Happy New Year!

As New Year’s Day arrives, I suspect that quite a few people are glad to see 2008 come to a close. It doesn’t matter who you are, you can find something about 2008 not to like. From the dismal financial performance of the stock market to the still slumping housing market to the political scandals around the country, there is some bad news available for everyone. Even with the election of a new president, the polls tell us that after his inauguration the country will still be split into red and blue groups of supporters. With that said, let’s look towards 2009 and think about what a New Year might bring our way.

     
Henry Melchior Muhlenberg PDF Print E-mail

Henry Melchior Muhlenberg grew up in Eimbeck where he was a member of the Council. His education was interrupted after his father's death in 1723 and did not begin again until he entered the University of Gottenberg in 1735. Feeling the need for instruction of poor and neglected children, he joined with several other students to establish an institution to provide instruction which still exists. He began his theological studies in 1737, and went to Halle in 1738 to complete them in 1739. He continued working at the Francke orphan home until he accepted a call from three congregations in Pennsylvania and elsewhere as the need arose in 1741.

Traveling to London in 1742, Reverend Muhlenberg left on a packet to the New World and arrived in Charleston on September 22, 1742. He spent time in both Charleston and the Ebeneezer colony of Georgia, finally arriving in Philadelphia on November 25.

The peripatetic Muhlenberg worked seemingly unceasingly to expand German Lutheranism, first in New York and eventually both up and down the Atlantic seaboard. He married J. Conrad Weiser's daughter in 1745, and helped found the first Lutheran synod in what is now the United States in 1748. He spent part of the year's 1774-75 in South Carolina trying to bring peace to the Lutherans there.

An American patriot, he found the War years difficult, moving to Trappe, Pennsylvania, where he remained in failing health until his death. Muhlenberg is best known today among non-Lutherans because of his magnificent journals of his travels and life in pre-Revolutionary America. His landscape descriptions and accounts of travel are some of the most cogent for the period.

Born: Eimbeck, Hanover, Germany on September 6, 1711
Died: Trappe, Montgomery County, Pennsylvania on October 7, 1787

Last Updated on Friday, 17 October 2008 06:15
 

Sunday Worship

8:30 a.m. Service with Holy Communion
9:45 a.m. Sunday Church School
11:00 a.m. Service with Holy Communion


Nursery available in Parish Hall during all services. Doodle Bags are available in the back of the church to keep little hands busy: they include coloring books, crayons, books, and stickers!

 
St. John's Lutheran Church, Charleston, SC