium many years ago. We are grateful for the faithful witness of Ginna and Merle, in the life of this church, the whole church, and throughout the world. The Rev. Kris Franke Hill officiated at the committal service. All of us go down to the dust, yet even at the grave we make our song: Alleluia!

News From the CDC Board of Directors

The FELCDC Board is pleased to announce Cat Holness as the interim director of the child development center.  Cat has most recently served as assistant director at another center and in the same role here at FELCDC.  We are grateful for Cat’s willingness to step into this leadership role and we are grateful for our teachers who are the foundation of our center. 

There will be no changes to the day-to-day operations of the center.  We will continue to serve our current families and to seek to increase enrollment as we begin to search for a new permanent director.  Thank you for your continued support through prayer and encouragement.   For any questions please email the FELCDC Board of Directors.

Thank You Women’s Choir

Our gratitude for all who joined in a newly formed choir and offered music on November 12. Friends, regular visitors, church members, former church members, and community members are invited to gather for several rehearsals and then sing four or five times a year. For more information and to participate, contact Bryan Rust at music@felcaustin.org.

Festival of Nine Lessons & Carols

Friday, December 8, 2023 at 7:30 PM

First offered at King’s College Chapel, Cambridge, in 1918, the Christmas Eve Festival of Nine Lessons and Carols has become a mainstay of the Advent and Christmas season. In this re-enactment, Artistic Director (and former director of music at First English) Donald Meineke, organist Chris Oelkers, and 16-voice Ensemble VIII will join forces to offer this celebrated tradition to Greater Austin. The singers will read the traditional lessons interspersed by carols performed by the choir. The audience will be invited to sing along to some of the most beloved and familiar carols. Plan now to join Ensemble VIII for this memorable event on December 8 at 7:30 PM at St. Martin’s Lutheran Church, 606 W 15th St., Austin. Tickets: $30 general, $25 seniors, $5 students. For more information, visit: Buy tickets – Festival of Nine Lessons and Carols – St. Martin’s Lutheran Church, Fri Dec 8, 2023 7:30 PM – 9:00 PM (tickettailor.com)

30th Annual Austin Powwow

November is “Native American Month”

Explore Cultural Traditions:

30th Annual Austin Pow Wow

When: Saturday, November 18

9:00 AM – 9:00 PM

Where: Travis County Expo Center, 7311 Decker Lane 78724

Dancers!  Drumming!  Native Marketplace & Food Court

 Admission: $10 cash at gate; kids under 12 Free

Visit:    Austinpowpow.net

Gather Austin

Gather is a community for Young Adults in the Austin-area that meets across ELCA congregations here & beyond! We invite any 22-35 years old to join us for food, fellowship and faith formation. Gather meets the first Thursday of every month.

Gather is hosting a Friendgivingmas on December 3rd in the afternoon. The next meeting is Thursday, December 7th at 6:30 pm at the Triumphant Love Lutheran Church. If you have any questions or want more information, email gatheraustin@gmail.com

Landscape Project Update

As you have no doubt noticed, our church grounds are getting a much-needed and long overdue facelift. The property team is working from the master landscape plan that was designed a year or so ago, with some modifications to ensure sustainability in our changing environment. To date, trees have been pruned, the old dead groundcover, shrubs, and weeds have been cleared away, plumbing for a new sprinkler system has been installed, and soil and edging have been delivered. A crew of volunteers met late in October to weed flowerbeds and spread the soil. This week we will have the first round of plants delivered.

There is a workday scheduled for this Saturday, November 11 at 8:30am to begin planting. If you like to garden and get your hands dirty, please join us to help out! Bring gloves and a shovel if you can. Contact Gwen Flory for more information. 

Church Wall Cracking & Floor Shifting: A History

You may have noticed wall and floor cracks having returned inside the church. These result from natural, cyclical changes in the moisture content of the underlying expansive soil that supports some parts of the building. The floor diselevation and resulting cracks have been ongoing concerns for decades. [If you want to know more about expansive soil, please see me.]

To my knowledge, part of the concrete floor of the transept was repaired at least once before 1963, the narthex floor was replaced in the 1980s (?) by member Clifton Lind, the nave floor was releveled by pressure grouting in 1992-1995 under the direction of professional engineer Martin Prager, and the floor at the south aisle was releveled by pressure grouting in 2018 by Concrete Raising Corporation.

Professional engineer Robert C. Davis of Trinity Engineering Testing Corp. conferred about the floor movement in the 1970s. I was unable to find a copy of his report in the Trinity archives, probably because he did the work gratis. He did not recommend structural repairs. He explained that the upper soil stratum at the south side of the building was Waller Creek alluvium of varying concentrations of gravel, sand, silt, and clay. These deposits had carved into the underlying Austin Formation atop which most of downtown Austin sits. Expansive soil does develop atop the Austin Formation, and my experience at Hyde Park to the north has been that the underlying limestone can be as shallow as 5 feet. In the case of the nave, the north parts mostly are unremarkable, and floor movement damage worsens with distance southward, consistent with the soil characteristics and thicknesses Dr. Davis described.

My opinion is that the expansive soil behavior has worsened in magnitude proportional to the worsening drought conditions. Expansive soil swells when it is wet and shrinks when it is dry. The cyclic movement never stops. There is more expansive soil at the south of the building than at the north. The soil-supported interior slab moves more than the walls and columns that instead are supported by concrete pilings (columns) atop footings 9′ to 12′ deep.

A professional engineering reassessment could provide more timely counsel than that received over fifty years ago, especially considering that the structure was designed and built with a 1930s-vintage understanding of soil mechanics, and that climate extremes have worsened. Modern site-specific soil sampling and laboratory analyses could provide the data needed to rigorously understand the soil stratigraphy and characteristics, to evaluate the current soil conditions, to project future soil behavior, and to guide remediation choices.

Oliver Rajamani in Concert: Sunday, November 12 at the Paramount Theatre

Maestro Peter Bay of the Austin Symphony Orchestra conducts Zamora Orchestra at the VASI album release concert on Sunday, November 12 at 7:00 PM at the Paramount Theatre. This will be a beautiful evening of original romantic ballads, soothing melodies, and high energy rhythm. Experience the signature hybrid sound of FELC’s very own Oliver Rajamani drawn from his personal cultural elements (Romani (Gypsy)/India/classic Texas Americana). Celebrate with us Oliver’s first concert in Austin after 4 years. For more information and to secure tickets, visit: https://tickets.austintheatre.org/9538/9539