Tuesday, September 29, 2020

Pastors' Conference at Salem Evangelical Lutheran Church, Ann Arbor

COVID limited our Pastors' Conference quite a bit this year.  Nevertheless, for one day, a number of pastors gathered at Salem Evangelical Lutheran Church of Ann Arbor on Monday, September 28.  Actually, Ann Arbor is a bit of a misnomer.  Salem is situated very much in the country to the southwest of Ann Arbor.  I suspect that Ann Arbor residents will eventually make their way closer, but for now I don't think anyone would think "Ann Arbor" when they see it.

All masked up and spread apart (we're usually spread apart as it is anyway), we discussed theology, practice, and the work of our synod.  Here are some photos of Salem.




Bible Matters -- Upcoming Topics

Bible Matters, a Bible discussion group, meets on Wednesdays at 7:00 PM.  Upcoming topics:

September 30  –  Racism: How do we view our fellow man?

October 7  –  The Church and the LGTBQ+ Community: How shall we love them? 

NOTE:  There is a booklet entitled “Gay and God” from Time of Grace Ministry (https://timeofgrace.org/), which will be a guide for our discussion.  While it is not mandatory to read it beforehand, it is valuable reading and may aid your thoughts before our session on October 7.  It is available at Good Shepherd, free of charge.

October 14  –  What is God going to do about evil?

October 21  –  I have doubts about the Bible.  Now what?

Future topics may be suggested to the pastor and will be announced prior to each session. 


If anyone wants to follow along on Zoom, contact the pastor (welsnovi@aol.com) and I will send you a link.  Your contribution to the discussion may have to be limited to the Chat feature.

Lutheran Satire -- St. Michael and All Angels

In honor of the Festival of St. Michael and All Angels today, here is a quick video to ponder the majesty of the angels who watch over us.  From Lutheran Satire.  Enjoy.




YouTube -- 17th Sunday after Pentecost (September 27, 2020)

 Here is the service from Sunday, September 27, 2020.




Sunday, September 27, 2020

Sermon -- 17th Sunday after Pentecost (September 27, 2020)

MATTHEW 18:21-35

MERCY DOES NOT KEEP AN ACCOUNT.

In the name + of Jesus.

     In his parable, Jesus tells about a man who had loaned to his fellow servant 100 denarii.  This was no small debt.  This was 100 days' wages.  In other words, if your annual income was $60,000, your fellow servant was indebted to you by almost $20,000.  At first glance, you might have thought of the angry servant, “Get over it.  You should just let this debt go.”  But once you see the debt in current monetary terms, you might understand how this servant would “seize him, choke him, and say, ‘Pay what you owe!’” (Matthew 18:28, paraphrase)  

     The debt was real, and it was not trivial.  100 denarii is a substantial sum.  If there had been no effort to repay, the first servant was wronged and justifiably angry.  He was in the right to demand justice of his fellow servant.  That is what the Law is for.  We appeal to it when we are wronged.  It is a legal form of vengeance.  And yet, for some reason, the other servants were appalled.  We don't hear anyone saying, “You know, I don't blame him.  I would be livid if someone owed me that much and did not repay.”  Instead, “when his fellow servants saw what had taken place, they were greatly distressed, and they went and reported to their master all that had taken place.” (Matthew 18:31)  

     Our Lord, in his wisdom, used money to get us to appreciate his mercy.  We understand money.  We carefully guard it and track it.  If someone owes us, we will not forget it.  We will demand repayment; if not repayment, then revenge.  And everyone will tell us that we are justified to appeal to the legal system.  But the parable is not about money.  It is about mercy.  It is about someone who sins against you.  Jesus tells the parable in answer to Peter's question: “'Lord, how often will my brother sin against me, and I forgive him?  As many as seven times?'  Jesus said to him, 'I do not say to you seven times, but seventy-seven times.'” (Matthew 18:21-22)  Jesus explains that mercy does not keep an account.

     Jesus' reply to Peter's question is outrageous.  Can you image forgiving the same person seventy-seven times?  Would you really allow yourself to get to a point where the same person sins against you seventy-seven times?  It makes Peter's suggestion of seven times generous.  

     St. Paul wrote to the Romans, “Owe no one anything, except to love each other.” (Romans 13:8)  Christians are called to love one another.  But if I sin against you, I have failed to render it.  More than that, I am indebted to you.  I need to replace what I have stolen, restore what I have broken, or rectify wherever I have wronged you.  Sometimes, that is impossible.  How could I make it right if things cannot be replaced or restored?  I remain in your debt.  According to the Law, you have the right to demand justice.  This all makes sense to the world which teaches you, “Don't get mad; get even.”  The Law measures and tracks and keeps score, but mercy does not keep an account.

     If you have been sinned against by a fellow Christian, the debt is real.  The sin is painful.  The breach among brothers and sisters is not trivial.  It cannot be brushed aside by, “Get over it!” any more than a $20,000 debt can be dismissed.  But if you are motivated by vengeance or stubbornly demand justice on the one who has sinned against you—as if making someone grovel improves anything other than your ego—then you have failed to remember what it is to be indebted yourself.  A debt of 100 denarii is significant.  And sins are not trivial, ever.  But Jesus does not tell Peter about forgiving someone seventy-seven times so that he can keep score.  Quite the opposite: Mercy does not keep an account.

     “Therefore the kingdom of heaven may be compared to a king who wished to settle accounts with his servants.  When he began to settle, one was brought to him who owed him ten thousand talents.  And since he could not pay, his master ordered him to be sold, with his wife and children and all that he had, and payment to be made.” (Matthew 18:23-25)  The king had extended a loan to a servant for ten thousand talents.  If we say the smaller loan was worth $20,000, then this loan is worth billions.  You might wonder about the sanity of a king who would give that much to his servants.

     But what has the Lord given you?  Has he not given you the world?  You get sunrises and seasons.  For you, the birds sing and the flowers grow.  For you, artists make music, movies, and comic books.  You get daily food—and if you are like me, too much of it.  You get sturdy shelter and a multi-colored, multi-textured wardrobe.   You get to walk and drive.  You get to see and hear and dream.  You get to reason, to imagine, to employ your skills and interests, and to communicate with loved ones.  Oh, and you get money.  God has granted innumerable blessings to you.  You have been entrusted with gifts galore with which you get to honor God and love your neighbor.  You and I are indebted to God to serve him in grateful and willing obedience.  But oh, how we have complained and squandered and hoarded and hated.  We have convinced ourselves that we are the reason we have so much and that God should really treat us better.

     Do not be deceived.  “The kingdom of heaven may be compared to a king who wished to settle accounts with his servants.” (Matthew 18:23)  The Lord does, indeed, hold us accountable for what we have done.  We owe him obedience, and we have given him bitterness.  We owe our fellowman love, and we only consider how our fellowman has not respected us enough.  According to God's Law, we ought to be cast into the prison until we can pay back to God what we owe him.  

     In the parable, “the servant fell on his knees, imploring him, ‘Have patience with me, and I will pay you everything.’” (Matthew 18:26)  This is laughable.  No one can restore, replace, or rectify this debt.  No one could deliver the first penny, let alone return the billions.  But “out of pity for him, the master of that servant released him and forgave him the debt.” (Matthew 18:27)  Mercy does not keep an account.

     And so, the Lord does not treat us as our sin deserves.  He does not carry out revenge on us, which justice would demand.  But that does not mean he just lets everything go.  If the king has entrusted so much and it cannot be repaid, someone has to absorb the cost.  It is like the political campaign to just cancel all college loans.  Now, if you want to debate that college costs are too high, that is another topic.  But loans were given, and return payments are expected.  Those who took the loans agreed to that when they took them.  If our government should decree that all loans are forgiven, that does not mean the money magically went away.  Someone is taking a loss.  Someone else is covering the cost.

     The king who canceled the ten thousand talents never got his loan back.  He absorbed the cost for his servant and let him go free.  This is precisely what our Lord has done regarding your debt to him.  Jesus did not magically waive your sins away.  Justice demands that a payment must be made for sins.  That is the Law, and God never ignores his Law.  The debt is truly and really owed.  Therefore, Jesus paid the price and absorbed the debt for you.  He rendered the perfect life demanded.  He gave to his Father all the love and obedience which was owed, but then he accepted the charges for all debts we incurred.  Jesus, the perfect Son of God, took on our guilt.  The immortal Son of God suffered our death.  The sinless Son of God accepted our hell.  He has bestowed the benefits to you when you were baptized.  There, he wiped the ledger clean.

     And he did more than wipe the ledger clean.  The blood of Jesus continues to keep the ledger clean.  For, mercy does not keep an account.  You and I, even though we have been forgiven of all our sins, continue to commit them.  But our Lord does not put checks in his ledger for our offenses.  He summons the penitent to the altar where the blood of Jesus, his Son, continues to cleanse us of every sin.  Jesus keeps you reconciled to the Father; for Jesus has covered your debts.  You do not stand condemned, but beloved and redeemed, innocent and blameless.  For mercy does not keep an account.

     If you know and appreciate what it means to be shown such mercy, how can you refuse mercy to your fellow servants?  If you insist that they must endure the justice of the Law for you, then understand that this same Law will be used against you.  The Law always concerns itself with what is deserved.  The Law measures and tracks and keeps score, but mercy does not keep an account.  The Lord is merciful, not treating you as your sins deserve.  His mercy endures forever and continually exonerates you of your guilt.  Therefore, you who bask in mercy get to show the same mercy to others.  If you must forgive your fellow servant seven times or seventy-seven times, mercy endures forever.  Mercy does not keep an account.  

     Faith does not focus on the faults of man, but on the goodness and promises of God.  Since our gracious King gives us so much and so freely, we also get to give freely and gladly.  For our debts have been covered.  The blood of Jesus is real, and his mercies are not trivial.  Therefore, we look upon our fellow servants not according to the faults they display, but according to the mercies they need.  We get to be lavish with mercy.  We find joy in extending forgiveness and being reconciled to our fellow servants.

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

Thursday, September 24, 2020

Update from Good Shepherd (September 24, 2020)

 Greetings!

DIVINE SERVICES
      For information on what you can expect when you come to church and what will be expected of you, see this link.
        Services will still be broadcast on Facebook Live, Sundays at 10:00 AM, and uploaded to YouTube.   Share our services and invite friends to tune in.

FALL SCHEDULE
Divine Services are at 10:00 AM on Sundays. 
Sunday School is on Sundays at 8:45 AM.
Adult Bible Class is on Sundays at 8:45 AM.  We will be going through the epistles of St. John.  The schedule can be found here.
Catechism Class is on Wednesdays at 3:30 PM. 
Bible Matters, a discussion group, is on Wednesdays at 7:00 PM.  More information on Bible Matters can be found here.  Topics coming up:
     Sept 30  –  Racism: How do we view our fellow man?
     Oct 7  –  The Church and the LGBTQ+ Community: How shall we love them? 
NOTE:  There should be a booklet available soon entitled “Gay and God” from Time of Grace Ministry.  This will be valuable reading before our session on October 7.  If it is not available on Sunday, September 27, it will be here by October 4.

REDFORD PREGNANCY CARE CENTER UPDATE
The RPCC is seeking donations for gently used fall/winter clothing.  We could really use 18 mo. - 4 T clothing.  For more information, please contact Carol Beeskow (cbeeskow@gmail.com). 

WELS LISTEN LIBRARY
          You may not think your church has any blind members. What about people who can no longer read your service folder or are too frail to hold a book or have dyslexia?
          WELS Mission for the Visually Impaired (MVI) posts audio versions of Meditations and Forward in Christ and Christian audio books on a new website called the “Listen Library” at listen.wels.net. You can see the Listen Library for yourself – it’s open but the recordings are password protected. For members to listen online, download to their devices or order book or periodical on a USB flash drive, they (or someone in their family or church) applies to MVI. A Service Application form is on the Listen Library landing page. The National Library Service for the Blind has free digital players available to all who are blind. MVI continues to produce braille and large print materials. 
          Coming soon: Professor Emeritus Daniel Deutschlander is recording his books for Listen Library clients to hear for free! Find out more about resources for members who can no longer read a book at wels.net/mvi.

OFFICE HOURS
Office hours are Monday-Thursday, 9:00 AM – Noon.  
The pastor will be in his office unless a meeting has been scheduled elsewhere (consult the weekly schedule).  The pastor is also available by appointment.  Call or text (248-719-5218).  You may also email (welsnovi@aol.com), but the response may be slower.

CONCERNING PASTORAL CARE
        Besides Facebook Live and YouTube, you can find the pastor's sermons archived on this blog.  You can use the search bar to find a particular date, day of the Church Year, or Scripture reference.
        Pastor Schroeder will be available for private devotions, Holy Absolution, and Holy Communion to members in small groups or to individuals.  You may call to set up an appointment at any time.  Visits by appointment can be done either at church or at your home.
        If you want to ask for intercessions for loved ones, we will certainly remember them in our prayers, too.  If your loved one has no pastor, ask if they would like Pastor Schroeder to visit them.  

GOOD SHEPHERD ON YOUTUBE
         The service from September 20 is here:   https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=20HsqgrAGw4  Feel free to share the videos.  For other services, do a search for "Good Shepherd Novi."  
         Bulletins for services can be downloaded from here (scroll down): 

OFFERINGS
While we may not be meeting for worship, we do have financial obligations to meet.  You may either mail your offering into Good Shepherd, or you can set up your offering to be transferred electronically from your bank.  If you are interested in the automatic transfer of funds for your offering, please contact the church at (248) 349-0565 or welsnovi@aol.com.

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
DIVINE SERVICES -- Sundays at 10:00 AM  (We also stream on Facebook Live )
SUNDAY SCHOOL & ADULT BIBLE CLASS on Sundays at 8:45 AM.
BIBLE MATTERS, a discussion group, on Wednesdays at 7:00 PM.

GOOD SHEPHERD’S WEBSITE

Monday, September 21, 2020

Summer into Fall

Today marks the last day of summer.  As a result, this is perhaps one of the saddest songs out there.  

Last Summer Song by Acoustic Alchemy.


In order to overcome the melancholy, I suppose it is time to turn on some James Taylor.  I always thought that his songs had a kind of fall feeling to them.  But there is never a bad time to listen to James Taylor.  So, here are three James Taylor songs, all with an autumn vibe.

September Grass


October Road


Walking Man



YouTube -- 16th Sunday after Pentecost (September 20, 2020)

 Here is the service from Sunday, September 20.



Sunday, September 20, 2020

Sermon -- 16th Sunday after Pentecost (September 20, 2020)

MATTHEW 18:15-20

LOVE WORKS TO PRESERVE OUR NEIGHBOR.

In the name + of Jesus.

      The second table of the Law is summed up, “Love your neighbor as yourself.”  Even unbelievers would admit that this is a noble sentiment.  But how we put that love into practice is where Christians part company with the world.  One clear example of that is in our Gospel lesson today.

     Jesus begins, “If your brother sins against you, go and tell him his fault, between you and him alone.” (Matthew 18:15)  The first thing we notice in this sentence is that we are dealing with a brother, that is, with a fellow Christian.  Jesus uses a word that is more endearing than “someone.”  It is not just “If someone sins against you.”  No, it is “If your brother sins.”  As fellow Christians, we have a special relationship with one another.  We don't always get to know each other as well as we ought.  Part of that is because suburban living has us scattered abroad.  Another part, however, is that we don't put in the work of getting to know and care for our fellow Christians as we ought.  You might know the faces of the members here, but you are embarrassed that you can't put a name to those faces.  And if you can't do that, you certainly don't know their struggles, their fears, or their joys.  

     We are brothers and sisters in Christ.  We ought to recognize that we are not merely bound together by membership of a congregation, we are bound together in Christ for eternal life.  We are equally loved by the Lord.  Although none of us has an inherent right to the kingdom of God, we all have received a place in it by God's grace.  We have all been redeemed by the blood of Jesus who suffered and died to take away our sins.  The Holy Spirit has converted our hearts and minds to confess that God's word is good, God's ways are right, and God's people are beloved by him.  If God deems you worthy of love and makes you a possessor of his kingdom, then I must treat you with great honor.  You are more than a generic “someone,” you are a brother or sister.  Love works to preserve our neighbor, and all the more a family member.  

     The next thing we note is this: Jesus said, “If your brother sins against you, go and tell him his fault, between you and him alone.” (Matthew 18:15)  Love works to preserve our brothers and sisters.  We can put up with a lot of differences among us.  If someone is quirky or has a different sense of humor, style, or political leanings, perhaps it is annoying to you.  But that only means you need to demonstrate patience and compassion, not that they need correction.  Jesus said, “If your brother sins.” (Matthew 18:15).   These are not mistakes or short-comings.  These are attitudes and actions which oppose the word of God.  To continue in them is to defy God who set the standard of what is right and wrong, good and evil.  Even to tolerate them threatens faith.  So, if you see your brother or sister in Christ who is persisting in sin or embracing it, love will move you to “go and tell him his fault, between you and him alone.” (Matthew 18:15)  Love works to preserve our neighbor.

     What's more, love will also work to preserve our neighbor's reputation.  Knowing that someone is persisting in a sin is often cause for gossip.  But what good does it do for our brother to talk to others about him?  This does not preserve his good name; it destroys it.  Therefore, love will work to preserve the reputation of our brothers and sisters.  But love cannot stand by silently to watch a fellow Christian embrace his sins and destroy his faith.  Love must speak up in love and concern.

     This is where Christian love departs from the worldly definition of love.  In fact, the world finds this Christian definition of love to be utterly offensive, intolerant, and hateful.  The world teaches us to keep our distance, mind our own business, and turn a blind eye.  The world sees someone who flaunts disobedience to God's word, and the world cheers them on.  “This is how God made you.  Don't apologize to anyone for who you are or what you do.  You do you!” is the cry.  Anyone who would expose such attitudes and actions as sins or would dare to try to correct them—being sure that they actually are sins—is shouted down and becomes a victim of the cancel culture.

     Now, if you see an unbeliever who thinks and acts like an unbeliever, you don't need to be surprised.  If someone does not know or believe God's word, we should not expect that they would live like they do.  But “If your brother sins,” (Matthew 18:15) this grieves us.  We know the danger they put themselves in—under God's wrath, cut off from God's grace, and if left unrepentant, destined for hell.  This cannot be acceptable to see a brother or sister headed in this direction.  Therefore, love works to preserve our neighbor, and all the more a brother or sister in Christ.

     “If he listens to you, you have gained your brother.” (Matthew 18:15)  This is always our goal and our prayer.  If the Lord does not delight in the death of the wicked, neither would we.  But we do not always see the results we want.  So, “if he does not listen, take one or two others along with you, that every charge may be established by the evidence of two or three witnesses.  If he refuses to listen to them, tell it to the church.  And if he refuses to listen even to the church, let him be to you as a Gentile and a tax collector.” (Matthew 18:16-18)   

     Love works to preserve our brother.  But perhaps this does not sound like love to you.  Perhaps it does not seem loving to join together in exposing the persistent sins of a fellow member.  We would rather not hurt someone's feelings than call them to repent.  Often friendship trumps faithfulness to God's word.  But if we keep our distance, mind our own business, and turn a blind eye, we become silent partners with them in their sin.  And if they perish in their sins, they will curse us for watching it and saying nothing to warn them.  Perhaps we could excuse ourselves for not confronting a stranger, but if it is your brother, how can you say nothing?  Love always seeks the good of our neighbor, and it is never good to have someone embrace their sins and to defy God—not a generic “someone,” and certainly not a brother or sister.

     If we follow Jesus' instructions to preserve our brothers and sisters, we ought not be surprised to hear a defensive or a bitter response.  It could be that someone is actually ashamed to be caught in his sin, and he might vigorously protest that he is a good person and does not need your concern.  He might turn on you and say, “You have your own sins to worry about.  Let me alone!”  Or there is the ever-popular, “Whatever happened to, 'Do not judge'?”  But here is what you must remember: You are not the judge.  And you should never claim to be the judge.  Jesus' instructions say this: “If your brother sins against you, go and tell him his fault, between you and him alone.” (Matthew 18:15)  The phrase “tell him his fault” could also be translated “bring it to light” or “point it out to him.”  So, how do we bring someone's sin to light?  We compare it to God's word.  “God says this, but you are doing that.”  In this way, God is and remains the judge.  It is God's word that we are upholding as the standard of right and wrong, good and evil.  But if a brother hears God's word and still defends his sin and commits to continuing in it, then we have a new confession.  He is calling God's word a lie.  He is calling God a liar.  And the Bible warns: “Whoever says 'I know him' but does not keep his commandments is a liar, and the truth is not in him.” (1 John 2:4)  If one persists in sin and denies that God's word applies to him, he has made his confession.  He is sadly no longer a brother in Christ, and we acknowledge it accordingly.  This is what Jesus means to “be to you as a Gentile and a tax collector.” (Matthew 18:18)   

     Our Lord Jesus Christ has brought us into the family of God by his grace.  We are all sinners, and we all have faults that could be flaunted and rubbed in our faces.  But Jesus does not do that.  He has not kept his distance; he became one of us.  He did not mind his own business; it IS his business to save sinners from wrath and hell.  He does not turn a blind eye; his eye is on you and he looks on you in mercy.  He has taken up our sins so that they do not condemn us.  And he does not treat us as mere acquaintances or a generic “someone.”  He tells us that we are children of heavenly Father and that he is our brother.

     The love of Christ did the work to bring us peace and to preserve us in God's favor.  Jesus suffered the hellish torment of God's wrath when he hung on the cross for us.  That is how the Lord deals with our sins.  If our sins are taken away, nothing stands against us.  Nothing.  And now, he continues to address us in his word.  He admonishes us so that we do not go back to our sins.  He encourages us to strive for what is good and right so that we honor him and benefit our neighbor.  He comforts us with the promise that we are his, clothed in his righteousness, and therefore continually pure in the sight of God.

     What Jesus has granted to us, we want given to all.  Love works to preserve our neighbor.  We long to see all people freed from sin, death, and judgment.  Only faith in Jesus and his words provides that.  And we yearn all the more for Christ's redeemed to remain his saving grace.  Only faith in Jesus and his words preserves that—which is why we continue in it, which is why we work to see our brothers and sisters remain in it, and which is why we cling to the words of Jesus.  For Jesus alone strengthens and keeps us in the true faith unto life everlasting.

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

Thursday, September 17, 2020

Update from Good Shepherd (September 17, 2020)

 Greetings!

DIVINE SERVICES
      For information on what you can expect when you come to church and what will be expected of you, see this link.
        Services will still be broadcast on Facebook Live, Sundays at 10:00 AM, and uploaded to YouTube.   Share our services and invite friends to tune in.

GOOD SHEPHERD ON YOUTUBE
         Services are posted on YouTube, usually in a few hours after the service.  When you go to YouTube, do a search for "Good Shepherd Novi" and they should pop up.  The service from September 13 is here:
 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PGk5Uri0DAI .  Feel free to share the videos.
         Bulletins for services can be downloaded from here (scroll down): 

FALL SCHEDULE
It will not be long before we are getting our fall schedule underway.  As much as possible, we will try to do everything in person.  We will continue to assess as we go if we need to adjust our plans.  You will be informed accordingly if anything changes.
>>>  Bible Matters, a discussion group, is on Wednesdays at 7:00 PM.  (We will NOT meet on September 23.)  More information on Bible Matters can be found here.
>>>  Sunday School is on Sundays at 8:45 AM.
>>>  Adult Bible Class is on Sundays at 8:45 AM.  We will be going through the epistles of St. John.  The schedule can be found here.
>>>  Catechism Class will be on Wednesdays at 3:30 PM.  (There will NOT be class on September 23.  We meet again on September 30.)
>>>  Bible Information Class will begin on Monday, September 21 at 7:00 PM.  The schedule can be found here.
>>>  Divine Services will continue at 10:00 AM on Sundays.  In the event that we have a larger group attending on Sundays, we may add a service in order to serve as many as possible and still maintain social distancing. 

CONCERNING PASTORAL CARE
        Besides Facebook Live and YouTube, you can find the pastor's sermons archived on this blog.  You can use the search bar to find a particular date, day of the Church Year, or Scripture reference.
        Pastor Schroeder will be available for private devotions, Holy Absolution, and Holy Communion to members in small groups or to individuals.  You may call to set up an appointment at any time.  Visits by appointment can be done either at church or at your home.
        If you want to ask for intercessions for loved ones, we will certainly remember them in our prayers, too.  If your loved one has no pastor, ask if they would like Pastor Schroeder to visit them.  

OFFERINGS
While we may not be meeting for worship, we do have financial obligations to meet.  You may either mail your offering into Good Shepherd, or you can set up your offering to be transferred electronically from your bank.  If you are interested in the automatic transfer of funds for your offering, please contact the church at (248) 349-0565 or welsnovi@aol.com.

BIBLE INFORMATION CLASS
The next scheduled Bible Information Class (BIC) will begin on Monday, September 21.  Classes will be 7:00 – 8:30 PM.
This notice is given so that our members can consider whom they may invite to BIC.  This class is for people who have questions about the Bible.  There is no further obligation beyond that.  If, on the other hand, you are convinced that we are teaching God's word correctly and faithfully, you are most welcome to become a member.  There is no cost for the class.  All materials are provided.
Call (248-349-0565) or e-mail (welsnovi@aol.com) to register for this class.  The format may be in person (depending upon the comfort level of the participants) or over Zoom.  The pastor will confirm the format with any interested parties.

OFFICE HOURS
Office hours are Monday-Thursday, 9:00 AM – Noon.  The pastor will be in his office unless a meeting has been scheduled elsewhere (consult the weekly schedule).  He may be in his office at other times throughout the day as well.  Pastor Schroeder is also available by appointment.  Call or text (248-719-5218).  You may also email (welsnovi@aol.com), but the response may be slower.

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
DIVINE SERVICES -- Sundays at 10:00 AM  (We also stream on Facebook Live )
SUNDAY SCHOOL & ADULT BIBLE CLASS on Sundays at 8:45 AM.
BIBLE MATTERS, a discussion group, on Wednesdays at 7:00 PM.

GOOD SHEPHERD’S WEBSITE

Wednesday, September 16, 2020

Things that make me go ARRRRGGGGHHHH -- Looking old

I was on my way out to the cemetery for the committal of Adolfine Janecke earlier today.  The driver of the hearse was in his mid-20's (I am guessing).  We had a little chit-chat on the way to the cemetery.  I had asked him how long he had been working for the funeral home.  He said since last February.  Then he said to me, "I suppose you're pretty close to retirement."

ARRRRGGGGHHHH!!!  Do I really look that old???  Does my fedora make me look like I grew up in the 1920's or something?

No ego trips today.

Sermon -- Funeral for Adolfine Janecke (September 16, 2020)

The Funeral of Adolfine Janecke was conducted at Estes-Leadly Funeral Home in Holt, Michigan

ROMANS 8:31-39

NOTHING SEPARATES US FROM CHRIST.

In the name + of Jesus.

      Death produces a separation that no one likes or wants.  Most obviously, death separates us from our loved ones.  Memories you will always have—overnight adventures in her living room and badly kicked soccer balls.  But you no longer get to enjoy her personality, hugs, and conversations.  The bonds of love have been severed.  You still love your loved one, but you no longer have her reciprocating it.

     Death produces another separation.  It separates the soul from the body.  As King Solomon wrote, “the dust returns to the earth as it was, and the spirit returns to God who gave it.” (Ecclesiastes 12:7)  Earth to earth, ashes to ashes, dust to dust for the body, but the soul goes to God for judgment.

     Death comes as a result of a separation, too.  As soon as Adam and Eve sinned, they were separated from God.  They were terrified of God, covered in shame and guilt.  They knew that they deserved God's judgment and God's wrath because of their disobedience.  Sadly, we share the same guilt.  All have sinned and continue to fall short of the glory of God.  No matter how nice you are, you are still a sinner.  You still bear guilt.  You and I deserve God's judgment.  Sin has separated us from God.  

     It is a common opinion that good people go to heaven and bad people go to hell.  But the question is this: How good is good enough?  Rather than leave us guessing, God answers the question.  “Who shall ascend the hill of the Lord?  And who shall stand in his holy place?  He who has clean hands and a pure heart...” (Psalm 24:3-4)  Only that which is holy can stand in the presence of a holy God.  It is not enough to be nice; God demands holiness.  But since no one is holy, not even one, where does our help come from?  Our help comes from the Lord, through Jesus Christ.

     This was Adolfine's confession and faith.  She knew that she was not holy.  But better than that, she knew she had a Savior who supplies the holiness needed to enter eternal life.  Jesus came to address everything that separates us from God.  Jesus took from us all our guilt and shame, and then suffered what sinners deserve.  Jesus loved Adolfine Janecke and rescued her from her sinful condition.  Through holy baptism, Jesus arrayed her in a robe of righteousness.  In Christ, she is not merely nice, sweet, and meek; she is declared holy.  She is a child of God—not, she was a child of God, but she IS a child of God—and nothing separates her from the love of God which is in Christ Jesus.  She dwells in God's presence, and will forevermore.

     This was the confidence that Adolfine had in her life.  It is the confidence that is had by all who are in Christ.  St. Paul asks: “If God is for us, who can be against us?  He who did not spare his own Son but gave him up for us all, how will he not also with him graciously give us all things?  Who shall bring any charge against God's elect?  It is God who justifies.  Who is to condemn?  Christ Jesus is the one who died—more than that, who was raised—who is at the right hand of God, who indeed is interceding for us.” (Romans 8:31-34)  Jesus Christ not only died as the payment for our sins, Jesus Christ not only conquered death by his resurrection, Jesus Christ has also been entrusted with the judgment of all people.  Who is the one who condemns?  Well, that would be Jesus.  But here is the comfort we have: Jesus Christ is on our side.  He has already rendered his verdict.  He is our Advocate and intercedes for us—those who are united to him in faith are justified, forgiven, and saved.  This is why sin no longer separated Adolfine from Christ; it was taken away.  This is why death no longer separates Adolfine from Christ; death has been killed off by Christ.  Jesus lives, and since Adolfine is connected to Jesus, so does she.  Nothing separates us from Christ.

     Jesus never forsook Adolfine, not even in life's harshest times.  When she was forced to flee Nazi Germany and separated from her homeland, she was not separated from Christ.  When she felt out of place in a new land with a strange language, she was not separated from Christ.  When death separated her from Martin in 1988, she was not separated from Christ.  Jesus never forsook her no matter how difficult her days were, not even on the day she died.  He is ever faithful and ever present.

     Nothing separates us from Christ who will restore all things.  Even the separation of the soul from the body will be remedied by Christ.  Jesus did not merely cleanse our souls.  He even redeemed our bodies.  For, Jesus is a flesh and blood, body and soul man.  Jesus rose from the dead with his body, and in the same way he will raise up Adolfine on the Last Day.  Adolfine's body will be summoned from her grave, reunited with her soul, and will live in perfect glory.  She will be raised imperishable, incorruptible, and holy.  She will never know hardship or heartache again.  For Christ, who delivered her from every evil, will keep her free from every evil forever.  And nothing will ever separate her from Christ.

     Death produces a separation from our loved ones, but Jesus even fixes that.  Thanks to Jesus, the grave must give back the dead in them.  Jesus will raise up all his redeemed to receive eternal life.  All who believe in Jesus will dwell together, forever in God's presence.  It does not matter if you end up facing “tribulation, or distress, or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or danger, or sword.” (Romans 8:35)  Those cannot separate you from Christ.  In Christ, you will have an end to pain, sorrow, and evil.  In Christ, you have peace and everlasting life.  Jesus makes you conquerors over sin, over the devil, and over death itself.  And since Jesus lives and reigns over all things, nothing can separate us from him.  Therefore, Adolfine Janecke lives.  Her soul is with the Lord.  Her body awaits the resurrection.  It will not be separated from his promises.  And neither, dear Christians, shall you.  For nothing in “all creation will be able to separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord.” (Romans 8:39)

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

The obituary for Adolfine can be found here: https://estesleadley.com/obituaries/adolfine-janecke/

Tuesday, September 15, 2020

Bible Matters -- Discerning the Will of God

 On Wednesday, September 16, our Bible discussion group, Bible Matters will meet at Good Shepherd at 7:00 PM.  

Our topic for the evening will be: "What does God want?  Discerning the will of God."

Our discussions we consider questions such as:

>  How can we know what God's will is?

>  Do some people have greater understanding of God's will?

>  What if I don't know what God wants from me?

>  When can I state with certainty that I am doing God's will?

>  If I am truly convinced that my actions are right, can I be equally convinced that this is what God wants for me?

>  If something evil happens to me, is that really God's will for my life?

All are welcome.  Feel free to bring friends.  Social distancing will be observed.

YouTube -- 15th Sunday after Pentecost (September 13, 2020)

 Here is the service from September 13, 2020.




Sunday, September 13, 2020

Sermon -- 15th Sunday after Pentecost (September 13, 2020)

MATTHEW 16:16-21

THERE IS NO SALVATION WITHOUT A CROSS.

In the name + of Jesus.

      The gospel reading begins with the phrase, “From that time on....” (Matthew 16:21)  It begs the question: What just happened?  What was the event that sparked Jesus repeated instruction that “he must go to Jerusalem and suffer many things from the elders and chief priests and scribes, and be killed, and on the third day be raised” (Matthew 16:21)?  It was this, that the disciples confessed and acknowledge that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God.  

     There was a great misunderstanding among the Jews about what the Christ would do when he came.  All the Jews were awaiting the Lord's Messiah, but they also had various ideas about the mission of the Messiah.  One common expectation was that the Messiah would restore the throne of David, the glory of Israel, and times of prosperity to the people of God.  In practical terms, that could mean expelling the Romans, an abundance of wealth, great honor and prestige, and continual dominance over surrounding nations.  In short, they wanted a worldly Messiah who would bring in a worldly kingdom of worldly success.  

     The disciples had confessed that Jesus was the Christ.  So, “from that time on,” Jesus continued to teach his disciples what that meant.  It meant that Jesus must go to Jerusalem, suffer many things, be killed, and on the third day be raised from the dead.  The reason this must happen is that there is no salvation without a cross.

     One reason the Christ must suffer this way is because that is what the prophets foretold.  If God had promised it, the Christ must fulfill it.  So Jesus must be lifted up as Moses lifted up the snake in the desert (John 3:14-15).  Jesus must be pierced in his hands and feet (Psalm 22:16).  As he hung from the cross, the Christ must have his bones disjointed (Psalm 22:14) but not broken (John 19:36).  He must die according to God's will (Isaiah 53:10).  And more prophecies foretold what must happen.  If God had promised it, the Christ must fulfill it.  The cross was not an option; it was a pre-determined destination.  There is no salvation with out the cross.

     But the Christ does more than merely fulfill prophecies.  The prophecies were given for a purpose—to proclaim the Lord's salvation for sinners.  Therefore, the Christ must do what he was sent to do in order to win salvation for you; and there is no salvation without the cross.  The Christ, the Son of God, must come to take upon himself the sins of mankind.  The Christ must submit himself to the righteous judgment of God and die as one accursed.  The Christ must lay down his life as a guilt offering on behalf of the guilty.  The Christ must endure this condemnation publicly so that all the world could know what God has done to remove the curse of sin and to graciously pardon our offenses.  After the payment for sins has been made, the Christ must be raised up from the dead to prove that the payment is complete, that sins are forgiven, that the grave is powerless against mankind, and that Jesus has been entrusted with all judgment.  Since he has taken away your sins and emptied the grave of its sting, he has already assured you of a judgment of innocence and eternal life.  All of this is only fulfilled through his death on the cross.  There is no other way of salvation, and that is why Jesus taught his disciples that this is what it means that he is the Christ.  This must happen, for there is no salvation without the cross.

     Jesus' instructions, however, continued.  He said that the cross was necessary for him, but he adds this: The cross is necessary for you, too.  “Jesus told his disciples, 'If anyone would come after me, let him deny himself and take up his cross and follow me.  For whoever would save his life will lose it, but whoever loses his life for my sake will find it.'” (Matthew 16:24-25)  There is no salvation without the cross.

     This is, perhaps, where you start to appreciate Peter's rebuke of Jesus.  Jesus had just taught his disciples that he must suffer many things and be killed.  Peter was appalled.  “Suffer shame, rejection, and a bitter death?  No, Lord!  God have mercy on you and spare you this.  And what about us, your disciples?  What do we get?  What is in this for us?”  Such opinions are held today as well.  What benefits does Christianity deliver to you?  What blessings does Jesus bestow?  Our longings are often as misguided as the people in Jesus' day.  Many want Christianity without a cross.

     Perhaps this is illustrated best by athletes who succeed or win championships.  They give glory to God, which sounds noble.  But underlying these claims is the belief that God rewards those who follow him with worldly success.  God gives strength to hit a home run.  God gives trophies and medals to those who honor him.  God will bless you if you share the Facebook post.  But what blessings are we expecting?  Like the Jews of Jesus' day, we want a worldly Messiah who will bring worldly success.  

     There is no salvation without the cross.  Jesus did not take a path of glory, fame, success, and wealth to the cross.  Why should his disciples expect a different path?  Jesus called Peter's thoughts about this Satanic, and indeed, they are.  These are the dreams and schemes of men—to seek worldly blessings from a worldly Messiah and to bask in a worldly kingdom.  But the world and all its riches will pass away.  If you devote yourself to them, you will perish with them.  “For what will it profit a man if he gains the whole world and forfeits his soul?” (Matthew 16:26)  

     There is no salvation without the cross.  That is why Jesus teaches us: “If anyone would come after me, let him deny himself and take up his cross and follow me.” (Matthew 16:24)  We never overcome our desire for personal glory.  We accumulate wealth not to benefit others, but ourselves.  We tell stories to enhance our own honor.  You can discover your true nature when you consider the kinds of things you daydream about.  How often are your daydreams about helping other people?  How often are your daydreams about the kingdom of God?  Are they not about your own pleasures, your own pride, and your own kingdom?  This is why Jesus tells you to deny yourself.  Jesus delivered you from your selfishness so that you would not be condemned for it, but not so that you could continue in it.  

     There is no salvation without the cross.  “If anyone would come after me, let him … take up his cross.” (Matthew 16:24)  Sometimes the cross is what the Lord lays on you.  In his wisdom and in his mercy, he has you endure pain and loss.  It surely does not seem like mercy, and your own wisdom strongly disagrees with the Lord's.  But the Lord is not looking for you to be happy in the next few minutes.  The Lord seeks your eternal salvation.  Therefore, he may take away from you good gifts.  The losses that truly grieve us are the loss of good things.  And yet, the Lord chooses to take them away from us to teach us to not put our trust in them.  We can give thanks for them, but we cannot rely on them.  Sometimes this is the cross that we must bear—to put to death our reliance on gifts that can be lost.

     There is no salvation without the cross.  Each one of us has a cross that is unique.  You take up your cross to put to death the sinful inclinations that you struggle with.  Every one of us is plagued by a different set of temptations.  Things that appeal to you may have no appeal for me, and vice versa.  If you than shrug your shoulders and say, “Oh, well, this is just who I am.  God will forgive me anyway, so I will not fight against sin and temptation”, This means you have no interest in denying yourself or in casting away your sins.  But God has not saved you so you can still dabble in the sins you find attractive.  These are the thoughts of men which lead to death.  But you have been transformed by the thoughts of God who calls you to flee from your sins.  He teaches you that defiance of his word is never good or harmless.  He calls you to put those desires to death.  This may be especially hard for you.  Daily, you may find yourself in a battle to resist temptation.  Just as Jesus did when he was facing his cross, you will have to call on God to strengthen you as you bear your cross.  And God is merciful.  He does not leave you to face sin and temptation alone.  He summons you to pray, and then he gives you a promise: “Call upon me in the day of trouble; I will deliver you, and you shall glorify me.” (Psalm 50:15)  And if you still fall, he extends another promise: “If we confess our sins, he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness.” (1 John 1:9) 

     There is no salvation without the cross.  The cross was designed for killing things, and the sinful nature cannot be tamed; it must be killed.  Our sinful desires must be put to death in us so that they will not claim us and control us.   And that is why you pick up your cross.  You have been set free from your sins; do not welcome them back.  You have been saved from sin's curse; do not return to it.  Rather, follow Jesus.  We devote ourselves to his word for comfort, guidance, and hope.  We consume his body and blood for the forgiveness of our sins and the strengthening of our faith.  We follow not just his words, but also his ways; and his way is the way of a cross.  Then, after the cross, everlasting glory.  These are the things of God.  And there alone do we find salvation.

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

Friday, September 11, 2020

Sermon -- Funeral of Paul Sullivan (September 11, 2020)

 For the Christian Funeral of Paul Eugene Sullivan (January 22, 1938 – April 8, 2020)

REVELATION 21:1-5

BEHOLD!  IT WILL ALL BE NEW.

In the name + of Jesus.


     Paul Sullivan is not the man he once was.  He was born into this world on January 22, 1938.  From the moment he drew his first breath, he was on a journey which would end with his final breath.  His parents knew that.  So, they had him baptized into Jesus Christ.  By means of that baptism, the Triune God made him new.  The heavenly Father declared Paul to be a child of God.  The Lord Jesus cleansed him of all sin and clothed him in garments of salvation.  The Holy Spirit kept him in the true faith as he continued to hear God's word and to partake in Holy Communion.  The Triune God made him a new creation—one who was destined to live forever.  Behold!  It was all new.

     God bless Paul throughout his life.  He blessed him with the personality of a joker and prankster.  He enjoyed life and having a good time.  He got married.  Besides blessing him and Barbara with many years of marriage, God also blessed him and Barbara with children and grandchildren, in addition to many friends. 

     I am sure that you all have fond memories of Paul—whether as friend, father, or grandfather.  I never got to meet him.  I had hoped to.  He was in a nursing home facility and just as I was about to go and serve him with God's word, the COVID shutdown hit.  I was told that he was suffering the effects of dementia, so my prayer was that the simple message of Jesus would have resonated with him.  Even if he did not know me, he knew Jesus.  More importantly, Jesus knew him.  But Paul was not the man he once was.  Age and dementia will do that.  Even if he was shadow of his former self, God's promises and God's mercies did not change.  The Lord was faithful to him.  Paul's body and mind may have failed him, but God did not.

     On April 8, 2020, his life in this world came to an end.  He was not the man he once was.  He was not as robust.  He was not as jovial or as energetic.  It is hard to see a loved one like that.  You remember him from his better years.  You remember the stories.  You have the memories.  And you grieve that he is not the man he once was.

     But this is not the end of his story.  Paul Sullivan was made a new creation at his baptism.  He was marked as a child of God.  He was given promises, and God is faithful to those promises.  St. John gave us a glimpse of the promises yet to be fulfilled.  Behold!  It will all be new.  St. John saw a new heaven and a new earth—a new home which will not be marred by hardships, by heartaches, or by any difficulties.  This is what St. John recorded: I heard a loud voice from the throne saying, “Behold, the dwelling place of God is with man.  He will dwell with them, and they will be his people, and God himself will be with them as their God.” (Revelation 21:3)

     Behold!  It will all be new.  Paul's dwelling is no longer among sinful people in a corrupt world.  In heaven, the saints of God are gathered together, and God himself is there with them.  Although God is with us and is our God now, we do not see him except by faith.  As God's word is preached, Jesus is with us.  His body and blood are distributed underneath bread and wine in communion.  The Holy Spirit dwells in God's people at all times.  We believe he is with us because he says so.  But when Jesus comes to make all things new, we will not live by faith.  We will see our Lord.  We will be with our Immanuel, and he will be with us.

     One of the bitter parts of death is losing one who is so dear to you.  When you lose a parent, you lose a part of your home.  You who are Paul's & Barbara's children are grown and have established your own homes.  You have your own jobs, families, and responsibilities.  But there is something comforting about coming back to your parents.  You may be frustrated at your job.  People may say nasty things about you.  You may be stressed out with your obligations.  You may even be at your wits' end with life.  But when you come to be with your parents, you are welcomed by people who love you without strings attached.  You do not have to pretend to be nice to them, and you know that they are not pretending to love you.  Your world may be a disaster, but your parents' home is still a refuge.

     Jesus Christ has provided an even greater refuge.  “Behold, the dwelling place of God is with man.  He will dwell with them, and they will be his people, and God himself will be with them as their God.  He will wipe away every tear from their eyes, and death shall be no more, neither shall there be mourning, nor crying, nor pain anymore, for the former things have passed away.” (Revelation 21:3)  The God who became man to redeem mankind has brought Paul to dwell with him.  Jesus—who suffered for our sins to take away our sins, he who died under God's curse to deliver us from that curse, he who conquered death in order to be our refuge in death—has brought Paul to himself in heaven.  Jesus, Immanuel, is God with us; and he is Paul's Immanuel for all eternity.  He has brought Paul's soul to this new home—the perfect dwelling in God's holy presence.  

     Paul is not the man he once was.  Now, Paul no longer knows pain, frustration, or what it is to shed tears.  He sings with angels and archangels and all the company of heaven.  The Lord who saved him, who blessed him, who preserved him in the faith, and who loves him without strings attached, remains a refuge in death.  He loves us without strings attached.  The Lord Jesus promised these things to Paul, and now he has granted them.  Behold!  It is all new.

     But there is still more.  Today, the remains of Paul Sullivan are here.  It is not the body he once had; for it has aged, grown weak, suffered badly in health, and has finally given out.  But the Lord has plans for this body.  Jesus announced them to St. John: He who was seated on the throne said, “Behold, I am making all things new.”  Also he said, “Write this down, for these words are trustworthy and true.” (Revelation 21:5)  

    Behold!  It will all be new.  Death has not had the last word.  Jesus overcame death.  He has purchased and won Paul from death.  Death does not own Paul Sullivan; Jesus does.  Therefore, on the Last Day, Jesus will raise these ashes up, and behold!  It will all be new.  This body which has succumbed to death will be raised up.  It will be incorruptible—which means that all effects of age and dementia and any sickness will be forever gone.  It will be imperishable—which means he will never know frailty, weakness, or death.  It will be holy—which means he will be perfected and live in God's holy presence forevermore.  Behold!  It will all be new, and it will forever be new.  These blessings are not just for your father and your mother.  Jesus has won them for you, too.  He speaks to you in his word to keep you faithful to him.  He summons you to his altar to partake in the heavenly feast in which he strengthens and keeps you in the true faith unto life everlasting.  If you yearn for the Lord's salvation—a blessing which your parents would yearn for you to have—then flee to Jesus.  He alone is our Savior, our refuge, and our comfort even in the face of death.

     Paul Sullivan will not be the man he once was.  He will be risen.  He will be glorified.  He will be without sin, without pain, without sorrow, without death, and without end.  And just as he was the Lord's redeemed throughout his life, so he will be for all eternity.  Jesus is his Immanuel.  Jesus makes him a partaker of his glory forevermore.  And that will never get old.

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

Thursday, September 10, 2020

Update from Good Shepherd (September 10, 2020)

  Greetings!

DIVINE SERVICES
      For information on what you can expect when you come to church and what will be expected of you, see this link.
        Services will still be broadcast on Facebook Live, Sundays at 10:00 AM, and uploaded to YouTube.   Share our services and invite friends to tune in.

DEDICATION OF CHURCH BELL TOWER
With our bell tower completed after years of planning, we will be dedicating it to the glory of God this Sunday, September 13.  A brief rite will take place after the Sunday service.

GOOD SHEPHERD ON YOUTUBE
         Services are posted on YouTube, usually in a few hours after the service.  When you go to YouTube, do a search for "Good Shepherd Novi" and they should pop up.  The service from September 6 is here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i4IkWi_uv9M Feel free to share the videos.
         Bulletins for services can be downloaded from here (scroll down): 

FALL SCHEDULE
It will not be long before we are getting our fall schedule underway.  As much as possible, we will try to do everything in person.  We will continue to assess as we go if we need to adjust our plans.  You will be informed accordingly if anything changes.
>>>  Bible Matters, a discussion group, will be Wednesdays at 7:00 PM.  More information on Bible Matters can be found here.
>>>  Sunday School will begin on Sunday, September 13 at 8:45 AM.
>>>  Adult Bible Class will begin on Sunday, September 13 at 8:45 AM.  We will be going through the epistles of St. John.  The schedule can be found here.
>>>  Catechism Class will begin after Labor Day weekend.  Date and time still TBD as of this writing.
>>>  Bible Information Class will begin on Monday, September 21 at 7:00 PM.  The schedule can be found here.
>>>  Divine Services will continue at 10:00 AM on Sundays.  In the event that we have a larger group attending on Sundays, we may add a service in order to serve as many as possible and still maintain social distancing. 

CONCERNING PASTORAL CARE
        Besides Facebook Live and YouTube, you can find the pastor's sermons archived on this blog.  You can use the search bar to find a particular date, day of the Church Year, or Scripture reference.
        Pastor Schroeder will be available for private devotions, Holy Absolution, and Holy Communion to members in small groups or to individuals.  You may call to set up an appointment at any time.  Visits by appointment can be done either at church or at your home.
        If you want to ask for intercessions for loved ones, we will certainly remember them in our prayers, too.  If your loved one has no pastor, ask if they would like Pastor Schroeder to visit them.  

OFFERINGS
While we may not be meeting for worship, we do have financial obligations to meet.  You may either mail your offering into Good Shepherd, or you can set up your offering to be transferred electronically from your bank.  If you are interested in the automatic transfer of funds for your offering, please contact the church at (248) 349-0565 or welsnovi@aol.com.

BIBLE INFORMATION CLASS
The next scheduled Bible Information Class (BIC) will begin on Monday, September 21.  Classes will be 7:00 – 8:30 PM.
This notice is given so that our members can consider whom they may invite to BIC.  This class is for people who have questions about the Bible.  There is no further obligation beyond that.  If, on the other hand, you are convinced that we are teaching God's word correctly and faithfully, you are most welcome to become a member.  There is no cost for the class.  All materials are provided.
Call (248-349-0565) or e-mail (welsnovi@aol.com) to register for this class.  The format may be in person (depending upon the comfort level of the participants) or over Zoom.  The pastor will confirm the format with any interested parties.

OFFICE HOURS
Office hours are Monday-Thursday, 9:00 AM – Noon.  The pastor will be in his office unless a meeting has been scheduled elsewhere (consult the weekly schedule).  He may be in his office at other times throughout the day as well.  Pastor Schroeder is also available by appointment.  Call or text (248-719-5218).  You may also email (welsnovi@aol.com), but the response may be slower.

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
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SUMMER SCHEDULE
DIVINE SERVICES -- Sundays at 10:00 AM  (We also stream on Facebook Live )
SUNDAY SCHOOL & ADULT BIBLE CLASS begin on Sunday, September 13 at 8:45 AM.
BIBLE MATTERS, a discussion group, begins Wednesday, September 9 at 7:00 PM.

GOOD SHEPHERD’S WEBSITE