Thursday, December 11, 2025

Update from Good Shepherd (December 11, 2025)

Greetings!

REGULAR SCHEDULE
Divine Service is Sundays at 10:00 AM.
Sunday School is Sundays at 9:00 AM.

Advent Vespers -- Wednesday, December 17.  Supper at 6:00 PM.  Vespers at 7:00 PM.

Adult Bible Class is Sundays at 9:00 AM.  We are studying the book of Revelation.  A schedule can be found here.

Bible Matters will resume on Wednesday, January 7 at 6:30 PM.
 

CALENDAR: For a calendar of events and meetings, click here.

ADVENT VESPERS

            Our final Advent Vespers (an evening prayer service) is Wednesday, December 17.  It is an opportunity for peaceful and prayerful preparation for the coming celebration of our Lord’s birth. Take a break from the frenzied December schedule and rest for a moment to ponder God’s promises, fulfilled by Jesus. Join us at 6:00 PM for a dinner followed by a 7:00 PM service. The theme for this Advent season is: Prophecies Pinpoint the Messiah.
              Wednesday, December 17       He is the Child of Bethlehem. (Micah 5:2-5)

CHURCH COUNCIL HIGHLIGHTS (November)

>  Our projector has not been consistent in projecting.  Since it is better than ten years old, we are considering a replacement.  We are looking into getting a smart TV with interactive capabilities which allows HDMI input as well as ability to draw with a special, electronic pen.  

>  We have added to our Servant Keeper office management system which allows for texting to large groups.  It will be similar to the email blasts, but with texting.  It will also be used more sparingly than the weekly email blasts.  When it is ready to go, we will do a test run after church some Sunday.  

NOTE: If you end up receiving neither email blasts nor any texts by the end of the year, it means we either don’t have your information or we recorded it incorrectly.  Please contact the church if you are not receiving any notices. 

>  We approved two policies, one new and one updated.  They are policies regarding pastoral counseling and anti-harassment / misconduct.  These policies have been posted on a bulletin board and church.  They are also available upon request.

>  We discussed ideas about improving security at church.  These ideas will be presented for further discussion at our Open Forum.

GROWING TOGETHER IN GOD’S WORD
          Starting in January, we are going to approach Bible Matters with a different format. We will be reading through a book as a group and meeting to discuss the chapter which was read the previous week. The book we will be working with is entitled, “Your Life Has Meaning: Discovering Your Role in an Epic Story.” This can be purchased in bulk for a discount ($20 each), but we will need to have people let us know if they will be purchasing the book so that we do not overspend on unused books. You can sign up for a book at church. They will be ordered so that you can have a copy by Christmas. Bible Matters will begin our discussion of the book on Wednesday, January 7.
          NOTE: If you will be bringing any friends to this study (and we encourage you to do so!), this book will be our gift to them.  Please indicate if we will need to order a book for any guests.

GOOD SHEPHERD ON YOUTUBE
           Services are uploaded to YouTube each week. Feel free to share the videos. Here is the Divine Service from December 7, 2025. Good Shepherd Novi, Divine Service, December 7, 2025

REGULAR OFFICE HOURS
          For the most part, the pastor will be observing formal office hours (Monday-Thursday, 9:00 AM – Noon). Occasionally, duties will take him away from the office during these scheduled times, so you will still want to call or text to confirm any meetings with the pastor (248-719-5218).

INTRODUCTION VIDEO FOR GOOD SHEPHERD LUTHERAN CHURCH
          Here is a video to introduce people to Good Shepherd Lutheran Church of Novi. Share it as much as you can.

DO YOU LIKE US?
          Look for Good Shepherd on Facebook. Then “LIKE” us for updates and other postings. Be sure to share posts with friends.

SHARE THIS POST!
          We desire as many as possible to rejoice in the Gospel which we proclaim and confess. Share the information from our weekly email blast, links to our web page, and even to the pastor's blog to let others know that we have a space in our congregation for them!

In Christ,
Pastor Schroeder

==================

REGULAR SCHEDULE

Sunday School -- Sundays at 9:00 AM 
Adult Bible Class -- Sundays at 9:00 AM 
DIVINE SERVICES -- Sundays at 10:00 AM.

Advent Vespers -- Wednesdays (December 17).  Supper at 6:00 PM.  Vespers at 7:00 PM.

GOOD SHEPHERD’S WEBSITE
www.GoodShepherdNovi.org

PASTOR SCHROEDER’S BLOG

www.LutheranSubject.blogspot.com  

Wednesday, December 10, 2025

Sermon -- Advent Vespers, Week 2 (December 10, 2025)

PROPHECIES PINPOINT THE MESSIAH:

He Is The Son Of David.

2 SAMUEL 7:11b-16.

In the name + of Jesus.

     When the Lord first promised the Savior to Adam and Eve, there was not much information given to identify who he would be.  That first promise said much about his actions, but it said precious little about his identity.  All that was indicated is that he would be a “he” (Genesis 3:15).  The promise was passed on from Adam to future generations.  For a long time, no further information was given—at least, nothing that is recorded in Scripture.  Although the Bible traces the line leading to the Savior from Adam to Noah, I don’t know if each patriarch in that line knew that the line went through him.  Enoch believed the promise.  Did he know that the Savior’s ancestry went through him?  I don’t know.

     Because he was delivered in the Flood, Noah knew that the promise was upheld through him and his family.  When Noah blessed his sons, we infer that Noah declared the line of the Savior would continue through Shem.  Later, the Lord himself narrowed our focus when he told Abraham, “All of the families of the earth will be blessed in you” (Genesis 12:3).  Prophecies pinpoint the Messiah.  A promise which could have been fulfilled through anyone suddenly is zeroed in on one man.  The promise was then passed on to Isaac, then Jacob, and then Judah.  And once again, if the men from Judah’s line knew that the promise flowed through them, the Bible does not say it.  Isaiah had prophesied, “A shoot will spring up from the stump of Jesse, and a Branch from his roots will bear fruit” (Isaiah 11:1).  But Isaiah's prophecy was some three hundred years after Jesse.  Did Jesse know the Messiah would come through him and his line?  Again, we don’t know.

     The Lord continued to sharpen our focus with more prophecies.  Did David know that the line of the Savior passed through him?  If he hadn’t known it before, he certainly became aware of it after the prophet Nathan spoke to him.  Prophecies pinpoint the Messiah.

     Once David had established himself as king of all of Israel, he arranged to have a palace built for himself in Jerusalem.  He was a king, and he wanted his residence to look like it.  After that, David recognized that the center of Israel’s government was a palace but that the center of Israel’s worship was a tabernacle.  “Tabernacle” may sound fancy, but it was a wood-frame structure covered with leather and goats’ hair. 

     “It happened that when the king was living in his palace, and when the Lord had given him rest from his enemies all around, the king said to Nathan the prophet, ‘Look, I live in a house of cedar, but the Ark of God sits under tent curtains’” (2 Samuel 7:1-2).  Having this realization, David was committed to building a magnificent structure for housing the Ark of the Covenant and for the worship of the Lord.  It was a noble idea, but God had other plans.  The Lord informed David that he was a man of war and of blood.  Therefore, the Lord deemed it inappropriate for David to build a house of worship for him.  The Lord’s temple should not be akin to a war memorial.  It was to be a place that proclaimed and delivered peace.  God did not condemn the idea, but he deferred David’s plan to David’s son.

     The prophet Nathan came to David and announced God’s will.  He said, “The LORD … declares to you that the LORD himself will make a house for you.  When your days are complete and you rest with your fathers, I will raise up after you your seed, who will come from your own body.  I will establish his kingdom.  He will build a house for my name, and I will establish the throne of his kingdom forever. … Your house will stand firm, and your kingdom will endure forever before you.  Your throne will be established forever” (2 Samuel 7:11-13,16). 

     Prophecies pinpoint the Messiah.  This prophecy had a partial fulfillment in David’s son, Solomon.  David had made extensive plans for the temple and its furnishings.  He had stockpiled the materials that would be used for its construction.  But it was Solomon who oversaw the actual building of the Lord’s temple.  After six years of construction, the temple was dedicated to the glory of the Lord.  So was fulfilled God’s promise: “(Your seed) will build a house for my name” (2 Samuel 7:13). 

     The Lord’s promise was also partially fulfilled in Solomon as the Lord had said, “I will establish the throne of his kingdom forever” (2 Samuel 7:13).  The Hebrew word “forever” has some flexibility to it.  It can mean eternally.  Sometimes it can refer to an extended period of time which does not have a foreseeable end.  It is similar to our expression, “This cold spell is lasting forever!”  True to his word, the throne of David did endure for an extended period of time.  However, it came to an end in 586 BC when Nebuchadnezzar destroyed Jerusalem, burned the temple, and deported the royal family.

     When the Lord speaks, he does not lie.  When he makes a promise, it does not fail.  If we pick apart the promise that God had made to David through the prophet Nathan, some may conclude that God’s promise had failed.  God said that David’s throne would endure forever.  It certainly does not exist today.  Therefore, God’s promise must find its fulfillment in another son of David.  Prophecies pinpoint the Messiah.  He is the Son of David.

     The Gospels of Matthew and Luke both include genealogies of Jesus.  Both document that Jesus is of the house and lineage of David.  So, Jesus fulfills that criterion.  But now, let’s consider the rest of Nathan’s words to David, because they do not seem to find a fulfillment in Solomon, at least not one that is recorded in the Bible.

     This is how the Lord spoke of the Messiah through the prophet Nathan: “I will be his father, and he will be my son.  When he sins, I will discipline him with a rod used by men and with blows of the sons of men.  My faithful mercy will not depart from him as I removed it from Saul, whom I removed to make room for you.” (2 Samuel 7:14-15).  Again, this prophecy pinpoints the Messiah more by what he will do than by who he is and where he comes from.  He is the Son of David, but David had lots of sons and daughters.  I don’t know how many people could have traced their ancestry to David’s line as the generations progressed.  So, according to this prophecy, the Messiah would be known by what he would do—or, rather, by what would be done to him.

     Prophecies pinpoint the Messiah.  But what about the phrase, “When he sins” (1 Samuel 7:14)?  We know of Solomon’s sins.  He took many foreign wives.  He not only accommodated them by building pagan temples for their hometown gods, but he also joined them in their worship.  Perhaps he was trying to appease them, as if to say, “Well, if I expect them to worship my God, then I should be polite and worship theirs.”  Whatever Solomon’s motivation was, he had strayed from the Lord.  If he had been beaten with blows of the sons of men, the Bible does not record that.  Some have reasoned that Solomon’s book of Ecclesiastes was written as an act of repentance before he died.  I hope that is an accurate deduction.

     Jesus, on the other hand, had no sins on his record.  Many spoke against him, accusing him of gluttony and drunkenness, of guilt by associating with reprobates, and of being in league with demons.  When he stood trial before people eager to find reasons to convict and condemn him, no one could.  Nevertheless, God the Father found him guilty of sin.  Isaiah foretold it: “He was crushed for the guilt our sins deserved.  The punishment that brought us peace was upon him, and by his wounds we are healed.  We all have gone astray like sheep.  Each of us has turned to his own way, but the Lord has charged all our guilt to him” (Isaiah 53:5-6).  Jesus became sin for us in order to deliver us from its curse and penalty.  He was spit upon and scourged.  He was punched in the face and pierced in his hands and feet.  He was despised by priests and damned by his Father.  All this for our sins.  All this to save us from what our sins deserve.  He was punished so that we would be pardoned.

     Yet, the Father’s love was not withdrawn from his Son.  For, the Son faithfully completed all that the Father had given him to do.  The Lord had promised through Isaiah, “I will give him an allotment among the great, and with the strong he will share plunder, because he poured out his life to death, and he let himself be counted with rebellious sinners” (Isaiah 53:12).  The Son was faithful to the Father, being counted as a rebellious sinner.  The Father was faithful to the Son, doing for him what he had promised.  He raised up Jesus from the dead as the conqueror over death.  The risen Savior has taken plunder from the devil—which is you.  Jesus snatched you from the dominion of death and the devil.  Now the dominion of the Messiah, the place where salvation is found, is the Holy Christian Church.  So, as promised through Nathan, “Your house will stand firm, and your kingdom will endure forever before you.” (2 Samuel 7:16). 

     Prophecies pinpoint the Messiah.  Jesus, the Son of David, lives and reigns forever.  He has made you subjects in his kingdom—not to threaten and to tyrannize, but to love and to bless.  You are not peasants he takes advantage of.  He has made you princes and princesses who enjoy the benefits of his reign—forgiveness of sins, peace of conscience, and the promise of future glory in an eternal kingdom.

     Prophecies pinpoint the Messiah.  The prophet Nathan had foretold it, and the apostle Paul declared that it has been fulfilled in Jesus the Nazarene.  St. Paul wrote to the Romans, “This gospel is about his Son—who in the flesh was born a descendant of David, who in the spirit of holiness was declared to be God’s powerful Son by his resurrection from the dead—Jesus Christ, our Lord” (Romans 1:3-4).  The Messiah is the Son of David and the Son of God who lives and reigns over all and forever more.

     Prophecies pinpoint the Messiah to show that your faith does not rest on mindless acceptance.  Your faith, your comfort, and your hope rest on promises that are historical record and have been fulfilled with verifiable facts.  Therefore, your forgiveness is not wishful thinking.  Your hope of the resurrection to eternal life is not fantasy.  Prophecies pinpoint the Messiah.  The Messiah promises everlasting life.  These are trustworthy sayings deserving of acceptance and assuring salvation.

In the name of the Father and of the Son + and of the Holy Spirit.  Amen.

YouTube -- 2nd Sunday of Advent (December 7, 2025)

Here is the Divine Service from Sunday, December 7, 2025.



Sunday, December 7, 2025

Sermon -- 2nd Sunday of Advent (December 7, 2025)

A RIGHTEOUS JUDGE WILL PRODUCE A HOME OF RIGHTEOUSNESS.

ISAIAH 11:1-10.

In the name + of Jesus.

    When John the Baptist foretold the coming of the Messiah, it was more of a warning than a reason to rejoice.  John said, “Produce fruit in keeping with repentance! …  Already the ax is ready to strike the root of the trees.  So every tree that does not produce good fruit is cut down and thrown into the fire” (Matthew 3:8,10).  John prepares the way for the Lord.  Part of that preparation means removing from our lives everything that our Lord would find offensive and contrary to his commands.  It is getting rid of the bad.  That’s the “repent” part.  But it is also replacing the bad with the good.  That is the “produce fruit” part.  The Lord created us in his own image.  We are to be a reflection of the goodness of God. 

     John the Baptist warned that we will be judged when the Lord comes.  The judgment will be stern, just, and final.  “Every tree that does not produce good fruit is cut down and thrown into the fire” (Matthew 3:10).  If we reflect a different image than our Lord’s, then we are not what God created us to be.  If our behavior is rotten, then we will be cast away like rotten fruit or cut down like a diseased tree.  The cry, “Repent!” still goes out today for that reason.

     When Jesus first came, he did not come slaying sinners or laying waste to cities.  John the Baptist was not wrong, he just had an issue with depth perception.  The Messiah, the righteous judge, will come to judge the living and the dead, but first he came to redeem sinners.  The Lord would rather not cut people down and throw them into eternal hellfire.  Jesus’ goal is to convert sinners into saints so that our delight comes not from gratifying any and all desires, but our delight comes from living as God desires.  Our Lord’s desire is to restore everything from corruption to perfection so that everything again reflects the goodness of God.  The righteous judge will produce a home of righteousness. 

     John the Baptist did not preach a new message.  Seven centuries before John, Isaiah had foretold what the Messiah would do: “He will be delighted with the fear of the LORD.  He will not judge by what he sees with his eyes, nor will he render decisions based on what he hears with his ears, but with righteousness he will judge” (Isaiah 11:3-4).  At first glance, this sounds terrible.  The Lord “will not judge by what he sees with his eyes or render decisions based on what he hears with his ears”?!  How else can someone gather the evidence for a proper judgment?

     When people take the witness stand, they are to report what they had seen and heard.  They can identify suspects.  They can repeat conversations they heard.  Based on what was presented at trial, the jury gets to pass a judgment—either “guilty” or “not guilty.”  They are not allowed to convict a man just because they think he is crude or looks scary.  They are not allowed to acquit him just because he comes with a hard-luck story.  The jury is to judge him based on the law and the facts presented.  Why would the Lord do things differently?

     We do not see and hear everything.  How many people get angry because they only heard part of a conversation?  We also draw wrong conclusions when we don’t hear everything.  I remember a conversation with my wife when we uttered the phrase, “Disney World.”  One of our children ran excitedly to the others and said, “Mom and Dad are taking us to Disney World!”  We can be deceived by things we hear.  We are also deceived by the things we see.  If someone posts photos on social media, you might falsely conclude that their life is more glamorous and exciting than yours is.  People usually hide their struggles, their hardships, and their pain.  We also try to hide our sins.  We have cover-up stories or try to make our guilt someone else’s fault.  We rarely know the full story.  We buy into the story people choose to share, or we choose to believe the version we want.  That’s why we do not make sound judgments. 

     But not so with the Lord.  He goes beyond what can be seen with the eyes.  He knows more than what he hears with his ears.  “Death and Destruction lie open before the LORD—how much more human hearts” (Proverbs 15:11)!  There are no secrets before God.  Your social media posts may impress some, but God knows every little thing.  Your heart lies open before the Lord. 

     “With righteousness he will judge…” (Isaiah 11:4).  The righteous judge will not be fooled, swayed, or biased in his judgment.  “With the breath from his lips he will put the wicked to death” (Isaiah 11:4).  The Lord will utter the sentence, and the wicked will get what they deserve.  They will be condemned eternally.  Is that good or bad?  It is only good if you are righteous.  It is terrifying when you realize that your heart lies open before the Lord. 

     God be praised that the Lord also lays open his heart to you!  This is what the Lord says: “Come now, and let us reason together, says the LORD.  Though your sins are like scarlet, they will be as white as snow.  Though they are as red as crimson, they will be like wool” (Isaiah 1:18).  Yes, Jesus will judge, but he is more eager to save.  Yes, Jesus will condemn the guilty, but he is more eager to cover over our guilt with his own righteousness. 

     The Lord Jesus shed his innocent blood to pay for the sins of the world.  Then he washed away every stain of sin by applying that blood to you in your baptism.  Isaiah described it this way: “I will rejoice greatly in the Lord.  My soul will celebrate because of my God, for he has clothed me in garments of salvation.  With a robe of righteousness he covered me” (Isaiah 61:10).  What’s more, Jesus continues to cleanse you with his body and blood in holy communion.  If you crave Jesus’ righteousness, come to the altar where he delivers it.

     Now, if Jesus has paid for your sin by his death, then the Lord will not issue a condemning sentence a second time for sins already paid for.  If Jesus has clothed you with a robe of righteousness, then a righteous judgment must declare you “not guilty.”  God is pleased with you; for he delights in what is good.  Through Jesus, you are without blame before God.  The righteous judge will welcome you to a home of righteousness.  This is proper justice displayed in divine mercy. 

     As God was creating the heavens and the earth and everything in them, he would assess his work throughout the process.  Five times, we hear, “God saw that it was good” (Genesis 1:10,12,18,21,25).  After God had completed all his work, he gave his final assessment: “Indeed, it was very good” (Genesis 1:31).  God’s creation was a reflection of God’s own goodness.  Because the creation has been spoiled by sin, Jesus  will restore his creation to its perfect state and make it a new home for those who are declared righteous.  The righteous judge will produce a home of righteousness.

     Isaiah described it: “The wolf will dwell with the lamb, and the leopard will lie down with the young goat, the calf, the young lion, and the fattened calf together, and a little child will lead them.  The cow and the bear will graze together, and their young ones will lie down together.  The lion will eat straw like the cattle.  The nursing child will play near a cobra’s hole, and the weaned child will put his hand into a viper’s den.  They will not hurt or destroy anywhere on my holy mountain, for the earth will be full of the knowledge of the Lord, as the waters cover the sea” (Isaiah 11:6-9). 

     Every bit of wickedness, bitterness, animosity, and rivalry will be gone.  If we let a wolf anywhere near a lamb right now, the lamb would become lunch meat.  If parents let a child play with cobras and vipers, the child would either be killed by the snakes or taken away from his parents.  Just recently, a 19-year-old man climbed into a lions’ den at a zoo in Brazil.  It is said that his ambition was to be a lion tamer.  He was mauled to death by a lioness.  The lioness was not tame, and he could not tame her.  This mauling was both unfortunate and predictable in a world of sin.  Even domesticated animals bite, scratch, and attack. 

     But in the home of righteousness, everything will be made right.  All that God had declared to be good will be made good once again.  All creatures will live in harmony, and the world itself will be free from any disasters.  For, Jesus will purify the world from anything which has been corrupted by sin.  The righteous judge will produce a home of righteousness.    

     It will be wonderful to live in a world where we don’t have to be afraid of snakes and spiders, black ice, white-out conditions, and cold and flu season.  But if the Lord fills this new heaven and earth with sinners, it cannot remain a home of righteousness for long.  Even if the climate is perfect, hearts would still grow cold; words would still get heated.  Even if the animals did not devour one another, people would still make biting comments and argue and fight with each other.  What good is a perfect world if people are still wicked?  But that is not how it will be.  The righteous judge will produce a home of righteousness.  It is not just that the world is made right.  All the people who dwell there will be righteous, too. 

     John the Baptist urged, “Produce fruit in keeping with repentance” (Matthew 3:8)!  In this world, we will continue to do that.  We will put to death our sins and strive to do the good God desires.  Our Lord has already worked in us the desire to do what is good.  And here, we struggle to do these good works.  But the Lord who will raise us up on the Last Day will restore not just the world.  He will raise us up with perfected bodies and hearts and minds.  We will be righteous when we enter the home of righteousness.  We will be confirmed in holiness so that nothing wicked will ever enter there again.

     The righteous judge will produce a home of righteousness.  “They will not hurt or destroy anywhere on my holy mountain, for the earth will be full of the knowledge of the Lord, as the waters cover the sea” (Isaiah 11:9).  All things will be right forever.  We will know the Lord and his will.  We will delight in God’s goodness and reflect it.  We will be restored to what God has created us to be.  God will produce it.  We will see it.  And indeed, it will be very good.

In the name of the Father and of the Son + and of the Holy Spirit.  Amen.

Thursday, December 4, 2025

Update from Good Shepherd (December 4, 2025)

Greetings!

REGULAR SCHEDULE
Divine Service is Sundays at 10:00 AM.
Sunday School is Sundays at 9:00 AM.

Advent Vespers -- Wednesdays (December 3, 10, 17).  Supper at 6:00 PM.  Vespers at 7:00 PM.

Adult Bible Class is Sundays at 9:00 AM.  We are studying the book of Revelation.  A schedule can be found here.

Bible Matters will resume on Wednesday, January 7 at 6:30 PM.
 

CALENDAR: For a calendar of events and meetings, click here.

CONGREGATIONAL MEETING

       On December 7, we will present a long-term plan for various improvements or maintenance projects which may need to be done in the next ten years or so.  Some projects are necessary; others would be nice.  We welcome feedback to see what the congregation would support or what alternatives we might consider.

CHURCH DECORATION FOR CHRISTMAS
          On Saturday, December 6, we will meet at 10:00 AM to set up the Christmas tree and decorate the church for Advent and Christmas seasons. While we have usually done this on Sundays, the congregational meeting on Sunday, December 7 is enough to occupy that day. All are welcome.

ADVENT VESPERS
            The first three Wednesdays in December will offer Advent Vespers (an evening prayer service). Advent Vespers is an opportunity for peaceful and prayerful preparation for the coming celebration of our Lord’s birth. Take a break from the frenzied December schedule and rest for a moment to ponder God’s promises, fulfilled by Jesus. Join us at 6:00 PM for a dinner followed by a 7:00 PM service. The theme for this Advent season is: Prophecies Pinpoint the Messiah.
              Wednesday, December 10      He is the Son of David. (2 Samuel 7:11-16)
              Wednesday, December 17       He is the Child of Bethlehem. (Micah 5:2-5)

NEW PASTOR AT PALABRA DE VIDA

         Rev. Martin Loescher will be installed at Palabra de Vida on Sunday, December 7 at 4:00 PM.  We pray God will bless his service to God’s people here.  

WELS NIGHT AT THE PISTONS
          The Detroit Pistons are sponsoring a WELS Night at the Pistons on Saturday, December 6 against the Milwaukee Bucks. Tip-off is 7:30 PM. Tickets can be purchased through a QR code (posted on the bulletin board in the hallway of church). The cheapest seats are $40.65 plus fees. You can spend up to $230.80 plus fees if you want to.

CHURCH COUNCIL HIGHLIGHTS (November)

>  Our projector has not been consistent in projecting.  Since it is better than ten years old, we are considering a replacement.  We are looking into getting a smart TV with interactive capabilities which allows HDMI input as well as ability to draw with a special, electronic pen.  

>  We have added to our Servant Keeper office management system which allows for texting to large groups.  It will be similar to the email blasts, but with texting.  It will also be used more sparingly than the weekly email blasts.  When it is ready to go, we will do a test run after church some Sunday.  

NOTE: If you end up receiving neither email blasts nor any texts by the end of the year, it means we either don’t have your information or we recorded it incorrectly.  Please contact the church if you are not receiving any notices. 

>  We approved two policies, one new and one updated.  They are policies regarding pastoral counseling and anti-harassment / misconduct.  These policies have been posted on a bulletin board and church.  They are also available upon request.

>  We discussed ideas about improving security at church.  These ideas will be presented for further discussion at our Open Forum.

GROWING TOGETHER IN GOD’S WORD
          Starting in January, we are going to approach Bible Matters with a different format. We will be reading through a book as a group and meeting to discuss the chapter which was read the previous week. The book we will be working with is entitled, “Your Life Has Meaning: Discovering Your Role in an Epic Story.” This can be purchased in bulk for a discount ($20 each), but we will need to have people let us know if they will be purchasing the book so that we do not overspend on unused books. You can sign up for a book at church. They will be ordered so that you can have a copy by Christmas. Bible Matters will begin our discussion of the book on Wednesday, January 7.
          NOTE: If you will be bringing any friends to this study (and we encourage you to do so!), this book will be our gift to them.  Please indicate if we will need to order a book for any guests.

GOOD SHEPHERD ON YOUTUBE
           Services are uploaded to YouTube each week. Feel free to share the videos. Here is the Divine Service from November 23, 2025. Good Shepherd Novi, Divine Service, November 23, 2025

REGULAR OFFICE HOURS
          For the most part, the pastor will be observing formal office hours (Monday-Thursday, 9:00 AM – Noon). Occasionally, duties will take him away from the office during these scheduled times, so you will still want to call or text to confirm any meetings with the pastor (248-719-5218).

INTRODUCTION VIDEO FOR GOOD SHEPHERD LUTHERAN CHURCH
          Here is a video to introduce people to Good Shepherd Lutheran Church of Novi. Share it as much as you can.

DO YOU LIKE US?
          Look for Good Shepherd on Facebook. Then “LIKE” us for updates and other postings. Be sure to share posts with friends.

SHARE THIS POST!
          We desire as many as possible to rejoice in the Gospel which we proclaim and confess. Share the information from our weekly email blast, links to our web page, and even to the pastor's blog to let others know that we have a space in our congregation for them!

In Christ,
Pastor Schroeder

==================

REGULAR SCHEDULE

Sunday School -- Sundays at 9:00 AM 
Adult Bible Class -- Sundays at 9:00 AM 
DIVINE SERVICES -- Sundays at 10:00 AM.

Advent Vespers -- Wednesdays (December 3, 10, 17).  Supper at 6:00 PM.  Vespers at 7:00 PM.

GOOD SHEPHERD’S WEBSITE
www.GoodShepherdNovi.org

PASTOR SCHROEDER’S BLOG

www.LutheranSubject.blogspot.com  

Wednesday, December 3, 2025

Sermon -- Advent Vespers, Week 1 (December 3, 2025)

PROPHECIES PINPOINT THE MESSIAH.

He Is The Seed Of The Woman.

GENESIS 3:14-15.

In the name + of Jesus.

    Immediately after Adam and Eve were expelled from the Garden of Eden, Moses recorded this event: “The man was intimate with Eve, his wife.  She conceived and gave birth to Cain.  She said, ‘I have gotten a man with the LORD’” (Genesis 4:1).  Some have translated that a little differently and, I believe, more accurately.  Eve declared, “I have gotten a man, the LORD.”  It seems that Eve took God’s first promise of a Savior to heart.  And it seems that Eve was so eager for the Lord to fulfill his promise that she concluded the first son to be born to her was the Savior that God had promised. 

     Who could fault Eve for her enthusiasm?  She had been deceived by the serpent and was the first one to chomp down on the fruit that God had expressly forbidden, the fruit that brought death with it.  Who knows how long she beat herself up for that?  Adam had been no help, either.  Not only did Adam fail to protect his wife, not only did Adam fail to refute the words of the serpent, not only did Adam stand by silently and join his wife in their foolish rebellion, Adam also blamed Eve for everything that went wrong.  So, Eve was a victim of deception and of betrayal.  Who could blame her for hoping that the son born to her would be the one to reconcile them to the Lord, to reconcile her and her husband again, and to restore a fallen world back to a perfect Paradise?

     Of course, you know the rest of the story.  Cain did not end up being the one to save mankind.  Cain ended up being the first one to murder one of mankind.  The devil is a murderer (John 8:44), and Cain proved to be one of his pawns.  Still, at the moment Cain was born, Adam and Eve had high hopes for him. 

      When a child is born, it is a moment of unlimited potential.  What will this child become?  How much will this child accomplish in life?  Could he be another Mozart?  Another da Vinci?  Another Tiger Woods?  Could Cain be the Savior God had promised?  Eve seemed to think so.  And even if Cain had been the Messiah, how could Adam and Eve know?  He was just a baby boy.

     Once again, you know the rest of the story.  You know the promised Messiah is Jesus of Nazareth, born of a woman centuries after Eve.  You have better and more complete information than Adam and Eve had.  Still, with all this information, many still reject Jesus as the promised Savior.  So, why are we so convinced?  This is why we will consider the prophecies God had made.  These prophecies pinpoint the Messiah so that we can have full confidence that Jesus is the one God has promised.  This evening, we will consider carefully that very first promise God had made.  This prophecy will not pinpoint the Messiah just yet, but it will point us in the right direction. 

     The first promise came right after the first sin.  God came to see Adam and Eve, but they ran for cover.  They were consumed with guilt and fear.  They wanted nothing to do with God, convinced that facing God would mean facing their damnation.  Even though God called out to them as one friend looking for another, Adam and Eve were afraid.  God had not changed, but they had.  When Adam and Eve would not come clean about their sin, God asked them point-blank what they had done.  Both finally admitted wrong-doing, but both said it was someone else’s fault.  There was no true confession, no heartfelt repentance, and no appeal for mercy.  Their fear of being damned was valid, and they did not help themselves.

     St. Paul described the depth of the sinful condition in a few of his letters.  To the Ephesians Paul wrote, “You were dead in your trespasses and sins” (Ephesians 2:1).  The dead cannot do anything to improve their situation; so also, sinners cannot change what they are.  To the Romans Paul wrote, “The mind-set of the sinful flesh is hostile to God, since it does not submit to God’s law, and in fact, it cannot” (Romans 8:7).  Sinners are not neutral toward God.  There is hostility.  There is a stubborn refusal to obey God’s commands and to admit our sins against them—and not only to admit them, but to stop them.  The sinner cannot suddenly flip, going from dead to alive, going from hostility toward God to loving God, going from wickedness to holiness.  If the sinful condition is to change, God must be the one to change it.

     That is what happened in the Garden of Eden.  Adam and Eve did not ask for mercy; God extended it.  Adam and Eve did not plead for a deliverer; God promised one.  God acted to rectify, to redeem, and to reconcile.  So, to the serpent, that is, to Satan, who seduced the man and the woman into rebellion, “The LORD God said…: Because you have done this, you are cursed more than all the livestock, and more than every wild animal.  You shall crawl on your belly, and you shall eat dust all the days of your life.  I will put hostility between you and the woman, and between your seed and her seed.  He will crush your head, and you will crush his heel” (Genesis 3:14-15). 

     Prophecies pinpoint the Messiah.  The first prophecy proclaimed that God would send a Messiah.  And while we do not have a lot of detail, we do have some information to focus our attention.  At first, it seems that God was simply drawing a divide between unbelievers and believers, as St. John noted, “The dragon was angry about what had happened to the woman (that is, the Church), and he went away to make war against the rest of her children—those who keep the commandments of God and who hold on to the testimony about Jesus” (Revelation 12:17).  So, there is animosity between Satan and the children of God.

     But God’s first prophecy focuses on one particular child.  After speaking of the seed of the woman, the Lord says, “He will crush your head” (Genesis 3:15).  In other words, there is a specific Seed who will come from the woman, and this Seed is a “He.”  If we are looking for the Messiah to come, he will be a male child.  While this allows for only half of the world’s population to qualify as potentially being the Messiah, it does limit our focus.  And the Bible tells us why.  St. Paul wrote, “Just as through the disobedience of one man the many became sinners, so also through the obedience of one man the many will become righteous” (Romans 5:19).  And again: “Since death came by a man, the resurrection of the dead also is going to come by a man.  For as in Adam they all die, so also in Christ they all will be made alive” (1 Corinthians 15:21-22).  Just as a man brought sin and death to all mankind, so righteousness and life for all mankind must also come through a man.  He who is the Seed of the Woman will accomplish this by destroying the serpent.  For, when you crush a serpent’s head, you have rendered it powerless, and it no longer presents a threat to anyone.

     Of course, there would be a cost.  All sin bears a cost.  Just ask Adam and Eve who ran for cover.  They didn’t do anything that we would consider a felony.  They ate food.  But what they did was violate God’s command.  That is always the problem with sin.  Many today will argue that they do not sin because their deeds don’t hurt anyone.  The couple that shares a bed outside of marriage can do so in secret.  If no one knows, no one can get hurt.  People who gossip can keep their stories to their inner circle.  No one is the wiser.  But God sees and knows.  He sees that his word is being ignored.  He knows that the person’s heart is devoted to itself.  He judges accordingly.

     All sin comes at a cost.  But the Messiah was sent to bear the cost for all people.  To the serpent, the Lord said, “He will crush your head, and you will crush his heel” (Genesis 3:15).  Oh yes, there is a cost to sin.  It will cost the Messiah his life.  For, when a viper strikes, the blow is lethal.  To deliver mankind from sin, the Messiah must die.  That is what the Lord had told Adam is the consequence for sin: “You will certainly die” (Genesis 2:17).  So, the Messiah had to suffer that judgment and pay the price.  Prophecies pinpoint the Messiah.  Although Adam and Eve could not have named him, they did know what he would do.  And they knew that this would set them free from sin and death.  Who could fault Eve for being so eager to see it fulfilled?

     There is one more part of this first prophecy that deserves our attention.  Whether it was obvious to Adam and Eve I don’t know.  Perhaps it was obvious only after Isaiah foretold it.  Already at the first promise, the Lord prophesied the virgin birth.  The Lord had promised the Messiah would be the Seed of the Woman.  Women do not have seeds; men have seeds which fertilize the egg in a woman.  This is what impregnates her.  But God prophesied that the Messiah would be born of a woman, but not from a man.  And you know the rest of the story: “He was conceived by the Holy Spirit and born of the Virgin Mary” (Apostles’ Creed).  Jesus is exactly whom the Lord said he would be.  Prophecies pinpoint the Messiah.

     Eve could not detect who the Messiah was from the first promise.  Her hope that it was Cain was wrong.  She was not alone in her ignorance.  By his first prophecy of the Savior, the Lord vexed Satan.  For, Satan had just as much information about who the Messiah would be.  He would be a male child born of a woman.  But who?  Where would he come from?  When would he be born?  Satan may have raged and plotted and hoped to destroy him.  But that’s hard to do if you don’t know who he is.  To be sure, Satan tried to thwart God’s promise throughout the Old Testament.  Think of Satan coaxing Pharaoh into killing all the Hebrew baby boys.  Or think of Satan coaxing Herod to kill all the baby boys in Bethlehem.  The devil surely hates babies.  But just as the Lord was moved by his own compassion to promise a Savior, so the Lord also acted to preserve his promise and thwart Satan’s efforts.

     Prophecies pinpoint the Messiah.  Our Lord promised to deliver all mankind from the venom of sin and horrors of death.  That promise was fulfilled by a man, and only one man has fulfilled all that God has promised.  Jesus of Nazareth is the Messiah.  He is the Seed of the Woman.  He is the virgin-born baby who crushes the serpent’s head.  He is the man who dies for the sins of the world.  He is the one who reconciles God and mankind.  And Eve rejoices because of him.

In the name of the Father and of the Son + and of the Holy Spirit.  Amen.

Tuesday, December 2, 2025

Something from ... Rev. Bryan Wolfmueller on Church Shopping

Rev. Bryan Wolfmueller is an LC-MS pastor who serves in Austin, Texas.  He often posts videos on YouTube.  In this instance, he responds to a question about someone who is looking for a Lutheran Church to attend.  He offers advice to someone who is searching, urging them to ask six questions to ponder as the visitor investigates which church to attend.  I thought the questions were quite helpful.  So, here you go. 

By the way, I recommend coming to Good Shepherd Evangelical Lutheran Church in Novi if you are in the area.  Make it your first stop, and then keep coming back every Sunday for many years.

Here is something from Rev. Wolfmueller: