Peace Lutheran Church Sussex, Wisconsin

Congregation at Prayer

The Catechism: The Creed—The Second Article

October 23, 2022

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Catechesis Notes for the Week — The Second Article and the Call of Abram—During this second week of meditation upon the person and work of Christ under the Second Article, we read the Tower of Babel in which we see the idolatry of man who begins to erect a monument to himself. The Lord confused the languages of mankind and scattered humanity as a testimony to what man will become without reliance upon his God and Savior. The origin of language, nation, and differences in people groups can be traced back to the judgment of God at the tower. The Call to Abram should be understood as the call of the Gospel. Abram was called to leave his idolatry and in repentant faith to follow the Lord to the Promised Land (a picture of heaven). Every promise of salvation to the Old Testament patriarchs highlights an aspect of the Gospel and our call to faith in Jesus. The call of the Gospel rests upon God’s grace, so it caused Abram to be generous in sharing the land with his nephew in the account of Abram and Lot. It is the call of the Gospel that moved Abram in love to rescue Lot. It is Abram’s faith in God’s promise that in his Seed (Jesus, the Son of God) all the nations of the earth will be blessed with the gift of salvation in Christ that Abram Pays a Tithe to Melchizedek (whose name means “king of righteousness”). Melchizedek is a type of Christ. Thus, every Old Testament story this week connects us to the person and work of our Lord Jesus, the blessed Seed of Abraham who brings the blessing of salvation to the world.CP221023

The Catechism: The Creed—The Second Article

October 16, 2022

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Catechesis Notes for the Week — The Flood—God’s Judgment against a Wicked World — This week’s Bible narratives focus upon the Flood. The Lord does not regret creating mankind, but after Adam’s fall, the corruption of man became so great that it grieved God’s heart of love. Throughout the narrative we see both God’s judgment against a wicked and unbelieving world and the gift of salvation for Noah and his family through water. The historical act of the worldwide flood completely transformed the world, its topography and climate, to what we now know as the world in which we live. This “recreation” is a type of the recreation that God begins in Baptism. Baptism drowns the Old Adam but raises up the new man of faith to live before God in righteousness and purity forever. Throughout the narrative it is God who acts. God orders the building of the ark. God brings the animals to Noah. God shuts Noah into the ark. God sends the rains from heaven and opens the doors to water beneath the earth’s crust. God also causes the waters of the flood to recede and the dry land and new life to appear. In the aftermath of the Flood, God gives permission to eat meat and institutes capital punishment for the sin of murder. At the end of the narrative we have His promise that the earth would continue to have its seasons. The Lord is in charge of the climate for His purposes. He will never again destroy the earth with a flood. The rainbow was set in place as a sign of God’s promise to us and to the entire creation. Ultimately, this sign of His grace is to point us to the source of His mercy, namely the death and resurrection of Christ in whom we are baptized.CP221016

The Catechism: The Creed—The First Article

October 9, 2022

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Catechesis Notes for the Week — A Prayer of Comfort from the Lord’s Abiding Presence—Psalm 139 offers us great comfort as we meditate upon the account of the Fall, the First Promise of the Gospel, the Curse of the Fall, and the sin of Cain who murdered his brother Abel. Genesis chapter 3 describes how the world came to be a place of brokenness and sin when Adam turned away from God’s Word, but it also offers to us the promise of salvation in the Seed of the Woman (Jesus) who would crush the Serpent’s head (Satan) in His suffering and death upon the cross (the bruised heel). Psalm 139 puts all things in perspective as does Paul in his sermon in Athens. There is no place we can travel where the Lord is not present for the help, comfort, and salvation of His people who believe in Him. He searches our hearts. He knows everything about us. He is acquainted with all our ways. He knows every word we speak before we utter it. We cannot hide from His presence. We cannot fully grasp the wonder of His omniscience. He orders the affairs of our life, so that we are drawn to Him to seek His help in repentant faith. He has made each of us individually in our mother’s womb. He knew us before we were born. Our days are ordered in His book. His thoughts toward each of us are precious and more than we can number. We ask Him to make His will our own and to lead us each day in humble contrition and repentance, and in prayer to seek His guidance. If there is any wicked way in us, we pray that He would turn us to the good and to the way of everlasting life.CP221009

The Catechism: The Creed—The First Article

October 2, 2022

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Catechesis Notes for the Week — The Creation Praises the Lord—This week we begin a slow walk through the Old Testament beginning with Genesis 1 and 2, from the Creation to the giving of the Law on Mount Sinai. The narratives for this week teach us how God the Father created all things by His Word. God orders the creation and has designed all things to be in our service as men and women made in the image and likeness of God. Psalm 148 is a psalm of praise that calls upon the creation to “praise the Lord.” How does the creation praise the Lord? What is praise? Praise gives all honor and glory to God. Psalm 148 extols “the Lord”—the great “I AM” and the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob as the only true God who is both the Creator of the heavens and the earth and the eternal Savior. The whole of God’s creation praises the Lord when the creation does the very things that God has given it to do and performs its work according to the Lord’s will. Psalm 148 teaches us to understand that the whole of God’s creation is in service to the Lord for His good and gracious purposes. Because of the song of praise throughout God’s creation, young men and maidens, old men and children, and every believer and faithful saint of Christ’s Church praises the name of the Lord and extols His salvation in all the earth.CP221002

Review of the Commandments and the Close of the Commandments

September 25, 2022

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Catechesis Notes for the Week — The Threat of Punishment and the Promise of Grace – The Law threatens punishment for sin; the Gospel promises forgiveness of sins for Jesus’ sake. Faith justifies because faith lays hold of the promise of forgiveness in Christ. Such faith is a miracle of the Holy Spirit through the promise of the Gospel. This week’s meditation focuses upon the Close of the Commandments. The Law always threatens punishment because we are sinners. The threat of punishment is necessary in order that we might see our sin, be brought to repentance, and flee to Christ for forgiveness. The narratives this week, God’s Law Threatens and Accuses, the Worship of the Golden Calf, and God’s Wrath Is Poured Out upon Idol Worshippers at Mount Sinai illustrate both the corruption of sin that the Law reveals and the punishment that we rightly deserve. The week’s final reading on the Close of the Commandments teaches us that Jesus Takes the Place of the Guilty, suffering all that the Law demands of the sinner, for us and for our salvation. The promise of “every grace and blessing” through obedience to the Law is fulfilled in Jesus who was made to be sin for us and who, by His suffering and death, suffered the wrath of God by being punished in our place. The promise of the Gospel declares to us that all is fulfilled in Christ, who has redeemed us from sin and the Law’s threats with “His holy, precious blood and with His innocent suffering and death.”CP220925

The Ten Commandments—Ninth and Tenth Commandments

September 18, 2022

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Catechesis Notes for the Week — Covetousness Is to Desire and Insist upon Having Something God Has Not Provided—How fitting it is that this week’s meditation upon the 9th and 10th Commandments should be the week of the Feast of St. Matthew, Apostle and Evangelist. Prior to Matthew’s conversion and call to apostleship, he was a covetous tax collector for the Roman government, but in repentant faith he was turned from the worship of earthly wealth and ill-gotten gain to the Lord in whom there is true peace and contentment. Ahab Covets Naboth’s Vineyard is a classic narrative where we see the “scheming to get a neighbor’s inheritance or house in a way that only appears right,” but which was absolutely evil. Covetousness was injected into Paradise by the Serpent who enticed Adam and Eve to follow their appetites and desires in the Fall of Man into Sin. In contrast to a covetous heart and will which is governed by its passions rather than the Word and our faith in Christ, Jesus calls us to Confess Christ, Take Up Our Cross and Follow Him. He alone gives peace and contentment to our restless hearts as the old, covetous, sinful flesh is put to death through daily contrition and repentance and the new man of faith is raised up. In the Rich Young Ruler we see that a man who lacks Jesus, the only One who is truly good, is unwilling because of his covetous heart to let go of everything and follow Christ. The rich young ruler went away sad, because he had many possessions that had become his idol. We pray that the Lord would lead us to true repentance for our covetous desires and give us a heart that is content with our Lord and the gifts that He provides.CP220918

The Ten Commandments— The Seventh and Eighth Commandments

September 11, 2022

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Catechesis Notes for the Week — Faith in Christ Is Active in Word and Deed—On Wednesday of this week, we celebrate Holy Cross Day, one of the oldest minor festivals in the Church Year. It is only through the Holy Cross of our Lord Jesus Christ and His redeeming work upon the cross that we come to know and believe in God rightly. Our faith in Christ as the Savior who has died for us upon the cross is what animates what we say and do in our lives as Christians. Our faith in Jesus’ undeserved love is active in words and deeds. Abram Gives Lot the Choice of the Land because he believes that the Lord promised him the land and the gift of salvation that he might share his possessions with others (7th Commandment). Jesus Comes to Zacchaeus’s House and calls him to repentance and faith. As a result, Zacchaeus restores what he had stolen from others as a Tax Collector (7th Commandment). When Jesus calls us to Bless Those Who Curse us, He is inviting us to live by faith in the Gospel so that we freely forgive our enemies and “explain everything in the kindest way” (8th Commandment). Living by faith in the grace of God toward our enemies is ultimately seen in our Lord as Jesus Prays for His Enemies. It is the ultimate fulfillment of the 8th Commandment. This week’s verse, “Let your ‘Yes’ be ‘Yes,’ and your ‘No,’ ‘No.’” reinforces that our faith in Christ is to be expressed in honest words before God and one another.CP220911

The Ten Commandments — The Fifth and Sixth Commandments

September 4, 2022

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Catechesis Notes for the Week — God Protects Life and Marriage—Under the Fifth and Sixth Commandments, God protects the gift and sanctity of life and marriage. In Labor Day’s reading, “Do Not Worry about Your Life,” faith in Christ and the contentment which comes through seeking His righteousness above all is the key to the work that God has given us to do. When Cain Murders His Brother Abel, we see the contrast between what faith in self produces – a man who hates his brother and kills him in jealous rage, and what faith in the Lord produces – a man who joyfully offers his work to the Lord in thanksgiving for God’s undeserved grace. The command to love one’s neighbor as oneself is demonstrated in the Parable of the Good Samaritan who, like our Lord Jesus, befriends and helps a fallen man who would have considered him an enemy. Joseph Flees from Adultery to protect the marriage of Potiphar rather than indulging the appetites of his flesh for another man’s wife. In Jesus Is Tempted by the Devil we see our Savior who fulfilled the Law for us by facing life’s temptations in our place with unwavering trust in God’s Word and the work that His Father had called Him to do. Jesus fulfilled the meaning of the Sermon on the Mount from Monday’s reading to “seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness.”CP220904

Catechism: The Ten Commandments — The Third and Fourth Commandments

August 28, 2022

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Catechesis Notes for the Week — “Hear Me! Honor Your Father and Mother!” – This week’s catechism meditation focuses upon the Third and Fourth Commandments. “Remember the Sabbath Day” calls us to hear the Word of the Lord. His Word is the source of true rest and eternal peace. By the Word of the Lord faith is created in our hearts, and the fruits of faith are brought forth in our lives. “Honor your father and your mother” is the first commandment under the Second Table of the Law. God’s authority stands behind the authority of our parents and all earthly authority. In the Fourth Commandment the Lord lays upon parents the great responsibility of bringing their children up in the fear of the Lord, and calls children to honor their parents in spite of their failings and shortcomings. In the Boy Jesus in the Temple, obedience to both commandments are seen in Jesus. He not only rejoices to gladly hear and receive the Lord’s Word in the Temple, but by being in the Temple listening to the teachers and asking them questions He honors Mary and Joseph who had taught Him to value God’s Word above all things. In Mary Sits at Jesus’ Feet, we learn that many things in life may be important and even necessary, but the “one thing needful” above all others is to hear and receive the Lord’s Word. In the Rebellion of Absolom, we see the negative example of a son who dishonored and betrayed his father by drawing the people of Israel away from David to himself. In Ruth and Her Kinsman Redeemer, Ruth honors her mother-in-law by confessing faith in the God of Israel and returning with Naomi to Bethlehem to love and support Naomi in her old age. The verse for the week joins both commandments together: the Word that we receive for our life and salvation is to be given to our children in daily prayer and conversation that our children might know the Lord and trust in Him.CP220828

The Ten Commandments—The First and Second Commandments

August 21, 2022

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Catechesis Notes for the Week — “I Am the Lord Your God and Savior! Trust Me!” The first week of a new catechetical year begins another pilgrimage through the Six Chief Parts and Table of Duties from the Small Catechism. During this week we hear the Holy Trinity speak to us in the first two commandments. “Trust Me!” (First Commandment) and “Pray to Me!” (Second Commandment). It is as if He were saying, “I am the only true and living God. I have created You. I have redeemed and sanctified You. I love You with an everlasting love. I have called you by My name—Father, Son, and Holy Spirit in the waters of Holy Baptism. There is no other God and Savior! Trust Me! I will take care of you!” This is the deep meaning of the First Commandment: “You shall have no other gods!” There is only one true and living God who provides for all that we need for our life and salvation. All other things or people that we might trust in have not made us, nor can they save us. The Three Men in the Fiery Furnace and Daniel cast into the Lions’ Den showed forth this miracle of faith. In the Second Commandment, “You shall not misuse the name of the Lord Your God,” we are called to pray to the Lord for everything, to always praise Him, and to give thanks to Him, even for the difficulties and hardships of life. Through the things we suffer He calls us to trust in Him and to pray to Him for help. Our Lord demonstrates this in Jesus’ Prayer in Gethsemane. In contrast, Peter Denies His Lord gives us an example of the swearing that is forbidden under the Second Commandment.  Thus the first and second commandments go together. Out of the proper trust of the heart (first commandment) we pray (second commandment), “calling upon His name in every trouble, praying, praising, and giving of thanks.” This week’s verse is the Creed of ancient Israel, the Shema Israel, which means “Hear, O Israel!” What we cannot do by our own reason or strength, God gives by His Word and Spirit. “Hearing” speaks of faith. We confess what is true. There is only one true God. We love the Lord our God with all our heart, soul, mind, and strength because He has opened our hearts by His Word to trust in Him above all things.CP220821