What’s Wrong with LCMS Congregations?

Pastor Martin Noland helpfully answers the question that is on the mind of our congregation.

Steadfast Lutherans » What’s Wrong with LCMS Congregations?.

Nothing is “wrong” with 99% of the congregations of The Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod! That means one of out of a hundred might have a significant problem.Nothing is “wrong” with 98% of the pastors that serve this church! That means one out of fifty pastors might have a significant problem. These are my observations after nearly thirty years in the LCMS pastoral ministry. Those are actually pretty good percentages, compared to any other industry or institution. Yet ever since I have been in the ministry, we have been led to believe by some synodical “leaders” that something is “wrong” withnearly all of our congregations, because most aren’t “growing.”

When the laymen in LCMS congregations hear these synodical leaders, or the recommended consultants, and then do some “navel-gazing,” they conclude it can’t be their fault, so it must be their pastor—and out he goes! I have witnessed far too many situations like this. And the results are predictable. The next pastor either proves to be just like the previous, which is no “improvement—and out he goes. Or the new guy “turns over all the apple carts” and scares away the best and the brightest laymen in his congregation, with the net result being real decline—and out he goes too, soon enough.

More and more LCMS congregations are seeing “revolving door ministries,” i.e., pastors who only stay a year or two because they don’t “grow their church,” which only aggravates the decline in membership. The Lutheran way of being the church requires pastors with long tenure in the parish, since the chief pastoral function of privatseelsorge requires years of getting to know people and earning their trust. The bad counsel of some synodical “leaders” is, in fact,accelerating the numerical decline of our congregations and is the direct cause of bad morale all around.

What, then, is the true story about numerical decline and what’s “wrong” with LCMS congregations?

The June 2012 issue of Christianity Today has a short article titled “Mainline Conservative’s Dilemma” (see page 7). It reports on a study conducted by the Hartford Institute for Religion Research. The study proves that in the matter of growth “it’s the denomination’s theology that tends to matter, not the congregation’s. Churches in evangelical [i.e., conservative] denominations are more than twice as likely to grow as churches in mainline [i.e., liberal] denominations, but within those denominations theological orientation doesn’t have much effect.” This presents a dilemma for conservative congregations and conservative pastors who are members of liberal denominations; but is encouraging news for churches like the LCMS. It also confirms the results of the 1970′s study by Dean M. Kelly titled Why Conservative Churches Are Growing (New York: Harper & Row, 1972).

The Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod is a conservative denomination and is defined by many as an “evangelical” one. Why, then, as Gerald Kieschnick argued, has it “experienced a slow but steady decline in numbers of members of our 6,160 congregations” (Gerald Kieschnick, Waking the Sleeping Giant: The Birth, Growth, Decline, and Rebirth of an American Church [St Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 2009], 16)? The causes are complex, and cannot be reduced to one or two factors. But, let me say up front, there is nothing “wrong” with 99% of our LCMS congregations, in spite of what our so-called “church growth” experts tell us. Those “experts” are simply wrong and/or incompetent.

LCMS “church growth” experts will typically point to the change in baptized membership in the LCMS from 1971 to the present (latest statistics are from 2010). In 1971 we had 2,886,207 baptized, the highest number for that statistic on record, and in 2010 we had 2,278,586 baptized. That is a loss of 607,621 members in about 40 years. It is a loss of 21% of the members we had in 1971; or a loss of about half of one percent per year. That is a significant figure, but numbers don’t give explanations for why these things happen. Let me give just four factors that explain this decline; admitting that there are many more that could be considered.

The first, and most obvious, explanation for this statistic is that LCMS membership peaked in 1971, because that was the last year of the United States’ demographic “baby boom.” One way of explaining LCMS growth from 1944 (1,567,453 members) to 1971 (2,886,207 members) was that it was caused by the abnormal “baby boom.” Once the “baby boom” stopped, the denomination started shrinking back to its “normal size,” due to normal and unavoidable factors of attrition.

The second, and usually unmentioned, explanation for the 1971-2010 decline statistic is that the LCMS was hurt significantly by the “Seminex” walkout and the resulting exit of congregations and pastors into the AELC (Association of Evangelical Lutheran Churches) in the late 1970s. The AELC consisted of 680 pastors, 279 congregations, and 112,169 baptized members. Although that membership loss is only 18% of the 1971-2010 decline statistic, it also included a disproportionate number of young and middle-aged adults in child-bearing years. The AELC also had a disproportionate number of large and wealthy urban and suburban congregations. Over the years, the LCMS had invested much of its resources into these large and wealthy congregations, so that their transfer into the AELC was more of a blow to the LCMS than mere numbers can tell.

The third, and never mentioned, explanation for the 1971-2010 decline statistic is that the LCMS’ outreach to youth and young adults was dealt a mortal blow by the controversies in the 1960s and 1970s. The Junior Walther League (for high school students), the Senior Walther League (for college age people), the Gamma Delta Fraternity (for college and graduate students), as well as full-time and part-time campus ministries were a BIG part of LCMS mission and ministry, until it all came to a screeching halt. The Walther League was banned by most congregations, because of its political activism in the 1960s. Nothing of significant size or impact replaced it at the local congregational level. Campus ministry went “on the back burner” of priorities in districts and is still there, as witnessed by the recent case of the Minnesota South Board of Directors’ actions against University Lutheran Chapel in Minneapolis.

All this down-sizing of youth and young adult ministry in the LCMS happened at the same time that the evangelical and conservative churches were up-sizing their youth and young adult ministries. Thomas E. Berger in his “When Are We Going to Grow Up? The Juvenilization of American Christianity” Christianity Today 56 #6 (June 2012):18-24, rightly credits the youth ministries of the Evangelicals for some of the growth of Evangelical churches in the last forty years. He states “Some of the growth of conservative churches over the subsequent decades [post-1960s] would come from this expertise in recruiting and retaining young people. . . . The white evangelical churches that are growing the fastest in America are the ones that look most like the successful youth ministries of the 1950s and 1960s” (pp. 22-23). The purpose of Berger’s article is to point out how this success has resulted in spiritual immaturity in those Evangelical churches; nevertheless, they are the churches that everyone points to as examples of “success.”

I am not saying or even implying that the LCMS should imitate these Evangelical churches by providing an “informal, entertaining, fast-paced worship experience set to upbeat music.” (Berger, p. 23). Certainly not! Berger doesn’t recommend that approach either. I am saying that the lack of effective, local youth ministry in LCMS congregations led many LCMS youth to leave the Lutheran church in the period in question. This has had a double or triple impact on membership statistics, since the same young people who left soon had children, and now some of them have grandchildren. Youth ministry and campus ministry of a Lutheran sort needs to get back on the front burner of priorities, folks, and it needs to come back at the local and congregational level, not just the national or regional level!

Finally, the LCMS decline has been partially due to national demographic shifts, because the LCMS is not equally distributed across the United States. Something like 85% of the baptized membership of the LCMS is located in an area bounded on the west by the 105th parallel, on the north by the Canadian border, on the east by the 80th parallel, and on the south by the Ohio, Mississippi, and Arkansas Rivers. This same area is designated, with slightly different boundaries, the “Midlands” by Colin Woodard in his recent book American Nations: A History of the Eleven Rival Regional Cultures of North America (New York: Viking, 2011). The “Midlands,” where Germans, Scandinavians, and Central Europeans once settled, are the one region in the US that has seen significant population decline in the last forty years. And that region may not see a recovery in population, for a variety of reasons, for many years.

Where people live and settle is determined by where they can make a living. LCMS leaders can’t change that. What they can do is look at demographic studies, both locally and nationally, and plant new congregations where the population growth is happening. No great rocket science there and the LCMS leaders are doing that! But if the LCMS leaders are smart, they will also study the “Regional Cultures” described by Woodard (read his book, guys!). It will help them understand the regional history and cultures of the areas they are trying to serve. Dividing the LCMS into five regions was, perhaps, a good idea, but it is only half-baked. The resulting boundaries don’t match the American cultural boundaries, because the regional division was done for political purposes, not for mission and evangelism purposes.

In closing, there is nothing “wrong” with LCMS congregations. Let’s get over the “guilt trip” and “fear” that “leaders” use to exploit us and our pocketbooks. Instead let’s work on improving what we have in our local congregations. There’s always room for improvement, enough to keep us busy until our Lord calls us home.

 

The Sunday of the Miraculous Catch of Fish ’12 – Luke 5:1-11

07. July 2012
The Sunday of the Miraculous Catch of Fish
Luke 5:1-11

Sometimes Christians fall into error and think of their body and soul as independent, one lesser or greater than the other. Yet, no one is given a body who is not also given a soul. And all the dead and departed will have flesh restored at the resurrection of the dead. It is good to be created with a body. The body is good and given inseparably with the soul. What God has joined together, let man not separate.

Why do we distinguish between body and soul (or sometimes body and mind)? Not because they are separable but because they are distinct. God the Father addresses, provides, sustains, strengthens, and preserves body and soul together and sometimes distinctly for our benefit. He cares for both not because one is better than the other but because both are his making and together you are his loved creature.

Consider today’s Gospel where Jesus shows this sort of care for both body and soul. On one occasion, while the crowd was pressing in on Him to hear the word of God. St. Luke doesn’t record what word Jesus spoke, only that He spoke and the people listened. What comes next is more curious. He was standing by the lake of Gennesaret (also known as Galilee and Tiberius), and He saw two boats by the lake, but the fishermen had gone out of them and were washing their nets. Getting into one of the boats, which was Simon’s, He asked him to put out a little from the land. And He sat down and taught the people from the boat.

Jesus isn’t just interested in the people who are pressing in on Him. His call is bigger than the curious multitudes. He’s also distinctly interested in those who let work keep them from listening. He wants them to stop cleaning their nets, stop mending their masts, to stop the days busy work, and to listen to Him. He wants them to take  Sabbath rest, and hold His Word sacred, gladly hearing and learning it.

What is going through those fishermen’s minds? “Yeah, my soul is important, but right now, I need to work to provide for my body.” Or perhaps “God will take care of my soul by some other means than His Word. Right now I have to work if there is hope for food and the needs of the body.” Sometimes we are tempted to think in a similar way about our work. Yet, from the example of today’s Gospel, Jesus is teaching us about godly priorities.

Is not God your maker and preserver? Does He not cause the rain to fall and the sun to shine, the seed to sprout and the fruit to ripen? Does He not give you clothing, shoes, house and family, and still take care of them? Do not be anxious about your body. God will grant you every bodily need and well provide them.

Notice how these fishermen are men of faith. When the call rings out, Simon follows the Word of Jesus. He dropped everything for the sake of gladly hearing and learning the Word. Simon acknowledged the need for the Sabbath and kept the Third Commandment by sitting down and listening when Jesus spoke. He did not let His bodily need get in the way of the Word that nourishes the soul.

I hope it is the same for you. While our body tells us to work, our faith compels us to pause, rest, and listen to Jesus. Our faith compels us to lay anxiety aside and keep God’s Word filling our ears, close to our heart, and always upon our lips in praise, thanks, and prayer. We keep the Sabbath not just by obligatory trips to church once a week or twice a year. We keep the Sabbath giving this Word priority day in and day out.

So it was for St. Peter. And when [Jesus] had finished speaking, He said to Simon, “Put out into the deep and let down your nets for a catch.” And Simon answered, “Master, we toiled all night and took nothing! But at your word I will let down the nets.” Even Simon Peter, despite having interrupted a busy day of work to Sabbath with Jesus, now wonders if Jesus will truly provide. Jesus is asking him to fish in the worst waters and at the worst time of the day. Deep waters will not bear fish nor will the heat of the day.

There is another commandment at work here. In the Seventh Commandment, God tells us not to steal; that is, we are to be content with what we have and work for what we need. Yet, doesn’t this command mitigate against the Third? Which is it? Go to church or work? Pray or busy yourself with the nets? No, they are both God-given and obedience to one is bound to the other.

God does not give you your faith at the expense of providing for you body. He cares for both and nourishes your whole being. He cannot give you work, family, or play that would hinder fear of him and godly piety. While He interrupted Simon’s work for a time, in the next, He called Simon to return to His work. And here’s the brilliant thing: Jesus confirmed His Word with providing for Simon, and his partners James and John. Even in the midst of work, Jesus confirms His Word. Simon answered… “But at your word I will let down the nets.” And when they had done this, they enclosed a large number of fish, and their nets were breaking. They signaled to their partners in the other boat to come and help them. And they came and filled both the boats so that they began to sink.”

Keeping the Sabbath and providing for your needs are bound together. We serve God in the midst of our vocations with faith, reverence, and love. We love God by showing love to our neighbor. It is true, we interrupt our work at special times of Sabbath to hear His Word and receive His Supper. But that is not the only way we are to serve Him. Even in the midst of our work we can live a life of Sabbath, holy rest in the Word. As we go about working, we should lift our hearts in thanks, sings hymn of praise, and begin and end each day in prayer. By the Word of God and prayer all our deeds are sanctified (1 Timothy 4:5).

There is the temptation to keep the needs of the body and soul separate when they are, in fact, inseparable. The work of our hands for the body is blessed by the Word of God that nourishes our soul. St. Peter first loaned his boat to hear the Word and then was blessed with a great catch of fish, even when before he had caught none. Both kinds of food are necessary but there is a priority.

We ought to be like St. Peter. First, care for the soul, hearing Christ from the boat, where He teaches and works in you faith and love, and then, second, your work will be blessed. The Third Commandment comes first, and then the Seventh follows. If we keep the Third Commandment, then we will be able to keep the Seventh. Contentment and satisfying labor is a result of the Word of God.

Think of it this way: why do we pray for daily bread if we can achieve it? Jesus says: Seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness and all these things will be added to you. (Matthew 6:33) Our first priority is the righteousness of God, received by the Word of God unto faith. The righteous man is content with what He has. The unrighteous man will not hear the Word of God, gladly, and thus will never be content even if he has much. To be rich in God is to received the Word. Without this Word, everything is soured by the constant, nagging conscience of sin.

It is the custom of our churches to dismiss the congregation from the Lord’s Supper with this Word: “The body and blood of our Lord Jesus Christ strengthen and preserve you in body and soul to life everlasting. Depart + in peace. Amen.” This is a Word of promise, utterly independent of what your own body and soul may be telling you at that moment. It is a Word of nourishment and sustenance for your entire being.

Jesus will strengthen and preserve you by the gracious gift of His body and blood. He is ever working by this most precious food to sustain you until He comes again. He will not see you fall into the pit of despair or Sheol but is constantly working to lift you up and bring you home to life everlasting. Knowing that Christ Jesus is working to strengthen and preserve you to life everlasting is a great word of comfort. It is a word that brings peace. In the Lord’s Supper, peace with God once more is made as He mercifully gives you to eat of His flesh and drink of His blood.

Yet, as we hear each week, the heavenly gift of Jesus Christ’s own body and blood preserves and strengthens body and soul to life everlasting. Generations of Lutherans have seen fit to acknowledge that the Lord’s Supper addresses both body and soul uniquely. How does the Sacrament strengthen and preserve our bodies? It is only a trifle of stale bread and only a sip of portly wine. This food is no sufficient as a meal replacement. How does the Sacrament  strengthen and preserve our souls? This food pales in comparison to our Christmas and Easter feasts. Its nothing like a one-star three course meal and certainly doesn’t life the spirit like a seven-course feast complete with three courses of wine. It seems like a silly thing to say, really, not really helping body or lifting the soul.

The answer lies in the Word of God. How does the Sacrament strengthen and preserve both our bodies and souls? First, by forgiving our sins, clearing our conscience, and granting us Christ’s righteousness. That is, first, by receiving the Word of the Sabbath strengthens and preserves the soul. And then, second, we are granted a right understanding of work, vocation, and temporal goods, content and satisfied with everything from the Father’s hand. That is, second, the Word received is also the Word that sustains and preserves the body.

It is not the bodily eating and drinking that does such great things but the Word written: Given and shed for you for the forgiveness of sins. Like Simon Peter, upon seeing the great things Jesus had done, so also, we fall down our knees before the throne of grace and confess, “Depart from me, for I am a sinful man.” For he and all who were with him were astonished at the catch of fish that they had taken. We are rightly astonished with how richly God has and continues to provide for our every need of body and soul. We approach God’s altar to be fed in humility and the poverty of sin. And He feeds us richly with the Bread of Heaven. So also, He feeds us with bread from the earth. First, we are fed with the feast of the Sabbath and then, with a feast for the body and every need well provided.

For all this, it is our duty to thank and praise, serve and obey Him. Let us hear and learn, receive and pray, with thankful hearts and a willing spirit. Let us receive and be fed both in body and soul to life everlasting. Do not be afraid. Keep the Sabbath and you will be content. Depart in peace. Amen.

Rev. Christopher R. Gillespie
Grace Lutheran Church
Dyer, Indiana