Wednesday, January 24, 2018

Choosing agendas. . .

To manage culture is neither a right or a responsibility given us by God.  The Church is in danger of being swept up or swept aside by competing agendas.  In fact, our age suffers the great anxiety of addressing improvements to our culture and world as if there might be a way to end all wrongs.  The Church cannot afford merely to take sides amid the competing  political, moral, social, sexual, and cultural agendas thrust before our nation and our world.  We are not in a race to become those who rescue the moment.  We have a unique and different task.  We are called to be voices of eternity in a world which sees and judges only by the moment.  We are not here to build a better world.  We are here to proclaim the Kingdom that is not of this world but is clearly in it through the means of grace.

The culture has adopted as normal nearly all the things those went before us could not even conceive -- from reproductive technology to gender fluidity, and to a world in pursuit of pleasure above all things.  Ours is not simply to oppose such irrational ends and promote a Christian society but rather to speak the Gospel to sinners in chains because of their sins and to those condemned to death now and forevermore. The Gospel is not a step stool toward a higher cause of justice but justice, if there is any, is the fruit of a society in which the Gospel is proclaimed loudly and clearly.

How strange it is that the Church seems to weigh in on everything from movie reviews to gender issues and yet is without much of a voice to call even her own people to lives of holiness and righteousness!  How strange it is when people equate the Church and the Gospel with a position on these issues instead of seeing the Church through the lens of Christ crucified and risen!  How strange it is when the institutional survival of church structures becomes equated with the survival of the Church, the Bride of Christ!  How strange it is that Christians battle for the dominance of their ideas but fail to manifest the cause of virtue, holiness, humility, and love in their daily lives!

The gift of the Gospel is the power to become the people God has declared us to be.  Good works may not be worth a dime for saving us but that does not mean that good works are without value for the sake of our neighbor, for the witness to the faith, and for the glory of God.  Love may seem impotent and laughable in a world where power is in the media and words become weapons as powerful as the ones we manufacture for war but we forget that love became incarnate for us and for our salvation and love triumphed in the ultimate sacrifice of the cross.

The preaching of the Church must not neglect the call to holiness and the sanctification of life even as the cross and our justification is proclaimed.  Yet this seems to be missing when our people gather in the Lord's House on the Lord's Day.  We face the triumph of liberty which is soiled in the pursuit of trivial things that become our undoing.  True freedom is expressed most of all by our submission to the gracious will of God and our pursuit of love for our neighbor.  What none can be compelled to do has become our free calling and vocation by the gift of God in baptism.

Right doctrine is surely connected to right praise but it is also connected to right living.  Even though we freely admit and confess that right living is difficult and beyond our grasp this side of glory, it should not reduce our passion or our pursuit of this goal.  All are tied together.  We cannot pick and choose which rightness we will pursuit -- not some theoretical orthodoxy of the mind which fails to manifest a liturgical orthodoxy or practice and not a liturgical orthodoxy of worship which fails to manifest a vocational orthodoxy of life.  Right doctrine sings and it sings a song that is the anthem of our new lives created in Christ Jesus for good works.

Until we get this, we will simply be fighting battles without a sense of who we are, whose we are, what what we are here for. . .

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

Pastor Peters, should LCMS pastors teach their parishioners the Lutheran Confessions, especially now that we have the McCain Readers edition?

Pastor Peters said...

But of course.

Anonymous said...

This is probably not news to you but it was a surprise to me to learn that a CPH published pastor disagreed at a speaking engagement here in East Tennessee. I believe that the Lutheran Confessions are neglected when they should be a staple in LCMS congregations.

Pastor Peters said...

Clearly the most accessible is the Augsburg Confession and it should be taught and known by most Lutherans and it would be good to also be as familiar with the Large Catechism. That said, we have covered everything but the Formula of Concord so far and have had classes with as many as 20 people in them. It can be done!

Anonymous said...

I honestly wish I could attend your church but it would be a three and a half hour commute one way. I’m not sure about taking the last train to Clarksville. Ha! I slay me!