Ray Spitzenberger

Ray Spitzenberger, poet, humorist, and Lutheran pastor, is 49.9% Wendish. Also an accomplished artist, Ray’s drawings may be viewed in his Spitzen-Doodle blog.

My story began in Dime Box, Texas, where I was born in the 1930’s, and where, as a three-year-old, I startled the whole town with my drawing of the new washing machine my daddy bought my mother so she wouldn’t have to use a rub board anymore. This was a non-electric machine with legs and wheels and a lever which was moved back and forth to agitate the clothes, and a hand-cranked wringer attached to it; thus it was a very complicated contraption to draw.

By the time I was in the first grade, I wanted to be a cartoonist, and I endlessly drew all of my favorite comic strip characters, such as Dick Tracy and Nancy and Sluggo, even creating my own comic strip. My love of writing came a little later, probably after my fourth or fifth-grade teacher inspired me to love reading good books. Our life centered around Trinity Lutheran Church in Old Dime Box, where my mother played the organ, and where, as a Confirmand, I first wanted to go into the ministry. In high school, I served as both Feature Editor and Art Editor of the Traveler Newspaper, and in junior college, I served as Feature Editor, Art Editor, and Co-Editor of the Jolly Roger’s Log. I began writing poetry in high school, especially after my English class voted my poem, “School Bells,” as the best in the class. In senior college, my creative writing classes inspired me to write short stories. As a college English teacher, I served as Faculty Advisor of Try Magazine, a college literary journal.

Fulfilling a Confirmand’s dream, my second career as Pastor of St. Paul Lutheran Church in Wallis, Texas, began in 1989 and ended in 2017, when I retired due to health issues. Because I felt so keenly the love of God, the love of my parishioners, and the love of the Wallis community, I miss my career as pastor the most.


Spitzen-Noodle

Spitzen-Doodle

Spitzen-Verse