Sunday, November 2, 2025

Prayer of Remembrance for All Saints' Day 2025

          Almighty God, today we recall with thanksgiving those saints who were taken from us in the Church Militant and carried by the angels to you and the Church Triumphant.  Especially, we give you praise for our departed family and friends who have gone before us in faith and all those who are in our hearts and minds this day:

            Gloria Jean Smith, aunt of Colleen Fadool (July 2, 1932 - February 1, 2025)

            Mike DeSantis, brother of Ken DeSantis (July 18, 1971 - February 10, 2025)

Grace Schulz, mother of Susan Gibbons, grandmother of Matthew and Naomi Gibbons (March 17, 1934 - February 26, 2025)

Mary Lou Gorte, aunt of Colleen Fadool (April 23, 1950 - February 27, 2025)

Mitchell Weimer, brother of Mary Beth Corbeill (November 12, 1956 – March 21, 2025)

Marjorie Anne Usimaki, cousin of Mary LeFevre, (March 24, 1961 - March 23, 2024)

Marion “Pat” Weimer, aunt of Mary Beth Corbeill (February 19, 1934 – May 1, 2025)

Shirley Buchanan (December 28, 1938 – May 7, 2025)

            Marlene Diener, aunt of Jean Nabozny and Dan Rauchholz (January 9, 1946 - May 11, 2025)

Ronald Schmidt, father of Laura Schroeder (May 9, 1942 – June 14, 2025)

            David Rumics (May 12, 1946 – June 19, 2025)

            John Vogeli (July 3, 1949 – July 27, 2025)

Mary Bougdanos, mom of Bob DuBois’ college roommate (December 24, 1936 – August 28, 2025)

            Cheryl Crenshaw (November 6, 1948 – September 10, 2025)

Daniel Napolski, Jr., Bob DuBois’ sister's nephew (December 7, 1982 – September 10, 2025)

Pamela Mattison (February 25, 1959 – September 26, 2025)

            David Miller, brother of Elaine McClay (died October 1, 2025)

Anica Guiboux, mom of friend of Bob DuBois (September 27, 1935 – October 9, 2025)

Ruth Schmidt, aunt of Laura Schroeder (November 22, 1936 – October 16, 2025)

          To these, you have granted eternal rest this past year.  We thank you for giving them new life in Christ while on this earth and for sustaining them in true and saving faith throughout their life.  We praise you for finally giving them the fulfillment of your promises of salvation and eternal life.  Strengthen and sustain us in this saving faith so that we may also join with the angels and archangels and all the company of heaven in joyful praise, peace, and rest forever; through Jesus Christ, our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever.

Cong:          Amen.

Sermon -- All Saints' Day, transferred (November 2, 2025)

HEBREWS 11:32-40

THE SAINTS OF GOD LONG FOR A BETTER HOME.

In the name + of Jesus.

     “I believe in the holy, Christian church, the communion of saints” (Apostles’ Creed).  That phrase, “the communion of saints,” is a reminder that there is one Church of God.  There is one group of saints.  Many of the saints have gone before us and dwell in the Church Triumphant.  They have departed from this world and have received the eternal rest, peace, and glory which was gained for us through Jesus Christ. 

     The kingdom of God is not something that you will enter one day.  You dwell in the kingdom of God now.  You are the Church, although you are not in glory yet.  You are in the Church Militant.  That means you and I have to do battle every day.

     We do battle against the devil who tempts us to sin, who tries to seduce us away from Jesus with fine-sounding arguments, and who accuses us of sins from our past.  The devil is stronger and more crafty than we are.  The weapon we have to fight against him is the word of God.  If we take Jesus’ words to heart, we are kept safe in his kingdom.

     We also do battle against the world and its attitudes.  The world assures us that there are great rewards if we abandon chastity, decency, morality, sobriety, honesty, and so on.  The world celebrates abandonment of self-control.  Anyone who upholds God’s word as the only source of truth and guidance in life is mocked and condemned.  One of the reasons the Lord brings you into the Church is so that you can be sure you are not fighting the battle alone.  The Bible reminds us, “The grace of God … trains us to reject ungodliness and worldly lusts and to live self-controlled, upright, and godly lives in this present age, while we wait for the blessed hope, that is, the glorious appearance of our great God and Savior, Jesus Christ” (Titus 2:11-13).  The saints of God gather regularly to receive this grace and the strength to stand firm.

     We also do battle against our own sinful flesh.  You are a new creation in Christ.  He has created in you a clean heart and renewed in you a right spirit.  It is this spirit which acknowledges that God’s commands are good and right.  You are eager to know and to do what God desires you to do.  But there is another part of you that remains rebellious.  Your new nature knows that when someone sins against you that you should forgive him just as, in Christ, God forgave you.  But another part of you wants to attack, vilify, and humiliate that person.  This is the part of you which you battle against every day.  This is life in the Church Militant.

     Your life in the Church Militant is no different than the saints of the past.  The Church has always had to face the same enemies, although the attacks have often been more intense and the consequences of fighting for the faith have been more severe.  The writer to the Hebrews spent the entire 11th chapter speaking about this communion of saints.  While their struggles varied, their goal was all the same.  It is the same as yours: God’s saints long for a better home.

     The writer to the Hebrews reminds us of the saints of old.  Sometimes they were blessed with divine aid which saved those who were steadfast in their faith.  He said that “by faith they … shut the mouths of lions” (Hebrews 11:33).  This brings to mind Daniel.  Late in Daniel’s life, a decree went out that no one should pray to anyone but the king of Persia.  Daniel went home to pray to the Lord about this.  He continued to practice his faith, not caring about the consequences.  The consequence was that he would be thrown into a den of lions to become their lunch.  God, in his mercy, shut the mouths of the lions and vindicated Daniel’s innocence.

     The writer to the Hebrews also mentioned those who “by faith … quenched the power of fire” (Hebrews 11:34).  This brings to mind Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego who refused to worship the idol Nebuchadnezzar had built.  The consequence of failing to worship this idol was to be thrown into a fiery furnace.  The three men remained steadfast in their faith.  Nebuchadnezzar even taunted them, “What god will be able to save you from my hands” (Daniel 3:15)?  Their response was amazing.  They replied, “Our God … is able to save us from the blazing fiery furnace. …But if he does not, you should know, Your Majesty, that we will not serve your gods, and we will not worship the golden statue that you set up” (Daniel 3:17-18).  They did not presume that God would save them from the fires of the furnace.  But they were sure that God would save them from the fires of hell.  They would suffer anything rather than lose their Savior.  Once again, in his mercy, God preserved these faithful men.

     We like these stories about God’s people because they come out unscathed.  But recognize that these men were willing to die for their faith because God’s people long for a better home.  They could have gained the favor of powerful kings if they had played along.  But the saints of God don’t desire to build a kingdom in this world for themselves.  They are eager for the kingdom of peace and glory that Jesus Christ is preparing for them.  God’s saints long for a better home.

     While we are inspired by the saints whom God miraculously preserved, those stories are the exceptions, not the rule.  In the early Church, the Christians lived under a government that demanded that they worship Caesar.  Everyone in the Roman Empire was to offer a pinch of incense at an altar and confess, “Caesar is lord.”  To refuse was treason.  Treason meant death.  I suppose those Christians could have just pretended—go through the motions and mouth the words.  After that, they could go and worship Jesus as they pleased.  But they did not.  The Christians refused to worship at Caesar’s altar.  They refused to confess, “Caesar is lord.”  They held steadfastly to the confession, “Jesus is Lord” (1 Corinthians 12:3).  In these cases, God did not shut the mouths of the lions.  Many Christians were mauled in the Colosseum to the amusement of the Roman crowds.  Nor God did quench the power of fire.  Nero doused many Christians in pitch and used them as human torches to light the streets of Rome at night.  Why would the saints of the past do this?  Because the saints of God long for a better home.

     The writer to the Hebrews commented that some of God’s saints in the past “who were tortured did not accept their release, so that they may take part in a better resurrection” (Hebrews 11:35).  That’s not to say that they earned their glorious home.  They could have enjoyed a happier life on earth if they had renounced their faith.  The world would have rewarded them and praised them if they had.  They refused.  They preferred torture over worldly pleasure, scorn over worldly praise, and a better home with the Lord more than a happy life without him.  God’s saints long for a better home.

     The devil still offers you the same deal he has offered the saints of the past.  He will make you popular.  He will let you gratify your lusts—if not with a partner, then with porn.  He will show you that riches can be gained through conning, fraud, and theft.  He will assure you that intoxication guarantees a good time and inspires great ideas.  He may keep it even more simple than that.  He may tell you that Sunday mornings are for family time, sports, leisurely breakfast, or sleep.  While those things are not evil of themselves, the devil will have you pursue them to avert your attention from Jesus.  If you neglect hearing God’s word and receiving his sacraments, your faith will suffer.  It may even die while you are convinced that you are doing good things.  Beware.  The battle in the Church Militant does not end, and the strategies of the devil’s attacks are clever. 

     In the Church Militant, we can become tired, lose focus, or even despair.  The Lord is our strength in the battle, and he is our refuge for comfort, hope, and assurance.  That is why we flee to him.  He reminds us of the end goal.  “And when the fight is fierce, the warfare long, steals on the ear the distant triumph song, and hearts are brave again and arms are strong” (For All the Saints, stanza 5).  The Lord keeps us focused on the end goal, which is everlasting peace, rest, and glory.  God’s saints long for a better home. 

     This is the home Jesus Christ has won for us.  He has rescued us from the empty promises made by a dying world.  He has delivered us from the devil who torments souls.  He has delivered us from the curse of death which terrifies the hearts of all.  He has done this by restoring us to the status he always intended us to have.  God created Adam and Eve to be holy and blameless.  God has made you a new creation, to be holy and blameless before him.  His innocent blood has purified your minds and hearts.  His resurrection means victory over death and the devil.  Jesus has made you partakers of his victory.  By your baptism, he has clothed you with the righteousness you need to enter the heavenly kingdom.  From this altar, Jesus feeds you with the body that has overcome death.  God’s saints long for these gifts because this is how the Lord delivers his salvation to us.  Here, he sets you apart for eternal life.  Here, he strengthens you for the battle.

     Our Lord has always sustained his saints in the true faith.  He has even blessed some to endure suffering, pain, torture, and death because God’s people recognize that there are things worse than death.  Dying apart from the Savior tops the list.  Our goal is not to die comfortably, but to die in the faith.  Many who die comfortably do not die in peace.  God’s saints, no matter how they die, depart in peace; for God’s peace rests upon them.  And God’s saints do not fret departing from this world.  If this life were all we had to live for, what a sad and bitter death it would be!  But God’s saints long for a better home, and Jesus Christ assures we will have it.

     “I believe in the holy, Christian church, the communion of saints” (Apostles’ Creed).  We are united with all the saints in heaven and on earth.  We all confess the same Savior, and we all long for the better home he has secured for us.  When we come to the altar as guests at the wedding feast of the Lamb, we feast together with Gideon, Barak, Samson, Jephthah, David, Samuel, all the prophets, and all the saints who have gone before us.  They now rest in glory.  We fight the battles that they had once fought.  We all rally to the same place for refuge, for relief, and for release from our service—the Lord Jesus Christ.  He has promised us a better home, and we long for him to take us there.  Amen.  Come, Lord Jesus.

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

Friday, October 31, 2025

Lutheran Reformation notes and stuff

October 31, 1517 marked the beginning of the Lutheran Reformation.  The years that followed continued efforts to restore the Church to a faithful proclamation and practice of the Gospel.  Entire books have been written on the topic, so I will limit my offerings to you here.

Luther Rose

          A seal or coat of arms is usually designed to commemorate an outstanding event or to express the hopes and ideals of the family or person who bears it. Each part of such an emblem has a special meaning. Martin Luther’s seal is no exception. As early as 1517, while Luther was professor at Wittenberg, he replaced his father’s seal with one that he himself designed. Composed of five parts, it suited him better than did the crossbow and two roses of Hans Luther.
          After Duke John Frederick had the seal cut in stone for a signet ring, Luther’s friend Spengler, the town clerk of Nuremberg, asked for an explanation of it. Luther wrote to him, in part:

          The first thing expressed in my seal is a cross, black, to put me in mind that Christ crucified saves us. “For with the heart man believeth unto righteousness.”
          Now, although the cross is black, mortified, and intended to cause pain, yet it does not change the color of the heart, does not destroy nature – that is, does not kill, but keeps alive. “For the just shall live by faith” – by faith in the Savior.
          The heart is fixed upon the center of a white rose, to show that faith causes joy, consolation, and peace….
          The rose, moreover, is fixed in a sky-colored field to denote that such joy of faith … is but an earnest and beginning of heavenly joy to come….
          And around this field is a golden ring, to signify that such joy in heaven is endless….


          Luther explained in detail his reasons for choosing certain colors and the significance of those colors. He also made comparisons between this life and the “bliss in heaven” which is “anticipated and held by hope, though not yet revealed.” But brushing aside the details, the gist of the letter was simply this: The coat of arms tells the story of what I believe and confess.
-- p 94, Martin Luther, Man of God by Morton A. Schroeder, Northwestern Publishing House: Milwaukee, WI. 1983.

Book of Concord -- The book which contains the confessions of the Evangelical Lutheran Church


Lutheran Satire: Diet of Worms, Mixtape Edition


Lutheran Satire: Reformation Piggybackers (noting people who used the Reformation to promote various different teachings)

Thursday, October 30, 2025

Update from Good Shepherd (October 30, 2025)

Greetings!

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

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

Bible Matters meets Wednesdays at 6:30 PM.  
We will have an overview of the Minor Prophets.  A schedule can be found here.  

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

PICTORIAL DIRECTORY
         If you were not able to make it in to have your photo taken for the directory, photos can be submitted for inclusion in the upcoming directory. Please speak to Terry Barber about these submissions.

CALL FOR NAMES – ALL SAINTS' DAY REMEMBRANCE
          By the time you get this, all the names submitted have been printed in the bulletin for the All Saints' Day prayer of remembrance.  You may still submit a name up to the time of our Divine Service at 10:00 AM on November 2.  If you do, please include the following information:
                    1. the name of the deceased
                    2. your name
                    3. how he/she was related to you
                    4. the dates of his/her birth and death, if known

          The prayer with all names submitted will be printed on this blog shortly after the service on Sunday, November 2. 


FOOD DRIVE FOR MARRIED STUDENTS AT WISCONSIN LUTHERAN SEMINARY
          From now until Sunday, November 2, we will be taking a collection of food and sanitary items from the married students at Wisconsin Lutheran Seminary. Our gifts help to alleviate the expenses of our future pastors, allowing them to potentially enter the ministry debt free. Items which are need most are posted at the bulletin boards in the fellowship hall above the boxes where the collection is being taken. Gifts of money are also welcome. Checks can be made out to Wisconsin Lutheran Seminary.

NEW PASTOR AT PALABRA DE VIDA
         Rev. Martin Loescher who had previously served in Neenah, Wisconsin has accepted the call to serve at Palabra de Vida Lutheran Church in Detroit. We look forward to having him, his wife, and his family come to southeast Michigan as he begins his service to God’s people at Palabra de Vida.  The likely date of his installation will be Sunday, December 7.
          When a new pastor moves to the congregation which has called him to serve him, it is customary for that congregation to welcome him with a food shower, gift cards, or some other expression of gratitude. While Palabra de Vida is certainly grateful for a new pastor, their resources are limited to express it with material gifts. We would like the congregations in the metro-Detroit area to share that expression of gratitude.
          If you would be willing to supply gift cards or gifts of money as part of the welcome for the Loescher family, please submit them to Good Shepherd so that they can be delivered to the Loescher family upon Pastor Loescher’s installation.

175th Anniversary of the WELS (Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod)

            The WELS was founded in Milwaukee, Wisconsin in 1850 by five Lutheran pastors.  Since then, it has grown to about 1,200 congregations throughout the USA and does mission work in about 50 countries.  We thank God for preserving a synod in which the Bible is upheld as God’s inerrant, inspired word.  We should not take this blessing for granted, as many denominations have chosen to ignore or reject parts of God’s word, leaving people to wonder what in the Bible is still true and what is not.

            In order to express our gratitude to the Lord for preserving our synod, and in hopes to see our synod expand its ministry to the USA and to the world, we will be participating in a thank offering throughout the month of November.  There will be a collection plate by the ushers’ station.  You may also designate an offering (mark it as “WELS 175”, but payable to Good Shepherd) and put it in the collection plate with your usual offering.

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.

STOCKINGS FOR VETERANS
          We are collecting items for stockings for veterans again this year. We will be putting together 36 stockings. This year our stockings will be distributed to veterans at the VA hospital in Ann Arbor.
          The items to be purchased, as well as to NOT purchase, are listed here. If you are contributing to this effort, please plan accordingly. Items will need to be at church by Sunday, November 30. We will be assembling them after church on November 30. The stockings and hats will be provided.
          It is understandable if you don’t wish to donate enough items to cover all 36 stockings. If you would like to make a donation to cover part of the stockings, you can indicate that on a sign up sheet on the bulletin board in the fellowship hall, indicating the item and the quantity you will be donating. Your generosity is appreciated!

CHURCH COUNCIL HIGHLIGHTS (October)

>  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.  

>  Our handicapped accessible entry via push-button should be installed on October 30. 

>  We plan on adding to our Servant Keeper office management system to allow for texting to large groups, similar to the email blasts, but with texting.  When it is ready to go, we will do a test run after church some Sunday.  

>  We have hired a professional janitorial service.

>  A gift was graciously given toward the purchase of a moveable coffee bar.  That coffee bar will be purchased soon.  We thank the donor for their generosity.

>  We are planning on two congregational meetings in late November and early December.  Our Open Forum on November 23 will present a recommended budget for the 2026 year, as well as present some plans we hope to implement in the next year or so.  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.

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.

GOOD SHEPHERD ON YOUTUBE
           Services are uploaded to YouTube each week. Feel free to share the videos. Here is the Divine Service from October 26, 2025. Good Shepherd Novi, Divine Service, October 25, 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.
Bible Matters -- Wednesdays at 6:30 PM 

GOOD SHEPHERD’S WEBSITE
www.GoodShepherdNovi.org

PASTOR SCHROEDER’S BLOG

www.LutheranSubject.blogspot.com  

Wednesday, October 29, 2025

YouTube -- Festival of the Reformation (October 26, 2025)

Here is the Divine Service from Sunday, October 26, 2025.



Stockings for Veterans

             We are collecting items for stockings for veterans again this year.  We will be putting together 36 stockings.  This year our stockings will be distributed to veterans at the VA hospital in AnnArbor. 

The items to be purchased, as well as to NOT purchase, are listed below.  If you are contributing to this effort, please plan accordingly.  Items will need to be at church by Sunday, November 30.  We will be assembling them after church on November 30.  The stockings and hats will be provided.

It is understandable if you don’t wish to donate enough items to cover all 36 stockings.  If you would like to make a donation to cover part of the stockings, you can indicate that on a sign up sheet on the bulletin board in the fellowship hall, indicating the item and the quantity you will be donating.  Your generosity is appreciated!

Items to include:
Slim Jims or Beef Jerky
Packages of Holiday nuts
Single-serving drink mix packets (i.e. Crystal Light, Powerade, etc.)
Candy Canes
Holiday candy (in sealed wrapping or small unopened bags)
Single-serving cookie packages
Peanut Brittle
Apple cider packets (must be in Ziploc baggies in case the packets break)
Hot chocolate packets (must be in Ziploc baggies in case the packets breaks)
Travel-sized games
Card games (Uno, Phase 10)
Stress balls (holiday-themed preferred)
Holiday-themed writing pens or pencils
Small notepads
Puzzle book (Crosswords, Sudoku, Word Find)
Playing cards
Holiday-themed lip balm
Gloves (preferably black; winter; one size fits all)
Socks
Other holiday-themed items


Items NOT TO include:
NO GLASS (containers, ornaments, etc)
NO SHARP OBJECTS (safety pins, razors, pocket knives)
NO PRODUCTS CONTAINING ALCOHOL (some mouthwash, hand sanitizer, and colognes may contain alcohol)
NO MEDICATIONS (OTC or otherwise)
NO CBD or HEMP PRODUCTS
NO Tobacco Products
NO AEROSOLS
NO HAND SANITIZER
NO GLITTER
NO BRANDED or marketing materials with company/organization names, logos, etc.
NO political materials
NO Nail Polish