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January, 28, 2008
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For Lent
and the Sundays of Easter
Rich in Grace: The Bible of the Poor of
21st-Century Christians by Kathryn Ann Hill, is a fine
resource for the pastor who is looking for devotional material
suitable for parishioners’ personal use or as a resource
for Bible classes before and after the Feast of the Resurrection.
ALPB Treasurer Dorothy Zelenko wrote the following that appeared
on the back of the 2007 ALPB Christmas Appeal Letter where the
book was announced for the first time:
“At
the start of this lovely volume, Kathryn Ann Hill quotes from
Matthew 13:52: ‘Therefore every scribe who has been trained
for the kingdom of heaven is like a householder who brings out
of his treasure what is new and what is old.’ And that
is exactly what she has done in Rich in Grace: The Bible
for the Poor for 21st-Century Christians. The ‘old’
things are the 38 woodcut images carefully reproduced from a
15th-century ‘blockbook’. Each image depicts a scene
from the life of Christ along with two scenes on either side
usually from the Old Testament. The ‘new’ things
are the brief meditations in poetic form that Hill has written
for each image. The original Biblia Pauperum was intended to
teach ordinary people both Bible stories and the elements of
the Christian faith. This volume can be used in the same way,
even by Christian parents with their children. But a thoroughly
Biblically literate pastor or layperson will also find much
that is surprising and new here in some of the Old Testament
stories chosen by the 15th-century artists and in many of the
connections that are made in the poems. This is a large size
volume (8” x 10”) with a beautifully colored cover
… and full-page images printed on rich creamy paper. Jesus
Christ is literally at the center of each image and is at the
heart of each poem.”
Dr. Francis C. Rossow, Professor Emeritus, Concordia Seminary,
St. Louis, in reviewing Rich in Grace for the
ALPB wrote: “Repeatedly in her poems Kathryn Hill takes
the jewels mined by the medieval authors and gives them the
kind of setting that enhances their worth and splendor….
Her poems are not only an orthodox and devout witness to the
Gospel – they are an artistic witness to that Gospel.”
Paper, 86 pp. $10.00 plus $2.50 postage for one volume,
$.40 for each additional volume
New for 2008,

Richard Bansemer gives to
the church another wonderful gift from his pen, Forced to Pray:
God’s Chosen Under Pressure. Again, to whet your
appetite in regard to this book I would quote from a review
by Dorothy Zelenko as it appeared as part of the Christmas Appeal
Letter:
“Richard Bansemer has thought a lot about prayer. His
O Lord, Teach Me to Pray, a catechetical prayer book based on
Luther’s catechism and published in 1995 has been the
ALPB’s single best-selling book. His We Believe, a prayer
book for adults based on the Augsburg Confession, has been used
by thousands of individuals in study groups and personally.
Bansemer, a retired bishop of the ELCA’s Virginia Synod,
knows that praying the psalms or the prayers of the church at
worship or prayers based on the Catechism or the Confessions
can help us grow into the kind of people who order their lives
by God’s priorities. But in this new volume, Forced to
Pray: God’s Chosen Under Pressure, he approaches prayer
from a different angle and looks at the prayer of the person
who finds himself in difficult circumstances, with a heavy burden
thrust upon him, and literally forced to pray by what has befallen
him. He examines the lives and prayers of 5 persons in the Bible
___ Jonah, Job, Mary, Jesus and Paul ___ and considers how God
might likewise drive us to pray by choosing us for some ‘hard
heavenly work on earth.’”
Forced to Pray is available
at $12.50 plus $2.50 for postage ($.40 postage for each additional
copy). Paper, about 144 pp.
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July, 10 2007
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Dinner To Honor Pastor Russell Saltzman
On His Retirement After Seventeen Years As Editor Of “Forum
Letter”
I doubt there is any well-informed Lutheran or
others who have not heard that Pastor Russell Saltzman will
be retiring as Editor of the “Forum Letter” with
the sending out of the August issue. The ALPB Board of
Directors is grateful for the seventeen years he has served
as Editor, longer than his predecessors: Richard Koenig and
Richard Neuhaus. To express our appreciation and make it possible
for those living in the New York area or who may be visiting
the area in mid-October, a Board Dinner honoring Russell will
be held on Saturday, October 13th at Immanuel Lutheran Church,
122 East 88th Street, Manhattan, NY at 6 PM. The dinner
speaker will be Father Richard John Neuhaus, Editor in Chief
of First Things. The cost of the dinner will be $50.00
per person. To make a reservation for the dinner or to receive
more information contact Donna Roche by phone at (607) 746-7511
or e-mail at dkralpb@aol.com.
New “Forum Letter” Editor
Chosen
At the May 22nd meeting of the Board of Directors of the American
Lutheran Publicity Bureau Pastor Richard O. Johnson was unanimously
elected the new editor of “Forum Letter” beginning
with the September issue. Richard is no stranger to readers
of “Forum Letter” having served as Russell
Saltzman’s Associate Editor. Richard Johnson serves
as pastor of Peace Lutheran Church, an ELCA congregation in
Grass Valley, California (since 1984) and is a member of the
Society of the Holy Trinity. He received his B.A. from San Francisco
State University in Philosophy and Relgion; an M. Div. from
Yale; and a Ph.D. in church history from the Graduate Theological
Union. He has serrved as Adjunct Professor at Pacific Lutheran
Theological Seminary and Fuller Theological Seminary's Northern
California Extension. He has written articles for Lutheran Quarterly
and Word and World and delivered several papers at the Lutheran
Historical Conference. He and his wife of 29 years, Lois Solberg
Johnson, are the parents of two children: Luke, currently working
as a journalist in Beijing for the China Daily, and Johanna,
a second-year student at Yale Divinity School.
For those who do not know Richard the photo below
was taken at the May 22nd meeting, following his interview with
the board and election.

Associate Editor Peter Speckhard serves Faith
Lutheran Church in Green Bay, Wisconsin, and has previously
served as Associate Pastor, also at Faith, and missionary-at-large
for the Northern Illinois District of the LCMS, planting Community
of Faith Lutheran Church in Spring Grove, Illinois. He is a
1997 graduate of Concordia Seminary, St. Louis (though he attended
both LCMS seminaries, transferring from Ft. Wayne after one
year due to a job opportunity for his wife in St. Louis) and
a 1992 graduate of Valparaiso University, where he received
a B.A. in English as a Christ College associate. He has also
served in the U.S. Army Reserves, has participated in the pastor-theologian
program of the Center for Theological Inquiry in Princeton,
NJ, and has served on the boards of various LCMS-affiliated
schools and organizations. He is married to Heidi, a Latin teacher-turned-homemaker
and has five children
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October, 25 2006
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I am rather confident that most subscribers to
the “Lutheran Forum Package” know that Pastor Ronald
Bagnall retired as Editor of Lutheran Forum with his
completion of the Summer, 2006 issue and after ten years of
outstanding service. As Pastor John Hannah wrote in the October
issue of Lutheran Forum, “Ron will long be remembered
for his faithful service at Lutheran Forum. His immediate
reform of the Lutheran Forum layout made the journal
so much easier to read. I suspect that Ron will be best remembered
for his very carefully selected colored covers that greatly
enhanced its attractiveness. He has certainly set a high standard
for his successors. His stewardship coincided with a critical
time for American Lutheranism and Ron has been faithful in constantly
calling us to the confessionalism and evangelical catholicity
which marks the ALPB.”
At the September 23rd meeting of the American
Lutheran Publicity Bureau board of directors, Pastors Sarah
Hinlicky Wilson and Paul Sauer were unanimously elected respectively,
Editor and Associate Editor. Pastor Sauer at an earlier meeting
had been elected Interim Editor.

Lutheran Forum staff
elected at the September 23rd meeting of the ALPB Board
of Directors meeting: Pastor Paul Sauer, Associate
Editor, and Pastor Sarah Hinlicky Wilson, Editor, engage
in coversation following their election.
Sarah received her B.A. in Theology and
Philosophy from Lenoir--Rhyne College and her M. Div. from Princeton
Seminary. She is currently working on her Ph.D. at Princeton
Seminary which she expects to receive in 2009. Sarah presently
serves in a part-time call as Pastor of St. John Lutheran Church,
Trenton, NJ. In 1999-98 she served as Editorial and Research
Assistant at First Things, and many of her writings
for that journal can be found on the First Things website. She
has also written for Books and Culture, Christianity
Today, and Lutheran Forum among many others. Sarah’s
many book credits include “The Great Reunion Beyond,”
reprinted from Christianity Today in Best Christian
Writing (2002) and “Seminary Sanity,” reprinted
from First Things in Best Christian Writing (2001).
She is married to Andrew Wilson, also a Ph.D. student at Princeton
and they have a son, Ezekiel. Andrew will assist with the layout
and production of the journal.
Pastor Paul Sauer received his B.A in Classical Civilizations
from Valparaiso University and his M.Div. and S.T.M. from Concordia
Seminary, St. Louis. He serves as Pastor at the Lutheran School
and Church of Our Saviour, Bronx, NY and is a member of the
ALPB board of directors. He has written several articles in
Lutheran Forum and has just recently completed the final
editing for the ALPB book, Lively Stone: The Autobiography
of Berthold von Schenk, edited by Pastors G. George Fry
and Joel R. Kurz. Paul also serves as Secretary of the Atlantic
District, LCMS and as an instructor in both the LCMS and ELCA
deacon program. He and his wife Jessica, a trained Lutheran
high school teacher and presently a stay-home Mom, have two
children, Katharine and Rosie.
Sarah and Paul will begin their work together as they prepare
for the October, 2007 issue of Lutheran Forum. At the
ALPB board meeting Sarah said I want to write and edit Lutheran
Forum in such a way that I will gain the trust of our Lutheran
Church – Missouri Synod subscribers and Paul said the
same in regard to readers from the Evangelical Lutheran Church
in America. Sarah and Paul will undoubtedly be the two youngest
editors of any theological journal and they promise to bring
to the journal the writings of the younger pastors and theologians
of our two Lutheran traditions and others, while continuing
to seek out the writings of our more mature and seasoned pastors
and theologians along with writers from other traditions of
the one holy catholic and apostolic church. The members of the
ALPB board are thrilled and excited with the future of Lutheran
Forum as these two young pastors continue to bring us the
best writings that will engage the church in a call to confessionalism
and evangelical catholicity.
Yours in Christ,
Frederick J. Schumacher
Executive Director |
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October 2, 2006
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The
Church
Selected Writings of Arthur Carl Piepkorn
This 2nd edition of The Church: Selected Writings of
Arthur Carl Piepkorn has been updated by editors Michael P.
Plekon and William S. Wiecher and retains the Afterword by Richard
John Neuhaus is now available as the first of four new Piepkorn
volumes: Volume I, 346 pages: $17.00 (plus postage).
For information on the additional Piepkorn volumes
contact the
editor, Philip J. Secker, at psecker@snet.net.
Vol. 1
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September 30, 2006
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Lively
Stone
C. George Fry & Joel R. Kurz
Berthold von Schenk marched to a different drummer. He was never
part of any political party in his church body; he was often
shunned and ridiculed. Yet he remained as stable as stone while
displaying a vibrancy not unlike that of the varied and flowing
colors of polished marble.
This volume traces von Schenk's
ministry in various locations as well as his thoughts on evangelism,
ecumenism, liturgical renewal and much more. C. George Fry &
Joel R. Kurz, editors Foreword by John Hannah 152 pp.: $12.50
(plus postage)
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October 19, 2005
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A
HANDBOOK FOR THE CHRISTIAN LIFE IN THE 21ST CENTURY
BY PROFESSOR ERIC W. GRITSCH
The price for the 72 page Handbook is $5.50 each including postage,
and $4.00 each for 5 or more copies. The Handbook
is an ideal text for an adult study group committed to asking
hard questions and desiring to have their lives formed in the
image of Christ. In the Introduction Professor Eric Gritsch
writes, "This Handbook has only one pedagogical
prerequisite: Curious minds who wonder about everyday life and
search for meaning, indeed have sensed the phenomenon of survival.
Any group of any size from all walks of life, or from
any Christian denomination, is invited to use this Handbook.
It invites Christians and non-Christians to assess the experience
of evil and the need for justice as essential parts of human
existence. Salvation from evil, sin and death through
faith in Jesus Christ is offered to anyone in the world.
This distinction between the struggle for justice (law) and
the promise of a never-ending life with God through Christ
(gospel) puts the stamp Lutheran on this handbook. Lutheranism
began as a reform movement within the Western church for the
preservation and nurture of the essential teachings of the church
catholic. The task of reform continues, and thus a Lutheran
handbook is simultaneously an ecumenical handbook. Its
instruction is offered to all Christians.
"The Handbook has
7 chapters -- beginning with Evil, followed by Justice, Baptism,
Church, The Lord's Supper, Prayer, --- and ending with,
Music.
Professor Eric
W. Gritsch is Emeritus Professor of Church History, Gettysburg
Lutheran Semnary wherehe also directed the Institute for Luther
Studies. A native of Austria, he experienced firsthand the reign
of Adolf Hitler and the tyranny of Communism; he came
to the United States in 1954. He received his Ph.D.
from Yale University and is an ordained minister of the Evangelical
Lutheran Church in America. He is the author of Bibliography
of the Continental Reformation (with Roland Bainton) [materials
available in English], Lutheranism (with Robert W. Jenson), Thomas
Muntzer: A Tragedy of Errors, Martin -- God's Court Jester:
Luther in Retrospect, Born Againism, Fortress Introduction
to Lutheranism, A History of Lutheranism. He has edited volumes
39 and 41 of the American Edition of Luther's Works, selected
Writings for Roman Catholics in Martin Luther --Faith in
Christ and the Gospel and four volumes of Encounters With Luther,
(Lectures, Discussions and Sermons at the Institute for Luther
Studies, Gettysburg Lutheran Seminary). He participated
for two decades in the North Amerilcan Lutheran-Catholic
Dialogue; served for a decade on the Board of the Ecumenical
Institute of the Lutheran World Federation in Strasbourg,
France; he is a member of the International Congress for
Luthe Research; a member of the Board of the Ecumnical Institute
of Theology, St. Mary's Seminary and University in Baltimore. He
and his spouse Bonnie live in Baltimore, Maryland. |
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October 5, 2005
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ANNOUNCING
The Daily Prayer of the Church
by Philip H. Pfatteicher
long-awaited,
decades in preparation, is Now Available.
A complete prayer book “in the ancient way of offices”
text and music, including
Evening Prayer for each season of the Church year
(Advent, Christmas-Epiphany, General Time, Lent, Holy Week,
Easter)
Morning Prayer for each season of the Church year
Compline
Forms for Prayer during the Day (mid-morning, noon, mid-afternoon)
Proper antiphons with each Psalm and with the Gospel Canticles
Psalm prayers and prayers appropriate for each Old Testament
and New Testament canticle
Hymns ancient and modern with music
Two-year BCP-LBW daily lectionary
Proper Responsories in Morning Prayer
An ecumenical course of collects, ancient and modern,
for every Sunday of the year and for every day of Christmas,
Lent, and Easter
An enriched calendar of festivals and commemorations
Prayers, intercessions, devotional prayers
A treasury of prayer beloved of those familiar with Anglican,
Lutheran, Roman Catholic traditions through the centuries
Arranged to facilitate use by clergy and laity; a prayer
book for all the people of God
Intended for the faithful of many denominations, to be used
whole or in part,
in private, in families or small groups, in churches
A companion book to the four-volume For All the Saints,
which may conveniently serve as a lectionary
.Available from
Lutheran University Press
P.O. Box 390759
Minneapolis, MN 55439
Price: $49.50 including postage
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Check out our new
Forum Online!
Online discussion, article reprints,
and new articles unpublished elsewhere.
May, 2004
Recent Awards
The oldest religious press association in North America, the
Associated Church Press, founded in 1916 (two years after
the American Lutheran Publicity Bureau), is an international community
of communication professionals brought together by faithfulness to
their craft and by a common task of reflecting, describing, and supporting
the life of faith and the Christian community. Nearly 200 publications,
websites, news services, and individuals are ACP members, representing
a combined circulation of several million readers. Among perhaps 1,000
contestants in several categories, Forum Letter received two
second-place awards for articles that appeared in 2003. In 2002 "Omnium
Gatherum" received an honorable mention (third place among columns).
Editorials:
Award of Merit: Forum Letter for "A Press Release
for Congress" by Pr. Russell E. Saltzman, March 2003. "In
crisp language the editorial suggests that it is not the task of the
church to take partisan stands on the issues or suggest that there
is a correct political view based on church membership."
Convention Coverage:
Award of Merit: Forum Letter for "The Mark Hanson Show:
ELCA Lutherans at Milwaukee"
by Pr. Russell E. Saltzman and Pr. W. Steven Shipman, October 2003.
"This entry displays good writing and nice compartmentalizing
of the various topics."
April, 2004
Christian Sexuality: Normative and Pastoral Principles
by Russell
E. Saltzman (Editor)
Published jointly by ALPB Books and Kirk House Publishers.
Available at www.Amazon.com and
at www.kirkhouse.com
List Price: $15.00

Lee Griffin, M.D., Psychiatrist,
Theologian
A vital read. This volume constitutes
a clarifying light of truth.
Paul L Maier, Professor of History
In support of the overpowering evidence
of scripture and two millennia of church tradition.
Walter Sundberg, Professor of Church
History, Luther Seminary (From the Back Cover)
An indispensable text for those who feel
that the mainline church in America has lost its way in sexual ethics.
Jaynan Clark Egland, President/CEO,
WordAlone Network (From the Back Cover)
A faithful presentation of Christ's
boundless love that confronts each of us with real and necessary boundaries.
Book Description
This book is a collection of nine essays
mostly by Lutheran scholars and church leaders who, from various perspectives
(scriptural, theological, pastoral, socio-scientific), defend the
church's traditional advocacy of an other-sex prerequisite for sexual
unions. The essays are revised versions of presentations made at the
Conference on Christian Sexuality held in Kansas City in October 2002,
sponsored by the American Lutheran Publicity Bureau and attended by
some 300 Lutheran (ELCA) pastors and lay persons from around the country.
Although all the authors have in view the sexuality discussion going
on in the Lutheran Church (ELCA) and all but two are members of that
denomination, the aim of most of the essays is to provide a broad
Christian perspective on sexuality and homosexuality. One of the two
non-Lutheran contributors is Robert A. J. Gagnon, associate professor
of New Testament at Pittsburgh Theological Seminary and author of
two influential books on the Bible and homosexual practice. Gagnon
provides a 50-page essay entitled "Does the Bible Regard Same-Sex
Intercourse as Intrinsically Sinful?" offering the fullest discussion
to date of both the relevance of the creation texts for an other-sex
prerequisite and the weakness of claims that Paul and the ancient
world generally had no concept of exclusive and innate homosexual
desire. Gagnon also mounts a cumulative case against the contention
recently put forward by Lutheran New Testament scholar Mark Allan
Powell, in the book Faithful Conversations edited by James Childs
for the ELCA sexuality discussion; namely, the contention that the
Bible permits exceptions to a general prohibition of homosexual behavior.
Gagnon's essay can be viewed as a companion piece to his essay in
Homosexuality and the Bible: Two Views (co-authored with Dan Via).
Robert Benne, professor of religion and ethics at Roanoke College
and author of Ordinary Saints and other books, provides a 10-page
essay on the subject of "The Limits of Tolerance: Homosexuality and
the ELCA's LPD (Liberal Protestant Drift)." Benne advocates a strategy
of "gracious tolerance" that nurtures persons in homosexual relationships
without blessing homosexual unions or ordaining persons in such unions.
In a 20-page essay, James A. Nestingen, professor of church history
at Luther Seminary, explores the subject: "Is There a Law? The Lutheran
Reformation and Homosexual Practice." Nestingen examines homosexual
practice in light of the law/gospel conversation in which Lutherans
must engage. Merton P. Strommen, a research psychologist and specialist
in youth and family ministry who has authored a number of books (including
The Church and Homosexuality) describes in his 15-page essay the forces
at work in our culture to normalize homosexuality, and the impact
this is having on youth ("Homosexuality: A Youth Issue"). Russell
E. Saltzman, pastor of Ruskin Heights Lutheran Church in Kansas City,
commentator, and editor both of this volume and of the Lutheran publication
Forum Letter, discussesas a divorced pastorthe accommodation
granted to divorced pastors and why it is not analogous to non-celibate
homosexual pastors ("Clergy and Divorce," 12 pages). In a 14-page
essay Amy C. Schifrin, pastor of Bethlehem Lutheran Church (St. Cloud,
Minn.) and former seminary pastor at Pacific Lutheran Theological
Seminary, draws on her personal experiences to address the conundrum
of ritualizing homoerotic relationships ("Ritualizing Life or Ritualizing
Death"). The book also contains essays by: Thomas A. Skrenes, "Some
Thoughts from a Pastor Who Serves as a Bishop" (9 pages); Phillip
Max Johnson, "The Spiritual Nature and Destiny of the Human Body:
A Pastoral Perspective on Human Sexuality" (16 pages); and Father
Jay Scott Newman, "Homosexuality in Ecumenical Perspective" (8 pages).
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