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Fred Meuser Tells ELCA, God Will Build the Church
From
ELCANEWS@ELCASCO.ELCA.ORG
Date
17 Aug 1997 17:26:47
ELCA NEWS SERVICE
August 17, 1997
FRED MEUSER TELLS ELCA,
GOD WILL BUILD THE CHURCH
97-CA-14-RF
PHILADELPHIA (ELCA) -- "There are only two sure things in life.
Death is one. Taxes are not the other," the Rev. Fred W. Meuser told
members of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America's fifth biennial
assembly, gathered for worship Aug. 17. "The other, in the words of
Luther's Small Catechism, is: God's kingdom comes indeed without our
prayer, but we pray that it may come among us also."
As the ELCA prepared to consider historic proposals to move closer
to the Episcopal, Reformed and Roman Catholic churches, Meuser,
president emeritus of Trinity Lutheran Seminary in Columbus, Ohio,
reminded voting members that the church's heritage and hope derive not
from comfortable structures and human interpretations but from Jesus'
promise to Peter in Matthew 16: "I will build my church."
"You who were baptized as infants, raised in Christian homes,
children of God from the cradle to this day in spite of having strayed
onto some very slippery spiritual slopes who did that?" he asked.
"You who once were too sophisticated to believe, too proud to
repent, too self-reliant to pray, to stingy to give, but how happily do
them all, and are here representing this whole church and imagine!
-- making decisions about its future who did that? Who toppled each of
us off the control panel of our lives and put Jesus Christ there?"
Christ's promise is significant because it says that God's power
sustains the church and that the church belongs to God, not to its human
caretakers, Meuser said.
"It's easy to forget what God promises to build: Not sanctuaries,
not the American way of life, not American Christianity," Meuser said.
"What God does promise is a saved people, a fellowship no solitary
Christians a family of disciples for whom Jesus is the center of life
A worldwide family of forgiven and forgiving sinners, bound together
by the Word and water of baptism, by the Spirit, by the Body and Blood
of the Supper, who cheer each other on, suffer together, worship
together, care for the world together."
The church, Meuser said, has walls of the "living stones" of its
members, windows in Christians "through which God's love shines into
someone else's life," and the "world of need, near and far," which is
the altar upon which Christians lay their lives and gifts.
The music of God's church, he said, is "the harmony that comes
when people with differing gifts, differing convictions, differing
traditions work together, pray, and cooperate in the cause of Christ."
And doors? "No doors. No one kept out. No one forced to stay in.
Nothing locked up for internal use only. Everything meant to flow out as
God's blessing into God's world."
The signs of that outpouring of God's love are many, Meuser said.
"Lives that were coming apart at the seams put back together.
Relationships, gone to pot, restored and healed. Graspers turned into
givers. Resenters into forgivers." Young people, such as ELCA youth
gathered at New Orleans last month, "rejecting the question, 'How can we
get in on the big bucks?' and asking instead, 'Teach me your ways, O
Lord; show me your paths.'"
Christ's promise, the basis of the heritage and hope which is the
theme of the ELCA's gathering, comes to life "wherever the life-changing
message of Christ the Savior is discussed, shared, celebrated Whenever
it comes alive in witness and sacrament, song and prayer, and service to
people in need. Then God does it!"
"The saddest sight in the church is people who think God cannot or
will not build that flock," Meuser said. "Alive, strong churches are
those whose people count on the promise that 'I will build my church,'
and give God their lives to use them in the process."
"That church, God's Church, is not a little fearful remnant hiding
from the big bad world, always bemoaning how bad things are, hanging on
by their fingernails. Oh, no! That Church is a great company, from every
land from times past and present and yet to come, with the mind of
Christ in them and a Lord out in front of them who says, 'Follow me! I
have overcome the world! I will build my church!"
"That promise," Meuser said, "is our heritage and hope. It's
never been rescinded. Not even now." The assembly's theme is "Making
Christ Known: Alive in Our Heritage and Hope."
Meuser, who has published widely on Martin Luther and American
Lutheran History, was professor of church history at Trinity before
becoming president in 1971. He was vice president of the former
American Lutheran Church, one of the predecessor bodies of the ELCA, for
six years.
The theme of unity pervaded the service, which opened with
Presiding Bishop H. George Anderson leading worshipers in renewal of
their baptismal vows. Ministers then used branches to sprinkle water
from the baptismal font upon worshipers to remind them of their
inclusion in the one, holy catholic and apostolic church. Anderson then
led the worshipers in a prayer that God "grant us the perfect peace that
overcomes all doubt."
The prayers of the people, offered by Dr. Addie J. Butler, a lay
voting member from Philadelphia, included a petition that God "set in us
respect for lives past, and set in us honor of generations yet to come."
For information contact:
Ann Hafften, Director (773) 380-2958 or NEWS@ELCA.ORG
http://www.elca.org/co/news/current.html
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