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Gottesblog

A blog of the Evangelical Lutheran Liturgy

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A Hymn for St. Matthew (and other Evangelists), Together with a Brief Digression on Latin Office Hymns in the Church of the Augsburg Confession

The Church of the Augsburg Confession is, historically speaking, very much a bilingual church. Well, there are rather more than two languages involved, but Lutheran worship is broadly unique for its embrace — from the beginning — of both the received Latin plainsong and choral repertoire as well as vernacular hymnody, whether that vernacular is German, Swedish, Hungarian, Slovak, or English. If you would like to claim that the Latin language has no place in Lutheran worship, I would direct you to Article XXIV of the Augustana:

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Stefan Gramenz Comment
We Have Got to Talk About Usury (Part VIII): Medieval Theologians

Pope Leo the Great’s epistle Nec hoc quoque (c. 443) was the first prohibition of all lending at interest for both clergy and laity issued with supreme ecclesiastical authority. Several centuries later, around 774, this text was incorporated into the Hadriana, the official collection of canon law presented by Pope Adrian I to Charlemagne. From that point onward, there emerged an ever-greater consensus among both church and state in Christian lands that all lending at interest is inherently sinful and thus forbidden. (Note: the capitularies of Charlemagne cited Nicaea in addition to Leo’s epistle.) And significantly, in Nec hoc quoque, Psalm 15 is cited as definitive proof of the universal moral prohibition against charging interest. It seems that for many in the first millennium of the church’s history, this psalm served as the most glaring evidence that the Old Testament prohibition was not just civil law, but moral, and is therefore still binding on the Christian. 

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Guest AuthorComment
Throwback Thursday: The Ministry of Prayer

The ordination vows in the LSB ordination rite are stated as questions. The first questions are related to doctrine. “Do you confess the Unaltered Augsburg Confession?” and so forth…. The very last question is: “Will you be constant in prayer for those under your pastoral care?”

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David PetersenComment
On Authenticity

“Authenticity” and “authentic” are front-burner words today. And this is true especially for us confessional Lutherans at this time of great debate about Lutheran identity. Given that we are bombarded 24-7 by ads, marketing, and propaganda, the quest for authenticity is a big deal in our day, especially in matters of worship.

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Larry Beane Comments
“Let’s Take It to the Next Level”

This is one of the inherent problems with the Church Growth mindset. It’s all about number-lust, and it is never enough. The Church Growther is never satisfied. It’s built-in to the fabric of the universe. For numbers are infinite. There is always a higher number. In the world of mathematics, there is always a “next level,” even as the flesh is never satisfied.

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Larry Beane Comments
Put Not Your Trust in Princes... or Princesses

This misguided trust - especially in matters of sex and reason - is based on our progressive culture. A lot of people are confused when I use the word “progressive,” thinking that this means politically left-wing, that is, what often (and often erroneously) is described as “liberal.” Progressivism is a deviation from conservatism, but there are both left- and right-wing progressives.

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Larry Beane Comments