Lent Devotion

Christ, the life of all the living,
Christ, the death of death, our foe,
Who, Thyself for me once giving
To the darkest depths of woe:
Through Thy suff’rings, death, and merit
I eternal life inherit.
Thousand, thousand thanks shall be,
Dearest Jesus, unto Thee.
(LSB 420 st. 1)

“But he was pierced for our transgressions;
he was crushed for our iniquities;
upon him was the chastisement that brought us peace,
and with his wounds we are healed.”
Isaiah 53:5

“Don’t worry about it.” “It’s ok.” God never says these words. There is no cheap forgiveness with God. He doesn’t ignore our sin or simply brush it off and move on. He wants a restored relationship with us. Cheap forgiveness can look like a restored relationship, but there is always distance, a separation. Something must be done to bring two people back together.

While we rightfully should be punished for our sin, instead Jesus was pierced, crushed, chastised, and wounded. His suffering and death paid the price of our costly forgiveness. Jesus restores our relationship with God, bridging all separation. God’s reconciliation, which is costly, reunites warring parties as the relationship is made right. When others wrong us, we can forgive because Jesus paid the cost. When we sin against God, He forgives because Jesus paid the cost. God’s Word spoken through pastors is never cheap or easy. Jesus bled and died so that we may hear the words: “I forgive you.”

Let us pray: Heavenly Father, You sent Your Son to die in order that we may live. Heal us by His wounds and give us peace by His chastisement, that we may forgive others as You have forgiven us; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.

(Keith Kettner Sem. IV)

Lent Devotion

By Thy deep expiring groan,
By the sad sepulchral stone,
By the vault whose dark abode
Held in vain the rising God,
O, from earth to heav’n restored,
Mighty, reascended Lord,
Bending from Thy throne on high,
Hear our penitential cry!
LSB 419 st. 4

“And Jesus cried out again with a loud voice and yielded up his spirit.”
Matthew 27:50

All of God’s living creation has the inward desire to stay living. It is our natural instinct to survive at any cost. Jesus, being both divine but also mortal man, has this natural instinct as much as we do. Jesus in His passion had to set aside this fundamental desire to have life. Life was dear enough to him that he asked if His need to die could be taken from Him, but ultimately submitted to the Father’s will that He would give up His life (Matt. 26:39).

Jesus suffering on the cross was not simply a matter of endurance; it had to end in death. Jesus, though having His full power as God, had to submit to death. He had to endure the taunts that He should save Himself from it. It is one thing for a savior to suffer and endure, it is a much more shameful matter that a savior give up His life.

But we know that death was not the end for Jesus. Jesus would gain life from this, and promises the same for us. Let us take courage in Jesus’ submission to death, knowing that we all too must die. Like Jesus, we do not welcome death as a good thing, but we face it with the confidence that we will enter eternal life with our Lord Jesus.

Let us pray: Heavenly Father, Your Son Jesus gave Himself up even to death, knowing that He would rise up and promise a resurrection for all of us found to have faith in him. Give us confidence in this promise, so that we may face death knowing we have life in Him. Amen.

(Paul Gaschler, Sem. IV)

Lent Devotion

By Thine hour of dire despair,
By Thine agony of prayer,
By the cross, the nail, the thorn,
Piercing spear, and torturing scorn,
By the gloom that veiled the skies
O’er the dreadful sacrifice,
Listen to our humble sigh;
Hear our penitential cry!
LSB 419 st. 3

“It was about the sixth hour, and there was darkness over the whole land until the ninth hour, while the sun’s light failed. And the curtain of the temple was torn in two.”
Luke 23:44-45

Good Friday is still a long way off. Our focus has shifted from the joy of the arrival of our Savior to the darkness of our sins and expressing our grief and repentance in light of them. In our observance of the season of Lent, we can find ourselves trudging through the gloom looking often only towards the joy of Easter morning. However, on this first Friday of Lent we are a reminded that on our journey through this season, our eyes should be fixed on Good Friday; our eyes should be fixed on the cross.

It is not our own moanings and prayers and agonies that bring us forgiveness. Our salvation is found in Jesus Christ on that cross, giving up his very life in pain, despair, and innocence. Only when we see what He has done are we able to penitentially cry out to him, seeing that we are utterly unworthy and humble before Him. This is Lent: Jesus Christ, God with us, no longer veiled behind the curtain of the temple but before our very eyes, on the cross, dying for the sins of the world so that we may have eternal life with Him.

Let us Pray: O Christ, by your innocent suffering and death you have won for us the forgiveness of all our sins. Turn our eyes always to the cross so that through this time of Lent we would remember where our cries for mercy find relief, and our hope is found. In Your holy name we pray. Amen.

(Emilia Mugnolo, Deaconess Student)

Lutheran Theological Seminary in Pretoria

Prof. Pless’s Advanced Catechetics class.
Imposition of the Ashes during Ash Wednesday service at the LTS chapel.

Another faculty member taking advantage of the quarter break to teach beyond the city of Fort Wayne is Professor Pless. He is teaching a two-week intensive catechetic course on Baptism and the Lord’s Supper at the Lutheran Theological Seminary (LTS) in Pretoria (Tshwane), South Africa. The class began on February 25 and ends tomorrow.

He is also working with the St. Philip Lutheran Mission Society to expand and remodel the current library at LTS. The society was formed by CTSFW students following the spring of 2008 (now pastors themselves), after they traveled to LTS and saw not only the present but also future impact the seminary will have on confessional Lutheranism in Africa.

Prof. Pless presenting new books to the LTS library.

LTS serves students from several African countries, who are educated in Scripture and the Lutheran Confessions and then return to their countries for ordination in their home communities. The Mission Society raises financial aid in support of LTS, and funds have been secured and designated for this library project. Construction is expected to start in the near future, and Prof. Pless had the opportunity to present new books for the library.

You can learn more about LTS in Tshwane/Pretoria at www.lts.ac.za.

Dr. John T. Pless (left) with Dr. Mark Rabe, LCMS director for theological education in eastern and southern Africa, and Pastor Eric Skogaard of Elm Grove Lutheran Church in Elm Grove, Wisconsin, who is at LTS to teach an intensive course on the pastoral epistles.

Lent Devotion

By Thy helpless infant years,
By Thy life of want and tears,
By Thy days of deep distress
In the savage wilderness,
By the dread, mysterious hour
Of the_insulting tempter’s pow’r,
Turn, O turn a fav’ring eye;
Hear our penitential cry!
LSB 419 st. 2

“In the days of his flesh, Jesus offered up prayers and supplications, with loud cries and tears, to him who was able to save him from death, and he was heard because of his reverence.”
Hebrews 5:7

Lent can often seem like any other part of the year with the same joys and sorrows that take place, but for Christians it is a time of repentance and penitent prayer. We mourn over our sinful flesh and pray that God would grant us forgiveness. However, when we pray, we are not doing anything in and by ourselves that merits God’s favor. Instead, we join with Jesus in prayer.

Jesus Christ, God incarnate, offered up prayers and supplications as the great High Priest, and God the Father heard His prayers because of His reverence. Our comfort amid our sinful state is that the Father continues to hear our prayers because of Jesus’ intercession in the flesh. Even after His ascension He remains true man with flesh and blood and continues to intercede on our behalf. Thus, His prayer is now our prayer because of what He has done. As Luther said, “By means of such prayer He won for us and communicated to us the power and merit of His sacrifice, that is, forgiveness of sins, righteousness, and eternal life. Prayer like that is valid forever and works its power in all Christendom. In short, He continues to exercise this office as our Mediator and Advocate before God” (AE 13:320).

Let us pray: Lord God, heavenly Father, though we are sinful and unworthy of Your grace, we pray that You would have mercy on us and hear our pleas for forgiveness for the sake of Your Son who makes intercession on our behalf, through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.

(Garrett Buvinghausen, Sem. IV)

Urban Immersion

The ordination and installation of Rev. Robert Winston as assistant pastor through the SMP-Español/English program, standing in the middle of this group shot. Dr. Wiley is second to the right.

Dr. Don Wiley is another of our faculty members busy over the quarter break. We most recently spoke of him on our Facebook page in relation to his presentation to the women of the Seminary Guild regarding his work with the SMP–Español/English program. And thanks be to God, on Sunday, February 24, the Rev. Robert Winston was ordained and installed as assistant pastor at Prince of Peace Lutheran Church/Iglesia Luterana Nueva Vida in Springfield, VA, the very first man in the SMP-Español/English program here at CTSFW to reach this point. “The Lord of the harvest has added another laborer in the Gospel ministry of Word and Sacrament,” Dr. Wiley wrote on his Facebook page.

The Lutheran Mission Society Compassion Place. From left to right: Rev. Dr. David Maack (Executive Director), Rev. Elliott M. Robertson (pastor at Martini Lutheran Church), Vicar Bob Etheridge, seminarian Chase Lefort, seminarian Daniel Wunderlich, seminarian Austin Meier, seminarian Tim Steele II, and Dr. Don Wiley.

Dr. Don Wiley was near enough to the area to attend the ordination and installation because he and four seminarians were in Baltimore for a nine-day Urban Immersion Experience in the city. Hosted by the Lutheran Church of the Redeemer and Martini Lutheran Church, in conjunction with the Wyneken Project, they have immersed themselves in both the work and the city. From Dr. Wiley’s Facebook page:

“Today we learned about the mercy work of Lutheran congregations in Baltimore through the Lutheran Mission Society Compassion Place. It’s one more way that the congregations reach out to their communities with Christ’s love and Gospel. We had the pleasure of meeting the Executive Director, Rev. Dr. David Maack and ran into one of our Concordia Theological Seminary, Fort Wayne-CTSFW students currently on vicarage, Bob Etheridge.”

The seminarians also had the opportunity to plan, purchase food, prepare, and finally serve a meal to the needy. In Dr. Wiley’s words: “[They] served it up in style and with great compassion at Lutheran Church of the Redeemer…Great job, men!”

Left to right: Dr. Don Wiley, Chase Lefort, Tim Steele, Daniel Wunderlich, Austim Meier, purchasing food for the meal to the needy. Then serving the need, l-r: Tim Steele II, Daniel Wunderlich, Austin Meier.

Lent Devotion

Ash Wednesday

Savior, when in dust to Thee
Low we bow the adoring knee;
When, repentant, to the skies
Scarce we lift our weeping eyes;
O, by all Thy pains and woe
Suffered once for us below,
Bending from Thy throne on high,
Hear our penitential cry!
LSB 419:1

“But the tax collector, standing far off, would not even lift up his eyes to heaven, but beat his breast, saying ‘God, be merciful to me, a sinner!’”
Luke 18:13

Today we celebrate Ash Wednesday. Some might think that “celebrate” is the wrong word for the occasion. As we attend services today, we trade “Alleluia” for “Lord, have mercy.” We trade feasts for fasting. We don ashes on our foreheads and mourn our sinful state. So, how can this be a celebration? After all, this is a penitential season filled with lamentations and grief. It’s a time where we grieve the sinful state of our flesh, the death that sin brings, and the fact that our Savior had to become man and bear our sins so that we might be saved eternally.

Yet we will not remain in our state of grief forever. Because of Christ we now have hope. In His bitter suffering and death, we now have the hope of salvation which cannot be taken away from us. The ashes of this day are made in the sign of the cross, which you also received in Holy Baptism. That washing of water and the Word has cleansed us of the perishable dust from which man was brought forth and has renewed us by Christ’s imperishable life as fully man and fully God. So, as we mourn and make our pleas with God for redemption, we know that our prayer has been heard in Christ.

Let us pray: Lord God, as we don the ashes of our sin in this penitential season, have mercy on us and guide our focus to the cross of Christ where our sins were crucified once and for all. Amen.

(Garrett Buvinghausen, Sem. IV)

Retirement: Linda Scicluna

Friday was the last day before retirement for our dear friend and sister in Christ, Linda Scicluna. She has been with the Seminary since 2013; if you have ever visited the Wayne & Barbara Kroemer Library, you have probably met her. Rev. Professor Robert Roethemeyer (the Wakefield-Kroemer Director of Library and Information Services), said of her:

“Whether providing story time for our youngest patrons, a welcoming presence for the many faculty, students, staff, and visitors to the library, or now caring for her mom, Linda wonderfully embodies our mission of ‘caring for all.'”

Linda was also a familiar face at the Seminary Guild meetings, actively serving the Guild and taking care of many of the small details that keep an organization running smoothly. On a personal note, she was a delight to work with and we will miss her hardworking, warmhearted nature and presence. May God bless and keep you, Linda!

Linda (left) welcomes the ladies to a Seminary Guild meeting.