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Music4Hym777
8th May 2004, 11:40 PM
...you only serve Jell-O in the proper liturgical color for the season.

...you didn't know chow mein noodles were a Chinese food.

...when someone mentions red and green (in terms of Christmas), you immediately think of a battle over hymnals.

...during the entire service you hold your hymnal open but never look down at it.

...during communion you hum the hymns so you can see who's at church that Sunday.

...rather than introducing yourself to a visitor at church, you check their name out in the guestbook.

...you think Garrison Keillor's stories are totally factual.

...you have your wedding reception in the fellowship hall and feel guilty about not staying to help clean up.

...a midlife crisis means switching from the old hymnbook to the new one.

...you forget to put water in the baptismal font but never forget to put water in the coffee pot.

...the pastor skips the last hymn to make sure church lasts exactly 60 minutes.

...you make spaghetti at your house with the little macaroni noodles because they're not so messy then.

...you don't make eye contact when passing someone in the hall because you think it's impolite.

...your choir believes volume is a fair substitute for tonality.

...you don't know what was sooo funny about dat movie "Fargo" then.

...in response to someone jumping up and shouting "Praise the Lord!", you politely remind him or her that we don't do that around here.

...you think a meeting isn't legitimate unless it's at least three hours long.

...peas in your tuna noodle hotdish add too much color.

...you make change in the offering plate for a ten.

...your dad's name is Luther N., your brother is Luther Hahn and you are Lew Theran.

...you think butter is a spice.

...the church is on fire, and you rush in to save the coffee pot.

...you have more than five flavors of Jell-O in your pantry.

...you know what a "dead spread" is.

...you talk to someone else and look at their shoes first.

...you have more than three friends whose first names have the letter "j" as the second letter.

...the only open pew is up front, so you volunteer to shovel the sidewalk.

...Ole and Lena are really the names of your relatives.

...you know what a Lutheran Church Basement Woman is.

...you give a party and don't tell anyone where it is.

...you think hotdish is one of the major food groups.

...your five-year-old recites the Old Testament books as Genesis, Exodus, Lutefisk...

...someone asks you after church if there's any "decaf coffee" and you laugh because you KNOW that if it doesn't have caffeine, it can't be coffee!

...you think anyone who says "casserole" instead of "hotdish" is trying to be uppity (or maybe even Episcopalian!)

...you think the term "Jell-O salad" is redundant.

...you freeze the leftover coffee from fellowship hour for next week.

...you were little you actually thought the Reverend's first name was "Pastor."

...you think you're paying your pastor too much if he gets a new car for the first time in eight years.

...you hear something really funny and smile as loud as you can.

...it takes 10 minutes to say good-bye.

...doughnuts are in the official church budget.

...they have to rope off the last pews in church so the front isn't empty.

...you're watching "Star Wars" in the theatre and when they say, "May the force be with you," the theatre replies, "and also with you."

...you tap a church visitor on the shoulder and say, "excuse me, but you're in my seat."

...you doodle on the back of communion cards.

...you can say the meal prayer all in one breath.

...Bach is your favorite composer just because he was Lutheran, too.

...you hesitate to clap for the church choir or special music because "it just wasn't done that way in the old days."

...your church library has three Jell-O cookbooks.

...it's time to change a lightbulb and the left side of the aisle begins a debate on "change," while the right side of the aisle musters five volunteers--one to hold the bulb, and four to turn the ladder.

...you laugh out loud while reading this list, and relive your childhood at the same time.

... you think the four food groups are coffee, lefse, lutefisk, and Jell-O.

...you can actually come up with responses to this.

...you sign a petition to have Campbell Soup Co. rename its "Cream of Mushroom soup" "Lutheran Binder!"

...you actually think the pastor's jokes are funny.

...the bumper sticker on your car says, "Legalize Lutefisk!"

... you pronounce the word Lutheran "Lutern."

...requests you hear are preceeded or followed by the phrase, "If it's not too much trouble then..."

...you know all the words to the first verse of "Silent Night" in German but can't speak a word of it.

...you carry silverware in your pocket to church just in case there's a potluck.

...you have an uncontollable urge to sit in the back of any room.

... P.M.S. is defined as "Post Merger Syndrome."

...your house is a mess because you're "saved by Grace," not by works.

...the doilies underneath the Thanksgiving flowers make nice snowflakes at Christmas.

...you think the communion wafers are too spicy.

...your mother reminds you often that she wishes you'd studied the organ.

... you dress up as your favorite reformer for Halloween.

...your mother could give any Jewish mother a run for the money in the guilt department.

...you think lime Jell-O with cottage cheese and pineapple is a gourmet salad.

...you think that an ELCA Lutheran bride and an LCMS groom make for a "mixed marriage." (or any other two synods not in fellowship.)

...Folgers has you on their Christmas list.

...your congregation's first two operating rules are "Don't change" and "Don't spend."

...your LCMS pastor refers to St. Louis as "the holy city." (WELS=Milwaukee; ELCA=Chicago; ELS=Mankato; etc.)

...at Thanksgiving you serve lutefisk and try to convince your kids it's really a turkey.

...you're at an evangelistic rally and you actually manage to raise your hands waist high.

...the only mealtime prayer you know is "Come Lord Jesus."

...you and your family of six squeeze into the last pew along with the 140 members already sitting there.

...you're 57 years old and your parents still won't let you date a Catholic.

...at the close of a memo it states "Peace be with you" and you respond "and also with you."

...you can't get into heaven without a casserole.

...you notice the Kool Aid stock shoots up during the Vacation Bible School season.

...you wonder why bread and wine are used for Communion instead of coffee and donuts.

...you are referred to as the frozen chosen!

...Commandment #11--If it's never been done that way before, don't do it.

...you consider lottery tickets a serious investment.

...you make your hotdishes with cream of mushroom soup and your salads with Jell-O.

...you sing "Stand Up, Stand Up for Jesus" while sitting down.

...a line item in the trustee's budget is "coffee maker maintenance."

...you think tuna hotdish is a gourmet meal.

...your idea of an affirmation is "This is most certainly true."

...you feel guilty about not feeling guilty.

...it's 110 degrees outside and you still have coffee after services.

...change means wearing your brown suit instead of your blue suit to church.

...you read your Catechism and start arguing theology with yourself because no one else is around.

...the most mail you receive all year is from the Stewardship Committee.

...you take your grandfather to McDonalds for breakfast and he asks for a large order of McLefsa.

...you win $10 million in the lottery and decide to throw a party and money is no object, so you advertise in the church bulletin, rent the parish hall, and ask all of your friends to bring a side dish or salad.

...every time something changes, the old one was better.

...you hold your family reunion in the church basement.

...a capital fund drive is needed to finance the new one million cup coffee urn.

...you serve Jell-O as a vegetable.

...your biggest fund-raisers are bake sales instead of bingo.

...you can't have a meeting without having a meal.

...you refer to your trip to Minneapolis as a pilgrimage.

...sharing the peace during the service takes more time than the sermon.

...all of your casserole dishes have your name on the bottom.

...you're willing to pay up to one dollar for a meal at church.

...the third service each Sunday is coffee hour.

...all your relatives graduated from a school named Concordia.

...potluck dinners are your favorite indoor sport.

...you ask for "A Mighty Fortress" on the love song request line.

...you automatically sing 'amen' at the end of every song you sing.

...you count coffee among the sacraments.

...you actually understand the folks from Lake Wobegon.

...your coffee cup is permanently stained.

...you consume some form of Jell-O at every holiday meal.

...you don't question why the seat you sit in at church is called a pew.

...you have a relative named Einar.

...you wish MTV, VH1 and CMT had hymns.

Rechtgläubig
9th May 2004, 12:01 AM
LOL www.Oldlutheran.com (http://www.oldlutheran.com/)!

OK, honestly, I am guilty of the following...

...you don't make eye contact when passing someone in the hall because you think it's impolite.


...in response to someone jumping up and shouting "Praise the Lord!", you politely remind him or her that we don't do that around here.


...you hear something really funny and smile as loud as you can.


...Bach is your favorite composer just because he was Lutheran, too.

...someone asks you after church if there's any "decaf coffee" and you laugh because you KNOW that if it doesn't have caffeine, it can't be coffee!

...you hesitate to clap for the church choir or special music because "it just wasn't done that way in the old days."


...you actually think the pastor's jokes are funny.


...you think that an ELCA Lutheran bride and an LCMS groom make for a "mixed marriage."

...the only mealtime prayer you know is "Come Lord Jesus."


...Commandment #11--If it's never been done that way before, don't do it.


...you sing "Stand Up, Stand Up for Jesus" while sitting down.


...you think anyone who says "casserole" instead of "hotdish" is trying to be uppity (or maybe even Episcopalian!)


...you feel guilty about not feeling guilty.


And I think JVAC or Breetai made this one up lol...


"...you aren't offended by Lotar."



This one cracks me up...


...you were little you actually thought the Reverend's first name was "Pastor."


My best friend is a WELS pastor and what drives him crazy about conferences is that everyones name is "pastor". "Can I get you some coffee pastor?" "Why yes thank you pastor" "That was nice of pastor to ask, wasn't it pastor?" "It sure was pastor"...

LOL! :D

Rechtgläubig
9th May 2004, 12:05 AM
I think this one should be added to the list! My wife just called me on my cell phone and that is what prompted me to think of it, so yeah I am guilty of this one as well...


...Your cell phone ringer plays Bach's "Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring"

:blush:

ByzantineDixie
9th May 2004, 07:50 AM
...Your cell phone ringer plays Bach's "Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring"

HEY! That's what I have my cell phone set to! ...because it sounds so Lutheran!

...you don't make eye contact when passing someone in the hall because you think it's impolite.

Not me...I will do what I can to MAKE you look at me when passing in the hall, give you a BIG smile and say "how's everything going" or something. I am so not a Lutheran in this one.

...in response to someone jumping up and shouting "Praise the Lord!", you politely remind him or her that we don't do that around here.

I am just WAITING for someone to do this in our church...not to say we do not do this...but to JOIN THEM!!! My admin joined me at church on our Friendship Sunday and while the pastor was preachin' she peppered her listening with a few "Amens" and "Preach it, brothers". It was GREAT! (Of course...this is Georgia and she is Baptist!)

...you think you're paying your pastor too much if he gets a new car for the first time in eight years.

I don't think there is enough money in the world to pay pastors what they are worth. Truly.

...Commandment #11--If it's never been done that way before, don't do it.

One of my purposes in life is to break this rule at least once every day. In fact, if the answer to any question is "because we have always done it that way" its the wrong answer and expect to see things done a new way!!!

Lest y'all start thinking "how'd she ever become a Lutheran"...there are a few things that do apply....

...it takes 10 minutes to say good-bye.
...you have your wedding reception in the fellowship hall and feel guilty about not staying to help clean up.
...you actually understand the folks from Lake Wobegon.

Wow, that's all I can find :o ...I guess I am not very Lutheran!!!

Oh I forgot one...

"...you aren't offended by Lotar."

;) ^_^

Hey, y'all have a wonderful Lord's Day. Call or visit your Mom's. You'll never truly understand the depth of love your mom has for you until you have kids of your own.

And to all you mother's, Lutheran or not, Happy Mother's Day!!!

Love

Rose

Rechtgläubig
9th May 2004, 07:59 AM
HEY! That's what I have my cell phone set to! ...because it sounds so Lutheran!


NO WAY!!!

^_^ Do you have cingular too? That is too funny! We'll, Mrs. Rose, you my dear, quite possibly, are a Lutheran!

LOL! :D

Music4Hym777
10th May 2004, 03:00 PM
Bach oh no, I have "A Mighty Fortress is Our God" on my cell phone!!!!

ByzantineDixie
10th May 2004, 07:52 PM
That's it...contest over. We have our uberLutheran!!! You go, Music!!! :D

Rose

Phoebe
10th May 2004, 08:21 PM
LOL
That list is so Norwegian.
Have you heard of a comedy duo, "Thos two Lutheran Ladies?"

LuxPerpetua
11th May 2004, 11:35 AM
Okay . . . I just have to ask: What on earth is Lutefisk and Lefse??? As a new Lutheran I think I should be let in the club ;)

Oh, and I make a mean tuna noodle casserole (I just don't think I could ever get into calling something a "hotdish" :blush: )

JVAC
11th May 2004, 12:23 PM
Lefsa is a potato bread, (I think it has German roots), and lutefisk is salted herring, which has Sweedish roots. Germany, Denmark, Sweeden, and Norway were all big Lutheran Countries, and a lot of Churches you find will probably identifiy themselves with one of those countries. Mine is Danish Lutheran, we keep a lot of Danish tradition in our activities. This happens to most all churches, except the really super big congregations, (and by that I mean over five hundred active attendance ;) we all aren't as blessed as Monica with such a large congregation. )

And I am sorry to say but, casserole is a forbidden word in a Lutheran Social Hall :D it is like the twelfth comandment, thou shalt serve hotdishes and only hot dishes.

-James

Music4Hym777
13th June 2004, 01:27 AM
Lefsa is a potato bread, (I think it has German roots), and lutefisk is salted herring, which has Sweedish roots. Germany, Denmark, Sweeden, and Norway were all big Lutheran Countries, and a lot of Churches you find will probably identifiy themselves with one of those countries. Mine is Danish Lutheran, we keep a lot of Danish tradition in our activities. This happens to most all churches, except the really super big congregations, (and by that I mean over five hundred active attendance ;) we all aren't as blessed as Monica with such a large congregation. )

And I am sorry to say but, casserole is a forbidden word in a Lutheran Social Hall :D it is like the twelfth comandment, thou shalt serve hotdishes and only hot dishes.

-James
Actually it is Norweigian.

So what if I have a "large church" (we are really small since we are traditional around here! Large is 10,000+)

Yep Casserole is forbidden

SPALATIN
13th June 2004, 08:53 AM
Actually it is Norweigian.

So what if I have a "large church" (we are really small since we are traditional around here! Large is 10,000+)

Yep Casserole is forbidden
I have to add my wife's story here. She was raised in a Southern US way even though they lived overseas quite a bit of the time. She moved here with me after we married and heard the word "Hot Dish" and didn't know that meant a "casserole" she thought we bought hot plates.

Music4Hym777
13th June 2004, 06:44 PM
I have to add my wife's story here. She was raised in a Southern US way even though they lived overseas quite a bit of the time. She moved here with me after we married and heard the word "Hot Dish" and didn't know that meant a "casserole" she thought we bought hot plates.
Haha, I've grown up calling things hot dish for the most part, although Broccolli hot dish kinda sounds funny!