Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Why am I a Missouri-Synod Lutheran - Part 2

When I last left you in part one, I was attempting to convey the history and influences behind why I believe what I do and how I have ended up with my views I have today. There have been several blog posts since then, so if you are coming in on this one without reading "Why I am a Missouri-Synod Lutheran - Part 1," you may want to go back and start there. Just sayin'...

Just for fun, and not to imply
I have a faith such as Luther's. Me
as Luther for a church program,
complete with hammer and 99
Thesis's. Note shaved bald
spot and monk cut.
Once again, a disclaimer... This particular blog is not being written to raise any one's ire that my beliefs may differ from anyone else's. I hold many Christian brothers and sisters who are strong in their faith in great regard as I believe does our triune God. However, let’s also be clear that I do not support a totally non-sectarian approach to Christianity either. I am convicted to believe in this manner. For me, I will use words similar to Martin Luther. Here I stand. I can do no other.

I mentioned sin trying to always take the reins in part one… it will be a focus of this writing as well…

Sin. I cannot water down the meaning of sin. Sin is our doom. Sin is inherited from Adam at the Fall. I learned this clearly in my Baptist High School. Some religious figures at some churches wish to not speak upon the subject or draw much attention to it because:

  • Talk of sin scares people...
  • Talk of sin makes people feel guilty so they stop coming to church...
  • Preaching sin just makes us sound all mean and judgmental...
  • The reasons go on...
Palm Sunday at St. Paul's LCMS Evansville, Indiana
If sin is not important then we do not need a Savior. This is Holy Week. Last Sunday we celebrated Palm Sunday representing Christ's entry into Jerusalem to the excitement of those who greeted him, only to be crucified FOR OUR SINS within a few days. In between, He exposed sin in the temple. Sin as greed of control caused those in power over the people to plot against Him. Sin as greed caused Judas to betray Him.

The Law shines the spotlight on Sin. To not talk about it devalues everything a perfect Christ did for us. So... during Holy Week, I am going to write this "Part 2" on sin as it accentuates why I am an LCMS Lutheran (not to mention that I will be adding in some family background that I was unaware of until recently as a bit of irony).

Kyrie Eleison...

Joyce Meyer (sorry to pick on her as I know that a lot of liturgical Christians do) says: "I am not poor. I am not miserable... and I am not a Sinner." I think that illustrates my comment above about the importance of recognizing and pointing out our sinful nature. Not to mention that it is heretical in nature and most assuredly blasphemy. 

Her reference is to one form of the liturgical confession:

"I, a poor, miserable sinner, confess unto You all my sins and iniquities with which I have ever offended You and justly deserved Your temporal and eternal punishment. But I am heartily sorry for them and sincerely repent of them, and I pray You of Your boundless mercy and for the sake of the holy, innocent, bitter sufferings and death of Your beloved Son, Jesus Christ, to be gracious to me, a poor, sinful being." - Divine Service, Setting Three, Lutheran Service Book, page 184, Copyright 2006, Concordia Publishing House

One thing my Baptist upbringing and education taught me: Scripture is inerrant and the whole of scripture is the word of God alone (Sola Scriptura). So this education helped me to grasp a core LCMS principle: Therefore, when the Holy Bible defines me by the Sin of Adam, my thoughts, my words and my deeds as a sinner. I am but a sinner. To be a sinner is poor and miserable. As a sinner, I cannot come into the presence of God. My sentence is but death. Only through grace alone (Sola Gratia), through Faith alone (Sola Fide), in Christ alone (Solus Christus) am I made clean and forgiven. And even this is but to the glory of God alone (Soli Deo Gloria) for His good purpose.

So... another reason why I am an LCMS Lutheran? We call ourselves what we are: Poor... Miserable... Sinners.

But... yet... as we will all yell aloud this coming Easter Sunday: HE IS RISEN! HE IS RISEN INDEED! And because of a wooden, blood soaked cross and a three-day old empty tomb, we sinners, by water and the Word, are forgiven, made whole and may enter into the presence of the Father. Again, through Grace Alone... We can receive the comfort of the Sacrament of the Altar "Given and shed" for me (a poor, miserable sinner). As a poor, miserable sinner I can now be a part of the Church, His holy bride. This said so concisely in the hymn below:

"The Church's one foundation is Jesus Christ, Her Lord. 
She is His new creation, 
By water and the Word. 
From Heaven He came and sought her 
To be His holy bride; 
With His own blood He bought her, 
And for her life He died." 

"The Church's One Foundation" 
- Samuel J. Stone, 1839-1900, Public Domain, LSB 644.

So, how does this illustrate the "Why Lutheran" point? It comes down to the essentials of Christianity.

Well... if you remember in "Part 1" (I know, I have skipped around a lot since then, but that is how my brain works), I was telling you that I was focused on BEING a Paramedic and BEING a Firefighter, not BEING the Christian God intended for me to be and certainly not BEING a Christ-centered husband.

I was centered on excitement. That was it. SINNER! (don't worry, it's my nature... yours too). So I crashed and I burned. I got divorced (my fault). Pitied myself for a bit. In the span of four months, I was alone and drunk most of the time (at least till a good friend at work came by early one evening and took all my alcohol away). 

I struggled for a bit in a lot of ways. Dated someone from Lebanon (not the one in Tennessee either). Read the Koran. Left Firefighting. Did not go to church for two years. Then met another girl.

This one took me to my first ever LCMS Lutheran service. It was Holy Week 1996. It was Maundy Thursday at Our Savior Lutheran in Evansville. We attended with my soon
Our Savior LCMS - Evansville, Indiana
to be Wife's Grandmother Alma. The impact of the stripped Altar at the end of the service and exiting the Sanctuary in darkness was the impact that initially told me I had finally come unto (not found, as He continually finds me) the depth of worship that I had been seeking all my life. The message was clear. Lord, bring it all together for me. I was ready to listen. Far from where I needed to be... and still learning today. Still imperfect and guilty by the Law, but forgiven through the sacrifice of The Lamb. 

By Fall of that year, I was in an adult Confirmation class at Trinity Lutheran in Darmstadt, Indiana (where Annette led us as her parents were married there). This is where I met Pastor Martin Keller who guided my initial learning and of whom I still greatly enjoy his sage advice today. We were married at Trinity in 1997. It is no wonder that my favorite services are Maundy Thursday, Palm Sunday and the power of Reformation Sunday.

"With might of ours can naught be done.
Soon were our loss effected;
But for us fights the valiant One,
Who God Himself elected.
Ask ye, Who is this?
Jesus Christ it is,
Of Sabaoth Lord,
And there's none other God; 
He holds the field forever."

- Martin Luther, 1483-1546, Public Domain, 
LSB 656 (see also variant LSB 657).

The depth of worship and clarity of literal interpretation of scripture had me at once. The clarity of the exposure of sin and the need for redemption is always clear. That redemption is accentuated in every prayer, sermon, liturgical action... The church is my home.

I sin daily... hourly in fact. The world wants to make the church the enemy at time for pointing out sin. Just because we do something, be it desire or by nature, does not make it right. We are guilty simply by association with Adam. With that guilt exposed by the Law, Christ is the Atonement. His Resurrection is victory over death. It is not just that he died for our sins. He rose again. He has gone to prepare a place for us.

Do not point out sin without loving the sinner. Despise the sin. Love the sinner as Christ has loved us. For we are no better, just forgiven.

My life is not perfect. I falter daily. My wife can write tomes on how I can mess things up. I still struggle at becoming a better Father. With the Lord's help I grow in that and many areas.

St. Paul's Stained Glass
Behold, I stand at the door and knock. 
If anyone hears my voice and opens the door, 
I will come in to him and eat with him, and he with me. 
- Revelation 3:20

He doesn't just knock once. He keeps on knocking for me. Every single time I falter, He is there to show me the wrong and help me learn the right. Many times I do not understand. The Word comes to me through scripture.

I will close with this. Look at this crown of thorns. Judean thorns are not like those of a rose bush. They are long and penetrating. When you think of the price paid for our sins, be broader than the cross. Start at the agony in the Garden, the beatings, that crown of thorns forced onto His head, the carrying of His own tool of death carried upon His freshly torn back... Dull nails, nine inches long, pounded through His innocent hands and feet. The price of sin is death... and He paid it for our sins.

Then as the words of the Apostle's Creed state... "He descended into Hell."

This Sunday... Easter morning, rise with thanks in your heart for He has risen and ascended. Those who know Him will someday see Him in glory.

This is not the end. In Part three (I know... promises, promises) I will talk about Early Church history and the Sacrament of the Altar (some of my favorite Lutheran Theology).

Till the writing virus overtaketh me again... May He bring you peace!

Below is a link to Pastor Fisk's Worldview Everlasting video blog which in this episode is a phenomenally clear discussion of sin and the essentials of Christianity that will offer more than I possibly can. So if you want more, click the link already!



Soli Deo Gloria

Opps... forgot to add one last thing I promised. Guess my family was Lutheran after all. I knew my paternal Grandfather was named Luther. He died a year after I was born. Dad always told me that his father had been "something that was a lot like Catholic, but protestant." I had never been to my Grandfather's grave at Oak Hill Cemetery before. They could not find a Luther Turpen. However... They did find a Martin L. Turpen! I guess a full generation in the past, I come from Lutheran roots. Still trying to track some more things down on this...



1 comment:

  1. One of my favorites:
    “Cheap grace is the grace we bestow on ourselves. Cheap grace is the preaching of forgiveness without requiring repentance, baptism without church discipline, Communion without confession.... Cheap grace is grace without discipleship, grace without the cross, grace without Jesus Christ, living and incarnate.” ― Dietrich Bonhoeffer, The Cost Of Discipleship

    Interesting quote from Joyce Meyer who seemingly couldn't take the rigors of the LCMS and had to strike out on her own avoiding any intimation that she needed any help.

    Well done and THANKS for sharing!
    <+><

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I am always open to discussion and views. Please remember to be polite. Thanks!