Delegate
Newsletter -- No. 3
For
Gospel-Centered, Mission Driven, Future-Oriented Leadership
in the Lutheran Church – Missouri Synod
Perfect
Love Blows the Fog Away
When I was 10
years old my parents gave me permission to walk from my house
to the local movie theater for the Saturday matinee. I think
the reason I loved the movies so much is because of the
freedom I enjoyed. If
I wanted to throw a Ju-Ju-Bee into the air and thus into my
mouth no one was there to stop me.
My heart soared to new places thinking about all the
things this new found freedom would allow me to do.
I’m afraid the freedom I rejoiced in went away the
minute I walked outside the theater.
When I
emerged from the theater, I first realized it was dark. That
made me uncomfortable. More
than darkness, a blanket of fog had moved in from the Pacific
Ocean to our neighborhood.
The fog really made me afraid. It was thick, wet and
had done a sinister thing. It blurred the way I had looked at
my world. Because
of the fog, all the things I thought I knew about my
neighborhood were being challenged.
The familiar grocery store right next to the theater
now looked like a haunted house. I ran by it.
The people I passed on my walk home looked liked aliens
from foreign planets - strange faces just “popping up”
from the fog. The
intersections were the worst. Because of the fog I couldn’t
figure out which was a red light and which was a green light,
so I just stood there petrified for the longest time.
As I walked I realized I hated the fog. It took my safe
and familiar world and made me afraid of it.
The fog was like the Serpent in the Garden of Eden.
It made me look at traffic lights and question, “Did
God really say that light is green?”
I remember my
heart beating hard in my chest until I turned onto my street.
Immediately I heard the voice of my Dad breaking
through the “pea soup” that had so frightened me.
“Tom, is that you?” “Yah Dad, I replied.”
“Just keep walking toward my voice.”
Suddenly the fog didn’t exist for me.
There was my Dad’s voice.
It was as though my Dad’s voice blew the fog away and
everything looked just like it always had. My neighborhood was back - no more haunted houses, no more
alien people, just home sweet home.
Those of you
who are serving as delegates to the 2004 convention of The
Lutheran Church - Missouri Synod should be ready for a large
blanket of fog to descend down upon you in the weeks to come.
For me, fog is anything that causes us to doubt what we
have known to be true. For
example, our church has operated effectively for over 150
years according to the LCMS constitution, not the constitution
of the State of Missouri. Some “foggy stories” are asking
people to doubt whether or not our long tradition of lawful
and fruitful service was real. These “fog producing
stories” are designed to make you afraid that our Synod is
operating out of line from the rules of the State of Missouri.
All the while the real reason for creating fog is for
the Board of Directors to take authority away from duly
elected officers of the LCMS.
There are
people who want you “in the fog” thinking that if a pastor
of our Synod gets up in a public place, in the middle of
representatives of other religions, and offers a prayer, he
has somehow, by his prayer, made Jesus, “into whose hands
all authority in heaven and on earth has been placed” look
equal to the false gods.
The “fog producers” in our church want you to be
afraid every time someone prays outside the walls of a
Missouri Synod Church! The
fog producers will send you information telling you that the
candidates supported by Jesus First want to take your church
away from you. They will cite worship styles, leadership
styles, and claim that the Lutheran Confessions are ignored,
attempting to prove that these leaders want to lead the church
into false beliefs. When this information comes, take the time
to read the biographies of the candidates.
Try to worship in a congregation which uses a different
style to gather people around Word and Sacrament.
Listen to the candidates speak, or preach, or read the
things they have written - you’ll penetrate the fog and see
that the Synod is still organized legally and Biblically. You’ll see that the Synod serves a God who is bigger than
any stadium or foreign cleric who may be in the venue to hear
his Holy name. You’ll
see that those who use “harp and timbrel, lyre and horns”
to worship the Lord are just as faithful as the Psalms
themselves.
I would
encourage you to continue your fervent prayer for the Lord to
prepare you for the challenges of this convention.
As you pray through the fog of distortions that some
folks will mail to you, stop and listen to the calming voice
of our Heavenly Father. He
will remind you again that Jesus is Lord of the Church.
He’ll remind you that mission is the reason for the
church’s existence. He’ll
remind you that it is He and his Word that organize and direct
the institution of the church, not State governments.
As you pray, you will hear the voice of the God who is
love; and you will know that perfect love casts out all the
fear others try to place in your hearts. In other words
you’ll see that perfect love blows away all fog.
Rev. Tom
Rogers
Pastor
Abiding Savior Lutheran Church – Lake Forest, CA