[Ger-Poland-Volhynia] ZION IN LUTHERAN CHURCH NAME
Otto
otto at schienke.com
Sat Sep 25 19:29:04 PDT 2010
On Sep 25, 2010, at 3:40 PM, MIKE MCHENRY wrote:
> Can someone tell me the significance of ZION in a Lutheran church
> name?
> MIKE_______________________________________________
Good evening Mike,
or perhaps "Moin Mike" is preferable.
You have a way of asking a mouthful in one sentence. . . This is not
quite the site for religious discussion or instruction yet I offer
enough to stimulate your interest to do research on your own. The
following words contain enough thought conveying terms to be
successfully researched on Wikipedia and Google.
The word Zion in a church name is not limited to Luther's persuasion.
Many churches adhering to the Christian construct espouse the term
"Zion.'
"Zion" is a Hebrew name. Do not confuse the the religious reference to
Zion in the Bible with the political reference to "Zionism" of present
day. They remain two different subjects, one religious, the other
political.
The name Zion is used in a literal sense and also as a figure of
speech. For Jews the term "Zion" became a synecdoche referring to the
entire city of Jerusalem and the Land of Israel. By the way, Oskar
Schindler, of "Schindler's List" fame, is buried on the literal Mt.
Zion for saving the lives of 1,200 Jews. This is the Mt. Zion of the
Last Supper. Jesus was held under arrest on Mt. Zion at the house of
Caiaphas, the high priest.
Christians, in harmony with the Hebrew and Greek scriptures upon which
the Christian construct is built, refer to the "New Jerusalem" or
"spiritual Jerusalem" in which their hope is founded. The Hebrew
scriptures (a good read as are the Greek scriptures) refers to God
dwelling on Mt. Zion.
The use of the term "Zion" may be to identify oneself as a Bible-based
Christian belief. . . "God dwells on Zion."
The term "Trinity", as used by Philipp Schwarzerdt a.k.a. Philipp
Melanchthon as also John Calvin (Reformed), is oft times included in
church names. (I personally find no evidence of a trinity in the
Hebrew or Greek scriptures {Jewish writings} and will make no further
comment on the term. . . Michael Servetus came to the same conclusion
as I, John Calvin had him burned at the stake. . . very slowly.)
A quikk reference to some Mt Zion events:
http://www.ctsp.co.il/LBS%20pages/LBS_mt_zion.htm
. . . Otto
" The Zen moment..." wk. of January 01, 2010-
_____________________________________
"Satisfaction . . . lurks in the answers."
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