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Kaffee und Kuchen 2025

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14 February, 2025

1pm Monday, 24th February. Langmeil Centre, 7 Maria Street, Tanunda.

Talk in English to be given is "Living Ancestors: My Approach to Family History".


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SALA 2025 Opening

SALA at the Hub Exhibition Opening

Friday 1st August 2025 5pm to 7pm

Come along and browse through this year's exhibition of our local Artists.

All Welcome.

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Who may dwell?

by Emma Strelan

Click here to download your printable verse to carry with you today.

Lord, who may dwell in your sacred tent? Who may live on your holy mountain? (Psalm 15:1)

Read Psalm 15

During a recent youth camp that I helped organise, the theme was ‘The House of the Lord’. It was a great opportunity to spend time thinking about what it means to dwell with God and ask: Who is welcome in God’s house/our places of worship? The answer we wanted the youth to take home is that everyone is welcome!

However, today’s reading from Psalms asks us to consider: What are the requirements for being in the holy places of God? Or perhaps it could be reworded to: What makes someone a worthy or good worshipper?

To sum up the hefty list of attributes the psalmist details as requirements for someone who may dwell with God: honesty, integrity, right-doing, sacrifice and selflessness.

I think this provides a good challenge, but not to those who have never been to church and are questioning whether they would be allowed inside to sit with the ‘holy’ people. Instead, I think this psalm is addressed to those for whom worshipping in God’s house is a regular occurrence – to those of us who show up to church every Sunday because we believe we do have a place there (perhaps even a specific pew).

The psalmist challenges us to consider whether our actions outside of our place of regular worship reflect the God that we experience inside our times of worship. Are we truly honouring God with our minds and bodies and through our interactions with others during the week as well?

This psalm makes it clear that God’s holy presence demands a certain level of virtue, but we know we don’t fit the criteria of deserving to dwell with God. In the past, priests had to cleanse themselves with sacrifices to enter God’s presence. But since Jesus, we have a new way of meeting God, a new temple. Because of Jesus’ sacrifice, we are holy and blameless in God’s sight.

As recipients of his cleansing sacrifice, Jesus invites us to walk in the way of one who dwells with God. Our challenge now is to be who we are.

I encourage you to read through Psalm 15 today (it’s only five verses!) and ask the Holy Spirit to show you where you have not been reflecting the goodness of your Lord and Saviour to others. Perhaps ask yourself: What can I do today to honour what (we’re reminded every Sunday) God does for us?

Gracious God, thank you that we don’t have to meet any criteria to be in your holy presence. Forgive us when we worship you on Sunday but walk in a different direction on Monday. Show us how we can welcome more people into your house to experience the love you have shown us. Amen.

Emma Strelan works part-time as a content producer with Lutheran Media and part-time as a freelance videographer around Adelaide. You’ll often find her rummaging through op shops or dreaming of her next camping trip or outdoor adventure. She feels blessed that her current work combines two of her biggest passions – creative media and exploring faith – and hopes the projects she works on will have a positive impact on others.

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FoLA Speaker August

Life on the Far Side: Adventures Undergone while Investigating a Forgotten Past Speaker: John Strehlow Thursday 24 July at 7.30pm, Nth Adl Lutheran Church,139 Archer St, Nth Adelaide

LIVESTREAM on FoLA YouTube :https://www.youtube.com/ @friendsoflutheranarchives9644/live

The meeting can be viewed at a later date as well. $5 donation, supper, all welcome. Biographer, playwright, theatre director, and set designer, John Strehlow was born in1946 in Adelaide, into a family closely involved with Aboriginal people for three generations.

He began researching his grandparents’ two volume biography, The Tale of Frieda Keysser, in earnest in 1994, publishing the first volume in 2011 and the second volume late in 2019. When John Strehlow embarked on a book about his family, The Tale of Frieda Keysser, he had no idea what he was letting himself in for.

Investigating a Forgotten Past gives the inside story in a nuts-and-bolts outline of the 25-year project.

Copies of the eBook will be on sale on the evening, and it is hoped a Print on Demand copy may also be available.

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