Rogate, the Fifth Sunday after Easter
May 25, 2025 AD
Old Testament: Numbers 21:4-9
Epistle: James 1:22-27
Gospel: John 16:23-30
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May 25, 2025 AD
Old Testament: Numbers 21:4-9
Epistle: James 1:22-27
Gospel: John 16:23-30
Click here to listen and subscribe to Pastor McClean’s sermons on iTunes.
May 18, 2025 AD
Old Testament: Isaiah 12:1-6
Epistle: James 1:16-21
Gospel: John 16:5-15
Click here to listen and subscribe to Pastor McClean’s sermons on iTunes.
May 11, 2025 AD
Old Testament: Isaiah 40:25-31
Epistle: 1 Peter 2:11-20
Gospel: John 16:16-22
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May 4, 2024 AD
Old Testament: Ezekiel 34:11-16
Epistle: 1 Peter 2:21-25
Gospel: John 10:11-16
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3301 The Alameda
Baltimore, MD 21218
410.235.9553
May, 2025
Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,
May 5th will be the 12th anniversary of my installation as pastor of Our Saviour Church. As I look back on these twelve years I am filled with happiness and with gratitude for all the ways in which our gracious heavenly Father has blessed me through these years. I think especially of all the many ways I have experienced the love and kindness of the members of this congregation. I am also acutely aware of your forbearance toward my limitations, weaknesses, indeed your forgiveness of my sins, my failure to love as I have been loved by God – and by you. Like any Christian, I can only live trusting in the cleansing blood of Him who died for our sins and rose again for our justification. I thank you and I ask your prayers. We do not know what the future holds for us as individuals or as a Christian congregation. But we do know Him who holds the future in His hands which still bear the marks of the nails, the marks of His love for us – though unworthy. In that sure knowledge we can face each new day with sure faith and certain hope.
On the second last day of this month we celebrate the Feast of the Ascension of our Lord, a celebration of our sure and certain hope that where He is there we too shall be – as Bishop Christopher Wordsworth (1807-1885) sings in his wonderful hymn (LSB 494) for Ascension Day:
He has raised our human nature
On the clouds to God’s right hand;
There we sit in heav’nly places,
There with Him in glory stand.
Jesus reigns, adored by angels;
Man with God is on the throne,
Mighty Lord, in Thine ascension
We by faith behold our own.
Like Christ’s incarnation and atonement and resurrection, His ascension is also one of the great mysteries of our faith. In a sermon for Ascension Day Pastor Ferdinand Walther (1811-1887), the Father Founder of our Synod, says that “the ascension of Christ is like the sun – the more intently one wants to look into it, the more blinded our eyes become, so that at last we cannot see anything at all; this work therefore belongs to those which are not to be fathomed at all but simply believed in childlike faith. The more simply we hold to what Scripture says about it, however, the more strengthening to our faith this mysterious article of Christian belief will become.” Come and join in celebrating this glorious mystery as we meet our risen and ascended Lord as He truly comes to us in the Holy Sacrament on Ascension Day!
The Spring Voters Meeting will be held on Sunday, May 18th, following the Divine Service. The Church Council will be elected and the budget for the new fiscal year approved. Every member of Our Saviour Church, eighteen years and older, is eligible to participate. Do come to the meeting and let your voice be heard!
Bert Buchanan’s sister, Marian Rollins, fell asleep in the Lord on Easter Monday at her home in El Paso, Texas, after a long illness, May the Light perpetual ever shine upon her and may Christ comfort Bert and all who mourn with the sure and certain hope of the resurrection.
Be sure to read Judy Volkman’s reminder at the end of this newsletter about our Free Flea Markets which begin again on Saturday, May 10th. Judy also reminds us to support GEDCO and thanks you for your continued willingness to assist this effort through food donations. During the last fiscal year GEDO supported
– 4,679 households with food,
– 417 households with utility bills, 128 receiving financial assistance,
– 260 households with rental assistance,
– 2,673 children through CARES assistance,
– 378 people with assistance in finding jobs,
– 500 older adults with aid to avoid social isolation.
These statistics provide a window on the need which remains great indeed! Remember to bring personal items for the Helping Up Mission which has helped so many homeless men for so many years and now is also helping homeless women.
As we move toward summer, let’s not forget that, because of the recent expense of repairing our heating system, we are still asking for donations to replenish our cash reserves. We have received some very generous gifts! Let each of us give as we are able.
When we think about the tragic, ongoing warfare in Ukraine, in the Middle East, in Sudan and other parts of the world, as well as the recurring natural disasters here at home, we can so easily be overcome with a feeling of helplessness. So let me again remind you that one way we can help is through our Synod’s Contributor Care Line (888-030-4439) or by sending a check to LCMS World Relief and Human Care, PO Box 66861, Saint Louis, MO 63166-6861. Make your check payable to The Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod and mark the check for LCMS World Relief and Human Care. You can also donate through our Synod’s secure website: lcms.org/givenow/mercy.
We continue to remember in prayer Bridget Bauman, James Bauman, Christopher Bell, Bertha Buchanan, Dana Carmichael, Timothy Doswell, David Dowdy, Quilla Downs, Bunny Duckett, Joyce Eaves, Albert Ford, Frank Ford, Iris Ford, Yolanda Ford, Sean Fortune, Lynne Funck, Katherine Gray, Sherry James, Gloria Jones, Mary Mokris, Pastor Elliott Robertson, Julia Silver, Robert Siperek Jr., Lawrence Smallwood, Paul Swank, George Volkman, Gary Watson; Marvalisa, Sierra, Jonathan and Steven Gibson. Yolanda Ford remains at Future Care, 1046 North Point Road, Baltimore, MD 21224.
Although the world celebrates Easter for just one day – if it celebrates Easter at all! – the Church continues to celebrate Christ’s resurrection throughout the forty days of Eastertide and also on every Sunday throughout the year. Here at Our Saviour we continue to sing Easter hymns until Ascension Day, singing one of the oldest and most loved Easter hymns, Christ is Arisen (LSB 459), every Sunday. The Paschal (Easter) Candle burns throughout the Easter season. The five red wax nails in the Candle signify the marks of the nails and spear, still to be seen in the body of the risen Lord. As we sing in that wonderful hymn, Crown Him with Many Crowns (LSB 525): “Crown Him the Lord of love: behold His hands and side!”
In closing I want to thank Paul and Mary Techau, Jean and Wayne West, Bernie Knox, and Richard Brown who helped to make this year’s Saint Mark’s Conference a success; also Marlyn Williams, a member of Redeemer Church in Irvington who provided a delicious lunch on Monday, and Beth Skinner, a friend of mine and of the Techaus whom we’ve known since we were all at Immanuel Church in Alexandria. Dr. Edward Naumann’s presentation on the Mystical Meaning of Holy Scripture and Pastor Coats’s presentation on the life and work of Laurentius Petri (1499-1573), the first Lutheran Archbishop of Sweden, were well received, and we were all blessed by the preaching of Dr. Carl Roemer and Pastor Christopher Seifferlein. Pastor Brian Westgate’s work as organist – as always! – enriched our worship greatly. Video of the Conference services and presentations will in due course be available on Youtube.
I am always glad to hear from you at charlesmcclean1942@gmail.com or at (410)554-9994. Let us continue to remember one another in prayer.
Affectionately in our risen Lord,
Pastor McClean
On May 10th we will resume our annual Free Flea Markets. Right now we have a great inventory of both clothing and household items. We could use some summer clothing for both men and women in sizes small and medium. We have a faithful group of volunteers, but we welcome “newcomers.” Please let me know if you will be able to assist on the second Saturday May through September from 9-12 noon each time. This is our outreach to the community. We have been blessed with bounty and we need to share it.
– Judy Volkman
Remember that we are still seeking donations to replenish our cash reserves which have been depleted by the cost of the repairs to the heating system. Please mark your checks: “heating system.”
April 27, 2025 AD
Old Testament: Ezekiel 37:1-14
Epistle: 1 John 5:4-10
Gospel: John 20:19-31
Click here to listen and subscribe to Pastor McClean’s sermons on iTunes.
May 5, 2024 AD
Old Testament: Numbers 21:4-9
Epistle: James 1:22-27
Gospel: John 16:23-30
Click here to listen and subscribe to Pastor McClean’s sermons on iTunes.
3301 The Alameda
Baltimore, MD 21218
410.235.9553
May, 2024
Thursday May 9, Ascension Day Festival Divine Service, 7:30 PM
Sunday, May 19, Pentecost Festival Divine Service, 11:00 AM
Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,
This month of May brings two festivals of the Christian Year. Thursday, May 9th, is Ascension Day; Sunday, May 19th, is Pentecost which with Christmas and Easter Day is one of the three great festivals of the Church Year. Our Lord ascended into heaven on the fortieth day after His resurrection, and so Ascension Day always occurs on a Thursday. The word Pentecost means “fiftieth”; it is the fiftieth day after Christ’s resurrection. There was a time when both Ascension Day and Pentecost were joyfully celebrated throughout the Christian world. But we have come to a time when here in America Ascension Day passes all but unnoticed – even in most churches – and Pentecost is just another Sunday. In some parts of Europe Ascension Day is still a holiday as is the Monday after Pentecost. But be all that as it may, both of these festivals remain a joyful celebration of the mighty acts of God for our salvation. On Ascension Day we sing:
On Christ’s ascension I now build
The hope of my ascension;
This hope alone has always stilled
All doubt and apprehension;
For where the Head is, there as well
I know His members are to dwell
When Christ will come and call them. (LSB 492)
And on Pentecost we celebrate the outpouring of the Holy Spirit by the risen and ascended Lord: “For all this the whole earth rejoices with exceeding joy,” as we pray in the liturgy of the Sacrament on this festival. With the descent of the Holy Spirit on the apostles and their proclamation of God’s saving acts in many languages, the Church begins its mission to the whole world, a mission that continues until the end of time. Through that on-going work of the Holy Spirit through the proclamation of the Gospel and the administration of the Sacraments, you and I have been brought to Christ and Christ to us. There can be little doubt that we are living in an age of indifference and even growing hostility to Christ and His Church, but there is also no doubt that it is not only our Christian duty but also our privilege as Christians to join together in giving thanks to God for all His mercies and receiving the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ as He comes to us in His Sacrament every Lord’s Day and festival. And so we need to pray fervently in the words of the ancient Pentecost prayer: “Come, Holy Spirit, fill the hearts of your faithful people and kindle in us the fire of Your love!”
The First Free Flea Market of this year takes place on Saturday, May 11th, from 9:00 A.M.-12:00 Noon. As always we need donations and also volunteers to greet and assist our visitors.
Do remember to bring items for the GEDCO Food Pantry and for the Helping Up Mission. Boxes for both are found inside the door from the parking lot north of the church. Needless to say, the need remains great.
And do remember that you can provide help for suffering people around the world – as in the Holy Land and Ukraine – through our Synod’s LCMS World Relief and Human Care. You can call our Synod’s Contributor Care Line: (888)930-4438 or you can give online through this secure website: lcms.org/givenow/mercy or you can send a check to LCMS World Relief and Human Care, PO Box 66861, Saint Louis, Missouri 63166-6861. Make your check payable to “The Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod” and write “LCMS World Relief and Human Care” on the memo line.
We continue to remember in prayer Bridget Bauman, James Bauman, Christopher Bell, Louis Bell, Dana Carmichael, Timothy Doswell, Quilla Downs, Bunny Duckett, Steve and Joyce Eaves, Albert Ford, Frank Ford, Iris Ford, Yolanda Ford, Sean Fortune, Sherry James, Gloria Jones, Althea Masterson, Chris Mokris, Marion Rollins, Julia Silver, Robert Siperek Jr., Lawrence Smallwood, George Volkman, Dennis Watson, Gary Watson, Julie Watson. Julie has been hospitalized for some weeks at Sinai Hospital. Yolanda Ford remains at Future Care, 1046 North Point Road, Baltimore, MD 21224. Louis Bell remains at Autumn Lake Healthcare, 700 Sudbrook Road, Pikesville, MD 21208,
Miriam Brown-Kelly, who had attended Our Saviour Church, fell asleep in the Lord on Tuesday, April 16th. Her funeral takes place at Journey of Faith Church, 7902 Liberty Road, on Thursday, May 2nd, at 11:00 A.M. May the Light perpetual ever shine upon her and may the risen Lord comfort all who mourn her departure.
The handbell ensembles of Concordia University Irvine, California, will give a concert on Saturday evening, May 11th, at seven o’clock at Calvary Church, 2625 E. Northern Parkway, using 127 handbells and handchimes, as well as other instruments.Concert Handbells and Spirit Bells are the touring ensembles of Concordia and represent a program that has become highly respected internationally. The performance is free, non-ticketed and open to the public.
I want to thank everyone who participated in the Work Day on April 13th: Bernie Knox, Andy Layman, Merton Masterson, Paul and Mary Techau. Dennis and Don Watson, Wayne and Jeanne West. I also want to thank those who helped to make the annual Saint Mark’s Conference a success again this year: Pastor Roy Coats, Pastor Thomas Foelber, Bernie Knox, Doug and Beth Skinner, Paul and Mary Techau, Richard Brown, and the indefatigable videographer Gene Wilken. God bless you all for your kindness!
Our Sunday morning Bible Class is continuing to study the Letter to the Hebrews. This is an informal gathering; questions and comments are very welcome.
My hope is that each one of us has been refreshed and heartened by the yearly celebration of our Lord’s resurrection from the dead. I also cherish the hope that all of us will continue to join together in the weekly celebration of His resurrection, because that is what every Sunday is, what every Sunday is for! The early Christians understood that and lived in that happy awareness as they gathered to meet the risen Lord in the holy mysteries of His body and blood. A Lord’s Day without the Lord’s Supper was unthinkable.
The Lord’s people are in the Lord’s house at the Lord’s own service every Lord’s Day.
Let us continue to remember one another in prayer and continue to remember in prayer the need of the whole church and the whole world.
Affectionately in our Lord,
Pastor McClean
Our Saviour on the Web There are a number of places you can see Our Saviour on the internet. In addition to our web page and Facebook page, we have: a Youtube channel with a collection of videos featuring great hymns of the church and a tour of the bell tower; a Youtube video that presents a history and description of each of our 32 stained glass windows; and, most recently and thanks to the efforts of our organist, John Igoe, a Wikipedia page that has a details about our building’s history and the property including its architectural features such as the stained glass, the chancel, the bells, the bell tower, and the organ. You can find them all at oursaviourbaltimore.org/oslc-on-the-web .
April 28, 2028 AD
Old Testament: Isaiah 12:1-6
Epistle: James 1:16-21
Gospel: John 16:5-15
Click here to listen and subscribe to Pastor McClean’s sermons on iTunes.
April 21, 2024 AD
Old Testament: Isaiah 40:25-31
Epistle: 1 Peter 2:11-20
Gospel: John 16:16-22
here to listen and subscribe to Pastor McClean’s sermons on iTunes.
April 14, 2024 AD
Old Testament: Ezekiel 34:11-16
Epistle: 1 Peter 2:21-25
Gospel: John 10:11-16
Click here to listen and subscribe to Pastor McClean’s sermons on iTunes.
3301 The Alameda
Baltimore, MD 21218
410.235.9553
April, 2024
Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,
No one can doubt that we live in a broken world and that we are all in various ways broken human beings. Our Lord’s disciples, fearfully gathered behind locked doors following His death and burial, were very broken indeed. All their hopes were ended and their hearts were filled with fear that they might suffer the same fate as their beloved Teacher and Friend. But then on the evening of that first Easter Day, unhindered by those locked doors, “Jesus came and stood among them and said to them, ‘Peace be with you.’ When He had said this, He showed them His hands and His side. Then the disciples were glad when they saw the Lord.” The risen Lord’s word of peace means more than the absence of conflict, it conveys a sense of wholeness, of restoration of what has been broken and out of joint, of God’s unmerited grace and favor toward broken, mortal sinners. And the risen Savior’s word of peace to His broken disciples is His word of peace to this whole broken, sorrowing, death-bound world. Christ is risen! He is risen indeed! Alleluia!
No wonder the Church continues to celebrate Christ’s glorious resurrection throughout the forty days following Easter Day and indeed on every Lord’s Day which is the weekly celebration of His triumph! Since singing better expresses our Easter joy than does the spoken voice, we will be singing the Nicene Creed throughout the Easter season and on other festivals of the Church Year. In the old Lutheran Church the Creed was always sung: either the actual text of the Nicene Creed was sung in German or in Latin or Luther’s wonderful paraphrase of the Nicene Creed, “We All Believe in One True God” (Lutheran Service Book 954, The Lutheran Hymnal 251) was sung as it always was in German services in our Synod’s churches. And on every Sunday during the Easter season we sing the hymn “Christ is Arisen” which had already been sung long before the Reformation of the 16th century. The forty days of Easter end on Ascension Day, which this year falls on May 9th, when we will celebrate a Festival Divine Service at 7:30 P.M.
Saturday, April 13th, will be a Work Day here at church from 10:00 A.M. until 12:00 Noon. Various outdoor and indoor chores need attention as we prepare for this year’s Saint Mark’s Conference which takes place April 22nd and 23rd. Information about the Conference can be found at our church’s website (2024 St. Mark’s Conference | Our Saviour Lutheran Church (oursaviourbaltimore.org)). Although intended primarily for pastors, everyone is welcome to attend the services and presentations.
On Saturday, May 11th, the First Free Flea Market of this year will take place beginning at 9:00 A.M. Judy Volkman reminds us that we have been blessed with clothing for women and lots of household items. We are lacking in jewelry and in men’s clothing. If you have any of these items you would wish to donate, please call Judy at (443) 425-3437. And volunteers are always needed to greet and assist our visitors. Judy asks, Who knows what will happen because of these interactions? Help to someone in need? A new member?
And do remember to bring items for the GEDCO Food Pantry and for the Helping Up Mission. Boxes for both are found inside the door from the parking lot north of the church. The need remains great!
Remember in your prayers all those for whom our prayers are desired: Bridget Bauman, James Bauman, Christopher Bell, Louis Bell, Dana Carmichael, Timothy Doswell, Quilla Downs, Bunny Duckett, Steve and Joyce Eaves, Albert Ford, Frank Ford, Iris Ford, Yolanda Ford, Sean Fortune, Sherry James, Gloria Jones, Althea Masterson, Chris Mokris, Marion Rollins, Julia Silver, Robert Siperek Jr., Lawrence Smallwood, George Volkman, Dennis Watson, Gary Watson, Julie Watson. Yolanda Ford remains at Future Care, 1046 North Point Road, Baltimore, MD 21224. Louis Bell remains at Autumn Lake Healthcare, 700 Sudbrook Road, Pikesville, MD 21208.
Do remember that as we see such terrible suffering in so many parts of the world, such as in the ongoing wars in the Holy Land and in Ukraine, we can provide help through our Synod’s LCMS World Relief and Human Care. You can give online through this secure website: lcms.org/givenow/mercy or you can call Synod’s Contributor Care Line: (888)930-4438, or you can send a check to LCMS World Relief and Human Care, PO Box 66861, Saint Louis, MO 63166-6861. Make your check payable to “The Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod” and write “LCMS World Relief and Human Care” on the memo line.
The familiar prayer that is prayed after we have received Holy Communion, based on the old Latin liturgy, was written by Dr. Luther for his German Mass of 1526 and has had a firm place in the Lutheran liturgy ever since. It is found in both the liturgies we use (Lutheran Service Book, pp. 166, 201; The Lutheran Hymnal, p. 30). In this prayer we ask that God would through the Holy Sacrament of His Son’s body and blood “strengthen us…in faith toward [Him] and in fervent love toward one another.” And so we see that the fruit of receiving Holy Communion is the strengthening of faith in the Lord who has so loved us as to offer Himself for us and also the increase of “fervent love toward one another.” It therefore goes without saying that, in coming to the altar, we repent of the weakness of our faith and the coldness of our love. We cannot seek the mercy of God if we are unmerciful toward those who may have offended us in some way. We cannot seek the peace of Christ if we refuse to be at peace with others. We all need to ponder the words of this prayer and take them to heart. How we pray shows what we believe.
Christ is risen!
He is risen indeed!
Alleluia!
The Lord’s people are in the Lord’s house at the Lord’s own service every Lord’s Day.
I ask you to keep me in your prayers as you are in mine.
May 18, 2023 AD
Epistle: Acts 1:1-11
Gospel: Luke 24:44-53
Click here to listen and subscribe to Pastor McClean’s sermons on iTunes.
May 14, 2023 AD
Old Testament: Numbers 21:4-9
Epistle: James 1:22-27
Gospel: John 16:23-30
Click here to listen and subscribe to Pastor McClean’s sermons on iTunes.
May 7, 2023 AD
Old Testament: Isaiah 12:1-6
Epistle: James 1:16-21
Gospel: John 16:5-15
Click here to listen and subscribe to Pastor McClean’s sermons on iTunes.
April 30, 2023 AD
Old Testament: Isaiah 40:25-31
Epistle: 1 Peter 2:11-20
Gospel: John 16:16-22
Click here to listen and subscribe to Pastor McClean’s sermons on iTunes.
April 23, 2023 AD
Old Testament: Ezekiel 34:11-16
Epistle: 1 Peter 2:21-25
Gospel: John 10:11-16
Click here to listen and subscribe to Pastor McClean’s sermons on iTunes.
April 16, 2023 AD
Old Testament: Ezekiel 37:1-14
Epistle: 1 John 5:4-10
Gospel: John 20:19-31
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April 8, 2023 AD
Guest preacher: The Rev. Roy Axel Coats, Pastor, Lutheran Church of the Redeemer
Epistle: Colossians 3:1-4
Gospel: Matthew 28:1-7
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May 26, 2022 AD
Epistle: Acts 1:1-11
Gospel: Luke 24:44-53
Click here to listen and subscribe to Pastor McClean’s sermons on iTunes.