Tag Archives: Trinity

Our Saviour Parish News, May, 2026



OUR SAVIOUR LUTHERAN CHURCH

3301 The Alameda
Baltimore, MD 21218
410.235.9553
May, 2026

Ascension Festival Divine Service
Thursday, May 14, 7:30 PM

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,

As we draw to the close of the festival half of this church year, we have three major festivals of the church to celebrate this month. On May 14, we will celebrate the Ascension of our Lord with Divine Service at 7:30 PM. Ten days later, on May 24, we will celebrate Pentecost. The word Pentecost means “fiftieth;” it is the fiftieth day after Christ’s resurrection and marks the outpouring of the Holy Spirit to Christ’s church through his apostles and is generally regarded as the birth of the church. We note that this Spirit was present at the creation of the world as we sing in that ancient hymn:

Creator Spirit by whose aid
The world’s foundations first were laid,
Come, visit every humble mind,
Come pour Your joys on human kind;
From sin and sorrow set us free;
May we Your living temples be.

The following Sunday, May 31, is Trinity Sunday, and the concluding celebration of the festival half of the church year. As we have noted previously, we are planning a farewell for Pastor McClean that day at the 11:00 AM Divine Service with a luncheon to follow. If you are able to attend and plan on staying for lunch, please sign up on the piano at church or call the church office and leave a message so we can plan for the luncheon. If you would like to send a card or note to Pastor McClean, his address is 4 Upland Rd., Apt. 21, Baltimore, MD, 21210.

As we discussed in the April newsletter, Our Saviour is not in a financial position to call a regular full-time pastor. The salary we paid Pastor McClean represents only a fraction of what a full-time pastor would ordinarily be paid. The Specific Ministry Pastor program was introduced by our church body, the Lutheran Church–Missouri Synod (LCMS), to help congregations in our situation. This program is meant to be used by congregations for whom calling a full-time pastor is problematic due to location, finances, or other considerations.

This is a four-year program, administered by the synodical seminaries, that begins with the candidate taking courses (mostly online, but with some on-campus intensives) while beginning his service as vicar in the church. Ordination occurs at the end of those two years, and an additional two-years of study are then completed. It is ‘specific ministry’ since the candidate is authorized to serve only in that specific place. This is all done under the supervision of a local pastor as well as the district president, the Rev. Dr. William Harmon.

At our May Voters Assembly meeting (May 17, immediately following Divine Service) we will consider the question of asking Scott Jones, a member of Our Saviour and life-long Lutheran, to enter this program so that he can serve Our Saviour as pastor upon completion of the program and thus we may continue to have Word and Sacrament ministry. He has the time and the theological formation to pursue the SMP program. He has been clear in stating that he wants no compensation for this service and that he would bear all the educational expenses himself. Scott has lived in the Baltimore area his entire life, growing up in Towson, Maryland and joined Our Saviour in 2016. He holds without reservation the confession this church was built on, the Unaltered Augsburg Confession, and he desires only to be a faithful steward of the rich liturgical tradition Pastor McClean has instilled in all of us. For additional information about Scott and the SMP program, please see the April newsletter. Pastor Eric Bednash, our circuit visitor, will be with us that day to preach and celebrate the sacrament and also to guide us in our discussions regarding the SMP program during the Voters Assembly meeting.

At this meeting we will also elect the members of the church council and adopt a budget for the 2027 fiscal year that starts on July 1. Please mark your calendars and plan on attending that day so you can be a part of this path forward. If you would be interested in serving on the church council or would like to nominate someone, please contact Gabe Purviance (gpurviance@comcast.net).

The Sunday Bible class is concluding a study of the risen Christ from the empty tomb to His throne in heaven on May 17. After taking a week’s break for the Memorial Day holiday weekend, the class will resume on May 31 with a study of selected readings from ‘Series A’ of the three-year lectionary (Our Saviour uses the historic one-year lectionary at its Sunday services). The class meets each Sunday morning at 9:45 AM.

Also, starting May 3, we are providing the opportunity to pray Matins at 8:30 AM. This is a spoken service, led by Scott Jones. While this is not a substitute for Divine Service  and there is no sermon, it is still an excellent way to prepare for the Divine Service as we pray the Psalms and Canticles of Matins, hear a reading, and pray for the church and the world. Please join us if you are able.

We are continuing to support the GEDCO Food Pantry and for the Helping Up Mission. Boxes for items for both are found inside the door from the parking lot north of the church. Needless to say, the need remains great. And remember that you can provide help for suffering people around the world 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.

With Frank Ford, we mourn the recent death of his daughter, Yolanda. There will be a memorial service for Yolanda on June 6 at 11:00 AM, with a repast to follow. Pastor Elliot Robertson has agreed to conduct the service.

We are continuing with our Free Flea markets each second Saturday of the month through September (May 9, June 13, July 11, August 8, September 12), 9:00 AM – 12:00 PM. Please see Judy Volkman for details or to volunteer to help.

We continue to remember in prayer Pastor McClean, Bridget Bauman, James Bauman, Christopher Bell, Bertha Buchanan, Dana Carmichael, Tim Doswell, Quilla Downs, Bunny Duckett, Joyce Eaves, Frank Ford, Iris Ford, Sean Fortune, Lynne Funck, Katherine Gray, Sherry James, Gloria Jones, Byron Masterson, Mary Mokris, Julia Silver, Robert Siperek Jr., Lawrence Smallwood, Paul Swank, George Volkman, Gary Watson, Marvalisa, Sierra, Jonathan and Steven Gibson.

Finally, we begin a new feature this month we are calling “The Month Ahead.” It is appended to this newsletter. In it, Scott Jones provides a summary of the major themes of each Sunday of the month. You can use this to prepare for service each week and develop a better understanding as to how the liturgical calendar unfolds.

In Christ and on behalf of the Church Council,
Paul Techau, Council President

The Month Ahead: June, 2026

Services and Their Readings

The Season: Trinity I–V: The Call to the Kingdom of Grace

With Holy Trinity Sunday and Festival Half of the church year behind us, the Church enters the long green season of Trinitytide, sometimes called the ‘Teaching Half’ of the church year. For the first five Sundays, the readings focus on what scholars call “the call to the kingdom of grace,” that is, God’s invitation to His kingdom, who is invited, and what it costs to refuse. The color green reminds us that faith grows steadily through the weekly hearing of God’s Word and the receiving of His Sacraments. June’s Sundays take us from the bedrock of salvation by faith alone, through the great feast God spreads for the undeserving, to the relentless mercy of a God who seeks out what is lost. We conclude the month with a special celebration of the day Lutherans put their faith on the line before the most powerful ruler in Europe.

June 7 First Sunday after Trinity

Genesis 15:1–6  •  1 John 4:16–21  •  Luke 16:19–31
The Old Testament reading gives us the single most important verse about how God saves people: Abraham simply believed God’s promise, and God counted that faith as righteousness. No works, no earning. Just trust. The Epistle unpacks what that does to us: when we truly know that God loves us, fear of judgment disappears, and that same love spills out toward the people around us. The Gospel drives the point home with the Rich Man and Lazarus. The rich man had everything and ignored the beggar at his gate. When both die, everything reverses. The parable ends with a sobering truth: even a miracle won’t change a heart that refuses to hear what God has already said in Scripture.

June 14 Second Sunday after Trinity

Proverbs 9:1–10  •  1 John 3:13–18  •  Luke 14:15–24
Proverbs pictures God’s Wisdom as a generous host who has set a magnificent banquet and is calling everyone to come, especially those who know they have nothing to offer. Jesus tells a parable with exactly the same shape: a man throws a great feast, his invited guests make excuses and don’t come, so he fills the hall with the poor, the blind, and the crippled instead, and then sends out to the highways to bring in strangers. The kingdom of God works like that: the people who think they are too busy or too important miss out, while those who know they need the invitation accept it. The Epistle reminds us that real love (the kind Christ showed on the cross) is not just words. It shows up in concrete acts of care for the people right in front of us.

June 21 Third Sunday after Trinity

Micah 7:18–20  •  1 Peter 5:6–11  •  Luke 15:1–10
Micah ends his book with a question: “Who is a God like you?” His answer is that God is unlike any other god precisely because He delights in showing mercy. He doesn’t just overlook sin. He buries it in the depths of the sea. Jesus fills this out with two of His most beloved parables: the shepherd who leaves ninety-nine sheep to search for the one that is lost, and the woman who sweeps her whole house to find one lost coin. In both stories, the finding ends in a party, because that is how heaven responds every time one sinner comes home. Peter’s letter brings it down to earth: we live under the care of this merciful God, so we can hand all our worries over to Him. But we stay alert, because the devil is real and prowls like a lion looking for someone to destroy.

June 28 Presentation of the Augsburg Confession

Isaiah 55:6–11  •  1 Timothy 6:11–16  •  Matthew 10:26–33
On June 25, 1530, Lutheran princes stood before the Holy Roman Emperor Charles V at Augsburg and read aloud a confession of what they believed. It could have cost them everything. Martin Luther himself could not be there. He was under an imperial ban, so his colleague Philip Melanchthon wrote the document and led the presentation. At its heart, the Augsburg Confession declares that we are saved by God’s grace alone, through faith alone, for the sake of Christ alone, not by anything we do or deserve. The readings appointed for this day speak directly to that moment: Isaiah promises that God’s Word never fails to accomplish what He sends it to do. Paul tells Timothy to fight for the faith publicly, just as Jesus confessed the truth before Pontius Pilate. And Jesus Himself tells His disciples not to be afraid of what powerful people can do to them, because God is with them in their witness. The Augsburg Confession was adopted into the Book of Concord in 1580 and remains the foundational statement of Lutheran teaching today. Our Saviour celebrates this occasion by local tradition on the last Sunday of June each year.

The Transfiguration of Our Lord

OSLC 5The Transfiguration of Our Lord

Preacher: Rev. Thomas Foelber

January 24, 2026 AD
Old Testament: Exodus 34:29-35
Epistle: II Peter 1:16-21
Gospel: Matthew 17:1-9

Click here to listen and subscribe to Pastor McClean’s sermons on iTunes.

Note: The service for this week was moved to Saturday afternoon due to an impending winter storm.

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, May/June, 2023



OUR SAVIOUR LUTHERAN CHURCH

3301 The Alameda
Baltimore, MD 21218
410.235.9553
May/June, 2023

THURSDAY, MAY 18, 7:30 PM
ASCENSION DAY—FESTIVAL DIVINE SERVICE

SUNDAY, MAY 28, 11:00 AM
THE DAY OF PENTECOST—FESTIVAL DIVINE SERVICE

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,

Christmas, Easter and Pentecost are the three chief festivals of the Christian Year.

This year Pentecost falls on the last Sunday in May. But before we come to Pentecost we celebrate Ascension Day, which is always the sixth Thursday after Easter Day because it was on the fortieth day after His resurrection that our Lord ascended into heaven. Preaching on Ascension Day, Saint Leo the Great (A.D. 400–461) had this to say: “Since, then, the ascension of Christ is also our exaltation, for there is hope that the body will be summoned whither the Head has preceded in glory, let us give worthy expression to our exceeding great joy and be glad in fervent thanksgiving. For today we have not only been confirmed as possessors of paradise, but in Christ we have scanned the heights of heaven. Greater benefits have we obtained through the ineffable grace of Christ than we had lost through the malice of Satan. Those whom the raging foe had thrust from their first peaceful dwelling, the Son of God has united to Himself and has placed them at the right hand of the Father.”

Ten days after His ascension, on the Day of Pentecost, Christ sent the Holy Spirit to His disciples who then proclaimed His saving work to people of many languages gathered in Jerusalem. The Savior’s victory for us was accomplished on the cross, revealed in His resurrection, and proclaimed on the Day of Pentecost when three thousand people were baptized and so added to the Church. Saint Luke tells us that the members of this first Church “devoted themselves to the apostles’ teaching and fellowship, to the breaking of bread and the prayers” (Acts 2:42). And so it has continued as the churches throughout the world have continued to gather every Lord’s Day to hear the teaching of the apostles in the words of Holy Scripture and in the preaching, and as the risen and ascended Lord gathers His church into one body through the gift of His holy body and precious blood in the Sacrament of the Altar.

And so it will continue until the Lord Jesus comes again in glory.

The first Sunday in June is the Festival of the Holy Trinity, commonly called Trinity Sunday, and the last Sunday in June is the 493rd anniversary of the Presentation of the Augsburg Confession by the Lutheran princes and cities to Emperor Charles V. These two festivals are connected because the Augsburg Confession begins by confessing the doctrine of the Holy Trinity which shows that the Lutheran confessors did not imagine themselves to be “founding” a new church but continuing steadfast in the faith the one Church that has been in the world since the first Pentecost. Through His incarnate Son God has revealed Himself as the Holy Trinity: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit—one God. This is a great mystery—the mystery that God Himself is no solitary being but communion in love who in love redeems the fallen world. What happened at the Reformation is that everything in the church’s life that had obscured the truth that our salvation is wholly the gift of God’s love was removed so that the pure Gospel of God’s saving grace could shine in all its splendor. We remember that in his 95 Theses Dr. Luther wrote: “The true treasure of the Church is the most holy Gospel of the glory and grace of God.” This is what is confessed in the Augsburg Confession, and so important was the Augsburg Confession to those who built our church that on the cornerstone, right after the name of our church, we find the letters “U A C” which stand for “Unaltered Augsburg Confession.” Christ alone is our Savior and He bestows salvation through the preaching of the Gospel, through Baptism, Absolution, and the Holy Sacrament. Through these means of grace the Holy Spirit brings Christ to us and us to Christ who brings us to the Father.

The first Free Flea Market of this year will be held on Saturday, May 13, 9:00 AM–12:00 PM. We always need volunteers to help greet those who come and hand out items. Saturday, June 10, will be our second free flea market. We are grateful to Judy Volkman who has taken the lead in making this happen. This is a way of reaching out to our community and sharing with others what God has given us.

The spring Voters Meeting will be held after Divine Service on Sunday, May 21. Every member of Our Saviour, eighteen years and older, is eligible to vote. At this meeting we will elect the Church Council and approve the budget for fiscal year 2023/2024.

I wish to thank our members who helped with this year’s Saint Mark’s Conference: Paul and Mary Techau, Bernie Knox, Richard Brown, Jake Mokris, Ben Orris, and Ted Jones. I have heard good things from those who attended the conference and who are looking forward to next year’s.

We continue to remember in our prayers James Bauman, Louis Bell, Dana Carmichael, Maggie Doswell, Quilla Downs, Bunny Duckett, Albert Ford, Frank Ford, Iris Ford, Yolanda Ford, Sean Fortune, Helen Gray, Queenie Hardaway, Gloria Jones, Althea Masterson, Mary Mokris, Julia Silver, Lawrence Smallwood, George Volkman, Dennis Watson, Gary Watson, Jean West, Wayne West. Maggie Doswell continues to recover at Cadia Healthcare, 4922 LaSalle Road in Hyattsville, MD 20782. Yolanda Ford remains at Future Care, 1046 North Point Road, Baltimore, MD 21224; Louis Bell at Autumn Lake Healthcare, 7 Sudbrook Road, Pikesville, Md 21208; Queenie Hardaway at Augsburg Village, 6825 Campfield Road 21207.

Please remember to bring food items for the GEDCO food pantry and personal items for the Helping Up Mission. The need continues to be great, even daunting.

The Sunday morning Bible class continues to study Saint Paul’s Letter to the Ephesians. Come join us! Questions are very welcome!

Please let me know if you are unable to come to church and wish to receive Holy Communion at home. Email me at charlesmcclean42@gmail.com or call me at (410) 554–9994. Please let me know if you need a ride to church and I will see that that need is met.

I have been invited to the 175th anniversary of Saint John’s Church in Springfield, Pennsylvania, which will be celebrated on Trinity Sunday, June 4. I served there as pastor from 1976 to 1982. Kathy Panek became organist at Saint John’s the same year as I began my ministry there and continues as organist to this very day. Our good friend, Pastor Noah Rogness, associate pastor at Immanuel Church in Alexandria, will be here in my absence.

In his presentation at Saint Mark’s Conference, Pastor Kurt Reinhardt of Trinity Church in Kurtzville, Ontario, showed us how even when most alone a Christian’s prayer is not solitary. In all our prayers we pray with the entire communion of saints in heaven and on earth—as we say at every celebration of the Holy Eucharist: “Therefore with angels and archangels and all the company of heaven we laud and magnify Your glorious name…” As those baptized into Christ and His Body the Church we are never alone. We pray as our Lord and Savior commanded and taught us: Our Father… In that awareness let us continue in prayer for one another, for the whole Church and for the whole world.

Affectionately in our Lord,

Pastor McClean

Feast of the Holy Trinity

Feast of the Holy Trinity

June 7, 2020 AD

Old Testament: Isaiah 6:1-7

Epistle: Romans 11:33-36

Gospel: John 3:1-15

 

Click here to listen and subscribe to Pastor McClean’s sermons on iTunes.

Listen to the Service: