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Life Issues

At Home in the Newness

Rev. Joel Fritsche

Six months into the foreign mission field in the Dominican Republic, my wife and I just finished our initial phase of intensive Spanish courses. Everything that was so new six months ago has begun to settle into the familiar category. New country. New city. New culture. New language. New way of driving. And as wild as the driving is here, we’re even starting to be at home in the newness of that.

What has put my family and me at home in the newness most of all is the liturgy of the Divine Service. Six months in, language classes complete, four to five hours a day of study, can I speak Spanish with the best of them? Not quite yet, especially with regard to Dominican Spanish. But in many respects, the liturgy has been and continues to be an incredible tutor. While everything around us is new and different, despite even the different language, we are at home in the timeless words we’ve sung, prayed and confessed again and again.

Whether it’s speaking the Confession and Absolution, praying the Creed or the Lord’s Prayer, singing the Kyrie or the Nunc Dimittis, we are at home, resting in the same promise of salvation by grace through faith in Jesus Christ. Even my three sons quickly adjusted from “Lord, have mercy” to “Señor, ten piedad, or “O Christ, Thou Lamb of God, that takest away the sin of the world” to “Cordero de Dios, que quitas del mundo el pecado.” No matter the language spoken or sung, the language of faith is the same; the confession of our Lord Jesus is the same. We can all conclude that our eyes have seen God’s salvation.

The liturgy also speaks for me when I just don’t have the Spanish words on the tip of my tongue. Whether I’m visiting someone in their home, comforting a sick church member, or talking to the homeless guy who comes to our gate each day, the Lord’s words of comfort and hope give me plenty to speak. These words are filled not just with the humility of a sinner confessing, they’re filled with Jesus Himself, the reality of suffering and the cross, the certainty of sin forgiven, the hope of a God who is near in Word and Sacrament. That’s evangelism at its best!

It’s good to be home. The liturgy offers you a home filled with Jesus crucified and risen for you, wherever you are in the world. I have the privilege to share that here in a new country with new Christians. We speak a different language, yet the same language, for we are one body in Christ, confessing Padre, Hijo y Espíritu Santo, un solo Dios por los siglos de los siglos. Amen! Yes indeed, it’s good to be home!

Rev. Joel Fritsche serves as a missionary to the Dominican Republic. He is also Secretary of the Higher Things® Board of Directors. You can find out more about the Fritsches and what they’re doing in the Dominican Republic at http://www.lcms.org/fritsche.

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Life Issues

Hurt, Part 4: Immanuel Means God Is with Us

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Or, God’s Not Stuck in Heaven

Rev. Harrison Goodman

Platitudes don’t help people. We only say them because they’re inoffensive. We don’t think they’ll make things worse. If someone’s already hurting, though, not making things worse doesn’t help. Things are already bad. If someone is on fire, refusing to pour gasoline on them doesn’t actually put out the fire that’s already there. Platitudes never help. Sometimes the church accidentally mutters platitudes, too.

One of the worst of those is “God is in heaven and you’ll see Him there when you die.” In other words, you won’t see Him until you die. The best you can hope for is that He’ll drop down a favor from on high now and then. Maybe answer a prayer. Maybe just send you a fuzzy feeling. Maybe not. Sometimes we get sick and die. Sometimes we’re depressed and hurting and just can’t seem to find anything that makes us feel good anymore.

Teaching that God is in heaven and you’ll only really see Him when you get there means that you’re basically on your own. It means you don’t think Jesus is really here. It means that at best, your church will be about Jesus. That’s not good enough. Telling a starving man about a cheeseburger doesn’t do him any good. It’s just cruel. Telling broken sinners there’s a God who loves them and helps them and heals them…but He’s in heaven right now is a false peace. At best, a church that’s just about Jesus spins it’s wheels and goes nowhere. At best, it’s a group of orphans who sit around and tell each other how great it will be to have a parent someday. There’s help later. Not now. If that’s the case, there’s no help for you here, so the only thing we can hope for is to hurry up and die. That’s a very, very bad thing to tell depressed people.

God is not stuck in heaven. When He saw us hurting, He didn’t stay in heaven and drop down parachutes full of “good news.” He loved us. He took on the same hurt, the same broken human flesh. He became incarnate. God joined His people in their suffering to bear that grief and pain and sin Himself on a cross. God died on a cross for you, for your hurt, your sin. He died your death. When God saw hurt, He dove headfirst into the worst of it to save you from it.

That’s our hope. Jesus died and rose for us so we can be saved from death. But ever since He ascended into heaven to sit at the right hand of the Father, we act like He’s stuck up there until the last day. We’re on our own until then. No, God is not stuck in heaven. We don’t have a Jesus who will be present with us someday. We have a Jesus who makes Himself present with us here and now.

Church is not about Jesus. Church is Jesus. We don’t gather every Sunday to talk about a cheeseburger. We gather to eat. We don’t talk about how great it will be to finally be with God. We commune. We kneel before a Jesus who is truly and physically present for us. We don’t just think about Jesus. We eat. This is His Body and Blood, given for you for the forgiveness of your sins. God isn’t stuck in heaven. We eat and drink the very same Body and Blood that died on a cross for you. Jesus is present in church in a meaningful way that helps us when we show up lost and heals us when we show up broken.

When you are hurting, when you feel hemmed in and torn to the ground, when you feel like there isn’t one stone left upon another inside you, please don’t think God is far away from you. He’s not. He is present in His sacrament, and more than that, He is present there for you. We take all of our sin and hurt to the altar and rejoice in a God who makes Himself present at our weakest and lowest moments to bear our pain and grief and sin, and forgive us – every single week.

Pastor Harrison Goodman serves St. Paul Lutheran Church in Winside, Nebraska and St. Paul Lutheran Church in Carroll, Nebraska. He can be reached at hgoodman01@gmail.com.

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Catechesis

The Lectionary Protects You From Your Pastor

Rev. Michael Keith

Have you noticed that when you go to Divine Service there are usually at least three readings from the Bible? One of them is a reading from the Old Testament. Another is a reading from one of the Epistles (creatively referred to as the Epistle reading). The last reading is from one of the Gospels. Have you ever wondered why those readings are read on that Sunday?

Your pastor does not pick the readings on Saturday night. In fact, your pastor does not pick the readings at all. And that’s the point.

There is a long explanation about how the readings that show up on any given Sunday have arrived there-I am not going to give you that long explanation here because I don’t want to-so just very briefly: The system of appointed readings we use on Sundays throughout the Church year is called the Lectionary. The Lectionary has been passed down to us in various forms, over the long history of the Church–in fact even going back to the synagogue. The Lectionary is the way the Church protects you from your pastor.

You need to be protected from your pastor. Why? Because he is self-centered. He is egotistical. He is arrogant. He thinks he knows it all and therefore you need to sit down and listen to him tell you it all. You see, I am a pastor. I speak from experience here. I have a lot of things to say. I have a lot of opinions and I am pretty sure they are the right opinions and I am really sure that you ought to have the same opinions as I do. I have some ideas on politics as well and boy, you really need to hear those! I have a couple axes that need grinding and a few hobby horses that need riding. I also have a few other clichés that need to be used…

But you know, the funny thing is, it turns out that you don’t come to church to hear my opinions and thoughts on things. I’m a little put out about that because I have a lot of good thoughts-but apparently you come to see Jesus. The Lectionary protects you from me and my brilliant thoughts and opinions and political insights and directs me to preach to you from the Word of God. It also forces me to preach from the entire bible and not just my favourite verses that deal with topics I feel are important. The Lectionary protects you from me. That’s a good thing.

Okay, let’s have full disclosure here. Sometimes the Lectionary is hard. Sometimes when I look up the texts I am supposed to preach on for the next Sunday I get the cold sweats. I don’t like that text! It makes me bring up some uncomfortable topics. The people may not like what the Word of God says. And if they don’t like what the Word of God says and I am the one saying those things then…they might not like me. And I like when people like me. A lot. I much prefer it when people are shaking my hand and patting me on my back for being such a swell guy. I don’t like it when people are grumpy and angry with me. The Lectionary protects you from me here as well. It protects you from my cowardice. It forces the pastor and people to be confronted with the Word of God-whether it is comfortable or not. That’s a good thing.

Now, I have a challenge for you. The next time you are in church before Service, look up the appointed readings for that Sunday. Read them. And then see if you can identify a theme that runs through them. See if you can guess what your pastor might be preaching about during the sermon. See if you can guess why the hymns for that Sunday were selected. Then, discuss it with your pastor after divine service. Ask why he went where he did in the sermon. Tell him where you thought you might have gone with the texts. Ask questions about the texts and the hymns. Your pastor will be blown away that you noticed that the service wasn’t just thrown together willy-nilly but it has a coherent theme and that he was trying to actually, you know, do something with it. You will make his day. Let him know that you are glad that he has enough sense to use the Lectionary to protect you from him.

Rev. Michael Keith serves as pastor at St. Matthew Lutheran Church and SML Christian Academy in Stony Plain, Alberta, Canada. He can be reached at keith@st-matthew.com

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Life Issues

Walking the Talk

Claire Houser

The first few weeks of school have come and gone and the pre-semester excitement has gone with it. As I contemplate the papers and readings I’ve already started to dread, I find myself wondering why I was so excited to get back to school. I appreciate the routine schedule and the daily structure. I love to expand my intellect and study subjects I’m passionate. I believe, however, that what every student looks forward to is seeing friends again.

I had been excited to see my roommates, my friends, the professors, and all the familiar faces at my university. There was only one problem. After a summer packed with Lutheran theology, (e.g., touring Fort Wayne Seminary, attending the Concordia Deaconess Conference, being a CCV at Higher Things), I had to go back to a big city school where diversity and progressivism are regularly shoved in my face. Even my closest college friends and my roommates don’t always share my worldview. I am in an environment where I often feel pressured to be politically correct. Going back to school can be a struggle. I sometimes wonder how confessional Lutheran students are to survive in a world that hates Christ.

While our parents and grandparents are typically shamed for their beliefs on abortion and marriage, they are also dismissed as being “old fashioned” or “out of touch.” As teens and young adults, believing that a baby in the womb is a human who has the right to life is offensive and absurd to the world. If you believe that marriage is between a man and a woman, you clearly have been brainwashed by a judgmental religion. We are simply expected to know better.

So, how are we students to survive this ever-changing world that only continues to hate us? The most important thing is to go to church where you can continue to have your faith nurtured. Attend a confessional Lutheran church that preaches the Word of God in its truth and purity, and that rightly administers the Sacraments! Bible study is also a great tool. Be able to defend your faith, backing it up with what the Scripture says. Also, surround yourself with like-minded people, such as the other people your age at church. This can be difficult, but it can be done. Living in a sinful world can be a lot easier when you have a friend to remind you of the life and salvation you have in Christ’s death and resurrection.

And finally, continue to be a good student. That, after all, is a wonderful, God-given vocation. Don’t pick a fight with everyone who disagrees with God’s Word. If someone asks why you believe what you believe, explain everything in the kindest way. Being a student is a difficult job. While we do not know what future God has in store for us, we do know is that we are baptized children of God. He has called us and we know His voice because we are His. By faith we can show Christ’s love when we serve our neighbors, and by God’s grace He will give us the words to proclaim our faith.

Claire Houser is studying Political Science at Concordia University in St. Paul, Minnesota. She serves in the Army National Guard and hopes to begin the Deaconess Program when she graduates.

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Life Issues

Hurt Part 3: Help Comes From the Outside

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Or, You Are Not Alone

Rev. Harrison Goodman

For some reason we treat sin as if it’s completely different from sickness. I’ve seen cancer destroy lives, but I’ve seen sin crush people, too. Sin breaks stuff.

When we read about Jesus walking up to a blind man and restoring his sight, nobody asks why the blind man didn’t just decide to start seeing without Christ. Nobody wonders if he just didn’t really want to see until Jesus came along and told him it would be a good idea.

When someone wrestling with depression and hurt, like my friend whom we’ll call Ashley, comes to us for help, we don’t see them like the blind man. When I was 17 and I saw cuts on Ashley, my first instinct was always to tell her something that boiled down to stop being hurt. Fix yourself. Platitudes. When she was still hurting, I wondered if she just didn’t want to feel better. It sounds stupid. It is. When we pretend sin doesn’t break stuff, we always end up imagining the problem can be fixed internally. It can’t.

Ephesians 2:1-5 And you were dead in the trespasses and sins in which you once walked, following the course of this world, following the prince of the power of the air, the spirit that is now at work in the sons of disobedience–among whom we all once lived in the passions of our flesh, carrying out the desires of the body and the mind, and were by nature children of wrath, like the rest of mankind. But God, being rich in mercy, because of the great love with which he loved us, even when we were dead in our trespasses, made us alive together with Christ- by grace you have been saved

Dead means dead. If we are dead in sin, we can’t just choose to stop being dead. We need to be made alive. The answer isn’t inside of us. God sends help externally. Jesus became man, not inside my heart, but outside of my broken heart in real flesh and blood. Jesus didn’t just tell me “stop being a sinner.” He died on a cross for me. He doesn’t just live in my heart. He really rose from the dead. All of this is external, because telling a blind man to decide to stop being blind won’t work any more than telling a sinner to just decide to stop hurting. Jesus saves us from the outside in.

But we still feel broken. Ashley was still depressed and cutting herself. God’s answer wasn’t just “think really hard about the cross.” The answer isn’t inside of us. God sends help externally. The cross doesn’t exist only in your heart. It’s brought from the outside to your heart, to heal, to help, to save. He makes that cross real and present from the outside in. He gives you communion, the very same blood shed on the cross for you is given for you to drink. His help always comes from outside of us. You don’t need to imagine the cross and make yourself feel better. Jesus sends His Body and Blood across time and space to bring all of the peace of the cross to you for when you can’t just feel better.

God always answers externally. Outside of us. He sent Jesus to die on a cross to forgive your sins. He sends His Sacrament to you to deliver that forgiveness to you. He works through people, too. The answer is always outside of us.

One of those people will be called a pastor. He deals with sin. He was sent with words that aren’t his own. God has sent Him to speak peace to you. We call it absolution. “In the stead and by the command of my Lord and Savior Jesus Christ, I forgive you all your sins in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit.” That’s God speaking literal forgiveness through a guy He sent to help you. God doesn’t expect you to think your way to absolution, so He sends someone equipped to help. Your parents might have a tax guy because they can’t figure out how to do their taxes themselves. You have a sin guy, sent by God to deal with your sins, because you were never supposed to be able to handle sin yourself. Use him. It doesn’t matter if your pastor is 25 and knows all your favorite bands or 80 and can’t work the Internet. It doesn’t even matter if he understands your motive, because God can still work through Him. Your pastor was only sent to bring you God’s words, not his own. He has God given words. “In the stead and by the command of my Lord and Savior Jesus Christ, I forgive you all your sins in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit.” That really works.

Some of those people God sends will be called doctor. They deal with medicine. God loves your soul, but He loves your body, too. It’s not an either or. It’s both. Don’t think that because you have Jesus you don’t need doctors, or because you have doctors you don’t need Jesus. I wasn’t Ashley’s pastor or her doctor. It wasn’t my job to fix her. It wasn’t my vocation. I cared for her, but just because you really love your grandma with cancer doesn’t mean you should handle her chemo instead of her oncologist. Ashley needed a friend, but she also needed a pastor and a doctor.

God also sends some people called parents. That’s a tough pill to swallow, especially when it looks like they’re the problem. This isn’t a “God doesn’t make mistakes” platitude. Your parents are sinners, too. They might not understand what’s going on, and they might not always handle it the best way, but they are sinners Christ died for, and more than that, they are the forgiven sinners that God gave you. Your parents don’t have to be sinless and perfect for God to work with them. It’s not about the gift. It’s about the giver. God could have given you anyone, but He gave you your folks. That makes them special, because the God we love and trust has promised that He will work through them. Even if they are sinners, they’re God-given sinners. God works with and through sinners. Even when they mess up, His hand will work.

We struggle with looking outside of ourselves when we hurt, especially because the external gifts God gives don’t always look all that impressive. A naked, dead God doesn’t look like He can help, but He can. A chalice of wine seems like an antiquated ritual, but it’s Jesus. An old sinner in a black shirt with a white tab might seem out of touch, but He carries God’s peace to you. Sinful parents might seem like the enemy, but God has promised to work even with sinners.

That’s our only hope. God will work with and for sinners. God can work with broken Ashley and broken you. God has helped and will continue to help. He saves you from the outside in. You are not alone.

Pastor Harrison Goodman serves St. Paul Lutheran Church in Winside, Nebraska and St. Paul Lutheran Church in Carroll, Nebraska. He can be reached at hgoodman01@gmail.com.

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There Is No Such Thing As “Cheap Grace”

Monica Berndt

Have you ever heard of the phrase “cheap grace” in reference to Lutherans, or had someone accuse you of simply being a “lazy Catholic?” Grace is NOT cheap. The grace of God towards us came at a price-a huge price. The price was so large that the immortal God, who rules over every last centimeter of the cosmos, had to take on the form of us measly human beings and then die. We like to think that we are quite large and influential here on our planet Earth, but in comparison to the vastness of the universe, we are even smaller than a speck of dust. Yet, God Himself came down and became smaller than a speck of dust so that He could pick up all the others and bring them back to Heaven.

Simply becoming a speck of dust was not enough to save us from ourselves, the world, and Satan; God had to die. He had to take on the entire wrath of God against sin onto Himself and suffer in agony until He had died to pay for everything we have done. There have been millions of people who have lived and died and who will live on this earth and yet God died for all of them-every last one.

That is a huge price and thanks be to God that He has paid the massive debt we owe so that we can simply live by the grace of God. It should be pretty easy, right? Yet, the Old Adam in us constantly keeps popping up and causing us trouble by trying to push our lives under grace to one of two extremes. The one is the familiar “I can do whatever I want” attitude. You just live your life however you please and God will handle it so you don’t have to worry. Yet this extreme causes harm to both us and to our neighbor, because honestly loving our neighbor is not the priority on our to-do list of living however we desire. We will not want to love our neighbor, we will constantly put ourselves first, and we will always seek to defend our actions by passing the blame onto our neighbor.

There is another extreme we turn to when trying to live by grace, and that’s just it. We start to try. We start to worry that grace is not enough, that what we have done cannot be forgiven. We repent of our sins, but then guilt and shame come knocking at the door of our consciences and we are unsure what to tell them. They ask “How can you be sure that you are really and truly forgiven?” “How do you know that the sins you committed are not being held against you by your neighbor?” “Have you tried hard to fix what you did?” They then bind you to the Law: “If you don’t do better next time, you must not have been trying hard enough and you only get a few chances to get it right.” This leaves us to wrestle with guilt, which will wear and tear at our faith just as much as the first extreme will-leaving us feeling like God will never be able to forgive everything we have done.

However, we confess that God is omnipotent, omniscient, and omnipresent so He is more than capable of forgiving our sins. In fact, that is the entire reason He came to die in the first place. If we could get to Heaven on our own, the death of Jesus Christ would be the most pointless death in all of history. Yet clearly we cannot make it on our own; we cannot make it at all. That’s why God had to become a smaller than a speck of dust. That’s why He had to die. He did all of that because we cannot do it and all of our attempts to try leave us guilt-ridden and afraid.

So we don’t believe in “cheap grace.” We believe in very expensive, very precious grace through Jesus Christ. Even though we daily commit sins, we rejoice in the fact that God has already forgiven us our sins, even as we daily come to Him in repentance and trust in His promise of grace.

Monica Berndt is a member of Christ the Savior in George, Washington and studies music at the University of Washington.

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Hurt, Part 2: God Speaks Peace to Broken People

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Or, Forgiveness Is Not About How Sad You Are.

Rev. Harrison Goodman

There was a guy in the bible named Judas. He was introduced as “Judas, who became a traitor.” The bible isn’t really big on cliffhangers. He’s the guy nobody wants to think about when someone’s depressed, because he made such a mess and hurt so bad he hanged himself.

Judas stole. He was the guy in charge of the moneybag. He used to help himself to what was put into it. Scripture never said why. You can put whatever spin you want on it. Maybe Judas was so evil that his mustache curled up, and he stole because he wanted to take money from God. Maybe Judas was just a normal guy who tried to do what he thought was best and made a mess of it. Jesus wasn’t exactly known for being financially responsible. He kept giving away money and allowing expensive perfume to be poured on His feet instead of sold, so maybe Judas just tried to cook the books a little to keep everyone fed. After all, if the whole traveling band keeps going, it helps everyone. But, whatever the motive, Judas stole.

In Jerusalem, Judas was getting closer and closer to being found out. He went to the chief priests and said, “What will you give me if I deliver him over to you?” And they paid him thirty pieces of silver. Again, spin it however you want. Maybe Judas was doubling his money and getting rid of Jesus in one move. Maybe he sat in his evil lair and literally laughed like, “Mwahahahaha!” Or, maybe Judas was just a normal guy who realized he messed up and was trying to fix what he broke the best way he could. Maybe Judas was so convinced that Jesus was innocent that he thought even if Christ was handed over, He would be declared innocent. Then, with 30 pieces of silver making up for what got spent, everyone would ride off into the sunset. But, whatever the motive, Judas betrayed Jesus.

Sin ate at Judas until he found himself at the most awkward meal of his life. His sin cut him off from his friends and from his God. He sat in the upper room during Jesus’ last supper just staring at his plate, wishing it was over. If you’ve ever sat at a family meal furious, ashamed, or guilty, you know how heavy silence can be. You know how loud every clink of silverware is in absence of what should be said at a normal dinner. Finally, Jesus lays it all out on the table. “The Son of Man goes as it is written of him, but woe to that man by whom the Son of Man is betrayed! It would have been better for that man if he had not been born.” Judas, who would betray him, answered, “Is it I, Rabbi?” Jesus replied, “You have said so.” Judas probably agreed. It would have been better if he had never been born.

Then came the kiss, the trial, and the cross. Judas saw how much he broke everything, and hated it, so he tried to fix things himself. He confessed his sin and tried to give back the money. Giving back the money didn’t undo the sin, though. Sometimes things break and we can’t fix them. Sin broke Judas. Judas hanged himself.

Peter sinned, too, that night. Really, it was the same sin as Judas, only he didn’t cast aside his Lord once. Peter denied the Lord three times. Judas and Peter committed the same sin. Peter even sinned more, but Peter lived while Judas killed himself. Peter has churches named after him, but Judas is the name we call each other when we backstab our friends.

There’s only one difference between Peter and Judas. It’s called repentance. I think we use the word too narrowly, though. Whenever I hear calls to repent, it only ever seems to focus on making sure someone feels sorry enough, but calling guilty, ashamed broken people to repentance doesn’t mean whipping them with their sin. They’re good at doing that to themselves already. My broken friend, whom we’ll call Ashley, never needed to be told to feel sorry or guilty or ashamed. Judas and Peter both wept in shame. The difference between Judas and Peter was not how sad or sorry they were. Ashley’s problem wasn’t that she couldn’t be sorry enough. Repentance isn’t how sorry you are. Repentance is faith. Repentance is trust–nothing more, nothing less.

Repentance is believing everything God’s word says, both the stuff about you being a sinner, and the stuff about Him being a savior. If repentance is just about being sorry, Judas was plenty repentant. The only difference between Judas and Peter is not that Peter was sorry for betraying Jesus and Judas wasn’t, but that Judas tried to solve his problem himself. Peter found help in the Lord. Both confessed, but Judas thought he had to fix his problem himself. Peter thought Christ would have to fix it for him. Both had the confession part down, but Judas stopped there, while Peter looked for absolution.

God doesn’t want sin to break you. He didn’t want it to break anyone. He wants it to break His own Son. He wants to give you real forgiveness. He doesn’t want it to be far from you. He showed up behind a locked door and spoke peace to Peter. He sends pastors to you to bring that forgiveness right to where you need it. They bring Jesus right to where you need Him. These pastors absolve sins. They say God-given words: “In the stead and by the command of my Lord and savior, Jesus Christ, I forgive you all your sins in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.” These pastors are here because it’s not your job to deal with these sins on your own. Just like your parents might have a tax guy because they can’t handle their taxes, you have a sin guy. You have a pastor. He’s there to forgive you. Don’t carry around guilt and shame on your own. Don’t even wait until Sunday. Call your pastor. He wants nothing more than to drop everything and say those words to you.

I wish I knew to tell Ashley to go see her pastor. I wish I knew to tell her that she didn’t have to walk around feeling broken all day, and she didn’t have to try and fix everything herself. There was a man sent by God Himself to absolve that hurt. If you’re hurting, don’t carry this around yourself. Christ brings real peace to broken sinners in this gift.

Find peace and pardon in a God who bears your sins for you. Find hope in a God who fixes what’s broken. Find life in a God who bore all your sin on the cross, rose from the dead, and then actually showed up for you when you needed Him most. Over and over, He will tell you some of the most important words you’ll ever hear: “In the stead and by the command of my Lord and savior, Jesus Christ, I forgive you all your sins in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.” You are forgiven. Do not be ashamed. Be healed.

Pastor Harrison Goodman serves St. Paul Lutheran Church in Winside, Nebraska and St. Paul Lutheran Church in Carroll, Nebraska. He can be reached at hgoodman01@gmail.com.

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The Silent Cries of Psalm 22

Grace Woelmer

The Book of Psalms was written as a prayer book to God our Father. There are psalms of petitions and lament, psalms of thanksgiving, and psalms of praise and worship. With these psalms we, as God’s children, can pray and talk to Him in any circumstances. Psalm 22 is the famous psalm that starts out with “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?” Jesus spoke those words from the cross in supplication to his Father in heaven. And likewise, we sinners cry out loud in our depth of sin, pleading to God to answer us.

I attended the Te Deum Higher Things conference this summer at Concordia Nebraska and served as a campus volunteer. One of the breakout sessions I went to was about the Psalms and how we can use them in prayer to our Father. The session I had attended just previously to this one was about defending life and arguing against abortion. So naturally, abortion and the recent release of undercover videos that detail the sordid activities of Planned Parenthood were both on my mind as I entered the classroom and heard the pastor reading Psalm 22 in the breakout.

We have the freedom to talk to our Father in Heaven in prayer and supplication, laying before him all our troubles and needs. But then I got to thinking, what about those who cannot voice their troubles? What about the babies in the womb who cannot yet cry out loud to the Lord and may never get the chance? From that point on as the pastor was reading, I was hearing Psalm 22 as the prayer of an unborn child, particularly as one who is to be aborted.

“On you was I cast from my birth,
and from my mother’s womb you have been my God.
Be not far from me, for trouble is near,
and there is none to help.” v. 10-11

“I am poured out like water,
and all my bones are out of joint;
my heart is like wax;
it is melted within my breast;
my strength is dried up like a potsherd,
and my tongue sticks to my jaws;
you lay me in the dust of death.” v. 14-15

We may feel exactly like this when we are burdened with sin, but physically a baby undergoes these exact descriptions in the cruel torture of the process of abortion. Their bodies become disfigured and their strength and health are stolen from them. Their life was a gift given to them, but it was also something that was so quickly taken away.

“For dogs encompass me;
a company of evildoers encircles me;
they have pierced my hands and feet–
I can count all my bones–
they stare and gloat over me;
they divide my garments among them,
and for my clothing they cast lots.” v. 16-18

All I could think of were the abortion doctors who encircle an aborted baby, dismember and take apart the body, and separate the “useful” body parts. They exclaim, “Another boy!” and they only care about the organs as means of a profit after selling them. I admit that, at this point, I was already shedding tears. Yep, I was the CCV in the back of the room crying, and I could not stop thinking about this psalm and these unborn children. What right do we humans have to decide whether or not a child is wanted or unwanted, useful or not useful, alive or not even a human?

“But you, O Lord, do not be far off!
O you my help, come quickly to my aid!
Deliver my soul from the sword,
my precious life from the power of the dog!
Save me from the mouth of the lion!
You have rescued me from the horns of the wild oxen!” v. 19-21

As sinners, we are helpless and cannot redeem ourselves or purchase our own salvation. Babies are also physically helpless from the time they are conceived until even after they are born. Babies rely so much on their mother and father to care for them and satisfy their every need. A baby’s abilities and reliance on others does NOT determine their worth or value. For instance, I am not a very good artist but my inability to paint a beautiful sunset does not mean I am less human. Just like an unborn baby, an elderly person in the nursing home unable to feed themselves does not make them worth less or make them less human. Just as Christ laid down his life for us helpless sinners, we should reach out to help the helpless unborn so that they may have the chance to be cared for and become a saved child of God.

“For he has not despised or abhorred
the affliction of the afflicted,
and he has not hidden his face from him,
but has heard, when he cried to him.
From you comes my praise in the great congregation;
my vows I will perform before those who fear him.
The afflicted shall eat and be satisfied;
those who seek him shall praise the Lord!
May your hearts lives forever!
All the ends of the earth shall remember and turn to the Lord,
and all the families of the nations shall worship before you.” v. 24-28

For those children who are aborted never have the chance to sing aloud to the Lord, to worship His name forever. Yet we must have faith that God has not turned His face from the aborted nor has He turned away from the mothers who choose abortion. God’s mercy is never ending, and He forgives all of our repented sins.

“All the prosperous of the earth eat and worship;
before him shall bow all who go down to the dust,
even the one who could not keep himself alive.
Posterity shall serve him;
it shall be told of the Lord to the coming generation;
they shall come and proclaim his righteousness
to a people yet unborn, that he has done it.” v. 29-31

Children are a gift from God.

Let us then fight for the unborn so that we may have another generation who can live in faith towards God and who can proclaim His righteousness to the next generation. Life is beautiful, for all life has been created by God. Let us speak not only for the voiceless ones in the womb, but also for the sorrowful women haunted by the regret of a previous abortion. May God work through us to give His comfort to those who seek His grace and mercy. It shall be proclaimed to all that Christ, by dying on the cross, has conquered sin, death, and the devil to win salvation for us and for all people, of all ages. Christ’s righteousness goes out even to those unborn children. He has not hidden His face from them, but died and rose again for their salvation, and for us all. Christ was born for all and He died for all, that all may be saved and receive eternal life.

Grace Woelmer is a member of Faith Lutheran Church in Plano, Texas and is studying music education at Concordia Nebraska.

Categories
Catechesis

I Don’t Believe in the Power of Prayer

Timothy Sheridan

I vividly remember the morning during one of my high school years when, before class, a friend closed a classroom door behind us. He told me his parents were probably going to get a divorce and then tearfully said, “But I believe in the power of prayer.” I prayed with him then and there, even though I don’t believe in the power of prayer. Shortly thereafter his parents were divorced anyway. I hope he reads this.

Too many times Christians (even some Lutherans) very piously talk about this “power,” by which they seem to mean that the more heartfelt and spontaneous your petition, the more likely it is God will answer you. Prayer certainly seems powerful in Scripture. After the children of Israel fall into idolatry while Moses is receiving the divine Law by which God’s people are to live, Moses intercedes for them. In reply, “the LORD relented and did not bring on his people the disaster he had threatened” (Exodus 32:14). As James says, “The prayer of a righteous person has great power as it is working” (5:16). Even Jesus tells His disciples, “Whatever you ask in my name, this I will do, that the Father may be glorified in the Son” (John 14:13).

But really, how many times have you prayed in the name of Jesus for something you didn’t receive, even though He commands us to ask and attaches His promises to that asking (Matthew 7:7-8)? Maybe it’s that we truly don’t know how to pray, and James is actually right when he says, “You ask and do not receive, because you ask wrongly” (4:3).

What we have to remember is that prayer isn’t our lifeline-Jesus is. True prayer verbalizes His promises to us and our faith which receives them. The Father hears Jesus’ prayers because Jesus is the Word Himself. God’s Word accomplishes that for which it is sent (Isaiah 55:11), and Jesus was sent for the salvation of the world. God heard Moses’ prayer at Sinai, only because Moses possessed the power of God’s promise. He reminded God of His own words: “Remember Abraham, Isaac, and Israel, your servants, to whom you swore by your own self, and said to them, ‘I will multiply your offspring as the stars of heaven…'” (Exodus 32:13).

If we are to be honest, we often feel that the Church’s formal prayers which direct us to the promises of God’s Word seem stilted, rote, and mechanistic. We think that the more creative and spontaneous the prayer, the more sincere we are. I for one confess that too many times I am insincere in my prayers, regardless of what “type” of prayer I’m praying. I have no problem confessing that, because sincerity doesn’t save us. Jesus said we won’t be heard for our many words (Matthew 6:7), no matter how much sincerity we try to conjure up within ourselves. But God is faithful. Many Christians still mistrust written prayers. But because “the heart is deceitful above all things” (Jeremiah 17:9), we can’t depend on spontaneous prayers from our hearts (ex chorde), to be filled with sincerity. We can’t afford to rely on our hearts when we pray.

When we pray the Lord’s Prayer, the Psalms, or the ordinaries of the liturgy, we’re praying the inspired and life-giving Word of God. The power behind prayer is the power of God’s Word, living and active (Hebrews 4:12).

You can try to simply pour out your heart to God as it is. But after you’ve bargained, then pleaded with God, clenched your fists and threatened Him, you’ll be empty. When your road is dark and your cross is heavy, flowery prayers won’t exactly roll off the tongue. Some of those days I’ve been so bitter, weary, and exhausted that my only prayer for the day has been, “Make haste, O God, to deliver me. Make haste to help me, O Lord” (Psalm 70:1). Sometimes it has just been, “Jesus, help me!” The liturgy taught me to pray that way.

At the end of the day, even with the treasury of devotion that we have in God’s Word and His people’s worship, we still don’t always know how to pray (Romans 8:26). But the good news is the responsibility of approaching our heavenly Father according to His required perfection is taken right out of our hands and is put in the nail-pierced hands of our Savior, His dear Son in whom He delights. We know our Father hears the intercessions of Jesus and the Holy Spirit, so we can confidently pray the words they have given to us. God-pleasing prayers will also direct us to Christ in His Word and Sacraments, in which all our petitions are fulfilled.

Don’t feel that you should never pray from the heart. But first, let the Word inform your heart. Make your daily prayers the Lord’s Prayer, the Ten Commandments, the Psalms, the Creed, the prayers in the Catechism, and the other prayers of the faithful that have been composed in accordance with these words and have stood the test of time. These will teach you how to pray, and will radically alter your spontaneous requests and thanksgivings.

Timothy Sheridan is a member of Our Savior Lutheran in Raleigh, NC. he can be reached at timothysheridan12@gmail.com.

Categories
Current Events

CCV Higher Things Reflection – Concordia: Seward

Magdalena Olson

College is tough. Along with exciting new adventures and friends, Christian students can face challenges to their faith that can leave them feeling drained and alone. Remaining true to my Lutheran confession becomes even more difficult when I am frequently surrounded at school by discussions and debates with those who like to challenge my own theological foundation.

Serving as a Higher Things CCV has blessed me with a rare chance to join a Lutheran community that offers wonderful support and has provided me with some of my dearest and closest friends. Those five days in July when hundreds of Christ-confessing students gather to receive God’s Sacraments and study His Word has become a refreshing oasis in the desert that many of us face at school. The nourishment that can be found in the four daily church services along with the faithfully taught plenary lectures offer abundant doses of clearly taught Law and Gospel. Even in the hour long breakaway sections, specific analysis of church practice and history provides a remarkable opportunity to explore personal inquiry and engage in discussion about a multitude of theological subjects.

Surrounded by fellow Lutheran college students and a multitude of faithful pastors, I quickly learned to take advantage of this beneficial environment. Both intense and relaxed conversations fill almost every minute of our free time and supply much needed counsel and consolation after wearying semesters as school. The support and friendship I have received during my three years as a CCV often make me wish that I could live in a place where I could be constantly immersed in this wonderful teaching, friendship, and worship.

At this year’s conference, during our initial get-to-know-each other circle, we were asked what our favorite part of Higher Things is. There were a few varying answers, but as in previous years one familiar answer arose as the most popular: the worship. I thought to myself, “These people get it!” The daily services of Matins, Vespers, Evening Prayer, and Compline have become some my most treasured memories, starting with my very first Higher Things conference six years ago. It was at Higher Things that I first understood what the glorious treasure we have in our liturgy, which allows us to praise and glorify God along with those in the past, present, and future.

These times of worship have given me, through the historic liturgy, some of the greatest comfort and reassurance of God’s love for us. Some say that today’s youth are turned away by traditional services, but I have seen thousands of youth enthusiastically singing an ancient liturgy and reverently celebrating the Lord’s Supper. What a immeasurable joy it is to unite our voices together in praise every day!

Throughout the academic year, these theology-filled and worship-packed days remain with me and have even helped me endure some hardest times at college. I find the comfort of the worship and the community of my Lutheran Higher Things family when confronted by the trials and challenges of college. When we pray evening prayer together at my college, I remember with fondness and gratitude the thousands of voices at Higher Things conferences, and joyfully anticipate the time when I will hear them again.

Magdalena Olson is a senior at Hillsdale College majoring in history and German, the vice president of Hillsdale College Students for Life, and a member at Zion Evangelical Lutheran Church in Marshall, Michigan.