Although this might seem like a rather picky point to make and even a rather narrow minded perspective, it is not. No one joins a church which has a split personality or more than one doctrinal and liturgical face. Do they? Maybe it was once possible to limit your sense of the Church to one congregation but not today. After all, we live in mobile world in which our people pack up and move many times throughout their lives. Furthermore, the differences between the various congregations of the seemingly same confession are not just window dressing differences but real and substantial. In a world in which people seem more and more interested in authenticity, which one is authentic?
Indeed, that is the problem. Which one is the real one? Lutherans have tried for a very long time to presume that there is no real face to Lutheranism -- they are all real and we even have a term for it. It is called adiaphora. We have adopted that term to mean that anything can go on Sunday morning -- within certain limited boundaries -- so long as the kernel of faith is preserved in theory. I do not buy it but it is the party line, so to speak. What this means is that Lutheranism presents itself in a variety of ways to those within the tradition and to those either interested or merely curious. The range is rather mind boggling. Some of us have bishops and some do not. Some have female clergy and some do not. Some confess the whole Book of Concord and some merely the Augsburg Confession. Some have adopted the Western version of sexual desire and gender identity and some have not. Some have praise bands and some have pipe organs. Some have pop gospel choruses and some have hymns. Some have an open table and some practice close(d) communion. Some have vestments and some have torn jeans and tees. I could go on. You get the point. So would the real Lutheran Church stand up? Que. They all stand. Ah. Duh.
Rome has an equally confusing face on Sundays. Some have Novus Ordo and some have Vetus Ordo. Some have reverence and tradition and some have casual informality all over the place. Some have pep talks on spirituality as sermons and some have, well, sermons. Some like Rome and the Pope and some want to keep both as far away from them as possible. Some kneel and some stand. Some hold out their hands and some wait for the Sacrament to be placed on their tongues. Some have altar rails and some are tearing them out. Some want a dictator pope and some want to introduce democracy into Rome. Some want married and female priests and some could leave it if ever showed signs of happening. Would the real Roman Catholic parish please stand up?
No matter where you stand on these issues, the truth is obvious. They all cannot be right or can they? Is Christianity more a state of mind than a liturgical identity or a creedal confession? I fear that those who may be interested in a Christianity neither lite nor paranoid will have to admit that not all the incarnations which display the name Lutheran are right or can have the same claim to fame. Eventually, we will have to resolve this (and so will Rome!). Even if we cannot muster the strength to resolve the untenable disparities for the sake of God and the people of God, then at least we need to resolve it for the sake of those who might be interested in trading the vacuous version of Christianity of the liberal left or no version at all from those who refused to teach it to their children into something authentic. At least I hope so...




