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Gottesblog

A blog of the Evangelical Lutheran Liturgy

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The Family Altar

Several years ago, I was visiting our seminarian in St. Louis. I attended the Divine Service with him and his wife. As I was sitting and waiting for the bells to chime, I flipped through the bulletin to find a page titled, “The Family Altar.” It’s goal was to provide simple devotional material for the home that’s purpose was to prepare for the week ahead.

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John Bussman Comment
Institute on Liturgy, Preaching, and Church Music: A Look Back

At the beginning of July, the Lutheran Church—Missouri Synod held the 2024 Institute on Liturgy, Preaching, and Church Music at Concordia University Nebraska. You can find the Reporter article here, but this author would like to offer some of his own (belated) recollections, both as an attendee and as one who served as a conference chaplain.

This year’s conference was centered around the psalter, with all 150 psalms sung or spoken (mostly sung) over the course of four days. There were over 500 attendees — largely LCMS, but not entirely. This author had lunch one day with a few attendees from the Evangelical Lutheran Synod, had a great chat with an Apostolic Lutheran, heard tell of some Australian Lutherans, and a few friends attended a workshop by a Reformed professor from New Saint Andrews College in Idaho.

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Stefan Gramenz Comments
Where's the Love?

The call for peace by the very ones who have assaulted the church and her doctrine comes from the same spirit that led Jezebel’s henpecked husband to name faithful Elijah “the Troubler of Israel.” So might a thief accuse his victim of breaking the peace by protesting at being robbed.

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Evan Scamman Comments
A Delinquency Letter

To those who had not attended the assembly; on the apostolic saying, “If thy enemy hunger feed him,” and concerning resentment of injuries. From Bishop John Chrysostom, Constantinople, 4th century.

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Guest Author Comment
From the Archives: We Never Pray Alone (Part I)

Standing in front of the used religious book section in the Value Village thrift store in a town near my home in Canada, I was amazed (although perhaps should not have been) at how many books there were on prayer amongst the discarded volumes on various forms of spirituality. They were, for the most part, of the typical evangelical variety directing their readers to the life-changing power of truly personal and heartfelt prayer. Some touched on the power of communal prayer. Others, like the Prayer of Jabez volumes, promised a surefire way to guaranteed worldly happiness and success if you followed their tenets.

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Guest AuthorComment
St. Francis of Assisi

Note: Our LSB sanctoral calendar doesn’t recognize St. Francis of Assisi - unlike the rest of Western Christendom. Conversely, there is no entry in the Treasury of Daily Prayer summarizing his life and work. So I wrote my own for use at Matins today (see below).

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Larry BeaneComment
From the Archives: Homily on the Te Deum Laudamus

The Te Deum is old. It is an old, old hymn. Although the two traditional guesses at authorship — St. Ambrose and St. Augustine—are apparently not well-founded, the hymn is almost as old as their day. Mid-fifth century, the scholars tell us. For forty generations and more, if forty years be a generation, the church has been singing, most often in the morning, this song of praise in its various renderings, and under its various musical settings. It is an old, old song.

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Guest Author Comments
From the Archives: The Our Father and the Eucharist

When it comes to the Holy Liturgy of the Church, the Our Father has pride of place. It has its station in the daily offices, a prominent position in the Lord's Day Mass, and it appears in most of the auxiliary services. This claim cannot be made for any other sacred text, not even the ecumenical creeds. The Lord's Prayer simply fits. Its absence leaves a gaping hole. This is no truer than when it comes to the Liturgy of the Faithful, the Holy Communion.

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Guest AuthorComment
Throwback Thursday: Real Worship

Note: This is a piece that I wrote in 2011 upon reflecting on a photograph of a Mass taking place amid the ruins of a bombed out church in Germany during World War II or its aftermath. Someone did share with me the identity of the church, but I don’t have it handy. But the point is not the specifics of this parish or even its affiliation - but rather how we should approach worship as Lutherans who confess the Incarnation and the Real Presence in the ruins of this fallen world. ~ Ed.

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Larry Beane Comment