Our Saviour Parish News, May, 2021



OUR SAVIOUR LUTHERAN CHURCH

3301 The Alameda
Baltimore, MD 21218
410.235.9553
MAY, 2021

ASCENSION DAY
Festival Divine Service Thursday, May 13, 7:30 P.M.

MEMORIAL SERVICE FOR DON WEBER 
Sunday, May 16, 4:00 P.M.

PENTCOST
Festival Divine Service Sunday, May 23, 11:00 A.M.

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,

We are basking in the afterglow of Easter Day, the glad Feast of the Lord’s Resurrection, and in the afterglow of this year’s Saint Mark’s Conference. Apart from last year’s cancellation because of COVID, this Conference has been held every year since 2016. Primarily for pastors but also for interested lay people, it addresses the doctrinal, sacramental, and liturgical life of the Church. It was this year my very happy duty and privilege to welcome to Our Saviour Church and to the Conference the Reverend Doctor Matthew Charles Harrison, President of The Lutheran Church–Missouri Synod, our Chief Pastor and Right Reverend Father in God. As he left for the airport I said to him, “Thank you for everything!” and he replied, “I thank God for you!” Included in that “you” is not only your unworthy Shepherd but also Our Saviour congregation. In Pastor Harrison, the President of Synod, we as a congregation in fact have a very good friend indeed! For this we are bound to give thanks to God. As Pastor Harrison’s lectures at the Conference made plain, he is not only a pastor to his fingertips but also, like the late Reverend Doctor Hermann Sasse (1895–1976) of whom he spoke, a most faithful confessor of the Church of the Augsburg Confession, which was first called “Lutheran” by its enemies, a name we now embrace as pointing to Dr. Luther who, as the Church’s norm of teaching—the Book of Concord—says, is “the principal teacher of the churches of the Augsburg Confession.” Never forget that on the cornerstone of this church building, written in stone, are the letters “U A C”! They stand for Unaltered Augsburg Confession, so important to our identity is that confession of faith which was presented on June 25, 1530 in the city of Augsburg to the Emperor Charles V by the Lutheran princes and by the two free imperial cities of Nuremberg and Reutlingen. Both in the late Dr. Sasse of blessed memory and in Pastor Harrison we have two joyful confessors of that one Christian and Apostolic “faith which was once for all delivered to the saints,” that faith which was boldly confessed by our Lutheran forefathers before the powers of this world. The world of 1530 was no less troubled than ours! The specter of sudden death was an ever-present threat. Among other things, militant Islam in the form of the Turk had reached the gates of Vienna, and Christian Europe was in danger of being overrun by the infidel with fire and sword. In that hour of peril and need, our Fathers in Faith confessed Christ crucified and risen, the only Savior, as do we in our own hour of peril and need. Christ alone is the Rock of our Salvation! And as those who embrace the Augsburg Confession, we too point to Him who is graciously present with His Church in His holy Gospel and with His truly present Body and Blood in the Holy Eucharist. It is noteworthy that at one time in its history the Constitution of this congregation required that its members be familiar not only with Luther’s Small Catechism but also with the Unaltered Augsburg Confession. I will have more to say about this precious Confession in the June newsletter, June being the month in which it was presented to the Emperor in Augsburg.

As the liturgy of the Holy Communion says, “we should at all times and in all places give thanks” to God for everything. It is also our happy duty as Christians to thank those who have done us good. And so I here wish to thank everyone who helped to make the Saint Mark’s Conference a success—especially Paul and Mary Techau. Gabe Purviance, Bernie Knox, Richard Brown, and Jake Mokris. The happy willingness of Our Saviour Church’s people to help our Church in its work is a reason for thankfulness and delight.

And while we are on the subject of thanksgiving, I hasten to mention the Memorial Service for Don Weber, our long-time and faithful organist and choirmaster. This will take place on The Sunday after Ascension Day, May 16th, at 4:00 P.M. A reception will follow. Our Saviour Congregation owes Don Weber a tremendous debt of gratitude. I hope that everyone who can will come to this memorial service in which we shall give thanks to God for Don and commend him to our heavenly Father’s mercy as he awaits—as do we—the resurrection of the body and the life everlasting. Plan now to be present on May 16 at 4:00 pm!

The Ascension of the Lord is yet another reason for giving thanks. Christ ascended into heaven to prepare a place for us, that where He is, there we might also be and reign with Him in glory. The neglect of Ascension Day is just one more symptom of the decline of churchly life in recent times. Plan now on attending the Festival Divine Service of Ascension Day (which is Thursday, May 13, the fortieth day after Easter) at 7:30 pm. Anyone who is in need of a ride for this or any Divine Service, please call me at (410) 554–9994, or email me at charlesmcclean42@gmail.com.

The Spring Voters Meeting will be held immediately after Divine Service on Sunday, May 16. All members of our congregation who are eighteen years old or older are eligible to participate and vote.

Elsewhere in this newsletter Judy Volkman tells us about the Free Flea Market which will be held on Saturday, May 8, 9:00 am–12:00 pm. We always need volunteers to welcome our visitors and help distribute what they need.

April of the year after next—2023—will mark the 50th Anniversary of the merger of the Church of Our Saviour and Saint Matthew’s Church, a merger which was among other things a remarkable act of Christian courage and faithfulness to the teaching of the written Word of God: “There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither slave nor free, there is neither male nor female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus” (Galatians 3:27).  Before the Supreme Court ordered the desegregation of public schools in 1954, Baltimore was a strictly segregated city. Having been born in 1942, I vividly remember those unhappy circumstances; such well-established circumstances are very slow to change! And so the merger was a remarkable achievement. We want to plan a worthy celebration of this half century of united witness and service here at the corner of The Alameda and 33rd Street. Suggestions are welcome; speak with members of the Church Council or with me.

When the merger took place, Saint Matthew’s Church brought with them their sacramental vessels. We have now begun to use the silver ciborium which they brought. “Ciborium” comes from the Latin word cibus which means “food.” We will be using the ciborium to distribute the Heavenly Food that is the true Body of the Lord. Until now we have been using the very fine, silver “footed” paten, a plate resting on a little base. It is a precious thing of beauty, but there has always been the danger of hosts falling from the paten or being blown off the paten by a gust of wind. The use of the ciborium solves that problem and therefore adds to that great reverence with which the precious Body of Christ is distributed to the communicants. Reformed Protestants commonly understand the Sacrament as an emblem, symbol, reminder of the absent Body of Christ. Together with the ancient Church and with Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox Christians, we Lutherans believe, teach, and confess the Real Presence of the Lord’s Body and Blood in the Holy Sacrament, a doctrine which therefore is no peculiarly Lutheran notion but quite simply “the faith which was once for all delivered to the saints” (Jude 3), the faith to which the Church is bound until our Lord returns in glory to judge the living and the dead.

The COVID pandemic continues—literally!—to plague the nation and the world. We are called to repentance and patience. I am not worried about people returning to Divine Service. They will “when”—for each one of them—”the time is right.” But honesty compels me to add that habit is a powerful force, and Satan will gladly use the force of habit to keep some people from ever returning to Divine Service! And so each and every one of us must pray as we do in the Lord’s Prayer: “And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil.” The original Greek text means: “deliver us from the Evil One.” “Satan disguises himself as an angel of light” (2 Corinthians 11:14). “We are not ignorant of his devices” (2 Corinthians 2:11).

In the ancient Christian Church, it was quite simply inconceivable that any member of the Church, which is Christ’s mystical Body (1 Cor 12:27), would fail to be present on the Lord’s Day to receive in Holy Communion Christ’s true Body (1 Cor. 10:16), the sure Seal of redemption, the certain Pledge of the resurrection, the Medicine of Immortality. To ancient Christians Sunday was the Lord’s Day because it was the Day of the Lord’s Supper. We have yet to recover that deep and joyful understanding of every Lord’s Day as the weekly celebration of the resurrection of the Lord who truly comes to us in the Sacrament.

Ten days after His ascension, fifty days after His resurrection, the ascended Lord poured out the Holy Spirit on His disciples. Pentecost, which means fiftieth, is the celebration of this mighty act of God. Together with Easter and Christmas, Pentecost is one of the Three Great Feasts of the Christian Year and therefore no less important a day for faithful Christians. On Good Friday Christ finished His victorious redeeming work, on Easter His victory was revealed, and on Pentecost His victory was proclaimed and so the Church was born. Pentecost is the Birthday of the Church. As no Christian would think of failing to be present at Divine Service on Christmas or Easter Day, just so no Christian should think of failing to be present on Pentecost. Everyone who can in fact should be present at the Festival Divine Service on Pentecost, this year May 23.

Yolanda Ford continues to be in a nursing home. Maggie Doswell is in intensive care at Bayview Hospital. Please remember them in your prayers and pray for me, your unworthy Shepherd.

Affectionately in our Lord,


Pastor McClean

Works of Mercy

Donations have been coming in and many thanks to all those who are helping! We are in good shape for the first Free Flea Market on May 8. We do need bags so we can fill them with purchases; we also need volunteers for that day. Let Judy Volkman know if you will be able to assist.  This is a fun time to interact with our “customers” and share our faith and bounty with them!

On Wednesday, April 28, 8 milk cartons of food were delivered to CARES, including 10 pounds of potatoes. Thanks to some very generous donations we were able to help stock the GEDCO Food Pantry.

Cantate

Cantate, The Fourth Sunday after Easter

May 2, 2021 AD

Old Testament: Isaiah 12:1-6

Epistle: James 1:16-21

Gospel: John 16:5-15

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Listen to the service:

Misericordias Domini

Misericordias Domini, The Second Sunday after Easter

April 18, 2021 AD

Old Testament: Ezekiel 34:11-16

Epistle: 1 Peter 2:21-25

Gospel: John 10:11-16

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Listen to the Service:

Quasimodogeniti

Quasimodogeniti, The First Sunday after Easter

April 11, 2021 AD

Old Testament: Ezekiel 37:1-14

Epistle: 1 John 5:4-10

Gospel: John 20:19-31

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Our Saviour Parish News, April, 2021



OUR SAVIOUR LUTHERAN CHURCH

3301 The Alameda
Baltimore, MD 21218
410.235.9553
APRIL, 2021

HOLY WEEK AND EASTER DAY
Maundy Thursday – Divine Service, 7:30 P.M.
Good Friday – The Liturgy of Good Friday, 7:30 P.M.
Easter Even – The Easter Vigil and the First
Divine Service of Easter Day, 7:30 P.M.
Easter Day – Festival Divine Service, 11:00 A.M.

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,

Since last Easter our country and the world have endured a year unlike any other in our lifetime. More than a half million of our fellow Americans have died, other thousands have been taken sick, some here in our own congregation, and the lives of us all have been disrupted in many ways. I remain convinced that through this tragedy the merciful God is calling wayward humanity to repentance and newness of life. Is that call being heard? I wonder. But what matters is that you and I hear that call and come humbly to the throne of grace, confessing our many sins of thought, word, and deed, and then rejoice in the pardon given through God’s only and eternal Son, the true Paschal (Passover) Lamb, who by His death has overcome death and by His glorious resurrection has opened the way to new and eternal life. In the words of the Easter sermon attributed to Saint John Chrysostom (AD 347-407), “Let no one grieve over his transgressions, for pardon has dawned from the tomb!” Apart from the resurrection of the Lord Jesus there is no salvation. Christ’s resurrection is the salvation of the world. “Christ, our Passover, has been sacrificed for us: therefore let us keep the feast!” (I Corinthians 5:7,8)
Because Holy Week and Easter Day are the heart of the Christian Year, I hope that all of you who can will join in the worship of these blessing filled days. On Maundy Thursday we go in spirit to the upper room where the Savior instituted the Holy Sacrament of His Body and Blood. In the stripping of the altar at the end of the Divine Service we remember how, at Jesus’ arrest in Gethsemane, all the disciples “forsook Him and fled” and of how Pilate’s soldiers stripped Him of His garments before they crucified Him. On Good Friday we stand at the foot of the cross and hear the Passion history according to Saint John which has been read on Good Friday since ancient times and we pray for all for whom Christ died in the Bidding Prayer which also comes to us from the early Church. The liturgy of Easter Even, the Easter Vigil, marks the transition from darkness to light, from death to life. As usual, our good friend Pastor Roy Axel Coats of Redeemer Church in Irvington will be with us. The Easter Vigil begins with the lighting of the Paschal Candle (symbol of the risen Lord) in the darkened church and then the ancient Easter proclamation, the Exsultet, is sung. Readings from the Old Testament, which point forward to our baptism into Christ’s death and resurrection, follow. We renew our baptismal vows and then sing the Church’s Litany with its petitions for the whole church and the whole world. The first Divine Service of Easter is then celebrated in which our risen Lord truly comes to us in the Holy Mysteries of His Body and Blood. On Easter Day we celebrate the Festival Divine Service.
 
The Adult Bible Class will not meet on Easter morning. Easter Day is for celebration! We continue our study and conversation on the Sunday following Easter Day. If you have not attended this Sunday class, you might want to give it a try. It is quite informal and questions are especially welcome. We are at present approaching the end of a study of the history and the biblical grounding of the Divine Service of Word and Sacrament, its text and its music.
Do remember that Easter Day is only the first of the forty days of the Easter season in which we continue to rejoice in the Lord’s resurrection. The Easter season ends with Ascension Day, the fortieth day after the resurrection, when the risen Lord withdrew His visible presence from His disciples.
Since these lines are being written on the Wednesday before Palm Sunday, I am still unable to say with certainty whether or not this year’s Saint Mark’s Conference will in fact take place on April 19/20. We will know when the office of the President of Synod contacts us on Monday in Holy Week. We hope that the chief pastor of our Synod, Dr. Harrison, will be able to be with us as he will be the main speaker on this year’s theme: The Life and Work of the Rev. Dr. Hermann Sasse (1895-1976). Dr. Sasse was a powerful confessor of the truth of the Gospel during exceedingly troubled times. In our own time, when it so often seems as if much of the world is drowning in a sea of lies, we need more than ever to hear Dr. Sasse’s witness that we in fact live by truth and die by lies. Definite notice of the Conference will be posted on Our Saviour’s website as soon as plans are firmly in place.
Judy Volkman tells us that the first Free Flea Market of this year will be held on Saturday, May 8th, 9:00 A.M.-12:00 Noon. We are in need of plastic bags so that our visitors can carry home the items they choose. Perhaps more than ever we need to share our bounty with needy people. And do remember to bring food items for the GEDCO food pantry. The need is great. You can place them in the boxes just inside the door to the education building. And remember to bring items needed by the guests of the Helping Up Mission. men’s toiletries etc.
The project to restore the mechanism which rings the bells in our tower continues. Mary Techau has done so much to push this forward. We are awaiting yet another estimate on the cost of these repairs. We have approximately ten thousand dollars in hand for this project. We also await an estimate on restoring the original doors of the main entrance of the church. A representative of a firm involved in historic restoration – they recently were involved in restoring the old mansion in Clifton Park – inspected the original doors and assured us that they are well worth restoring. They are very solidly built and, like the two remaining original doors, have some very fine wrought iron work.
I want to thank everyone who helped with the clean-up day last Saturday. Among other things, some rather sad old shrubbery was removed and new dividing lines painted on both our parking lots. I am truly thankful that our congregation seems to be blessed with a spirit of happy cooperation. Long may it be so! I am also happy to note that our people have continued during these months to support the Church’s work with their offerings.
During these pandemic days, I seem to conclude every monthly newsletter in the same way. Thanks to Richard Brown, all our services continue to be livestreamed at Our Saviour Baltimore Facebook. This is such a wonderful help for the many who still are not able to come to church. I continue to bring the Sacrament to members who remain at home. If you want me to bring you the Sacrament, you need only call me at (410) 554-9994 or email me at charlesmcclean42@gmail.com. Remember that sermons can be heard by calling (XXX) XXX-XXXX. And I am always available to hear private confession in accord with the Fifth Chief Part – The Office of the Keys and Confession – in Dr. Luther’s Small Catechism. In private confession and absolution, the penitent hears Christ’s sure word of pardon individually addressed to him or her. You need only contact me to make an appointment for this means of grace.
I very much look forward to seeing you during Holy Week and at Easter. Let us continue in prayer for one another and for the whole Church and the whole world. I wish you a blessed and joyous Easter!
Affectionately in our Lord,


Pastor McClean

Our Saviour Parish News, March, 2021



OUR SAVIOUR LUTHERAN CHURCH

3301 The Alameda
Baltimore, MD 21218
410.235.9553
MARCH, 2021

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,

Our nation has just passed the half-million mark in the number of fellow Americans who have died during the present pandemic. This is a staggering number, a number so large that it is almost impossible to imagine. I suspect that so many of us had assumed that this type of thing was only a thing of the past or that such things simply do not happen in our country. But now it has happened and, although there are signs of hope on the horizon, the end is not yet. So how should we as Christians respond to this immense tragedy? As I said a year ago: Through this calamity God is calling the world to repentance. We are also being reminded in a way that cannot be ignored of the shortness and uncertainty of human life. The words of the burial service have ceased to be mere words but instead are an expression of inescapable reality: “In the midst of life we are in death,” words that once had a place in the Lenten liturgy. As always at the beginning of Lent we hear the words spoken to Adam after the fall: “Remember that you are dust and to dust you will return” (Genesis 3:19). Given all these circumstances, we are called to earnest repentance which includes active compassion and fervent prayer for those whose lives have been touched by this calamity. We are also reminded to do as Christians have done down through the ages: To remember the unknown hour of death and to meditate on our own death both in the light of the judgment to come and of the mercy that flows from Christ’s life-giving cross and resurrection. This is our sure and certain hope, this is why we can and must rejoice in the Lord, come what may. And of course all of this is of a piece with our annual journey through these Lenten days.

It will soon be a year since our dear sister in Christ, Joyce Gillespie, succumbed to the coronavirus. Gabe Purviance and his father Philip have now recovered from the virus and for that we give thanks!

The funeral of our dear sister in Christ, Dorothy Bell, who fell asleep in the Lord on January 28, was held in church on Saturday, February 13. Her mortal remains were committed to the earth at the cemetery of Saint Matthew’s Church in Meherrin, Virginia. May the Light perpetual ever shine upon her and may our merciful Savior comfort all who mourn.

Although private confession and absolution are not obligatory in the Lutheran Church they are available as a means of grace. The fifth chief part of Dr. Luther’s Small Catechism provides instruction about this, and in the Augsburg Confession—that principal confession of the faith of the Lutheran Church—we find these words: “It is taught among us that private absolution should be retained and not allowed to fall into disuse […] The people are carefully instructed concerning the comfort of the Word of absolution so that they may esteem absolution as a great and precious thing. It is not the voice or word of the man who speaks it but it is the Word of God who forgives sin, for it is spoken in God’s stead and by His commandment” (Augsburg Confession, Articles XI and XXV). I am always ready to arrange for times to hear confessions. There is no reason why any Christian should remain troubled in conscience or burdened with the painful memory even of sins committed long ago: Private absolution bestows the joyful certainty of sin forgiven, our pardon sealed in heaven.

On the first three Wednesdays in March we will have Lenten Vespers with the Litany at 7:30 pm. My Lenten meditations will focus on Old Testament types of Christ’s passion: The sacrifice of Isaac, the Passover lamb, the sprinkled blood of the covenant.

The fourth Wednesday in March this year is the Eve of the Annunciation. Exactly nine months before Christmas, this festival commemorates the announcement by the angel Gabriel to the virgin Mary that God had chosen her to be the mother of His Son. With her assent, “Let it be to me according to your word” (Luke 1:38), God the Son took on Himself in her womb the humanity that is yours and mine. This is the actual moment of the incarnation, when “the Word was made flesh and dwelt among us, full of grace and truth” (John 1:14). This is the beginning of Christ’s journey to His cross and resurrection.

The last Sunday in March is Palm Sunday, the beginning of Holy Week. As usual there will be Divine Service on Maundy Thursday and the Liturgy on Good Friday, both at 7:30 pm. On Saturday, Easter Even, the Easter Vigil will be celebrated at 7:30 pm. Our good friend, Pastor Roy Coats, will as usual be with us for the Vigil. The Vigil begins in darkness with the lighting of the Paschal (i.e. Easter) Candle, which burns throughout the Easter season. It then continues with the reading of Old Testament lessons which show types of our baptism into Christ’s death and resurrection; this is followed by the renewal of our baptismal vows, and the Vigil comes to its climax and completion in the joyful first Holy Eucharist of Easter. This oldest festival service of the Christian Church is truly an Easter celebration which in a very real sense surveys the whole history of our salvation, beginning with the creation of all things, and—because the Holy Eucharist is always the anticipation of the Marriage Supper of the Lamb in His eternal kingdom (Revelation 19:6–9)—looks forward with joy to the final coming of the risen Lord in glory.

Palm Sunday is the deadline for ordering Easter lilies. The cost is $11.00, and you may include with your check a list of names of loved ones you wish to honor or remember. As usual Judy Volkman is in charge of all this.

As mentioned in last month’s newsletter we are hoping to have the annual Saint Mark’s Conference on April 19–20. The Rev. Dr. Matthew Harrison, the President of Synod, will be with us as the keynote speaker at this year’s Conference, which is focused on the Life and Work of the late Rev. Dr. Hermann Sasse (1895–1976), who was almost certainly the greatest confessional Lutheran theologian of the last century. Much information about him can be found online. The COVID pandemic seems to affect everything, and so a decision to hold or cancel the Conference will be made on Monday of Holy Week. Although primarily intended for pastors, the Conference is open to everyone. For members of Our Saviour there is no registration fee.

Remember that our services are now livestreamed: Sunday Divine Service at 11:00 am and Wednesday Lenten Vespers at 7:30 pm. You can also hear the sermon by calling (410) 587–0979. If you are still unable to come to church I am more than willing to bring you the Sacrament at home. Among other things, that is what pastors are for! You need only call me at (410) 554–9994 or e-mail me at charlesmcclean42@gmail.com.

Let us make good use of this Lenten season for the renewal of our life in Christ. Let us continue in prayer for one another and for all whom God’s love has called out of nothingness into being.

Affectionately in our Lord,


Pastor McClean

Works of Mercy

On February 10, Judy Volkman delivered five crates of canned goods to CARES. They were well stocked at that point, but they almost certainly emptied out their stores quickly. And we need to restock; the boxes are empty!

Also delivered were eight knit hats and twelve hand-knit scarves to help keep people warm in this cold weather.  Bounty shared!

– Judy Volkman

Laetare – The Fourth Sunday in Lent

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The Fourth Sunday in Lent
March 14, 2021 AD

Old Testament:  Exodus 18:2-21

Epistle: Galatians 4:21-31
Gospel: John 6:1-15

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Listen to the service:

Oculi – The Third Sunday in Lent

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The Third Sunday in Lent
March 7, 2021 AD

Old Testament:  Exodus 8:16-24
Epistle: Ephesians 5:1-9
Gospel: Luke 11:14-28

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