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Gottesblog

A blog of the Evangelical Lutheran Liturgy

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Reminiscere…Remember, O Lord, Thy Tender mercies

Lent is a time of Catechesis in the faith. If Invocabit introduced the new Christian to an important reality of the Christian life, namely, that they have an enemy who likes to parade as a friend, the second Sunday in Lent, Reminscere, introduces the newbies (and reminds the old hands) that there are plenty of times to the contrary where our dearest Friend appears to us in the guise of our enemy, as one who seemingly ignores our pleas for mercy and aid.

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William WeedonComment
Lament for an Introit

Sadly, many of our modern services (following the suggested rubrics in the Altar Book) omit the lovely Introit for Ash Wednesday, with its powerful antiphon from Wisdom: “You have mercy on all, O Lord, and abhor nothing you have made. You look past the sins of men that they may repent. You spare them all because you are our Lord, our God.”

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William Weedon Comments
This is the Catholic Faith

We Lutherans are often accused of heresy by Roman Catholics by means of a clever and ironic rhetorical trick. Roman Catholics will sometimes claim that Jesus founded the Catholic Church, and therefore the Catholic Church is the only true church.

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Larry Beane Comments
That's Too Catholic!

I love our country, and I love the quirks of our culture - as well as its many unique subcultures. But we Americans often have a cloying habit of presuming that everyone in the world must surely think like we do. We are often ignorant of history to boot - and when it comes to our understanding of the Church - even of Lutheran Christianity - we sometimes embarrass ourselves.

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Larry Beane Comments