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Why are you a Lutheran?

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112657

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Hello all! I have a question...why are you Lutheran? I am working with/ for Lutherans. I am studying a bit. I like what I know about the Lutherans (the ELCA folks in particular) so far.

I have never found my "home" so to speak, so I have remained non-denominational. I feel ready to explore and possibly commit. But, when I ask Lutherans (as I have asked others I am curious about) why they chose to be Lutheran, they all sort of look at me blankly.

If you had to say, in the simplist terms possible, why you find yourself where you are--what would you say?

Thanks to anyone willing to share.
 

Protoevangel

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Lutheranism has always stood on the solid Rock of Christ. Lutheranism is not simply another denomination, another opinion; it is the continuation of the Visible Church in the West. Rome may have dubbed us "protestant", but we are truly catholic. Scripture is the sole rule and norm; the teaching of the Church catholic throughout all ages, and the Lutheran Confessions are our witnesses.

I am Lutheran because I agree with the Lutheran Confessions completely.

If you would like to know what the Lutheran Confessions are, you can start with Luther's Small Catechism, and The Augsburg Confession. And of course, feel free to keep asking questions.
 
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SPALATIN

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I was baptized Lutheran and grew up Lutheran. I ventured away for 15 years in the desert of American Evangelicalism only to find my oasis back in the Lutheran Church and I shall not and will not leave it again.

And what Danhead said goes for me as well.
 
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LilLamb219

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I'm Lutheran because it's the closest to what the Bible teaches concerning Christianity. Lutherans teach that salvation is 100% God's work and I haven't come across any other denomination who can claim that without adding on any other terms, whether it's you must accept Christ into your heart, surrender yourself, make a decision for Christ, etc... Lutherans say that faith is a gift from God and we believe because of that gift of faith. We don't have to work for it in any way. Lutherans are truly unique and worth looking into.
 
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Virgil the Roman

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LilLamb219 said:
I'm Lutheran because it's the closest to what the Bible teaches concerning Christianity. Lutherans teach that salvation is 100% God's work and I haven't come across any other denomination who can claim that without adding on any other terms, whether it's you must accept Christ into your heart, surrender yourself, make a decision for Christ, etc... Lutherans say that faith is a gift from God and we believe because of that gift of faith. We don't have to work for it in any way. Lutherans are truly unique and worth looking into.
I'll try and do that. :thumbsup:
 
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JVAC

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Cuz no one else would have me :p

I have a lutheran view of Law/Gospel (and if you have one of these you get kicked out of every other place you go to); an Orthodox view of Ecclesiology; a Roman Catholic view on the Sacraments, all in all just a screwed up person :D.

I like the term Stanley Hauerwas coined, "Ecclesial Cannibal".
 
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Protoevangel

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You may be able to find a good local congregation here. (lutheranliturgy.org)

If not, you can try:
LCMS
TAALC
WELS/ELS
CLBA (follow the "People of the CLB" link at the top of the page)
ELCA (Liberal)
 
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DaRev

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JVAC said:
Cuz no one else would have me :p

I have a lutheran view of Law/Gospel (and if you have one of these you get kicked out of every other place you go to); an Orthodox view of Ecclesiology; a Roman Catholic view on the Sacraments, all in all just a screwed up person :D.

I like the term Stanley Hauerwas coined, "Ecclesial Cannibal".

Check out this church.
 
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CaliforniaJosiah

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112657 said:
Hello all! I have a question...why are you Lutheran? I am working with/ for Lutherans. I am studying a bit. I like what I know about the Lutherans (the ELCA folks in particular) so far.

I have never found my "home" so to speak, so I have remained non-denominational. I feel ready to explore and possibly commit. But, when I ask Lutherans (as I have asked others I am curious about) why they chose to be Lutheran, they all sort of look at me blankly.

If you had to say, in the simplist terms possible, why you find yourself where you are--what would you say?

Thanks to anyone willing to share.


MY thoughts...
(I post not as an official representative of the Office of Information for any Lutheran denomination, synod or group - I speak only for me)...


1. I agree overwhelmingly with Lutheran doctrine. If you check out my beliefs thread (there's a link in the signature line of every one of my posts), you'll see a lot of Lutheran influences although I do NOT claim that it is an exposition of Lutheranism - ONLY a brief witness to what I believe in my own words. It is what I think/feel in my words.


2. My affirmation of Lutheran doctrine probably comes naturally. My mother is the daughter of a Lutheran pastor and went to Lutheran schools, K-8 and college. My father has his doctorate from a Lutheran seminary and considers himself theologically to be clearly Lutheran. I was homeschooled, and in K-8 that was from materials published by CPH (the LCMS publishing house) for Lutheran schools, and in high school, that involved 3 years of very intense study of the 3 vol. of F. Pieper's "Christian Dogmatics" - the same series used to teach theology to pastors in the LCMS and I think WELS. I also completed the course work for Lutheran Confirmation and a study of the Small Catechism and the Augsburg Confession. BUT, I've also studied many other expressions of Christian faith including Catholicism (I was actively involved in the CC for about 5 years - including Mass, a weekly Bible study and the Information Class for membership).


3. I'm very drawn to the humility and simplicity of Lutheran doctrine. Lutheranism is VERY Christ-centered and embraces - to it's very core - humility and servanthood. I've only recently come to understand that the very foundation - the Theology of the Cross - is something I've always embraced to my very core. Getting a better handle on that caused me to realize why Lutheran theology has always appealed a lot to me. I have a post on this in my "Beliefs Thread" (again, a link is found in the signature line below).


4. On the other hand, Lutherans are often a strongly cognative, didactive people - focused much on the head rather than heart and life; their "gift" to Christianity is doctrine. Some Lutheran groups are, sadly, notorious in all of the Christian world for their warrring, bickering, and exclusive attitude. MY experience is that this usually doesn't filter down to the congregational level any more than in any other faith community. MY experience has been that in spite of their reputation, Lutherans and Lutheran congregations are wecoming, embracing, loving and caring. Jesus said, "By this will people know that you are My disciples - if you have love." I've found that Lutheran's display that in real and genuine ways no less than any other Christian community and there are congregations that truely shine in this regard, in ways that make the Lord of the Church rejoice.


5. Be aware that Lutheranism is an old, large, diverse faith community. There are some 70 million members in nearly every nation on earth - perhaps the largest and oldest Protestant faith community in the world. And not infrequently, there are various sub-groups existing side by side (sometimes in harmony, sometimes in a state of war) wherever Lutherans are found. Often (but not always), Lutheranism is defined by the Lutheran Confessions. I doubt any two Lutherans always agree on all things, and yet most do embrace those Confessions and various central themes perhaps best expressed by Sola Gratia, Solus Christus, Sola Fide, Sola Scriptura and the Theology of the Cross. In a given community, there might be 3 or 4 different Lutheran congregations - each quite distictive in terms of customs, traditions, policies, etc. They may have very distinctive attitudes. But there is a commonality in their doctrine that clearly makes them all "Lutheran."


6. Much more I could add - the "Law/Gospel" dynamic (next to the Theology of the Cross, it is Lutheranism's greatest contribution to Christianity, IMO), their embrace of mystery, Tradition and community - and much more.


7. A book I'd highly recommend is entitled, "The Spirituality of the Cross" by Gene Edward Veith, Jr. It's published by cph (www.cph.org). It's a small, inexpensive, easy reading book that well defines Lutheranism. My girlfriend's father (a Lutheran pastor) gave me that book and it helped me realize how very Lutheran I am - and why.



MY views and perspectives....



- Josiah


.
 
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LutheranHawkeye

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First off I am Lutheran because it is part of my identity. I am german/czech and ironically enough both families are very lutheran and they have been lutheran as far as both families go back. I am Lutheran because it is the closest church to the bible. It is the original church, it just took the roman out of roman catholic, and has kept away from all the modern unbiblical stuff. Overall some branches may be liberal or conservative but as one lutheran church we have kept strong in the true faith and guided people through the grace of God. That is why I am Lutheran:).
 
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SPALATIN

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NordicLutheran said:
First off I am Lutheran because it is part of my identity. I am german/czech and ironically enough both families are very lutheran and they have been lutheran as far as both families go back. I am Lutheran because it is the closest church to the bible. It is the original church, it just took the roman out of roman catholic, and has kept away from all the modern unbiblical stuff. Overall some branches may be liberal or conservative but as one lutheran church we have kept strong in the true faith and guided people through the grace of God. That is why I am Lutheran:).

If the liberal branches change something in the faith, is it still the true faith or has it now been tainted?
 
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LutheranHawkeye

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SPALATIN said:
If the liberal branches change something in the faith, is it still the true faith or has it now been tainted?

The liberal branches are just as much apart of the tree as the confessional/conservative branches are apart of the tree, its just the confessional branches bear fruit and don't fall off the tree occasionaly to be picked up by presbyterian folks walking in the park. :)
 
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Protoevangel

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NordicLutheran said:
The liberal branches are just as much apart of the tree as the confessional/conservative branches are apart of the tree, its just the confessional branches bear fruit and don't fall off the tree occasionaly to be picked up by presbyterian folks walking in the park. :)
"Communions calling themselves Christian but not accepting God's Word as God's Word and therefore denying the Triune God, according to God's Word are no churches but synagogues of Satan and temples of idols."
- CFW Walther

http://herchurch.org/
Is this of the Church you are talking about? Is the body in communion with this, the church you are talking about?
 
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