Peace Lutheran Church Sussex, Wisconsin

Congregation at Prayer

Monthly Archives: June 2025

Catechism: Lord’s Prayer—Second Petition and Explanations

June 29, 2025

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Catechesis Notes for Week — Summer Stories from the Gospel of Luke— In the power of the Gospel alone, the Sending Out of the Seventy takes place, giving us a picture of the Office of the Holy Ministry that continues to the present day in the Church. The present sufferings of this life for us as Christians are not worthy to be compared with the glory that shall be revealed in us. The call of the Gospel leads us through death to life. The Seventy Return with Joy to Jesus. They learned that the Gospel of Jesus was the power of God to save sinners and cast out demons. Wherever this Gospel of peace is faithfully preached, Jesus Himself is at work comforting troubled consciences and giving the gift of eternal life. This theme continues in the Parable of the Good Samaritan in which Jesus’ love for sinners is depicted in the Good Samaritan who saved a Jew from certain death, even though that Jew would have considered the Samaritan his sworn enemy. Instead, the Samaritan binds up the man’s wounds, carries him to the inn, and provides for everything he needs to be brought back to health. In the same way, while we were the enemies of God, helpless and spiritually destitute, Jesus came to us and rescued us from destruction, doing everything for us and for our salvation. In the account of Mary and Martha, it is precisely this undeserved mercy of the Lord Jesus that moves Mary to sit at Jesus’ feet and be taught the Word of Life—the one thing needful. Jesus promises those who delight in His Word that it shall never be taken from them.CP250629

Catechism: Ten Commandments—First Commandment and Explanation

June 22, 2025

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Catechesis Notes for Week — Summer Stories from the Gospel of Luke—In the Transfiguration of Our Lord we see clearly that the Suffering Servant is none other than the eternal Son of God, as the glory of His divine nature, and the future glory that we shall partake of, is revealed in His human nature.  Our continuous readings from Luke are interrupted with the celebration of the Nativity of John the Baptist, the forerunner to the Messiah who was born to be the minister to prepare the way for Jesus’ coming. In a Boy Is Healed we see that the call of the Gospel delivers us from the kingdom of Satan and the forces of darkness. At the heart of Satan’s kingdom is the wickedness of a perverse generation that rejects all that Christ has done for us. To counter this perversity, Jesus again predicts His suffering and death because His work alone is our salvation. Those who humbly receive the Gospel by faith are the Greatest in the Kingdom of Heaven. The highest worship of Christ is to receive, believe, and trust in what He has done for us in love. The call of the Gospel brings forgiveness of sins, reconciliation with God, and eternal life to sinners. This is why we follow Him, even through suffering and death. The call of the Gospel, “Follow Me” not only carries with it the power of the Spirit to bring us to faith in Christ, but it also enables us to bear up under the same rejection, persecution, suffering and death that Jesus faced. We have no such strength of our own, but the Gospel gives us this strength, making us faithful and fit for the kingdom of God. CP250622

Catechism: Lord’s Prayer — First Petition and Explanation

June 15, 2025

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Catechesis Notes for Week — A Demon-Possessed Man is Healed teaches us not only the power of Jesus’ Word of mercy to deliver us from the kingdom of Satan, to clothe us with His righteousness, and to give us a good and sound mind, but it also reveals the insidious nature of the unbelieving sinful nature that fights against the Word of mercy and rejects Jesus, even as the citizens of the Gadarenes pleaded with Jesus to leave them. A Girl is Raised and a Woman is Healed reinforces the great truth of the Catechism: “Where there is forgiveness of sins, there is also life and salvation.”  It is Jesus’ Word of mercy through the forgiveness of our sins that not only raises the dead to life, but which also cleanses the unclean and restores life with God. The Sending Out of the Twelve teaches us that the Office of the Holy Ministry is not only established so that Jesus’ ministry of mercy continues, but that whenever His Word is proclaimed it is just as powerful and life-giving as if Jesus spoke the Word Himself. Finally, the Feeding of the 5,000 teaches us that the preaching and teaching of God’s Word of mercy and grace leads us to Jesus, the bread of life, who is the very fount and source of forgiveness, life, and salvation for all who believe. Peter’s Confession and Jesus’ Prediction of His Suffering – at the heart of the Church’s confession that Jesus is the Christ is His suffering and death for the sins of the world. As His body the Church, we confess that the death of Christ for our sins is the source of life. The call of the Gospel means that we may suffer with Christ, but the end of our faith is the resurrection to eternal life.CP250615

Catechism: Third Article and Explaination

June 8, 2025

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Catechesis Notes for Week — Summer Stories for the Family from the Gospel of St. Luke— The Raising of the Widow of Nain’s Son—Jesus took the uncleanness of sin and death to Himself, spoke the Word of life that raised the boy from the dead, giving him back to his mother as a picture of the resurrection and the blessed reunion we will experience in heaven; John the Baptist Sent Disciples to Jesus to confirm that He was the Messiah, and they were directed to all the words and works that Jesus performed in fulfillment of the Old Testament Scriptures. At the end of chapter seven, Jesus Forgives a Sinful Woman in the house of Simon the Pharisee which takes us full circle to the mercy and grace of our Lord that was at the center of Jesus’ teaching in chapter six: “Love your enemies…” The Parable of the Sower and the Seed teaches us how the Seed of the Word, the Gospel of God’s mercy in Christ, is what brings a sinner to repentance and faith in Jesus for salvation. Whenever anyone comes to faith in Christ, it is a miracle of this Word of mercy. Those who receive His Word are the true members of Jesus’ family.CP250608

Catechism: Lord’s Prayer—Sixth Petition and Explanation

June 1, 2025

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Catechesis Notes for Week — Psalm 27: A Prayer of Faith and Confidence in the Lord’s Salvation

Psalm 27 begins with two rhetorical questions that rest upon confident assertions of faith in the Gospel. It is as if David were saying, “since the Lord is my light and my salvation, then whom shall I fear?”  Answer: No one! “Since the Lord is the strength of my life; of whom shall I be afraid?”  Answer: No one! Clearly it is the Lord’s will that we know with certainty that He is our Savior from all sin, death, and from the power of the devil. Since He has died for us and redeemed us from eternal destruction, we have nothing to fear from anyone or anything that would seek to destroy us! Psalm 27 prays for the Lord’s help, deliverance, guidance, and forgiveness based on everything that Jesus has done in love for us. Christ is our confidence. To hear and receive Christ is also the singular delight of the Christian: “One thing I have desired of the Lord, that will I seek; that I may dwell in the house of the Lord all the days of my life, to behold the beauty of the Lord, and to inquire in His temple.”CP250601