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3rd Annual Lutheran Lecture
Series
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The Church's Theology of Worship
Session 1- Worship in the Early Church
Dr. Kent Berreson Professor Concordia Sem. St Louis
Session 2- Luther's Theology of Worship
Music's Role in Preserving the Continuity of the Church
Dr. Ronald Feuerhahn Professor Concordia Sem St. Louis
Session 3- Liturgy the Renewal of the Church
The Divine Worship Service- Heaven and Earth Join Here
Dr. Arthur Just Concordia Theological Sem. Ft. Wayne
Session 4- An Analysis of the Contemporary Service
Can It Be Lutheranized?
Dr. John Pless Professor Concordia Theological Ft. Wayne
Date- October 15, 2005
Time-11am-4:30pm
Location- Mt. Olive Lutheran Church
2103 Mt Olive Church Rd
Newton, N.C. |
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Copyright © 2003
Last modified:
November 10, 2005
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The Crucifixion
of our Lord and Savior |
| (St. Louis:
Concordia Publishing House, N.D.)
[Adopted 1932]
6. We teach that the first man was
not brutelike nor merely capable of intellectual
development, but that God created man in His own image,
Gen. 1:26, 27; Eph. 4:24; Col. 3:10, that is, in true
knowledge of God and in true righteousness and holiness
and endowed with a truly scientific knowledge of nature,
Gen. 2:19-23.
7. We furthermore teach that sin
came into the world by the fall of the first man, as
described [sic] Gen. 3. By this Fall not only he
himself, but also his natural offspring have lost the
original knowledge, righteousness, and holiness, and
thus all men are sinners already by birth, dead in sins,
inclined to all evil, and subject to the wrath of God,
Rom. 5:12, 18; Eph. 2:1-3. We teach also that men are
unable, through any efforts of their own or by the aid
of "culture and science," to reconcile
themselves to God and thus conquer death and damnation.
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