Bethany Lutheran Church
Lindsborg Kansas
To be a Lutheran is to be a Christian (not the other way around!). Many characteristics of the Lutheran way are also traits of other Christian traditions. Lutherans have no monopoly on certain ways of being Christian, but are part of the "church catholic" ("catholic" means "universal").
The Lutheran Church comes out of Martin Luther's sixteenth-century protesting of certain Roman Catholic church teachings for which Luther found no biblical basis. His primary insight into the Gospel was that salvation is never earned by our own effort, but is a free gracious gift of God. Thus, Lutherans have ties to Roman Catholicism (Martin Luther was, after all, an Augustinian monk), as well as to other Protestant churches.
Lutheran Christians confess Jesus as the Christ, the Savior of the World. Through Jesus, God has said to us, "Yes. I made you. I sustain you. I love you. I give you forgiveness, wholeness, and eternal life. The gift is unconditional. You need not be somebody or do anything to deserve the gift. It's free and can't be bought for any price! Only receive it by faith." Faith is not intellectual acceptance of doctrines about God, but dynamic, life-changing trust that God's promises will be kept. The good works that we do are done out of thankfulness to God for what we have already received, not out of a need to earn God's favor.
Within the church, Lutherans are committed to:
Commitment to all of this cannot be sustained without prayer. We come together regularly to praise God and receive nurture and guidance. We take the Bible seriously, trusting that although some of it may appear to be straw, it holds the precious Word of God just as the manger held Jesus (God's Word made flesh). We receive Baptism and Holy Communion as renewed promises that God will not ever or finally forsake us but remains as close to us and to the world as cleansing water, bread, and wine.
If you would like to learn more about Christianity in the Lutheran tradition, please contact:
The Rev. Dr. Constance (Connie) F. Parvey
The Lutheran Ministry at MIT
MIT Bldg. W11, 40 Massachusetts Ave.
Cambridge, MA 02139
Telephone: (617) 253-2325
E-mail: lutheran@mit.edu
(Material in this description was adapted by the Rev. Susan P. Thomas from Baptized We Live: Lutheranism as a way of life by Daniel Erlander,© 1981 Daniel W. Erlander)
Here are the 95 Theses Martin Luther nailed on the church door at Wittenburg, October 31, 1517:
Made available to the network by Bob Van Cleef revc@garg.campbell.ca.us
Lutherans accept two Sacraments as God-given means for penetrating the lives of people with his grace. Although they are not the only means of God's self-revelation, Baptism and Holy Communions are visible acts of God's love.
In Baptism, and it can be seen more clearly in infant Baptism, God freely offers his grace and lovingly establishes a new community. In Holy Communion -- often called the Lord's Supper or the Eucharist -- those who come to the table receive in bread and wine the body and blood of their Lord. This gift is itself the real presence of God's forgiveness and mercy, nourishing believers in union with their Lord and with each other.
*Prepared by the ELCA Department for Communication (11/95); adapted from a pamphlet of the same name published by Evangelical Outreach, Division for Parish Services of the former Lutheran Church in America, now out of print.
To borrow a phrase from Luther, the Bible is "the manger in which the Word of God is laid." While Lutherans recognize differences in the way the Bible should be studied and interpreted, it is accepted as the primary and authoritative witness to the church's faith. Written and transcribed by many authors over a period of many centuries, the Bible bears remarkable testimony to the mighty acts of God in the lives of people and nations. In the Old Testament is found the vivid account of God's covenant relationship to Israel. In the New Testament is founding the story of God's new covenant with all of creation in Jesus.
The New Testament is the first-hand proclamation of those who lived through the events of Jesus' life, death, and Resurrection. As such, it is the authority for Christian faith and practice. The Bible is thus not a definitive record of history or science. Rather, it is the record of the drama of God's saving care for creation throughout the course of history.
*Prepared by the ELCA Department for Communication (11/95); adapted from a pamphlet of the same name published by Evangelical Outreach, Division for Parish Services of the former Lutheran Church in America, now out of print.
A. Baptism is not just plain water, but it is water contained within God's command and united with God's Word.
Q. Which Word of God is this?
A. The one which our Lord Christ spoke in the last chapter of Matthew:
"Go into all the world, teaching all nations, and baptizing them in the name of
the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit." ( Matthew 28:18-20)
Q. What does Baptism give? What good is it?
A. It gives the forgiveness of sins, redeems from death and the Devil, gives eternal salvation to all who believe this, just as God's words and promises declare.
Q. What are these words and promises of God?
A. Our Lord Christ spoke one of them in the last chapter of Mark:
"Whoever believes and is baptized will be saved; but whoever does not believe
will be damned." (Mark 16:15-16)
Q. How can water do such great things?
A. Water doesn't make these things happen, of course. It is God's Word, which
is with and in the water. Because, without God's Word, the water is plain water
and not Baptism. But with God's Word it is a Baptism, a grace-filled water of
life, a bath of new birth in the Holy Spirit, as St. Paul said to Titus in the
third chapter:
"Through this bath of rebirth and renewal of the Holy Spirit, which was poured
out on us abundantly through Jesus Christ, our Savior, that we, justified by the
same grace are made heirs according to the hope of eternal life. This is a
faithful saying." (Titus 3:4-8)
Q. What is the meaning of such a water Baptism?
A. It means that the old Adam in us should be drowned by daily sorrow and repentance, and die with all sins and evil lusts, and, in turn, a new person daily come forth and rise from death again. He will live forever before God in righteousness and purity.
Q. Where is this written?
A. St. Paul says to the Romans in chapter six: "We are buried with Christ through Baptism into death, so that, in the same way Christ is risen from the dead by the glory of the Father, thus also must we walk in a new life." (Romans 6:4)
Originally translated in 1994 by the Rev. Robert E. Smith; language significantly altered. Public domain.