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I have been a pastor for over 35 years and was introduced to deer hunting in the first congregation that I served in Northern Minnesota. In other words, I have been a deer hunter for as long as I have been a pastor. One of the things that I appreciate about going to deer camp is the fact that at deer camp it doesn’t matter that I’m a pastor. At deer camp I am just one of the hunters, no better and no worse than anyone else. Deer hunting has always been enjoyable for me because it provides an annual escape from the routine and constant focus of pastoring a congregation. Still, I have also found a connection between what happens at deer camp and who I am as, not just a pastor, but as a person of faith. Because I am a pastor I have received a couple of “deer hunting devotional books” as gifts from people who knew that I have an interest in hunting. As I have read the devotions in those books I have been mostly disappointed by the lack of focus on the good news of the gospel of Jesus Christ and I have thought to myself, “I could do better than that!” Having shared this observation with some of my deer hunting friends, they have challenged me to write this deer hunting devotional which conveys, I hope, not just a love for deer hunting but also a distinct Evangelical Lutheran focus on the good news of God’s love for all people. The stories in this book are all true. I have done my best to respect the privacy of the people with whom I hunt so the only names that are shared are the names of my own family members and the first names of those friends who have died and who are dearly missed. I decided to write thirty devotions for the thirty days in November because most of my hunting has been in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan where the firearm hunting season always begins on the 15th of November and ends on the 30th of November. My experience is that once I turn the page on the calendar and know that the month of November has begun, I have already entered into the anticipati