Tag Archives: Festival

Our Saviour Parish News, October, 2025



OUR SAVIOUR LUTHERAN CHURCH

3301 The Alameda
Baltimore, MD 21218
410.235.9553
October, 2025

Sunday, October 5th
Family Day and
The 95th Anniversary of the Dedication of
the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Our Saviour
Festival Divine Service, 11:00 A.M.
Preacher: The Rev. Dr. Dien Ashley Taylor
Bishop/President of the Atlantic District of
The Lutheran Church – Missouri Synod

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,

Our Saviour Lutheran Church as it exists today is the result of the merger back in 1973 of the Church of Our Saviour which had been founded as Jackson Square Church in 1892 and of Saint Matthew’s Church which had been founded in 1929. When in 1919 the Jackson Square congregation moved from its original location near the John Hopkins Hospital to the corner of 33rd Street and The Alameda, a wooden chapel was built and the congregation took the name of the Church of Our Saviour. You can see the wooden chapel in the special picture at the top of this newsletter, which is a copy of a postcard which appeared not long after the dedication of the church in 1930. The preacher for our celebration of the 95th anniversary of dedication will be the Rev. Dr. Dien Ashley Taylor (pictured) who is the Bishop/President of the Atlantic District of our Synod. An engaging preacher, he is the first African American district president in the history of our Synod.

Three districts of our Synod – the English, the Atlantic and as of this year our Southeastern District – now use the title bishop for their district presidents, the title used since ancient times for the pastors who supervise the doctrine and practice of pastors and congregations. Most Lutheran churches around the world use the title bishop and the Lutheran churches of Scandinavia have retained the office of bishop since the time of the Reformation. The bishops of the Church of Sweden wear the bishop’s mitre as do the bishops of those African and Asian churches founded by Swedish missionaries. At the installation of Pastor Harrison as President of Synod the Lutheran Archbishop of Kenya (who was the preacher on that occasion) wore the mitre. The bishops of our English and Atlantic districts on occasion wear the mitre as a symbol of their office.

When Our Saviour Church was dedicated in 1930 the preacher was Pastor William Dallman who had led the group of laymen who had been members of Immanuel Church in founding our congregation. His sermon topic was “Confessing Christ in Augsburg in 1530 and in Baltimore in 1930.” 1930 was the 400th anniversary of the presentation of the Augsburg Confession to Emperor Charles V. Although Luther’s posting of his 95th Theses on October 31st 1517 is considered the beginning of the Reformation, it was at the council of the Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation in Augsburg in 1530 that the Lutheran Church appeared as a distinct confession within the one Church of Christ. The Confession presented to the Emperor in Augsburg was intended to be nothing more and nothing less than a confession of the one faith of the one Church of Christ. So important is this principal confession of the faith of the Lutheran Church that the cornerstone of our church is marked with the letters UAC which stand for Unaltered Augsburg Confession. Why do we say “Unaltered”? Because the Augsburg Confession had once been altered, subtly changed in such a way that those who in fact denied the Real Presence of Christ’s Body and Blood in the Sacrament could falsely claim that they embraced its teaching – though they did not! And so when pastors at their ordination promise to be faithful to the Unaltered Augsburg Confession and congregations in their constitutions subscribe to the Unaltered Augsburg Confession or – like our congregation – place the letters UAC on their church cornerstones, they are in fact confessing the Real Presence of Christ’s true Body and Blood in the Sacrament, that beating heart of the Church’s life. The Augsburg Confession can easily be found online and we do have copies at church. Just ask!

On Sunday, October 12th, our Sunday Bible Class will reconvene after the summer hiatus. We are studying the Smalcald Articles of Dr Luther, one of the doctrinal confessions of the Lutheran Church. Like the other confessions of our Church, the Smalcald Articles are a summary of biblical teaching. Come join us! Questions are very welcome! We meet at 9:45 A.M.

The fall Voters Meeting will take place after Divine Service on October 19th. Every member of Our Saviour Church, 18 years and older, may participate. Why not join us and learn more about our congregation’s work? Your input is very welcome! The meeting almost never lasts more than an hour.

The last Sunday in October is Reformation Sunday, October 31st being the 508th anniversary of Luther’s posting of his 95 Theses on the door of the Castle Church of All Saints in Wittenberg. The Reformation was just that: a reformation of the one Church of Christ and in no sense the beginning of some new Church. At the Reformation all those things which had come to obscure or even deny the Gospel were reformed so that the Gospel of the free grace of God in His crucified and risen Son might shine forth in all its splendor.

Katherine Gray has returned home following hospitalization and recovery at Autumn Lake Healthcare at Homewood. Her home address is 725 East 21st Street 21218.

As of this writing, Paul Swank is hospitalized at Bayview Hospital. Yolanda Ford is now at Autumn Lake Healthcare at Perring Parkway, 1801 Wentworth Road, Parkville, MD 21234. Keep these fellow members in your prayers.

Be sure to read Judy Volkman’s report on our Free Flea Markets as found at the end of this newsletter. Remember to keep bringing items for the GEDCO Food Pantry and personal items for the Helping Up Mission. The truly desperate situation in Sudan and in Gaza and the ongoing Russian aggression in Ukraine require all the help the peoples of the world can provide. Remember that you can help through our Synod’s Contributor Care Line (888-030-4439) or through the secure website: lcms.org/givenow/mercy. You can also send a check to LCMS World Relief and Human Care, PO Box 66861, Saint Louis, MO 63166-6801. Make your check payable to LCMS and mark the check for LCMS World Relief and Human Care.

We continue to remember in our prayers: Bridget Bauman, James Bauman, Christopher Bell, Bertha Buchanan, Dana Carmichael, Tim Doswell, Quilla Downs, Bunny Duckett, Joyce Eaves, Albert Ford, Frank Ford, Iris Ford, Yolanda Ford, Sean Fortune, Lynne Funck, Katherine Gray, Sherry James, Gloria Jones, Byron Masterson, Crista Mohr, Mary Mokris, Elliott Robertson, Julia Silver, Robert Siperek Jr., Lawrence Smallwood, Paul Swank, George Volkman, Gary Watson; Marvalisa, Sierra, Jonathan and Steven Gibson.

When I think about the unhappy divisions in our country today, my thoughts often turn to the luminous words of Abraham Lincoln’s Second Inaugural Address, given in the waning days of a civil war with (according to recent research) 800,000 casualties, an address given little more than a month before his assassination. Addressing the war weary American people, this is what he said: “With malice toward none, with charity for all, with firmness in the right as God gives us to see the right, let us…strive to bind up the nation’s wounds… to do all which may achieve and cherish a just and lasting peace among ourselves, and with all nations.” Lincoln addressed very different circumstances, but his words spoken in those very different circumstances reflect a spirit which speaks down through all the ages. As we say in the Divine Service, “For the peace of the whole world, for the well being of the Church of God, and for the unity of all, let us pray to the Lord.”

Affectionately in our risen Lord,

Pastor McClean

Free Flea Market

Our Free Flea Markets have concluded for the year and have been very successful. A total of 199 people have attended the 5 openings this year and received 1583 (this includes items such as a set of dishes or a set of bed linens=1 ticket).

Outreach was also expanded to include individuals who receive support of St. Peter’s Learning Center in South Baltimore. The focus is to include them in community activities. Many come from disadvantaged families and so this is expanding our support to those who need it. They are people with intellectual disabilities and they attended on separate days when I opened the church for them. They attended 4 times, totalling 131 people and receiving 1310 items.

All this could not be accomplished without the assistance of faithful volunteers. They are: Pastor McClean, Bernie Knox, Mary Techau, Wayne West, Jean West, Eugene James, Gary Watson, Dennis Watson, Gabe Purviance, Kayle Buck. Many kudos to them for their assistance in keeping order and making sure there were plenty of items for shoppers to choose from.

In the past year, a number of people who have attended have also contributed to our inventory. It is good to see that those who received are also willing to share their bounty with us. We will still need your support with donations for next season, since we have completely depleted our stock (clothes went to Orphan Grain Train and household items to Savers). Items will be accepted on Sundays since we don’t want items left outside to be damaged by the weather.

In summary, since 2014 (11 years), 1744 people have attended and 13,479 items were distributed. That is a pretty good statistic for a small congregation at the corner of 33rd Street and The Alameda. The Lord has provided us with bounty and we have shared it!

– Judy Volkman

All Saints Day (2015)

OSLC 5All Saints Day

November 1, 2015 AD

First Reading: Revelation 7:9-17

Epistle: 1 John 3:1-3

Gospel: Matthew 5:1-12

Click here to listen and subscribe to Pastor McClean’s sermons on iTunes.


Whenever we say the Apostles’ Creed— and if we follow Dr. Luther’s instructions in the Small Catechism we say the Apostles Creed twice a day, morning and evening— whenever we say that Creed we confess our faith in the Holy Christian Church the Communion of Saints: the Holy Christian Church which is the Communion of Saints. And it is especially on this Festival of All Saints that we rejoice in this truth— or, to speak more accurately, in this blessed reality.

It was Pastor Wilhelm Löhe, one of the great Fathers of the Lutheran Church during the nineteenth century, who said:

When I was young I thirsted for an eternal fellowship. Now I know an eternal fellowship which becomes more and more close and binding— the holy Church! From it death shall not separate me, but death will for the first time bring me to complete enjoyment of love and fellowship. [For] there is one eternal Church, part to be found here, and part to be found in eternity.

I believe in the Holy Christian Church, the Communion of Saints— here on earth and there in heaven. As we sang in William Walsham Howe’s wonderful hymn:

O blest communion, fellowship divine!
We feebly struggle, they in glory shine:
Yet all are one in Thee for all are Thine.

Or as we sang in the sermon hymn:

One family we dwell in Him,
One Church above, beneath:
Though now divided by the stream
The narrow stream of death.

I believe in the Holy Christian Church, the Communion of Saints.

Long before the coming of our Lord the author of the Book of Proverbs said: “Where there is no vision, the people perish.” Well in the first reading from Holy Scripture we have a fragment of the vision of Saint John exiled on the island of Patmos in the Aegean Sea. We usually call that vision The Revelation to Saint John. And at its very beginning Saint John says, “I was in the Spirit on the Lord’s Day”— the day when all the seven churches of Asia Minor to which he wrote would have been gathered for the weekly celebration of the Holy Communion on the day of the Lord’s resurrection. The late Austin Farrer put it this way:

One Sunday it happened that St John could not be at church with his friends, for like Elisha, like Jesus, he was taken by the armed men and held in prison. But God consoled him with a vision: he saw the Christian sacrament that morning not as we human beings see it, but as it is seen in heaven. His spirit went up; he saw the throne of glory and the four cherubim full of eyes in every part who sleep not saying Holy, Holy, Holy. And he saw the Lamb of God: a Lamb standing as though slaughtered; a Lamb alone worthy to open for mankind the blessed promises of God. He saw the Lamb, and then the angels. I saw, he says, and heard the voice of many angels round about the Throne, the number of them ten thousand times ten thousand and thousands of thousands, saying with a loud voice: Worthy is the Lamb that was slain to be receive power and riches and wisdom and honor and glory and blessing…

And he saw the saints standing before the throne of God and the Lamb. And who are the saints? Those who had come out of great tribulation and had washed their robes and made them white in the blood of the Lamb, the gentle Lamb who leads to springs of living waters and wipes away every tear from their eyes.

You and I are not yet there. We are only on the journey; they are at journey’s end— in the nearer presence of the Lord in whom is all our life and hope. As Pastor Löhe said, “There is one eternal Church, part to be found here and part to be found in eternity.” But it is one eternal Church, and both here on earth and there in heaven Christ’s people worship before the throne of God and the Lamb. In heaven the saints see Him. Here on earth we find Him hidden under the outward appearances of bread and wine. But we with the saints in heaven acclaim Him as the Lamb slain for us all, washing away our sins through His most precious Blood, feeding us with the heavenly Food for our journey— His Body given, His blood shed— and worshipping Him as do the saints and the angels in the words of the thrice holy hymn: Holy, Holy, Holy, Lord God of Sabaoth: Heaven and earth are full of Thy glory. Hosanna in the highest!

I believe in the Holy Christian Church: the Communion of Saints. God grant that we may rejoice not only on this All Saints Day but every day in that blest communion, fellowship divine, until we too are called to Christ’s nearer presence and join in worshipping Him before the throne of God and the Lamb.

And now the peace of God which passes all understanding keep your hearts and minds in Christ Jesus, to live everlasting. +Amen.