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sheep1: This is most disturbing. The statement "new ways to deliver God's message have been evolving." I guess liturgical worship that has been around for centuries is being thrown out. What do these churches do with the article XXIV of the Apology to the Augsburg Confession which states that "we also keep traditional liturgical forms, such as the order of readings, prayers, vestments, and other similar things?"

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Saturday, January 13th 2007

7:52 PM

Why do we need another Lutheran Congregation in Milwaukee?

Dear Friends,

Perhaps some out there are wondering why Sola Scriptura Evangelical Lutheran Church began and why we need a mission congregation in a metro area that is filled with Lutheran churches.  We would be happy to discuss our the reason for our existence and welcome comments, questions, concerns on the subject of why another Lutheran congregation?

Please feel free to post.

 

Sola Scriptura

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Thursday, December 28th 2006

4:50 PM

Traditional vs. Contemporary Worship?


The following article appeared in the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel on Monday, December 25.  Please feel free to make comments about this article and contemporary/ traditional worship.

Old time rock 'n' roll

Traditional hymns get fresh beat as interest grows in contemporary church services

By TOM HEINEN
theinen@journalsentinel.com
Posted: Dec. 24, 2006

Martin Luther wrote the lyrics centuries ago, but the eighth-note rock rhythms that pulsated through St. Marcus Lutheran Church on Christmas Eve clearly proclaimed that this was new terrain for "From Heaven Above to Earth I Come."

Such sounds would have been verboten in the distant past within the Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod, known for staunch theological conservatism.

But new ways to deliver God's message have been evolving.

Exploration of modern musical forms and instrumentation also has been happening for years in other branches of Lutheranism, and in other denominations, sometimes sparking what have been termed "worship wars" as contemporary and traditional approaches to music and worship vie within congregations.

At St. Marcus, 2215 N. Palmer St., traditional hymn lyrics are retained for its alternative service at 6:30 p.m. Sundays. Even the familiar tunes usually are there - just with a blues, pop, folk or rock 'n' roll setting, all played by the "house" band Koiné.

Pete Reese, 32, a string bass player from Milwaukee, describes the music as "bombastic pop, to classic rock, to folk. Even a touch of metal, a touch of punk here and there."

"We don't consider ourselves a praise band," said Brian Davison, 28, of Milwaukee, the band's vocalist and the church's youth and music minister. "We call ourselves a worship band or a church band. All our songs come from old hymnal songs from the Lutheran tradition, and others. We are trying to give new life to some of the old hymns that taught so well and had such beautiful words."

'Natural drive'

Take the Luther hymn, for example.

"The song has natural drive to it," said Milwaukeean Benj Lawrenz, 31, the band's creative spark, electric and acoustic guitar player, and grandson of Carl Lawrenz, a theologian and former president of Wisconsin Lutheran Seminary in Mequon.

"It's the shepherds explaining to the world what they have just seen with the angels. So there's a lot of energy to the lyrics. And the music has a lot of energy behind it. If you play it in an upbeat tempo, it just pushes you forward, like the shepherds were being pushed."

That hymn was one of several from the synod's 1993 book, "Christian Worship: A Lutheran Hymnal." Adding brief narratives and Scriptural readings, the service told the Old Testament history that led up to Christ, the events around his birth and the sacrificial purpose for which he came.

"A lot of times people leave Jesus in the manger, and it's just really nice and cuddly at Christmas," Lawrenz said. "They forget that this person came to die for the sins of the world and not just to be a ploy to sell Christmas merchandise."

There is theology behind retaining traditional lyrics, which are seen by some as more accurately reflecting Scripture.

"You have to get the difference between the way the evangelicals and Lutherans look at theology," said James Tiefel, dean of chapel and a professor of worship and homiletics at Wisconsin Lutheran Seminary. "The evangelicals will say that a human being has to make a decision to become a Christian. And so the way you get him to make that decision becomes very important. You have to find a way to raise his emotions or convince his intellect. Lutherans will say the Holy Spirit works through the word (Scripture) to create a Christian."

There has been some experimentation with full-blown praise bands in WELS churches for at least 10 years, but it is not widespread, Tiefel said.

One of the noteworthy WELS examples nationally is St. Mark Lutheran Church in De Pere. About 80% of the music that its praise band plays comes from top-selling contemporary Christian music. The church, which has a $150,000 audio-visual system with two big video screens, has nearly 2,000 members and needs to expand beyond the new facility it built a few years ago, said Phil Boileau, its minister of music and family.

A growing number of WELS churches nationally are making at least some use of contemporary music and instruments beyond the organ, according to Tiefel and the Rev. Bryan Gerlach, administrator for the WELS Commission on Worship. At least 150 have gotten instruction at Gerlach's School of Worship Enrichment.

25% offer alternative service

Wayne Mueller, first vice president of synod mission and ministry for WELS, estimates that 25% of the denomination's 1,263 congregations offer some type of regular alternative worship.

He thinks the push for contemporary music is coming from 35- to 40-year-olds, and that younger people prefer tradition. He also cites a study that correlates membership growth with the percentage of a congregation's people involved in Bible study.

Unlike many other mainline denominations, the Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod has had stable membership instead of losses. There were about 317,000 baptized and confirmed members 16 and older in 1990, a majority in Wisconsin, Michigan and Minnesota. Now there are about 315,000, Mueller said.

Formed in 1993, Koiné, the St. Marcus band, took its name from an ancient Greek term for the language of the common people. With Seth Koch, 25, of East Troy as a newly added replacement on drums, and Seth Bauer, 26, of Waukesha on piano, the band recently released its second CD. Koiné has played at more than 70 churches in the region.

From 15 people at the first Sunday night services, attendance now averages about 150, with many more for special services, said the Rev. Jim Skorzewski, who conducts the alternative services and assists Senior Pastor Mark Jeske in shepherding the diverse, growing congregation. Many are 18 to 35. Sunday's service drew about 300 worshippers.

Growing congregation

St. Marcus has grown from about 500 members four years ago to about 800, Davidson said. The home of Jeske's "Time of Grace" television and radio ministry, the church has a 280-pupil school with a waiting list, a gospel choir, bible study groups for men and women, a bible-based Wandani Youth Outreach program and other groups for various age ranges.

The original concept was to reach out to African-Americans in the church's central-city neighborhood, a few blocks east of N. King Drive, near North Ave. But drawing on talents within the congregation and adding a couple of outside musicians resulted in music with more appeal to young adults and college students, and from a wider area.

"We get a sprinkling of everything, but not the target group we sent out for," Skorzewski said. "It's like God just said, 'I think it would be really cool if you went this way.' "






From the Dec. 25, 2006 editions of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

 

 

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Monday, November 27th 2006

7:43 PM

Advent

You see, your King will come to you,
        He is righteous and victorious!   Zechariah 9:9 
 
    "HE IS COMING!"  Such is the message of Advent.  This does not mean that someone is coming from anywhere within our world but that Someone is coming from beyond our world and entering our time and space, yea, even our very human nature, to help us in our need.  And that Someone Who is coming is no one less than God Himself!
 
    The Advent cry "He is coming!" is, however, not a mere empty promise of a future event but the announcement of an already present day reality, a reality which God already began in the past.  We dare not, however, speak of God's coming as if it were merely a bygone event; He is at the present time still coming to us.  Yet He does not exhaust Himself in the present but will reveal Himself to us also in the future.
 
    The church has attempted to express this entirely unique, supranatural coming of her Lord by speaking of His threefold Advent.  (1)  He has come!  The One Whom God promised to His peole actually appeared in history and has permanently united Himself to our human nature.  (2)  He is coming!  Even today He continues to come unto us with all of His grace and favor through His Word and Sacraments.  (3)  He shall come!  His tremendous majesty shall be revealed at the end of time.  He Whom the world nailed  to the cross shall confront His rebellious creatures as their Savior-Judge.  He is already now secretly and invisibly present in the world, ever since His resurrection from the dead and His exaltation to the right hand of God's power.  Soon, however, He will break through the orders of creation and make us fully understand what He means when He says: "I am Alpha and Omega, the Beginning and the Ending, Which is andWhich was and Which is to come, the Almighty."
 
    If we are to meet Him Who comes thus, we must repent and allow ourselves to be admonished by His forerunner, John the Baptist, to approach His crib and the approaching celebration with repentance.  That is why an earnest violet is the liturgical color for Advent, preceding the white of Christmas and Epihany (which symbolizes Christ's glorious light). In keeping with the tone of repentance the Gloria in Excelsis is omitted from the liturgy during Advent.  In many places no flowers are placed on or about the altar.  Christmas hymns and carols are not sung until Christmas Eve.  A fine Advent custom is that of preparing an Advent wreath with its four candles; one candle is lighted before the reading of the Old Testament lesson in the service during the first week in Advent, two during the second week, and so forht until during the fourth week all four candles burn in anticipation of the "the fullness of time" when the incarnation and the coming of the Light of the world is celebrated.
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Sunday, November 26th 2006

4:59 PM

WIll Jesus Find You Ready When He Returns on the Last Day?

Today people are busy.  Busy, busy, busy.  People are preparing for Christmas already by shopping and putting up decorations and getting ready for parties.  Christians, let us not forget that Christ is going to return.  Let us not be caught with our lamps of faith snuffed out because we neglected the Word and Sacraments because we were just too busy with other distractions.  In the parable of the Ten Maidens in Matthew 25, Jesus warns us to be ready for His coming by daily watching and praying by studying His Word and receiving the gifts he offers in the Sacraments.  Jesus says in Luke 12:35:“Be ready for action with belts fastened and lamps burning, like men waiting for their master when he comes back from a wedding, so that they can open the door for  him the moment he knocks.”  For those who choose to despise God's Word, the door will be shut and the Master will say, "I never knew You," but to those who's lamps of faith are burning the Lord Jesus will say, "Come, you whom My Father blessed, inherit the kingdom prepared for YOU from the time the world was made. Matt. 25.

Thanks be to God!

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Sunday, November 26th 2006

4:52 PM

Jesus Will Return Again - Matthew 25:1-13

The Gospel Lesson for The Last Sunday in the Church Year:

 

Matthew 25:1-13 

(Only he who prepares himself daily with watching and prayer will enter with Christ into the wedding feast above.)

 

[Jesus said to His disciples:] “Then the kingdom of heaven will be like ten girls who took their lamps and went out to meet the bridegroom.  Five of them were foolish, and five were wise.  The foolish girls brought their lamps, but they took no extra oil.  The wise took flasks of oil with their lamps.  But the bridegroom delayed, and so they all dozed off to sleep.

“At midnight there was a shout: ‘Here’s the bridegroom!  Come out and meet him!’  Then all those girls woke up and got their lamps ready.

“But the foolish asked the wise, ‘Give us some of your oil.  Our lamps are going out.’

“The wise girls answered, ‘There will never be enough for us and for you.  Better go to the dealers and buy some for yourselves.’

“While they were away buying it, the bridegroom came, and the girls who were ready went with him to the wedding, and the door was shut.

“Later the other girls also came and said, ‘Lord, lord, open the door for us!’

“ ‘I tell you the truth,’ he answered them, ‘I don’t know you.’

“Keep awake, then, because you don’t know the day or the hour.”

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Sunday, November 12th 2006

7:22 PM

Welcome!

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