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Gottesblog

A blog of the Evangelical Lutheran Liturgy

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Point of Order!

But there are simply resolutions that are a waste of time, and they actually resolve nothing, as I said before. Then there are those that should be ruled out of order, and frankly, a more knowledgeable floor committee should have quashed.

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Larry Beane Comments
The Good in Usury: How Exploitation Goes Both Ways

Economics are important. The Christian life doesn’t stop at the church doors, but subsumes everything under the One Lord Jesus Christ. And so, it is important for us to wrestle with and struggle with issues like usury. As a reminder, the biblical definition of usury is the sum paid for the use of money, hence interest; not, as in the modern sense, exorbitant interest

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Travis Berg Comments
1700 Years after Nicaea - A Sermon Series for Trinitytide

This year, as you are all well aware, marks a major anniversary in the life of the Christian Church. The Council of Nicaea was convened on June 19th or 20th of 325, 1700 years ago to the day (give or take 24 hours). The Lutheran Witness recently printed an excellent introduction to the Council of Nicaea written by Dr. Joel Elowsky of Concordia Seminary, St. Louis, which is well worth your time, together with an entire issue dedicated to the subject. While these are a fine beginning, I think that such a significant anniversary warrants some sustained attention in our congregational life over the course of the year.

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Strangers at the Rail

Practicing closed communion is hard, messy, and generally thankless work. But the faithful pastor must be more concerned with the account he will one day give of his stewardship than the hurt feelings of those who come unprepared to the altar.

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Throwback Thursday: The Unknown Sin?

There is much to say about the entire presentation, but what I wanted to address here is a position that he takes, beginning at about 33:00 and running through about 41:30. It concerns what the presenter calls “unknown sin” and how he believes the church can use this approach to deal pastorally with homosexuality among parishioners.

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Larry BeaneComment