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Blessed
Are They Which Do Hunger and Thirst After Righteousness
The window title consists of one of the
Beatitudes, with which Christ's Sermon on the Mount began.
In these words of Jesus, Christians found not only guidelines
for daily life, but also an explanation of the relationship
between the new concepts related by Christ and the older
teachings of Judaism. Inner goodness and integrity, obedience
to God and an actively loving relationship with one's fellowman,
make the disciple of Jesus both salt and light in the world
(Eph. 5:13-16), as symbolized by the lamp of learning resting
on the open Bible at the upper right. The Greek letters
Alpha and Omega beneath the arms of the Cross represent
our belief that Christ is the beginning and the end.
Henry Melchior
Muhlenberg is described in the lower panes as the founder
of the Lutheran Church in America, 1742. This does not refer
to the present Lutheran Church except in the broad sense.
In 1748, however, he did organize the Ministerium of Pennsylvania,
the first synodical structure to unite the Lutherans. His
motto, Ecclesia Plantanda, means "The Church must be
planted.'' In the lower left appears the Trappe Church in
Pennsylvania, so closely associated with him,
The seal above
Muhlenberg's name was desiged by Martin Luther while teaching
at Wittenberg, and it has become the Primary emblem of the
Lutheran Church. Comprising it are: the black cross, for
faith in Christ crucified; the red heart, for faith in the
Saviour; the white rose, to show that faith causes joy,
consolation and peace; the blue sky, to denote that such
joy of faith in the spirit is the beginning of heavenly
joy to come; and the golden ring surrounding all, to signify
that such bliss in heaven is endless. The last stanza of
the Luther League Hymn (SBH 567) gives a poetic description
of this same Luther Emblem.
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