Tag Archives: Nicene Creed

Our Saviour Parish News, June, 2025



OUR SAVIOUR LUTHERAN CHURCH

3301 The Alameda
Baltimore, MD 21218
410.235.9553
June, 2025

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,

In his letter to his young co-worker Timothy, Saint Paul says, “Great indeed is the mystery of our religion, God was manifested in the flesh” (I Timothy 3:16). Although God has from all eternity been the one God – Father, Son and Holy Spirit – it was only in the coming into this world of God the Son that the mystery of the Holy Trinity was clearly revealed: at Jesus’ baptism by John in the Jordan River the Father declares Him to be His beloved Son and the Holy Spirit descends on Him in the form of a dove. The Holy Trinity is an inscrutable mystery, and three hundred years passed before the Church found words to safeguard the mystery. This Year of Our Lord 2025 is the 1700th anniversary of the Council of Nicaea which did just that. A great controversy had broken out when Arius, a presbyter in the Church at Alexandria in Egypt, denied that Jesus is truly God. To resolve the increasingly bitter controversy the Emperor Constantine summoned a council to meet in the City of Nicaea – present-day Iznik in Turkey – about 90 miles southwest of Constantinople – present-day Istanbul. The Council of over 300 bishops met from late May through July of the year 325 and finally adopted a Creed which confesses that Jesus is “of one substance” with the Father, meaning that Jesus is truly God. Only God can save this lost and fallen world! The Creed adopted at Nicaea, which safeguards the truth that Jesus is truly God, was expanded at the Council of Constantinople in the year 380 in a way that safeguards the truth that the Holy Spirit is truly God the Lord. And so the great mystery of the Holy Trinity was safeguarded and confessed. And the Creed adopted at Nicaea (as expanded at Constantinople) has for a thousand years been confessed at the celebration of the Holy Eucharist as it is to this day in the Divine Service. The Holy Trinity is the God who made and saved us! The Holy Spirit leads us to Christ who leads us to the Father. And so in the Introit for Trinity Sunday (which this year falls on June 15th) the church sings: “Blessed be the Holy Trinity and the Undivided Unity: let us give glory to Him because He hath shown His mercy to us.”

The May issue of our Synod’s periodical, The Lutheran Witness, has some excellent articles about the 1700th anniversary of the Council of Nicaea which I highly recommend. You can subscribe to the Witness by calling  800-325-3040 (option 2) or by emailing lwsubscriptions@cph.org.

Three of the five Sundays in June are festivals of the Church Year. June 8th is the Feast of Pentecost which together with Christmas and Easter is one of the three chief festivals of the Church Year. June 15th is Trinity Sunday and June 29th is the Feast of Saint Peter and Saint Paul..

The Sunday Bible Class will be suspended for the summer beginning on June 15th and will resume on October 5th. We have been studying the Smalcald Articles, one of the documents in which the Lutheran Church confesses its faith in the truth revealed in the written Word of God.

David Dowdy fell asleep in the Lord on Tuesday May 27th. His funeral will be held in church on Tuesday, June 10th, at 11:00 A.M. May the Light perpetual ever shine upon him and may the Savior comfort all who mourn His departure with the hope of the resurrection.

At the spring voters meeting the budget for fiscal year 2025/26 was approved and the Church Council was elected: Bernie Knox, Merton Masterson, Gabe Purviance, Paul and Mary Techau, Gary Watson, Wayne and Jean West. Andy Layman, who was our lay delegate to the recent Southeastern District convention, gave a brief report on the convention. The repairs to our heating system are expected to be completed this month but we are still trying to replenish our cash reserves.

Remember to bring food items for the GEDCO Food Pantry and personal items for the Helping Up Mission. The need remains great as does the opportunity to help as we are able. Those of us who know nothing of food insecurity and homelessness are obligated by the Law of Love to help those who suffer want. Remember too that you can help people suffering from war and all kinds of disasters 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 the secure website lcms.org/givenow/mercy.

We continue to remember in prayer Bridget Bauman, James Bauman, Christopher Bell, Bertha Buchanan, Dana Carmichael, Timothy Doswell, 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.

Remember that our second Free Flea Market of this year will be held on Saturday, June 14th, 9:00 A.M. – 12 Noon. We always need volunteers to help and greet our visitors.

I suspect that everyone will agree that for a great many years now we have been living in a time of increasing moral disintegration. Marriage as ordained by God in creation is increasingly in danger as some people even question the created reality of human beings as male and female. These problems will be addressed in a workshop In His Image: Christian Sexuality According to God that will be held on Saturday, June 28th, from 9:00 A.M. – 4:00 P.M. at Calvary Church, 2625 E, Northern Parkway. The cost is free and lunch will be provided but you must register by emailing Berealutheran2999@gmail.com by June 13th. If you have any questions you may call Calvary Church at 410-426-4307. The workshop will be led by Doxology which is a ministry funded by Synod’s Office of National Mission.

This month of June brings to an end the festival half of the Church Year when we have remembered and celebrated all that God has done for us in the birth and life and death and resurrection of His Son and by sending to us the Holy Spirit. But because every Sunday of the year is a celebration of the Lord’s resurrection, Christians have from the very beginning of the Church’s life gathered to meet the risen Lord as He comes to us every Lord’s Day in the Holy Sacrament. If you are unable to come to church, I am always glad to bring the Sacrament to you. I am always glad to hear from you either by telephone (410-554-9994) or by email (charlesmcclean1942@gmail.com). If you or a loved one are sick or in some other kind of need, never hesitate to let me know.

In the words of the Divine Service, “For the peace of the whole world, for the well being of the Church of God, and for the unity of all, let us pray to the Lord.”

Affectionately in our risen Lord,

Pastor McClean

Our Saviour Parish News, April, 2024



OUR SAVIOUR LUTHERAN CHURCH

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.

Affectionately in our Lord,

Pastor McClean