It’s better to have 100 friends than 100 rubles

“It’s better to have 100 friends than 100 rubles!ā€

This bit of Russian folk wisdom comes from a time when 100 rubles was worth a lot of money. Having many talented friends who can help in different situations makes life a lot easier – especially for people living in a collective society.

God has blessed me with many friends.

From Siberia to Portugal, from the Mediterranean to Scandinavia, God has allowed me to develop deep, spiritual relationships with many dear brothers and sisters. The members of Jesus’ body are precious, blood-bought souls carefully gathered by the Lord of the Church and placed exactly where he wants for our mutual edification and his glory.

Recently God has blessed me with some new friends in the U.K. and back ā€œhomeā€ in the WELS. Let me explain.

Pete Myers served in the ministerium of the Church of England. He is a Hebrew scholar and worked for several years as a professor of Old Testament studies at a seminary in Ethiopia. Pete is a sincere man who wants to confess solid Biblical faith in Christ. To make a long story short, Pete became Lutheran through an independent study of classic Lutheran writings and began searching for a Lutheran church faithful to scripture. After moving back to London, he met Missionary Michael Hartman. The two of them spent hours discussing what we in WELS believe on the basis of Holy Scripture. God blessed those conversations. Several months ago, Pete and his family joined our fellowship. Since then, they have moved to Manchester (a major city about four hours north of London), where Pete is supporting himself with secular work as a math teacher. But his real passion is to plant a congregation in Manchester that enjoys fellowship with our hub church in London.

We’re thankful for Pete and his family, and we’re excited about blessings God is giving to his people through them. But we also want Pete to deepen his understanding of confessional Lutheranism, and we want those in our broader Lutheran fellowship (CELC) to have confidence that we share a common faith. What should we do?

Let me introduce you to some partners in WELS who are helping us.

Professor Allen Sorum teaches at Wisconsin Lutheran Seminary. He is also part of the Pastoral Studies Institute (PSI). Professor Sorum has broad experience working with men who want to prepare for ministry not only in North America, but around the world. He serves as the PSI representative to our Europe team. This past June, he arranged for Pete to spend a couple weeks on our seminary campus in Mequon. Here Pete attended summer quarter classes and spoke with faculty members about a wide variety of doctrinal topics.

While in Mequon, Pete met another friend of mine, Professor Jim Danell. Professor Danell serves on the faculty of Martin Luther College in New Ulm, Minn., where he helps prepare young men for ministry. He also serves as the chairman of WELS Commission on Inter-Church Relations (CICR). This commission works to ensure that we indeed share authentic doctrinal fellowship with our brothers and sisters around the world. He is the CICR representative to our Europe team.

I’m so thankful that Professor Sorum and Professor Danell join our Europe team meetings every week. They understand the work that we are carrying out in Europe. Having PSI and CICR working together with World Missions has been a tremendous blessing. God richly blessed Pete’s time during summer quarter, and there are plans in place for continued doctrinal conversations with key representatives in WELS to ensure that we are all walking together and contending for Jesus’ truth.

Please join me in giving thanks for the gifted friends the Savior gives us in his Church. Let’s continue to work together to share Jesus’ good news with the world!

Written by Rev. Luke Wolfgramm, world missionary on the Europe One Team.Ā 

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10 years of Academia Cristo

Join us as we celebrate 10 incredible years of Academia Cristo, a ministry that has shared the gospel and touched the lives of thousands across Latin America! Over the past decade, we have witnessed transformations, blessings, and life-changing moments as the message of Christ has reached new hearts and homes.

We reflect on the journey, the countless stories of faith, and the mission to continue spreading the good news of Jesus. From the first days to where we are now, Academia Cristo remains dedicated to making disciples, sharing free biblical teachings, and empowering leaders in local communities.

Watch the inspiring stories of those who have been impacted by this ministry, and hear from those whose lives were forever changed by the power of the gospel. Join the celebration and help us keep spreading the message of hope and salvation!

Learn more about Academia Cristo and mission work throughout Latin America at wels.net/latinamerica.

Sing a New (Old) Song to the Lord

In the closing days of August, Rev. Dr. Terry Schultz from Multi-Language Productions (MLP) and Rev. Ben Foxen of the One Africa Team traveled to Uganda.

The goal? Fulfill a request made by our brothers and sisters in the Obadiah Lutheran Synod (OLS) to help them create new songs with Christ-centered lyrics.

Thanks to funding provided by MLP, we were able to gather about 20 musicians from the various districts of the OLS in one place for 5 days of training, encouragement, and hands-on work composing and performing songs. MLP also provided funds for the purchase of some equipment that will be used by the OLS to train future musicians in their church body.

In the time spent in this workshop, we were continually amazed at the musical talent and creativity that had been assembled. In a short time, these men and women composed and recorded 68 new songs that showed incredible diversity. Since the composers came from different parts of the country, they composed in no less than seven different languages. The musical styles differed as well, ranging from traditional Ugandan beats, to more of a hip-hop style, to chants and chorales. It was eye-opening to witness how the people of OLS sought to incorporate all these different styles, showing that all of them are now a part of their cultural heritage.

The content of these songs also differed, some focusing on themes of praise and thanksgiving (among them my personally favorite melody, ā€œNebaza Musumba Wange,ā€ or ā€œI thank you, my Shepherdā€); others focusing on the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus; others on sin and repentance; and others a recasting of the timeless songs of the liturgy.

One of the goals of this workshop was to preserve any music that was produced. So, a handheld recording device was used to capture the compositions as they were performed for the group, and handwritten lyrics were transcribed into a Microsoft Word document. Both were then transferred to SD cards that can be shared with all the congregations of the OLS, so that the entire church will be able to benefit from what was produced at the workshop.

OLS leaders have plans to take this project further. They want these composers to continue their work in producing new melodies and lyrics, focusing their talents on the various seasons of the church year, so that in time an entire OLS hymnbook might be produced and digitally recorded. It’s an ambitious project, but one they certainly have the talent to accomplish.

Through it all, we rejoice in the amazing gifts that God has given to his people. Throughout the ages, new songs have always been created to praise and glorify our God and teach people about his amazing deeds and love. The OLS may be singing some new songs to the Lord now, but they’re also singing the same song that God’s people have always sung—Christ for us, and Christ in us. All glory and praise be to his name, in whatever melody you sing it!

Written by Rev. Benjamin Foxen, world missionary on the One Africa Team.

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WELS Connection – The impact of World Missions

By the grace of God and your generous support, WELS has been given countless opportunities to share the life-saving message of the gospel with souls all around the world. Sometimes that is done on a large scale with pre-existing, organized church bodies, other times it is on an individual level with one particular soul, and everywhere in between. These people may be in far away lands on the other side of the world. Yet they are our brothers and sisters in Christ, children of God, who now have the comfort and certainty of eternal life, knowing that their sins are forgiven. Camilo Herrera is one of those people.

“I have joy talking to the Lord. I have peace in him, no matter what happens.”

Hear more in this October 2024 WELS Connection video.

 

Learn more about WELS World Missions at wels.net/missions.

CAMM September 2024 Newsletter

As you read blogs, self-help books, and Facebook posts, they seem to have one common theme: How do you find your joy and happiness in life? You may look around and joy seems to be missing in so many areas of your life. There may seem to be less smiles and less laughter. Work is hard and tedious, relationships are difficult to maintain, and healthcare is expensive and time consuming. We go to church and surround ourselves with the gospel, but is the joy we feel truly displayed? In Romans 15:13, Paul wrote, ā€œMay the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace as you trust in him, so that you may overflow with hope by the power of the Holy Spirit.ā€ Are we overflowing with hope?

This past month, I traveled to Mwembezhi Lutheran Rural Health Centre in Zambia along with Gary Evans (Field Director) and Alisad Banda (Clinic Administrator). While all of us had been there many times in the past, we were not expecting to see the joy displayed as we drove past Martin Luther Church, which is adjacent to the clinic. Hundreds of people were camped out for a five-day Lutheran Church of Central Africa campout.

What a surprise! Kids were running and playing, adults were socializing and getting ready for the day and the singing. . . nothing can truly impact you like the sound of an African choir! The harmony, smiles, and joy that we saw and heard is my version of the singing I hope to hear when I arrive in my home in heaven. To hear a sample of the choir singing, visit our Facebook page. What a blessing to hear and see the fellowship as we ventured down the road to tour the clinic buildings and see the clinic at work.

The joy did not stop at the campout. You could see the smiling faces of the clinic staff, the moms as they weighed their babies, the village residents greeting us and thanking CAMM and clinic staff for being there. Some of you have experienced these sights first-hand, but for those that haven’t, I pray the videos and photos that CAMM shares help bring you joy and give you a sense of the joy that is displayed at the clinic.

Your support, whether through prayer, shipped donation boxes, monetary donations, or sharing the work CAMM does, brings me joy and helps us share your joy with the patients that visit the clinic in Zambia as well as the clinics in Malawi.

Whether it be from seeing the photos and videos CAMM posts, or the joy that surrounds you in your personal life, we pray that God continues to bless you and bring you joy. CAMM humbly thanks you for your continued support that helps to spread joy to so many within our organization.

Written by Angela Sievert, Central Africa Medical Mission (CAMM) chairwoman





Finding a place to stand

There’s a lot going on in the fastest growing city in America. According to the 2023 U.S. Census Bureau, Celina, Texas, is the fastest growing city in America based on percentage change (in cities with a population of at least 20,000). Roads are being expanded and the city is breaking ground to build a Costco. Three years ago our city was just around 23,800 residents, and now it is splitting at the seams, sitting just north of 50,000 residents. But right in the middle of this rapidly changing community a small church named Divine Savior Church – North Collin County opened its doors in a small storefront unit on Sept. 8, 2024.

It was a special morning for us. A big step in the mission planting process! To finally throw open our doors, set up our signage outside, and invite the friends we’ve all made was fantastic. Seventy-one people came through the doors, and what made it fantastic was knowing that those individuals would hear the gospel of Jesus.

That’s what any given Sunday morning is all about. We confess our sins, we receive forgiveness, we hear God’s Word read and preached. We confess a common faith, we sing with joy, we pray, we receive the Lord himself in the Sacrament, and we receive God’s blessing. It’s just as important as it sounds. What an honor it is that God has afforded us this opportunity to participate in this ministry. A launch service presents a pastor with a unique opportunity to plan a service that sets the tone for a ministry. What better way to set the tone for a ministry than to be uniquely Lutheran, to be uniquely Christ-centered? Christ is our peace through his blood shed on the cross. The cross is where sins are forgiven. The cross is where we are at peace with God. The cross is where we find belonging. Beneath that cross is our place to stand.

In a rapidly changing community, identity is at stake. This small town is scared of losing its identity and its roots, and I can’t blame them. I’m concerned about it, too. My wife, Sami, and I have fallen in love with the small town we now call home. But we know that the small-town feel is rapidly changing. New people are moving here from all over the country. Where do they find a place to stand? The long-term tenants are mourning the loss of their small town. Where do they find a place to stand? Where does a small mission church find a place to stand in a place like this?

Thanks be to God we have the answer. We never had to find a place to stand in the first place, and neither does anyone else. God provides one, and it’s the best place. It’s beneath the cross of Jesus. So, we cling with an iron grip to that blessed cross. We fashion a service that is centered on the cross because it tells the story of Christ.

Truth be told, the fastest growing city in America is the perfect place for a small mission like ours to do what we do best not only on Sunday mornings, but every day. We engage one person at a time with the gospel so that they can know and trust the Savior that changes their life in Spirit-wrought faith. The privilege is ours and the praise is his. I can’t wait to see those who God touches through this ministry before the throne of our God.

Please keep us in your prayers as we move into post-launch mission life!

Written by Rev. Caleb King, home missionary at Divine Savior Church in North Collin County, Texas.Ā 

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Tuning up before taking off

What in the world is a mission enhancement? That was the first question on my mind after hearing about the details of my new call. Call Day at Wisconsin Lutheran Seminary flew by in an instant, but that question stuck with me. I have heard of a new mission start . . . but an enhancement? That one was new.

Rev. Eli and Rachel Steinbrenner

When my wife, Rachel, and I got to our new home, it started to become more and more clear what it means to be a mission enhancement pastor. Unlike a new mission start, Good Shepherd already has a church building and a large core group of people. They even maintained regular worship throughout a long vacancy. The core group and I are eager to kickstart outreach efforts once again to take advantage of the gospel outreach opportunities the Lord is providing. As an enhancement, we have support from our District Mission Board, guidance from an experienced Mission Counselor, and some short-term financial support to help us get there.

In short, being a mission enhancement is all about tuning up before taking off. Because Good Shepherd has made so much progress earlier on, before the vacancy, many of the big projects to get a church going have already been checked off our list. Our goals over the next couple of months, and even years, are focused on updating how we do ministry, both for maintaining close-knit relationships and increasing fellowship as well as branching out and diving deep into outreach projects. But, before we hit the ground running, there are some preparations that need to be made beforehand.

Over the last couple of weeks, I have spent a lot of time getting to know the people whom I serve. I have had the opportunity to learn about the many gifts God has given them and the history that connects them to Good Shepherd and the community. On top of meeting my own people, I have been reaching out to our community’s leaders: other church’s pastors, local government, business owners, civil service personnel, etc. to get a better pulse as to what our community needs and how we can address those needs with our unique gifts and abilities.

In addition to doing information gathering, our District Mission Board is sending Rachel and I to a Church Planter Intensive specifically for mission enhancement pastors. The Church Planter Intensive is run by a group of home missionaries who have been in very similar situations as the one I am in. It is designed to help and instruct me on how I can use my gifts, the gifts of my people, and the information on my community to better serve my people and community. For a little under a week, Rachel and I will be learning from mission experts in Virginia and picking up a mentor along the way. The mentor will help give practical advice and encouragement as we ā€œtune upā€ over the next two years.

This is all to say, mission work isn’t just outreach events and worship. There is a lot of learning and tuning that needs to be done before we can take off and make our ideas a reality. It has been a little overwhelming, but I am very thankful that there are so many people who support and encourage me throughout all of it. Praise be to God that there are thousands of people who pray for us and our ministry every day!

Written by Rev. Eli Steinbrenner, home missionary at Good Shepherd in Plymouth, Wisconsin.

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Where church planters go to die

ā€œThat’s where church planters go to die!ā€

That’s what a man told me only months after I moved to Mississauga, Canada, when I mentioned that I was pastoring a church in the northwest part of the city.

Whether or not he knew what he was talking about, I think we can agree that planting a church in Mississauga looks challenging on paper. Mississauga is the third most expensive city in Canada (only behind Vancouver and Toronto), extremely transient (more than 50 percent of Mississauga residents have lived here for less than 5 years), and highly post-Christian (although about 50 percent of residents claim to be Christian, less than 25 percent of them are regularly in worship on a Sunday).

And the historical fact is that WELS has tried to plant a church in the Mississauga area two times previous to the current version of our congregation (in the 1970s and early 1990s), but both times the missions had to close. In some sense, that man was right.

But despite the challenges on paper and in ministry, our synod continued to ā€œhave concern for the great city.ā€ (Jonah 4:11). And here we are! August 15, 2024, was the 25th anniversary of our congregation and many blessings accompany that celebration:

First, fruits of the gospel! Over Cross of Life’s history, 116 people have received the gift of Baptism and 216 have been confirmed in the faith after studying scripture with one of our pastors.

Second, a new population to serve. We have received over 70 new visitors in the last six months who are refugees from five different African nations. We were able to mobilize humanitarian aid and spiritual care for these folks. About 20 of them have joined our church, with more intending to join. Ironically, this started only a month after I said to a brother pastor, ā€œWe are a very multicultural church . . . except we don’t really have anyone from Africa.ā€ Oh, how Jesus made me eat my words!

Third, a subsidy-free ministry. This year, we chose to stop receiving subsidy from our synod to operate our church. After literally millions of dollars spent to keep a church in this city, we can fund ministry on our own now.

Fourth, a future home. We have made a deal to purchase a 10,000 square foot building to be our church home. We are waiting for city permission to close the deal, but things look promising at this point. Pray that God would give us this home or a better one, if it is his will.

Fifth, a future ministry. We have started two men on the path to becoming WELS pastors in Canada through a partnership with Wisconsin Lutheran Seminary. We get to dream what God is planning for us in the next few years as those men near graduation and can serve full-time in the ministry!

Of course, all these blessings ultimately come from Jesus, so thank him as you hear how he is blessing us! But these blessings are also the result of the generous Congregational Mission Offerings of congregations like yours, and because of the commitment of our synod’s leaders to planting and supporting churches in major cities, despite the immense costs and challenges. So, thank you also for your offerings and your prayers, and please keep praying for God’s work to be done here!

Written by Rev. Caleb Schultz, home missionary at Cross of Life in Mississauga, Ontario.

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The road to new opportunities

The mindset of so many is ā€œWhat’s next?ā€ or ā€œWhat’s the next goal in my life?ā€ The Central Africa Medical Mission (CAMM) has also been considering that same question: What’s next for CAMM? There are endless opportunities for CAMM to provide healthcare to those in need in Africa and even possibly outside of Africa. We know CAMM will never put our current clinics at risk in Malawi and Zambia, and we are staying true to our mission that CAMM is providing healthcare in support of gospel ministry. Therefore, new opportunities we consider in other countries must be supported by the local Lutheran churches in those countries.

This past week, I had the opportunity to travel to a potential new clinic site in Malawi. The drive was long, the road was bumpy, bridges were out and looked treacherous, but due diligence was needed to see if the site was feasible. While this location showed great need, CAMM needs to evaluate it considering the distance to nearby health clinics (government run or private), the distance our staff would need to travel to the location, cost, government rules to operate and how the local church would support the clinic (available water, Chimbudzsis aka bathrooms, and a covered building with adequate light).

The opportunities are endless when it comes to providing healthcare internationally. The need seems to always be there. While visiting we were in constant awe, especially in the remote villages, of the need for healthcare. We were told there are over 40 patients who have epilepsy who travel over 40 kilometers to the Msambo Clinic in Malawi to access the medications CAMM can provide on a monthly basis. We saw our staff treat a little baby struggling to breathe due to pneumonia. We saw a woman suffering from asthma that came to our clinic for a steroid shot that she may need on a monthly basis. Earlier this spring, we saw an additional 400 patients in one day for malaria because the nearby government clinic ran out of medications. The need is constant.

In February 2025, the Central Africa Medical Mission, along with the Board of World Missions, One Africa Team, Christian Aid & Relief, and the Lutheran Congregations in Mission for Christ-Kenya will once again host a short-term five day clinic just outside of Nairobi. Although this isn’t a new clinic opportunity, for the first time we plan to take five volunteers from the United States who are not part of the CAMM committee, but who have previously applied as volunteers to help run the short-term medical clinic. These volunteers will assist local medical staff with diabetes screening, blood pressure screenings, and outpatient care. CAMM would love to continue to look at the possibility to take volunteers to future locations.

The opportunities for CAMM to serve are endless, and the path that CAMM should take next seems to have many different routes, but in Proverbs 16:9 we hear, ā€œThe heart of man plans his way, but the Lord establishes his steps.ā€ We must trust in the Lord that he will lead us down the right road to serve Him. We will continue to pray and look for God’s help as we evaluate these new requests from the local churches in other countries in Africa. We know God will point us in the right direction and support us as we serve Him.

Written by Angela Sievert, Central Africa Medical Mission chair.

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One Latin America Team – Summer 2024 Quarterly Update

A snapshot of blessings during the past quarter:

1. Vicar program in Colombia: In August 2024, we welcomed new Vicar Matthew Rugen to the field. He will be serving his vicar year under Pastor Henry Herrera in MedellĆ­n, Colombia. Also in August, we said goodbye to Vicar Jacob Bitter and his wife Sofia Spiegelberg. They are returning to Mequon, Wis., for Jacob to finish his senior year at Wisconsin Lutheran Seminary.

2. Continuing education in San Salvador: In May 2024, all missionaries traveled to San Salvador, El Savlador, where Pastoral Studies Institute (PSI) professors Allen Sorum and Skip Goetzinger led a workshop on Christian Counseling in the Mission Setting.

3. New admissions coordinator: Fabi GuamƔn from Ecuador has stepped in as the new Admissions Coordinator, replacing Jen Proeber, who has moved from Chile to teach at Arizona Lutheran Academy in Phoenix. We thank Jen for her outstanding work!

4. 1,000 new students enrolled: In the first eight months of 2024, 1,000 students enrolled in the Discipleship level of live courses after completing four self-study courses. Missionary Luke Beilke and the Student Services Team lead the charge in orienting and integrating new students. This quarter, 350 new students successfully finished their first Discipleship course.

5. Church planting classes launch: The second level of live classes, Discipleship Two, is being revamped as a Church Planting level to better prepare Confessional Lutheran church planters. Nine new courses are in development by the One Latin America Team in collaboration with Multi-Language Productions (MLP), with Missionary Nathan Schulte leading the project.

6. A diverse, team effort: We now have professors and support staff from Argentina, Bolivia, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, the United States, and Mexico working alongside missionaries to deliver Academia Cristo’s mission.

7. New Academia Cristo website: The Promotions & Productions team, with Multi-Language Productions (MLP), launched a new website for Academia Cristo, led by MLP Producer Jon Gross. The updated site better serves church planters and is easier to maintain. Check it out: academiacristo.com

8. New materials completed: The Promotions & Productions team completed all essential materials for church planters in the Academia Cristo program and is developing more resources to support church planting groups, including Bible history, doctrinal, and practical Bible studies.

9. Specialist plan for church planting course: A plan is in place for an existing missionary to specialize in providing one-on-one support to students taking the Discipleship capstone course on church planting. In this course, students are equipped to gather a group and teach them a course on sin, grace, faith, and works.

10. New church plant in Ecuador: Henry Isidro Chonillo (pictured left in the above photo), an Academia Cristo student, has planted three groups in the Guayaquil area of Ecuador. Missionary Nixon Vivar serves as his mission counselor.

11. Mission Counselor Residency Program: A new residency program will see Missionary Luis Acosta spend a month in Mexico, working closely with church planters on a weekly basis.

12. Iglesia Cristo WELS Internacional: Plans are set for Pastor Henry Herrera, president of Iglesia Cristo WELS Internacional, to visit church plants in Colombia, Mexico, and Argentina to discuss the process of becoming members of this international synod.

13. Diaspora Ministries: Team Leader Andrew Johnston is serving as the Diaspora Ministries Facilitator. Mr. Angel Otero, a WELS member from Deltona, Fla., and Academia Cristo graduate, has been hired to assist in this work.

Fast Facts

  • 1.7M average weekly social media reach (user looks at the material for over three seconds)
  • 23,693 total cumulative students enrolled in online self-study level
  • 3,619 students have finished the online self-study level of courses
  • 457 total cumulative students enrolled in the online self-study level in the U.S.
  • 1056 students have completed one Discipleship level live course
  • 104 students have completed the Discipleship level (13 live courses)
  • 40 students have completed the Church Planting level of coursesĀ  (Eight live courses)
  • 35 active church plants





CAMM August 2024 Newsletter

The Lutheran Mission Rural Health Centre-Mwembezhi has a come a long way since it began in 1961, and I can indeed say this far that the Lord has brought us. The Clinic that started as a drug dispensary is today one of the Zambia mission’s success stories, not by human efforts but, by God alone. One of the many positive changes that has happened over the years has been the extent to which the government has recognized the Lutheran Church in Zambia through the clinic.

The recognition of the health centre is attributed to the members of staff who have put in their best effort in the delivery of the health care in the Shibuyunji District. The big motivation comes from serving Christ our Savior. The Central Africa Medical Mission, through its leadership (CAMM) and its supporters, provides the means that enable success such as salaries, medications, maintenance and everything that requires monetary help for the facility. In the past five years, the clinic has seen a face lift in many areas of the centre and uplifted the status of Lumano village. The clinic leadership appreciates the Field Director’s regular visits. The article cannot be complete without mentioning our supporters who have generously given the finances, material help and for some, even coming to visit the clinic. Every donation, in all forms is appreciated, even baby blankets, hats and clothes which are given to newborns and act as a motivation for expecting mothers to come and deliver at the facility.

As the clinic nears the end of the financial year, we can say yes, this far the Lord has brought us, but one thing is so loud to my ears and that is to stay faithful, as the clinic is founded on Christ-centered love and compassion. It is very important to remember that God has sustained the clinic. He has sent people to the centre for numerous reasons, for all it is to hear about the love of God, for many it is for healing and health maintenance, and for our staff who gain expertise and experience through the variety of patients they see.

Today, the clinic has twenty-six members of staff, sixteen are on the CAMM payroll and the rest from government and non-government organizations. A lot of them are young people and sometimes this age group comes with its own pressures. These are part of our Christian battles, but the call is to remain faithful to our God despite the situations that may come our way. This far, indeed the Lord has brought us. The clinic is a reliable source of healthcare and sometimes this can cause us (the members of staff including management) to forget that God has created the facility for His own purpose and that is to demonstrate God’s love to humanity. This love must first be seen in the members of staff before it can be demonstrated to others. Indeed it is particularly important to remember that the clinic is not only a source of medical expertise and medications, but is primarily a place where Christ is the centre of all our activities.

In conclusion, the Lutheran Mission Rural Health Centre in Mwembezhi is a family, and by the grace of God, we continue planning as a family for the future and pray for each other. It is important to pray for our leadership at CAMM, well-wishers, and members of staff at the clinic.

Written by Alisad Banda, CAMM Clinic Administrator





TELL: Connecting East Asia to the Philippines

The TELL program was designed with flexibility in mind. Its framework is made to be used in many countries, by many cultures, by many ages. Perhaps this is best displayed by Peter. Peter is a Ugandan, living in Hong Kong, training believers in the Philippines.

A few years ago, while living in Hong Kong, Peter was introduced to Asia Lutheran Seminary (ALS). He was interested in furthering his Biblical education when a pastor he knew in Canada encouraged him to study through ALS. He enrolled as a student and began completing classes regularly. This connection with ALS also led him to begin studying with the TELL program.

Peter’s church in Hong Kong has a strong membership of Filipinos working in Hong Kong. As some of the members returned to the Philippines, they brought their worship life with them. They soon saw a need for small group leaders and for training. Peter took the opportunity to put his own Biblical training into practice. He uses the TELL method to regularly meet online with eleven small group leaders from the Philippines. He chose to use the TELL method because: ā€œI have been exposed to quite many Bible study methods, but I find TELL method cutting across all scenarios and levels, ages, and categories, a very easy way to administer Bible study. Also, for learners, no matter how much prior knowledge of the Bible they have, through TELL they will always learn something easily.ā€

The TELL program is working with ALS and will soon be implemented more widely by our Asia One Team. We pray that God blesses the use of this program to reach and equip more leaders like Peter, leaders who are willing and ready to pass on their training and knowledge of the Bible to others!

Learn more about the TELL Network from WELS Multi-Language Productions.

Written by Rev. Tony Barthels, world missionary on the Asia One Team

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Teach all nations!

Teach all nations! Equip the saints! Those two holy commands come from our ascended Savior to his Church. Victory of the Lamb in Katy, Texas, has partnered with WELS Latin America missionaries to do more of both.

Katy, Texas, is a ā€œsuburbā€ of Houston that has swelled to 400,000 in population and continues to grow. Because of the oil/gas and medical industries, it is an upscale, international community. Although people from every continent make Katy their home, some have given it the nickname ā€œKaty-Zuelaā€ because so many Venezuelans have moved into town. In addition to these Venezuelans, many other Spanish speakers live in Katy as well. Approximately 20 percent of the households within 3 miles of Victory of the Lamb speak Spanish in their homes. Some of them are bilingual, but many are not. Victory of the Lamb has faithfully preached and taught God’s Word for 25 years. . . in English. However, I, the pastor at Victory of the Lamb, do not speak Spanish. Is there anything that can be done?

In May 2023, a dozen Victory of the Lamb members who speak Spanish got together to talk about it. The first step was an encouragement for them to take the online Academia Cristo classes, produced by WELS Latin America missionaries. Then they could invite their Spanish-speaking friends and family to do the same from a background of familiarity. Perhaps some additional inroads could be made into the Spanish-speaking Katy community.

Hector Medellin, a native Mexican and Victory of the Lamb member for 12 years, attended this meeting and decided to give Academia Cristo a try. Very quickly, he was hooked! God’s Word in his native tongue grabbed him, and he deeply enjoyed the experience. Hector progressed through the first level of self-directed classes on the Academia Cristo app. The next step was to begin taking online classes led by a WELS world missionary, with several other Spanish speakers from all across the world as his classmates.

Hector was excited, but also had some mixed feelings. Was this worth the time and effort? Did he want to make such a large commitment of time? In his first online class, one fellow student lived in a place where he had to drive an hour up a mountain, each way, in order to get an internet signal so he could take the class. Another student tried to take the class as best as she could while also working shifts as a nurse, because that was her only way to have an internet connection. Hector thought, ā€œOkay, if they go through that much effort to take this class, and I’m sitting at home with internet and air conditioning, I have no excuses. I’ll do it.ā€ He says it was one of the best decisions he’s ever made in his life! As God’s Word grew in his heart, Hector’s love for his Savior also grew, as well as his desire to reach more souls.

Fast forward one year. With the help of his professors and missionaries, Hector is now trained to lead his own Bible class! On June 9, 2024, Victory of the Lamb launched a second adult Bible study on Sunday morning – one in English and one in Spanish. Hector also plans to lead a four-week class on Bible basics online with some Spanish-speaking friends and family members who don’t live in Katy. Victory of the Lamb members can invite their Spanish speaking friends, relatives, and neighbors to these classes. Down the line, it will be easy to encourage more Spanish speakers to try Academia Cristo. Hector is equipped to lead Bible studies either online or in person.

Teach all nations! Equip the saints! Through Victory of the Lamb’s continued partnership with WELS Latin America missionaries, and connection to Academia Cristo materials, both of those goals are happening more than before. Praise God!

Written by Rev. Nathan Buege, home missionary at Victory of the Lamb Lutheran Church in Katy, Texas.

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Supporting home missionaries: Church Planter Intensive and coaching program

One of the ways WELS Home Missions works behind the scenes to support new home mission congregations and their missionaries is through a Church Planter Intensive (CPI) and coaching program. Brand new church planters gather together with experienced home missionaries for a Church Planter Intensive at Carbon Valley Lutheran Church in Firestone, Colo. Experienced church planter Jared Oldenburg (Eternal Rock – Castle Rock, Colo.) developed the program and Home Missionary Matt Rothe (The Way – Fredericksburg, Va.) now leads the training. This extended weekend seminar encourages and equips pastors who are called to plant brand new home mission churches. They are then paired with a coach from an established mission church to guide them for their first two years of launching a new church. Learn more about the program on the wels100in10.net website.

Here’s what three home missionaries had to stay about the program:

When I was approached about attending the Church Planter Intensive (CPI) in 2023, I had no idea how influential and vital it would be to my personal ministry and our mission start as a whole. Over the course of three days I was able to gather with other pastors in similar situations and explore church planting together. I’m brand new to church planting, and frankly had no idea where to even start. While there is so much to continually learn and no one perfect way to plant a church, CPI gave direction that would be missing otherwise. From finances to structure to leadership and beyond, CPI gave me peace of mind to know where to start, what to focus on, and what do in certain situations. I weekly refer to the CPI booklet. The Church Planter Intensive also connected me with other mission pastors who continue to talk, encourage, and bounce ideas off of each other. It’s a unique brotherhood that I don’t take for granted.

As much as the Church Planter Intensive was able to ground me, set our ministry on a good path, and send us out with valuable information, the coaching program is now my lifeline in an ongoing way. My coach is the most accessible avenue to bounce ideas off of, get input from, and help me grow as a pastor. We meet monthly to study aspects of church planting that I’ve never thought about. We also talk every week or two on the phone for feedback with our mission. I am so so grateful for my coach, the time he gives to me, and the huge heart that he has for missions. His brotherhood and coaching has transformed our new mission start and will continually be a blessing to me and many others. Thank you to everyone who makes the Church Planter Intensive and coaching program possible! It’s a massive blessing!

At the Church Planter Intensive, we developed systems and timelines which have helped us tremendously. We had some frame of reference and ideas formulated and ready to use when we got to Boston, and so many of the things we learned have been implemented. Someone told me that you have to be able to think inside the box to think outside the box. I think the analogy applies to CPI. Boston is a different home mission—WELS has never had a church in this city—and in some ways, you are forced to think outside of the box. CPI gave us the tools to orient ourselves to think outside the box and engage the city creatively and contextually. It was also incredible to network with the other church planting couples at CPI. The support that Katelyn and I felt after going to the training has been so helpful. I keep in touch with some of the guys from training, and we use each other as sounding boards and for support. It is wonderful knowing that there is a community of church planters all praying for each other and with a similar goal—to proclaim the peace only Jesus can bring to the ends of the earth!

I also can’t say enough about my coach, Rev. Lucas Bitter from Intown Lutheran Church in Atlanta, Ga., and his wife, Meredith. He and I both work in urban environments, and he has helped me think and rethink many ideas about working in the city. Meredith has also been outstanding in this process. She and Katelyn have a monthly call to discuss what it’s like to be a church planter’s wife and share experiences. My coaching calls with Pastor Bitter give me a chance to articulate what is going on in my ministry, ask questions, give comments, and voice concerns. His knowledge of church planting, his desire to reach those who are lost, and his love for Jesus is evident every time we talk. He’s been available, patient, and filled with wisdom. I look up to him as a mentor for ministry and life.

The Church Planter Intensive (CPI) coupled with the coaching program is incredibly beneficial for new missionaries. Throughout our schooling, you get a lot of exposure to what it’s like walking into an existing church. It’s a little different when you drive into a new city, and it hits you that you’re starting a new church plant there. There are SO many questions. Every church has the same mission, but each church carries it out in a different way. The Church Planter Intensive and coaching program didn’t necessarily tell me what to do, but exposed me to different ideas, experiences, and resources and provided me with a network of fellow missionaries to encourage and support me throughout this process. It helped bring so much clarity to my plans.

Each month I get to sit down for an hour or more with my coach where we talk about implementing part of what I learned at the Church Planter Intensive. He’s there to check in on how I’m doing spiritually, emotionally, and physically, and to be a sounding board for any ideas I have. It also gives me an opportunity to take a step back each month and look at our mission as a whole—where have we been, where are we going, and how we going to get there. He assists my mission so that I can really focus on Christ’s mission.

One of the greatest ways WELS Home Missions and the Church Planter Intensive are supporting their missionaries is putting a big value on the wife’s role in the mission plant process. My wife, Samantha, shares: “As a new missionary’s wife, it can be a little daunting to jump headfirst into the mission field since my husband was the one who went through the years of schooling, and he was the one assigned to our new mission church. I was encouraged knowing it’s not just the work of the pastor that’s important in starting a mission church. It also includes me, our core group, and the community we get to share Jesus with. Attending CPI encouraged me as a pastor’s wife to surround myself with a community of women who have gone through this before. They are sisters in Christ who I can lean on during the difficult times and celebrate with during the joyous times.”

The Church Planter Intensive establishes a brotherhood with other church planters right from the beginning. I have a network of people that care about me not just as a missionary, but as an individual. We remind each other that what’s at the heart of this work is individual souls who need to hear about their personal Savior. It charges me up to get back to that important work so that more lives can be touched by the life-changing power of Jesus.





God’s hand in Indonesia

ā€œI know the plans I have for you.ā€ Jeremiah 29:11. These words of the Lord through the prophet Jeremiah are a familiar theme at many Christian graduation ceremonies. Written originally to God’s Old Testament people who were facing an uncertain future in exile from the promised land, this verse reminds believers today too that our God, the Lord Almighty, is still in control. No matter what today or tomorrow may bring, we too have a hope and a future because of Christ Jesus. The details of how we will get there, however, are known only to God.

Counting on God’s promises to be with them, the faculty and staff of Sekolah Tinggi Teologi Lutheran (STTL), the seminary of our sister churchĀ in Indonesia, worked hard this last year toward the goal of official accreditation for their school. Accreditation would mean that the certificate the school offers after four years of classroom training would be nationally recognized. Graduates could then use that certificate to apply for part-time employment as religion instructors in government schools. And since children in Indonesia have the right to have religion class according to their own faith, there is often a need for Christian teachers. This would be ideal for many pastors who will need to have ā€œtent-makingā€ ministries.

After much work, and by God’s grace, STTL was fully accredited earlier this year! This led to a momentous occasion this August, where the first of these government-recognized certificates could be awarded to 18 students who had recently completed the four-year course of study either this year or last. Besides family and friends, other guests and visitors included local government officials and representatives from other area institutions, as well as myself, happily representing Asia Lutheran Seminary and the WELS Asia One Team to congratulate our brothers in Christ for their hard work. The event gave much visibility to this young seminary, and the faculty and staff have much to be proud of and thankful for.

STTL’s pastoral training program includes two to three years of practical experience as vicars following the years in the classroom. So these 18 men were not yet ordained as pastors, but some of them received their first assignments as vicars in that same service. Others were reassigned to meet ministry needs in their church body. How will the Lord use these young men as his ministers in the coming years? What challenges will they face as they proclaim the gospel of Christ in a country that is officially secular but with a strong Muslim majority? Will the STTL’s plan of accreditation prove to be the boon that they think it will be? Will they be able to meet the need for pastors as the gospel spreads across the country?

The theme verse of the graduation service was Jeremiah 29:11. ā€œI know the plans I have for you,ā€ God says. The details of his plan are his own. But all of them are based on the work of Christ, the Savior of the nations. Please join me in praying for these young men, the churches they serve, and the work of the gospel in Indonesia.

Written by Rev. Guy Marquardt, world missionary for the Asia One Team.Ā 

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WELS endowment funds continue to provide ongoing ministry support

Thanks to the generosity of God’s people, WELS Foundation distributed $1.4 million for our Savior’s gospel ministry in July from the WELS endowment funds. Established by delegates at the 2005 synod convention, these funds provide ongoing, dependable support for the Lord’s work in WELS Ministerial Education and WELS Home, World, and Joint Missions.

The WELS Joint Missions Endowment managed by WELS Foundation provides support to cross-cultural ministry efforts like the Vietnamese outreach ministry at King of Kings, Garden Grove, Calif. Missionary Trung LĆŖ was installed at King of Kings in August 2023 after graduating from the Pastoral Studies Institute at Wisconsin Lutheran Seminary. LĆŖ leads the congregation’s ministry to its Vietnamese community, which makes up about 40 percent of Garden Grove’s population.

King of Kings shows its love to its Vietnamese-speaking neighbors in a number of ways, including offering U.S. citizenship classes, after which the students are invited to stay for Bible study. LĆŖ has also begun providing English as a Second Language classes twice per week. In addition, he leads two Bible information classes in Vietnamese and is working to form a core group, with the prayer that within the next year or two, he will begin a Vietnamese worship service. ā€œEverything is in God’s will,ā€ LĆŖ says, ā€œbut we try our best and see what can happen.ā€

LĆŖ is grateful for the support provided to the Vietnamese ministry at King of Kings from the Joint Missions Endowment: ā€œIt has been a wonderful blessing to have such wonderful help from WELS Joint Missions,ā€ says LĆŖ. ā€œI praise the Lord for that.ā€

WELS Foundation also manages endowments that are set up by individuals, congregations, and other WELS-affiliated ministries. In total, WELS Foundation distributed $4.5 million from more than 375 endowments this year, providing ongoing financial support for Christ’s gospel work throughout WELS.

ā€œAn endowment fund can provide a source of predictable financial support for ministry like the Vietnamese outreach being done in Garden Grove for years to come,ā€ says Mr. Jim Holm, executive director of WELS Foundation. ā€œThat’s what makes endowments so impactful and such a blessing to gospel work.ā€

There are a variety of ways to give to an endowment: cash or appreciated assets; through a will, trust, or beneficiary designation on a retirement account; or with insurance proceeds. To learn more about adding to an existing endowment or establishing a new endowment for a ministry that you love, contact your local WELS Christian giving counselor at wels.net/giving-counselors or call 800-827-5482.

Read more about Trung LĆŖ and the ministry in Garden Grove in Forward in Christ:

https://forwardinchrist.net/huu-trung-le/

https://forwardinchrist.net/one-campus-three-languages/

 

 

Why 100 Missions in 10 Years?

An update from WELS Home Missions Administrator, Rev. Mark Gabb

Hear from Rev. Mark Gabb, WELS Home Missions administrator, as he reflects on the importance of the 100 Missions in 10 Years initiative and the gospel outreach opportunities it will provide.

Navigating new chapters

The book of Joshua opens with Israel on the banks of the Jordan River, a moment Joshua and the people had waited on for years. But Joshua’s journey didn’t start there. It began long before—training under Moses, climbing Sinai, wandering the wilderness. After crossing into the promised land, how quickly do you think time passed for Joshua?

In the days following Assignment Day at Wisconsin Lutheran Seminary, I found myself reading through Joshua during personal devotions. During the transition—new people, a new place, new work—I found comfort in how God used Joshua. But like Joshua, the story didn’t start in the new land. Here’s what life has looked like as my wife Grace and I walked toward our new journey:

April was full of studies with classmates. Studying Romans deepened our love for the message of forgiveness. The prophets reminded us of God’s faithful messengers. Projects and social events filled the calendar. We were all counting down the days until Assignment Day while making the most of the time we had left.

Rev. Jacob and Grace Ungemach at Ault Park in Cincinnati, Ohio.

May was busy. Classes wrapped up, countdowns began, and celebrations filled the days—a baby shower for friends and graduation at Martin Luther College in New Ulm, Minn. Meanwhile, excitement for the Call Day kept building.

Call Day was a blur. We started early with a devotion by Lake Michigan along with some classmates. At the Call Service, we sat nervously with family, waiting to learn where we’d go. We listened as friends were assigned to their new places. Then it was our turn: Beautiful Savior – New Mission Start; Oakley, Ohio. Neither Grace nor I knew where Oakley was, but we knew this: God would be with us there.

June began with a quick trip to Cincinnati to see where we’d be living. I’ll never forget driving into the city for the first time—rolling green hills and beautiful buildings rising into the skyline. We met a few members of our Oakley group during that short trip. Driving back to pack up, Cincinnati was already beginning to feel like home.

Moving day for the Ungemach’s!

July 1 was moving day! As we pulled into our apartment, we were greeted by members from Beautiful Savior ready to help unload. The congregation was excited to start work on the second site in Oakley, and so were we. Afternoons and evenings quickly filled with opportunities to meet new people in our core group and the community.

Today . . . things still haven’t slowed down. We’re just beginning to meet together, grow in the Word, and find ways to show this community the love of Jesus. There are still so many unknowns.

The greatest comfort I’ve found in Joshua isn’t in the change he experiences, but in the changelessness of God. Just as God was with his people in a new place and age, he will be with us in this new mission. And like his promises were fulfilled to his people before, the promise that his Word will not return empty stands with us today.

Please keep Beautiful Savior in your prayers as we begin planting a second site in Oakley, Ohio.

Written by Rev. Jacob Ungemach, home missionary at a new mission start in Oakley, Ohio.

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Faces of Faith – Lincoln

ā€œPraise the Lord!ā€ I didn’t expect him to shout that over his shoulder as he sprinted down the mountain past me and my friend, who were hiking and talking about church that Sunday afternoon. After he stopped and apologized for interrupting us, my first conversation with Lincoln began. ā€œI wouldn’t even tell a shrink half of the stuff I’ve done,ā€ he admitted. I responded, ā€œWould you tell a pastor?ā€ After talking for a few minutes about God’s grace and forgiveness, I gave him my business card. He promised I’d see him next Sunday; but to be honest, I doubted I would ever see him again.

But there he was on Sunday and every Sunday after. ā€œI feel accepted, welcomed, and loved. There’s a comfort in knowing that Pastor Jensen is always going to point me to Jesus,ā€ Lincoln says. Lincoln was confirmed last year and enjoys growing in God’s Word through a midweek Bible Class. ā€œI love how we get deep into the Bible, but I don’t feel overwhelmed or confused. It’s actually fun!ā€

As we get ready to start our new building project, Lincoln is all-in. ā€œWe’re blessed to have such an amazing church body working together to share the Word of Christ, and I’m grateful and excited to be part of it here in Las Cruces. I want everyone to be able to see what’s going on here and experience God’s love here like I do.ā€

From Nathanael Jensen, home missionary at Cross of Christ, Las Cruces, N.M.

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Faces of Faith – Kim Nga

I arrived in Garden Grove, California in the first week of October to begin my work to answer the Lord’s call to serve at King of Kings. I’ve spent a lot of time visiting nursing homes and care centers. One of the places I often visit is Chapman Care Center. It appears this place is owned by a Korean.

On November 2, I visited and met Uncle Minh, who is Vietnamese. His wife, Ms. Le Thi Kim Nga, had been in the hospital for a while. When he heard me greet him and talk, he was surprised and somewhat excited because he’d thought I was a Korean. When I heard their story, I asked for his permission to visit his wife and pray for her. Through the story, I learned that the uncle came back to Vietnam and married his wife and brought her to America recently. A few years ago she had a brain tumor, they removed almost half of her brain. Now she can’t walk, she must stay in bed and have special care. Uncle Minh is retired and takes care of his wife every day. I was very touched by their story!

After praying for Ms. Nga, I continued to come back and share Jesus with her, explaining God’s love to her. She was quiet and attentive, and in December when I came back to visit, I asked her if she wanted to be a child of God. She replied that she did and asked me what she should do if she wants to become a child of God? I told her I would help her!

On December 12, 2023, I called uncle Minh as usual. I didn’t know how we could talk about Baptism. He shared that he asked a Vietnamese pastor to visit, pray, and baptize his wife, but that pastor was busy and had no time. I said I could help complete the Baptism for her. He agreed. Within a period of 2 hours. I prepared water in a cup, and a certificate along with it, and on December 12, 2023, I baptized Ms. Nga in the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. One more soul has been recorded in the book of heaven.

When it ended, Ms. Nga told me she was happy, and proclaimed that God is real, and that she wanted to share God with many more people. I replied that she could share with everyone because she was now a child of God.

From Trung Le, home missionary at King of Kings Lutheran Church in Garden Grove, Calif.

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Faces of Faith – Bill

ā€œI’ve never heard that before.ā€ That’s what Bill said after he attended worship the day his six-year-old grandson was baptized. ā€œThatā€ was a line which the pastor said, ā€œJesus died for all sins.ā€

Bill grew up attending Catholic schools, so he had knowledge of some of the Bible said. A section of God’s Word that he knew very well was what God said about divorce. So, when Bill got divorced over 20 years ago, he thought he was doomed. For twenty-plus years Bill had been carrying around guilt and fear. But on that Sunday, he heard, ā€œJesus paid for all sins.ā€ Did that mean Jesus had paid for the sin of his divorce? Bill left his business card with me on his way out of church, saying, ā€œLet’s do lunch.ā€

After numerous lunches and a few coffee meetings, Bill enrolled in our Bible information class. The first words he said were, ā€œI know I’m going to hell, but. . . I have some questions.ā€ By God’s grace and the power of the Word, Bill no longer thinks he’s going to hell. Now, he cherishes free forgiveness and that Jesus died for all sins, even his.

From Joel Heckendorf, home missionary at Light of the Valleys in Reno, Nev.

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Faces of Faith – Ruth

Nearly ten years have passed since an email showed up in my inbox. At the time, I was deliberating a call to a new mission in Mt. Horeb, Wis. The email was from a WELS member who had family connections in Mt. Horeb and was delighted to hear about the new WELS mission opening in town. Her son’s mother-in-law, Ruth, was described as ā€œa young 84, with a magnetic personality.ā€ She hoped that if I took the call to Mt. Horeb, I would be able to connect and share the gospel with her.

For the past ten years, God has been busy: I accepted the call to Good News in Mt. Horeb. I looked up Ruth and quickly found out that the description I had been given of her was spot on. She had a young, magnetic personality—along with a little East-coast stubbornness. As a result, it took three years of conversations before she became a member of our church.

During Ruth’s time at Good News, God used her magnetic personality to connect with even more people. There are now three families who belong to our church and another that attends regularly that can all be traced back to Ruth. I’m certain God will continue to use the connections made through Ruth to bring people to Good News and to the Good News of Jesus Christ.

From Jonathan Bauer, home missionary at Good News in Mt. Horeb, Wis.

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Faces of Faith – Steve and Tammy

Back in 2017, I did some door-to-door canvassing in a neighborhood near my house. I met Steve and Tammy who told me that they were looking for a church. I added them to our prospect list and kept in touch through monthly mailings and invitations to our church, but I never saw or heard from them after that. Six years went by before Steve and Tammy finally decided to attend. When I met them in our parking lot, they said, ā€œYou’ve been sending us mailings and invitations every month for the past six years, so we finally decided we wanted to take you up on your offer and attend your church.ā€ By God’s grace, Steve and Tammy have not stopped attending The Vine since. In fact, I had the privilege of baptizing both Steve and Tammy during one of our Sunday services in 2023. And, several months later, they joined us as fellow members of The Vine. Praise God for the means of grace and for giving our congregation the opportunity to be a blessing to them as they are to us.

From Kevin Schultz, home missionary at The Vine in Hayden, Idaho

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Faces of Faith – Bruce and Sheryl

Northwest Wisconsin is known for its vast resources for hunting and fishing. The members at Our Redeemer in Ladysmith hosted an outreach event and decided to combine two things they do well, cooking wild game and being friendly. One couple in the congregation had befriended their neighbors, Bruce and Sheryll, and invited them to the annual wild game dinner. Not only did they enjoy a great meal of bear, venison, rabbit, elk, fish and more, but they were also welcomed with open arms by the members. Before going they received an invitation to come back for worship and they came. They saw the same welcoming congregation at worship and never stopped coming. After going through a Bible information class, they knew Our Redeemer was their church family. Two people loving Jesus, hearing the Word, and enjoying the fellowship of a new church family; all because they were invited for supper.

From Christian Christenson, home missionary at Our Redeemer in Ladysmith, Wis.

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Flexibility

More Worship Words to Wrestle With

Flexibility

One of the strengths of liturgical worship lies in its yearly repetition and recurring patterns that establish the rhythm of worship in your parish. The familiar words and actions allow us to concentrate on worship without counting the steps of the dance, as C.S. Lewis said. But as worship planners, we work to ensure that repetition doesn’t become repetitive and that the rites don’t become ironclad rules. Liturgical worship is not meant to be a straitjacket for the worshiping church, but to provide the framework on which we build congregational worship life.

So what are some areas and examples of flexibility in liturgical worship? Here are some simple suggestions that the reader might consider implementing if found fitting for the local context.

Musical Style

Several years ago, a couple of snowbirds stopped in Sharpsburg for worship on their way to Florida. When I met them in the line after service, the man leaned in, as if we were co-conspirators, and said, sotto voce, ā€œWe’re from Wisconsin. We’ve never been to a contemporary worship service before.ā€ I had to break the news to them that they still hadn’t—that the service was Matins and had been in use by the Church for many centuries. They were befuddled because the service had been accompanied by guitar, flute, piano, and windchimes. They were unfamiliar with that kind of variety in instrumentation and made the mistake of thinking liturgical worship is about style rather than text and content. What they heard was a style fresh and new to them adorning a form with long use in the Church.

They made the mistake of thinking liturgical worship is about style rather than text and content.

One of the best ways to express flexibility in liturgical worship is through style, instrumentation, and the settings of the service. Mozart may have called the organ the king of instruments, but that doesn’t mean it has to be the only instrument in Lutheran worship. Adorn the liturgy with as many instruments as you have. Liturgical worship lends itself to the varied musical resources of any congregation. In the past few years at least 22 different types of instruments have been used in worship at our congregation. Whatever God provides you in terms of an instrumentalist can be brought to bear in the flexibility of the liturgy and hymnody of the church.

The new hymnal project’s Musician’s Resource (nph.net/musicians-resource) is a powerful tool to help. Simply search on hymn number, tune, or the like, and you will find various settings for the hymn prepared for your instrumentalists. Musician’s Resource will eventually provide instrumental resources for every hymn in the hymnal. If you have a pianist and guitarist, the resources will help you provide a fresh sound inside of familiar forms. All of the hymns in the hymnal will have one or another type of guitar setting, some matched with a keyboard setting, others not. If you can build a liturgical ensemble (e.g., piano, guitar, percussion, wind instrument), you will find materials ready to purchase and download for suitable hymns.

Are your instrumentalists less experienced? Check out the easy lead sheets (Musician’s Resource–Packages)—arrangements with fewer chords that are easier to play that work in tandem with Easy Hymn Accompaniments—Piano Edition (NPH, 0303068).

Many of the newer hymns in Christian Worship are well suited to be accompanied by piano, guitar, and some hand percussion. Try it, and you will see that the addition of rhythm instruments makes those hymns much easier to sing.

Maybe your context will have brass ensemble, strings, and timpani for Easter festival service, or maybe what you have is piano, guitar, and cajón. The beauty of liturgical worship is the flexibility to feature any or all of them, and between Christian Worship, Service Builder, and Musician’s Resource, you will find the right resources for your context.

Canticles and Settings

We usually think of the Ordinary as the part of the liturgy that doesn’t change (ā€œGloria,ā€ ā€œKyrie,ā€ ā€œSanctus,ā€ etc.). Providing variety in the Ordinary can be accomplished by introducing new settings of the service, such as Setting Three. But, teaching new service settings takes time and effort. People may complain because they don’t know the new ā€œGloria,ā€ or that it’s hard, or that it’s just not the Common Service. The temptation for the worship planner is to abandon the flexibility that liturgical settings offer and settle into the same settings for the liturgy Sunday after Sunday.

In Service Builder you can find resources that will allow a huge amount of variety.

But in Service Builder you can find resources that will allow a huge amount of variety in your liturgy with minimal introduction for the congregation. In fact, if your congregation can sing ā€œFrom Greenland’s Icy Mountainsā€ (MISSIONARY HYMN) and ā€œWhen I Survey the Wondrous Crossā€ (HAMBURG) you could introduce a brand-new setting of the service this coming weekend.

Service Builder provides The Service Settings 6-10, and all the canticles are based on hymn tunes. You can choose the origin of hymn tune service (American, German, British, Scandinavian, Evening), or mix and match, and you will be given several hymn tune choices and accompanying texts for the ā€œGloria,ā€ the ā€œSanctus,ā€ and the ā€œAgnus Dei.ā€ These settings provide a lot of flexibility. For example, there are 38 versions of the ā€œGloria,ā€ each based on hymn tunes—some very familiar; some less so. Service Builder allows you to quickly assemble a service and service folder that will provide immediate variety in a very accessible form.

Worship planners could also consider seasonal canticle replacements. During the Season of Epiphany in Year C, try replacing the ā€œGloriaā€ with the first three stanzas of ā€œChrist Beginsā€ (CW 385). Put a note in the service folder that this newly composed hymn has stanzas that walk us through the season. Stanza 1: the Baptism of Jesus (Epiphany 1C); stanza 2: the Wedding at Cana (Epiphany 2C); stanza 3: Transfiguration (Last Sunday of Epiphany C); refrain: the Season of Epiphany. Piano and rhythm instruments are a great fit.

During the Season of Easter CW suggests that the ā€œGloriaā€ can be replaced with ā€œThis is the Feastā€ (CW 938 or, available only in Service Builder, CW 963). We have instead used ā€œAt the Lamb’s High Feast We Singā€ (CW 675) in the setting by Phillip Magness that is meant for a liturgical ensemble (Hymns for the Contemporary Ensemble, Vol 2, CPH, but currently out of print). We last did this with piano, guitar, string bass, clarinet, and percussion. Let loose your liturgical ensemble on this piece, and you will find a text that’s been used for a millennium, a tune used for two centuries, and recently composed setting that combine into a great sing for the Season of Easter. You could have an amplified cantor lead the singing, but after a couple of weeks your congregation will need no help.

Four times each year a month will have five Sundays. Have a small group learn and lead an alternate service setting used whenever a fifth Sunday occurs. We use Morning Prayer (Matins). Utilizing the small group or choir to lead it makes introducing it simple. Using it four times annually results in it feeling both fresh and familiar. Check out Morning Prayer (alternate) in Service Builder. It offers Marty Haugen’s folk style setting that could be led by a liturgical ensemble (and could make snowbirds think they have been initiated into contemporary worship).

Communion

When a congregation reaches out with the gospel corporately and its members individually, unchurched families will join the worshiping assembly. We have all had those moments when a person that you’ve invited comes to church for the first time—and it’s a communion Sunday. If possible, we would prefer if someone’s first time at worship doesn’t exclude them (rightly) from an action in worship that all the other adults are doing. Especially when your congregation invites the community to join worship at an outreach event, we can be kind and thoughtful hosts and ensure that we schedule fall festivals, church picnics, and other invitational events on a non-communion Sunday.

However, two of the dates that have the highest likelihood of an unchurched or dechurched person attending for the first time are Christmas and Easter. Of course, on these two high festivals, we should not fail to offer communion, but you could consider a modified schedule. In Sharpsburg, Christmas Eve is a service we invite our community to join us, and so it is a non-communion preaching service, but we celebrate Christ’s mass on Christmas Day.

Our Easter celebration starts with Easter Vigil on Holy Saturday evening. We celebrate the Sacrament in that service and then leave Easter Sunday as preaching services. Members who want to receive the Sacrament on Easter are invited to join us at the Vigil. (Some churches offer the Sacrament at the Easter Dawn service.) We have found this practice ensures celebration of the Sacrament on the high festivals while being visitor friendly. It has the added benefit of growing attendance at the Vigil and Christmas Day services.

The Propers

Lectionary-based preaching brings a wealth of blessings to the congregation. When the lectionary sets the path for public worship, my congregation is protected from my whims and wants as a worship planner. It means I don’t get to pick out the parts of Scripture I want to talk about and ignore the parts I don’t. It ensures that broad sections of Scripture will be expounded. It offers balance between preaching on events in the life of Christ and teachings from the mouth of Christ. The Church Year instills a pattern to congregational worship life reminding us that there is a time and season for everything under heaven: a time to prepare, to celebrate, to anticipate, to mourn, to grow.

That being said. . . don’t forget that the lectionary is a guide, not a ceremonial law. Sometimes it pays to do a little picking and choosing. Christian Worship models that in its suggestion that congregations observe the festival of Reformation on the last Sunday in October and All Saints on the first Sunday in November rather than on their actual dates of Oct 31 and Nov 1. However, that means the readings for Proper 26 (Sunday on Oct 30 – November 5) would never be used. In the upcoming Year C that means you always miss out on the Gospel featuring the story of Zacchaeus, paired with Romans 5:6ff. (ā€œWhen we were still powerless, Christ died for the ungodlyā€) and Micah 7:18ff. (Who is a God like you who. . . will tread our sins under foot and cast our iniquities into the depths of the seaā€). That’s a fantastic set of readings that deserves to be preached with regularity. Proper 25 faces a similar fate most years.

Next year I will use Propers 25 and 26 earlier in October, replacing Propers 23 and 24 on October 12 and 19, 2025. This maintains the end time focus outlined in The Commentary on the Propers: Year C beginning with All Saints and running to Last Sunday. The next Year C will use Propers 23 and 24 again.

Some texts are just too important to miss. So are some festivals.

Some texts are just too important to miss. So are some festivals. Not every church is going to celebrate Epiphany on January 6 when it falls on a Tuesday. Not every church is going to celebrate Ascension on the Thursday 40 days after Easter. But every church should have those readings and celebrations in their worship life. Celebrate Ascension (observed) on the following Sunday. Each year you could alternate assigning the Sixth Sunday of Easter readings from Easter 6 and 7. All six of the Gospels (ABC) are from the Gospel of John and are Jesus’ words to his disciples in the upper room.

Observing Epiphany on the following Sunday gets a little more complicated. First, you’ll have to explain how the 12 Days of Christmas became 17. Then you’ll have to decide how far you are willing to deviate from the Church Year. Epiphany 1 is Baptism of our Lord—another festival we don’t want to miss. If you observe Baptism of our Lord on Epiphany 2, then the Gospels you miss annually are the beginning of John’s Gospel (ā€œLook the Lamb of Godā€; the calling of Andrew and Peter, Phillip and Nathanael; and Cana, and the first of John’s seven signs).

Consider this: When Christmas 2 falls on January 4 or 5 observe Epiphany in place of Christmas 2. This keeps you in line with the calendar throughout the Season of Epiphany. When there is no Christmas 2 or if it falls before or after January 4-5, then observe Epiphany on the following Sunday, in place of Epiphany 1 and slide all the Epiphany Sundays forward, removing the last one before Transfiguration. This practice ensures the infancy narratives of the Christmas season will be preached regularly.

Our congregation will observe Epiphany on January 5, 2025, and January 4, 2026, by replacing Christmas 2, and all the remaining Sundays are as appointed. But in 2027 Christmas 2 falls on January 3, so we will observe Epiphany on January 10, Baptism of our Lord on January 17, Epiphany 2 on January 24, and so on. This means that we will miss out on one of the Gospels at the end of Epiphany. It also means we are one Sunday off from the rest of Christendom for a few weeks. In Years A and C, the end of Epiphany Gospels have several pericopes from the Sermon on the Mount. Choosing to drop one of those works well in Years A and C. Year B is tougher sledding.

Occasionally when a minor festival falls near a Sunday, observe it. Preach St. Barnabas on a Sunday in June.

And as long as we’re breaking lectionary rules, consider breaking another. Occasionally when a minor festival falls near a Sunday, observe it. Preach St. Barnabas on a Sunday in June and thank God for the ā€œson of encouragementā€ and the work the Holy Spirit did through him. Schedule St. Michael for the Sunday near the fall equinox, and as the days grow shorter and the nights darker remember that we are not alone in the spiritual battle. The sanctoral cycle drove not only worship life but also the civil calendar in the western world for centuries. Could it find a place in your congregation’s worship life?

ā€œTherefore every teacher of the law who has become a disciple in the kingdom of heaven is like the owner of a house who brings out of his storeroom new treasures as well as oldā€ Matthew 13:52.

By Jonathan E. Schroeder

Pastor Schroeder serves as the chairman of the WELS Board for World Missions, first vice president of the South Atlantic District, and pastor at Faith, Sharpsburg, Georgia. Past service includes pastor-at-large on the WELS Synodical Council, moderator of the Institute of Worship and Outreach, executive committee member and chairman of the scripture committee of the WELS Hymnal Project, and editor and an author for the series Commentary on the Propers.


This article points to the wealth of resources available from the Musician’s Resource. At two WELS national leadership conferences some of this material accompanied old, heritage Lutheran hymns (along with some modern songs), for example, ā€œWhy Should Cross and Trial Grieve Meā€ (CW 831). Some participants were overheard commenting, ā€œThose don’t sound like old hymns at all.ā€ ā€œRight, quite fresh and appealing.ā€ Not that there is anything wrong with sounding old. In the realm of heritage furniture, we call priceless and highly appreciated items antiques. Antique does not mean obsolete or irrelevant. And so the Church—and even at times the wider culture—can value old hymns like ā€œOf the Father’s Love Begotten.ā€ Note how frequently this 13th century tune is heard in modern arrangements at Christmas.

For the benefits of flexibility plus continuity throughout WELS and not only in a single congregation, see the discussion of flexibility and one couple’s transfer to various kinds of WELS churches in Foundations, page 219 (NPH, 0303055).


Devote Yourself

1 Timothy 4:13: ā€œUntil I come, devote yourself to the public reading of Scripture, to preaching and to teaching.ā€

Coming this fall, WELS Congregational Services will offer a new newsletter called Devote Yourself. This newsletter will focus on providing ministers of the Word with helpful articles and practical approaches to teaching, preaching, and leading worship. This new newsletter will be an email subscription-based resource that replaces the current electronic newsletter, Teach the Word, as well as the mailed newsletters of Preach the Word, and Worship the Lord. Delivered on a bimonthly basis, you will find similar articles and helpful content that you have enjoyed in the past. The electronic version will not only save on printing and mailing costs but will also make it easier to include links and videos. The articles in Devote Yourself will also be posted on welscongregationalservcies.net. Watch for more information on the launch of this new newsletter resource.


 

WORSHIP

Learn about how WELS is assisting congregations by encouraging worship that glorifies God and proclaims Christ’s love.

GIVE A GIFT

WELS Commission on Worship provides resources for individuals and families nationwide. Consider supporting these ministries with your prayers and gifts.

 

Preach the Word – Discourse Analysis for Preaching

Themes in Current Homiletical Theory

Discourse Analysis for Preaching

Haddon Robinson was one of the most well-known homileticians of the late twentieth century. He was the Distinguished Professor of Preaching at Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary, but most remember him for his homiletics textbook Biblical Preaching, which is widely used in seminaries across America. After making his case for expository preaching, chapter 2 is devoted to ā€œThe Big Idea.ā€ Robinson laments what he calls ā€œfragmentationā€ in preaching, namely, how some preachers ā€œoffer little more than scattered comments based on words and phrases from a passage, making no attempt to show how the various thoughts fit together as a whole.ā€1 Robinson goes on provide biblical and communicative rationale for the importance of distilling one central theme—in other words, why ā€œa sermon should be a bullet, not buckshot.ā€2 In the homiletical world, Robinson has become synonymous with ā€œThe Big Idea.ā€

The terminology may differ—Robinson’s ā€œBig Idea,ā€ Chapell’s ā€œcentral theme statementā€ that passes the ā€œ3:00 A.M. test,ā€3 or Gerlach and Balge’s ā€œpropositional statementā€4—but basic homiletical theory emphasizes the importance of distilling the text into one central statement during the textual analysis stage of sermon development. But that begs the question—how do you determine ā€œthe big ideaā€ in preaching? Homileticians frequently tell preachers to determine a central idea when they are studying the text but not necessarily how to do so. For example, in his section on ā€œThe Formation of an Idea,ā€ Robinson says, ā€œBecause each paragraph, section, or subsection of Scripture contains an idea, we do not understand a passage until we can state its subject and complement exactly. While other questions emerge in the struggle to understand the meaning of a biblical writer, these two (ā€œWhat precisely is the author talking about?ā€ and ā€œWhat is the author saying about what he is talking about?ā€) are fundamental.ā€5 Later he gets slightly more specific, ā€œYou must become aware of the structure of the passage and distinguish between its major and supporting assertions.ā€6 Chapell lists two simple steps: (1) ā€œread and digest the passageā€ to determine the text’s main idea or an idea with enough material in the text and (2) ā€œmelt down this idea and develop it into one concise statement.ā€7 Gerlach and Balge encourage preachers to mark the major coordinate thoughts with a heavy line and then to mark the minor subordinate thoughts with a lighter line, grouping the subordinate thoughts under the coordinate thoughts.8

How do you determine the ā€œbig ideaā€ in preaching?

But to ask it again, ā€œHow exactly do you determine which are the main points and which are the subpoints?ā€ If the answer is not clear or explicit, it is no surprise that often textual analysis (if it is even done) rests on the preacher’s own intuitive instincts. Preachers do their best to group the text into various parts and then summarize what the text is all about. Because this method is based on different instincts, different preachers create different themes and parts and take their sermons in different directions. What is lacking in current homiletics is a more objective, data-driven, textual way to determine the big idea. Thankfully, a solution exists in another discipline of theology, namely, biblical studies, and more specifically, biblical linguistics.

Basic Features of Discourse Analysis

Linguistics is the formal, scholarly study of how language works. Many of us were trained in exegetical text studies that basically work like this: give an overly literal translation of the original text, analyze the verb forms, make some comments on the historical background or the doctrinal content, then go on to the next verse, and finally read some commentaries. Linguistics has shown that a text is far more than that.

Discourse analysis falls under linguistics. While the method of text study I described above is usually focused on aspects within the sentence itself,9 discourse analysis seeks to analyze the text on a more macro-level. It focuses on the clues an author has left embedded in the text to discern how each thought relates to one another, and which points the author intends to be the main points and which points the author intends to be the subordinate points. As David Black explains:

Generally speaking, discourse analysis is the attempt to study the organization of language above the sentence level. … Chief among the concerns of discourse analysis is to show the internal coherence or unity of a particular text. Discourse analysis involves a wholistic study of the text. It is not simply ā€œverse by verse analysisā€ (the method usually taught in seminaries and employed in most commentaries), but rather an analysis of how verses fit into the structural unity of the entire text. It is critical to realize that discourse analysis is not merely an investigation into the flow of thought of a text, but is at heart an investigation into how the text produces flow of thought.10

Discourse analysis focuses on the clues an author has left embedded in the text to discern how each thought relates to one another.

The renowned Bible translator Eugene Nida quipped that exposure to linguistics ā€œcan be a positive, although sometimes difficult, learning experience.ā€11 I need to warn pastors: the first time you are exposed to discourse analysis, it can be a rather frustrating experience filled with technical language. The problem is that formal discourse analysis, generally speaking, is not taught at the MDiv level but is reserved for postgraduate study.12 However, even if you have never studied discourse analysis, everyone practices a basic form of discourse analysis whenever they speak English. Consider this example:

While I was busy writing my sermon, my wife called. The day was a disaster. Our tired kids were screaming all day. So I decided to quickly wrap up my sermon and go home. After all, family is so important.

What’s the main point? There are certain clues in the text itself, words like ā€œwhile,ā€ ā€œso,ā€ and ā€œafter all.ā€ The hardest part of discourse analysis is when there are no connectives between sentences, but then we can make the implicit explicit by supplying the implied connectives. With that in mind, I can turn this example into a basic discourse analysis:

  • My wife called
  • (temporal) while I was busy writing my sermon
  • (general-specific) [She said] The day was a disaster
  • (grounds) [because] our tired kids were screaming all day.
  • (cause-effect) So I decided to quickly wrap up my sermon and go home.
  • (grounds) After all, family is so important.

This uncovers the second-to-last thought as the main one, namely, this made-up example of how my day went is communicating that I went home early because of the importance I was placing on my family.

Discourse Analysis Applied to Homiletical Text Analysis

The most recent edition of Logos Bible Software included discourse analysis and propositional outlines at a click of a button. I recently upgraded largely for that purpose alone, especially given its utility for sermon preparation. One downside to Logos’ propositional outlines, however, is that they give little help in determining the macro-view of the pericope. G.K Beale’s approach to discourse analysis, however, does explicitly identify which propositional relationships are superordinate and which are subordinate. Unfortunately, there is no standard terminology among scholars, so for simplicity’s sake here, I am focusing on the Greek NT, and I am using G.K. Beale’s terminology.13

Figure 1

Now we are at the point where we can see how discourse analysis plays out in an actual text analysis. Figure 1 is my formal discourse analysis for Revelation 20:1-6 (Proper 5B).

By way of orientation, the brackets signal the relationship between the propositions, and a superordinate relationship is identified by *. As you go further to the left, you get to more superordinate relationships. Each * needs to be connected to another * by a bracket, and so on and so forth until you have arrived at the main idea of the entire text. In my explanation below, the relationship signaled by these brackets will be highlighted in italics.

Let’s break this text down. First, I arrange my translation of the Greek text to the right, making sure to include all the Greek connective words.14 Those are highlighted in red. The Book of Revelation includes a series of seven visions that begin with, ā€œAnd I saw.ā€ Chapter 20 introduces the next vision of an angel (which I think is Christ), holding a key and a chain. V. 2-3a is a general-specific propositional relationship that further specifies what John saw the angel doing. V. 3b is a means-end propositional relationship that explains the goal or purpose of the angel binding Satan, followed by v. 3c, which notes a temporal relationship that places Satan’s loosening at the end of the millennium. By this point, we have v. 1-3 in place, and we can move on to the next phase of John’s vision in v. 4-6, the saints who are seated on thrones. In v. 4b-5a, the saints are contrasted with ā€œthe rest of the deadā€ in a positive-negative propositional relationship (A, instead of B; or not B, but rather A), which emphasizes the positive all the more. In other words, the rest of the dead did not live on with Christ, but the saints did. This is the more specific thing John saw regarding the saints who were seated on thrones and were given judgment in v. 4a (which here refers more to kingly rule than judicial decrees). Finally, the apostle John interprets the meaning of all this (a fact-interpretation propositional relationship) with his benediction about those who share in ā€œthe first resurrection.ā€ At this point, we have the propositional relationships in place for v. 1-3 and v. 4-6, but the most difficult part is determining how both relate to each other. Upon closer inspection, Satan’s binding during the millennium results in the saints’ rule with Christ (a cause-effect propositional relationship). So the ā€œbig ideaā€ of this text is in v. 6, namely, the saints’ priestly and royal reign with Christ. This highly debated text is riddled with interpretive issues—Satan’s binding, the millennium, physical vs. spiritual ā€œcoming to life,ā€ and so forth—but a discourse analysis helps the preacher keep the main point the main point: Christians share in Christ’s victory today.

Discourse analysis is hard. For me personally, the best part of preaching is the beginning and the end. I love text studies, and I love writing and preaching sermons. The most arduous part is the middle: the discipline of textual analysis and an extended outline. But the fruits of those painful labors will be seen when the final theme and parts and the final sermon are organically derived from the features of the text itself.

There are not a thousand sermons in every text.

A Thousand Sermons in Every Text?

This article has been interdisciplinary. I have taken one field, biblical linguistics, and applied it to another field, homiletics. Discourse analysis can seem to be quite technical (and admittedly, it is), but this article has shown the practical utility of discourse analysis or preaching. At times, I have listened to sermons—trying to go through every deductive or inductive homiletical outline or pattern I know in my head and yet still struggling to follow where the preacher is going—and then at the end I say to myself, ā€œI’m not quite sure that was the point of the text.ā€ I imagine many other pastors (and parishioners too!) have been in that situation. You could listen to a thousand preachers preaching the same text, and you could hear a thousand different sermons. As the old adage goes, ā€œThere are a thousand sermons in every text.ā€ When I first studied homiletics, I found it interesting to hear so many different themes and different sermons from seminary students preaching on the same text. The more I have studied homiletics since then, the more I am convinced that was not necessarily a good thing. There are not a thousand sermons in every text. Because preachers are bound by the text, they do not have the freedom to take the text and develop the sermon in a thousand different ways. This results in atomistic preaching that often isolates key passages of a preacher’s own choosing from the text.15 At best we could say, ā€œThere are a thousand applications in every text.ā€ Certainly, preaching on a passage like, ā€œLove your neighbor as yourself,ā€ will reveal a thousand different scenarios for different people in their different vocations. But even then, it would be more precise to say, ā€œThere are a thousand different examples of this one application.ā€ Like textual exposition, applications still need to be derived from the text, and the text gives us a finite amount of applications. This is why discourse analysis is so important for preaching. If preachers can do the hard work of wading through the technical language, they will come away with a textually grounded tool for determining the main point and application of the text that is sitting right in front of them.

Written by Jacob Haag

Rev. Dr. Haag serves at Redeemer Lutheran Church, Ann Arbor, MI. His doctorate is from Westminster Theological Seminary with research in New Testament and preaching. His research project was entitled ā€œEvangelical Exhortation: Paraenesis in the Epistles as Rhetorical Model for Preaching Sanctification.ā€ He also serves on the Michigan District Commission on Worship.


1 Haddon W. Robinson, Biblical Preaching: The Development and Delivery of Expository Messages, 2nd ed. (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Academic, 2001), 35.
2 Robinson, Biblical Preaching, 35–39, esp. 35.
3 Bryan Chapell, Christ-Centered Preaching, 2nd ed. (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Academic, 2005), 47, 136.
4 Joel Gerlach and Richard Balge, Preach the Gospel (Milwaukee: Northwestern, 1982), 25.
5 Robinson, Biblical Preaching, 42-43.
6 Robinson, Biblical Preaching, 67.
7 Chapell, Christ-Centered Preaching, 46-47.
8 Gerlach and Balge, Preach the Gospel 24-25, 28-32.
9 J.P. Louw laments this approach in sermons, ā€œEven Bible commentaries and sermons focus to a large extent on word meanings. Except for occasional references to historical or cultural issues, words and ā€˜what they mean’ have become the beginning and end of most attempts to arrive at a proper understanding of a passage.ā€ J.P. Louw, ā€œReading a Text as Discourse,ā€ in Linguistics and New Testament Interpretation: Essays on Discourse Analysis, ed. David Alan Black, Katharine G. L. Barnwell, and Stephen H. Levinsohn (Nashville: Broadman, 1992), 17. Later, he explains, ā€œLinguists insist that the meaning of a sentence is not merely the sum total of the meanings of the words comprising the sentence and, similarly, that discourses are not a matter of sentence meanings strung together. Reading a text involves far more than reading words and sentencesā€ (18).
10 David Alan Black, introduction to Linguistics and New Testament Interpretation, 12.
11 Eugene A. Nida, forward to Linguistics and New Testament Interpretation, 9.
12 For example, the preface of Wallace’s Greek Grammar—widely used to train pastors at seminaries across America—admits it does not treat discourse analysis. Daniel B. Wallace, Greek Grammar Beyond the Basics: An Exegetical Syntax of the New Testament (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 1996), xv.
13 G. K. Beale, Daniel J. Brendsel, and William A. Ross, An Interpretive Lexicon of New Testament Greek: Analysis of Prepositions, Adverbs, Particles, Relative Pronouns, and Conjunctions (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan Academic, 2014), esp. 7-12.
14 Unfortunately, John exhibits typical Semitic parataxis, and the numerous καὶ’s do not help the preacher. Clauses that begin with καὶ often signal a propositional relationship far deeper than ā€œand.ā€
15 I actually preach significantly longer sermons than I did when I first entered the ministry. My sermons are now about 2500 words (or about 30% longer). The reason is twofold. First, my study of discourse analysis has impressed on me the importance of expositing the entire pericope (as much as possible), in order to allow the hearers to see the text’s natural flow of thought. I believe longer sermons that are focused on the entire text (as opposed to shorter sermons that isolate a few passages in the text) will result in sermons that are more similar and more textually-grounded, no matter who is preaching them. Second, my study of the theology of preaching has impressed on me the importance of a sermon fulfilling all the philosophical obligations of preaching. I have grown less convinced that a 12-15 minute sermon, generally speaking, can do everything a sermon is meant to do. For this last point, see Tim Bourman’s series of Four Branches articles on sermon length (ā€œSermon Length Unleashed,ā€ December 2023; esp. ā€œā€˜Law/Gospel Obsession’ and Sermon Length,ā€ February 2024), accessible from www.wisluthsem.org/grow-in-grace-2024/the-four-branches-review.


For Further Study

Consider Prof. Ken Cherney’s online Summer Quarter class, ā€œLinguistics for Exegetesā€ (next offered in fall 2024).


Devote Yourself

1 Timothy 4:13: ā€œUntil I come, devote yourself to the public reading of Scripture, to preaching and to teaching.ā€

Coming this fall, WELS Congregational Services will offer a new newsletter called Devote Yourself. This newsletter will focus on providing ministers of the Word with helpful articles and practical approaches to teaching, preaching, and leading worship. This new newsletter will be an email subscription-based resource that replaces the current electronic newsletter, Teach the Word, as well as the mailed newsletters of Preach the Word and Worship the Lord. Delivered on a bimonthly basis, you will find similar articles and helpful content that you have enjoyed in the past. The electronic version will not only save on printing and mailing costs but will also make it easier to include links and videos. The articles in Devote Yourself will also be posted on welscongregationalservcies.net. Watch for more information on the launch of this new newsletter resource.


WORSHIP

Learn about how WELS is assisting congregations by encouraging worship that glorifies God and proclaims Christ’s love.

GIVE A GIFT

WELS Commission on Worship provides resources for individuals and families nationwide. Consider supporting these ministries with your prayers and gifts.

 

Faces of Faith – Brandi

On Easter Sunday 2024, several local families brought their children to the waters of baptism. One woman, Brandi, brought her two sons, Ryan and Ryley. Brandi has been working her way through Bible basics class in preparation for her adult confirmation. Here is what she says about our church: ā€œIntown is not just a church, it’s a home for us – with family, unconditional love, and spiritual healing. It’s our safe place when we don’t know where to go. It’s like a life coach who never lets us feel alone. To sum it all up, it’s life, growth, and creation for the better.ā€

Our connection with Brandi and her family began at a community service event called the Christmas Store. Their family is an example of how compassion ministry and providing physical aid can create loving relationships, which ultimately lead to deep spiritual growth.

Written by Lucas Bitter, home missionary at Intown, Atlanta, Ga.

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Heaven is the goal!

Marcelo grew up in Argentina but spent his entire adult life in his father’s home country of Costa Rica. An astute businessman, he worked in the insurance industry. In September 2020, he connected with Academia Cristo’s online classes. By September 2022, Marcelo had completed the first level of classes, and I began connecting with him one-on-one. Through these classes, Marcelo became a committed Lutheran. He also felt it was important to share what he had learned with others, so he started our second level of classes to train as a group planter.

L to R: Rev. Nathan Schulte, Alyssa Schulte, Flor, and Marcelo

I would visit Marcelo in Costa Rica and observe him leading his group. He was a confident leader, patient, and skilled at guiding discussions. Although Marcelo was a mature believer, leading his own Bible study group pushed him to grow even more. This past January, he called me to study the biblical support for why we can forgive someone else’s sins. His group had asked about it, and he wanted to learn more Bible passages for the conversation. We scheduled a Zoom meeting and started going through a few stories and Bible verses that show we have the privilege of announcing God’s forgiveness to people. One of the passages was from 2 Corinthians. ā€œWe are therefore Christ’s ambassadors, as though God were making his appeal through us. We implore you on Christ’s behalf: Be reconciled to God. God made him who had no sin to be sin for us, so that in him we might become the righteousness of God” (2 Corinthians 5:20-21). When we read this passage, Marcelo teared up. ā€œWow,ā€ he said, ā€œwe really can give this gift to others. That’s so special.ā€

Over the past two years, Marcelo was not only working on group planting , but he was also suffering from bone cancer. The cancer was painful, and soon he couldn’t work as much or meet with his Bible study group as often. Then, July 2, 2024, the Lord took Marcelo home. I miss Marcelo’s phone calls, his eagerness to learn more, and his correction of my Spanish when I made mistakes.

However, I am thankful to know that he is in heaven now. His passing is a powerful reminder of our purpose as missionaries. We want to bring people along to heaven with us. Heaven is the goal! Thank the Lord for the gospel.

Written by Rev. Nathan Schulte, world missionary on the Latin America mission team in Quito, Ecuador.

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Faces of Faith – Joann

Fairview Lutheran Church tried a new way to connect to its school families. Everything was ready, but when the event began, only current church members were there. Five minutes after the event started, evangelism began. Three minivans with over 20 school family members emptied and overfilled the bingo space. Fairview members quickly set up more tables, distributed snacks, and sat with families to assist some of the younger students who had never played bingo. It was busy, loud, and a bit chaotic. It was also blessed.

One of the school moms, Joann, stayed after the event and with her six children, cleaned up the area and made connections with some of the church ladies. They invited her to come to Fairview’s outdoor worship and picnic the following weekend. Joann and her family not only came to worship but found her way into helping serve the main course and clean up after. Before leaving she scheduled her first Bible information class for the upcoming Tuesday.

Despite having a car out of commission, Joann and family have been coming to worship and sitting up front ever since. The entire family was baptized, and the middle school children are enrolled in youth confirmation class. Joann has recently agreed to be trained and begin making evangelism calls to her fellow school families.

From Paul Steinberg, home missionary at Fairview in Milwaukee, Wis.

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