All Members, Winter Residents, Family and Friends,
Good Monday Greetings are extended to all of you on thie 4-29-2024! Many and most of our dear Winter Residents are heading back north this week and many have already returned. We are blessed to have so many Year Round Residents and Winter Residents who come together each year to Worship and Minister together. Trinity is blessed as seen in the attendance each week, the desire to move forward with ideas and opportunities and our steady year round financial support. For this as your Pastor I am most grateful that we are so blessed. Each Sunday we come together is blessing and an opportunity for you to grown closer to you Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.
Susan announced an opportunity to have a personal connection with our Graduating Students from Trinity Tots by purchasing a Children’s Bible. As these students move forward into Kindergarten it can be a scarey time. You will receive a picture and a name of a students that you can pray for. The Students will receive a Children’s Bible with a notation of your name and Trinity Tots. If you are interested and we hope 10 more people are, the Bible’s cost $10.00 but can provide a great resource for the spiritual development of these young people. Please give Susan a call in the office this week if you are willing to sponsor a Bible at 465-6313 (Trinity Tots Line) or the Church main line at 465-5253!
This Friday Morning Susan and Trinity Tots will be hosting a Parent breakfast for all of our students and their parents. Unless you want to work, please be advised this is going on this Friday May 3rd, 2024.
The Second Sunday in May will be our final Dragon Den collection for this year as school gets out the following week. So please support this needed program and help some students who face challenges of no food over the weekends. Thank you.
As we move toward Pentecost Sunday I found an article from 2019 from the Lutheran Witness that some of you may find interesting concerning the Holy Spirit. Admittedly it is a long article but well worth the time to read it. It is printed below.
My Sermon for the first Sunday in May is attached@
Have a great week and make it great for someone else as well.
Respectfully In Christ,
Pastor Norris
What about the Holy Spirit?
Curtis P. Giese
When it comes to talking about the person and work of Christ, Lutheran theology is particularly rich. The Lutheran Confessions (for example, Apology IV, 51) state again and again that every article of the Christian faith connects with the saving work of Jesus Christ, and as a result, Christ is boldly proclaimed from every Lutheran pulpit.
Unless it’s Pentecost Sunday, however, Lutherans may hear much less about the Holy Spirit in sermons and Bible studies, and they may be largely unfamiliar with who the Spirit is and what He does.
There’s a good reason, of course, that Lutherans generally try not to overemphasize the Holy Spirit: The Spirit Himself wants us to keep our eyes fixed firmly on Christ!
Even so, silence on the subject can lead to some negative consequences for the Church. Confusion can arise regarding the Spirit’s unique role and His saving action among God’s people. Christians hungry to know more about the Third Person of the Trinity may seek answers in non-Lutheran or even non-biblical sources, cobbling together an inaccurate and incomplete theology of the Spirit (also known as “pneumatology”) from what they find there.
Miracles, tongues and a ‘still, small voice’?
It’s hard to deny, on the surface, at least, that the way some other church bodies talk about the Holy Spirit can sound more exciting than the Lutheran point of view.
Pentecostal churches often emphasize the dynamic works of the Spirit: speaking in tongues, healings, new prophecies, dancing in the Spirit in worship and the like. Some even teach that these tangible experiences of the Spirit are necessary to validate one’s faith. They prompt Christians to look toward glorious manifestations of the Spirit’s presence — rather than to cross and Baptism — for the assurance of salvation. Chris Armstrong, in his article “Embrace Your Inner Pentecostal,” cites a growing number of denominations that are embracing Pentecostal practices in worship. He maintains that the Third Person of the Trinity is present in such services as a “Spirit of Spontaneity,” and places strong emphasis on “encountering the divine” in “immediate” and “experiential” ways.
Evangelical Christians, while sometimes reluctant to embrace Pentecostal worship practices wholesale, often emphasize the subjective work of the Holy Spirit in other ways: as private revelations, intuitions, inner voices, emotions, feelings or dreams. This way of understanding the Spirit’s work directs Christians to look for personal guidance from the “still, small voice” (1 Kings 19:12) of the Spirit speaking outside of Holy Scripture. Evangelical scholar Daniel B. Wallace, in “Who’s Afraid of the Holy Spirit?,” refers to difficult times in life when Scripture is inadequate and one must rather rely on direct revelation by the Spirit and seek an “existential experience” with Him. Wallace advocates individual revelation from the Spirit to grant specific guidance in life decisions.
How the Spirit doesn’t promise to work.
These understandings of the Holy Spirit’s work are exciting, dynamic and personalized. It’s not surprising that such glorious, individualized manifestations are quite attractive to people in the present age, when cynicism runs rampant and miracles are scarce. Unfortunately, neither of these ways of thinking about the Spirit’s work is fully biblical, and both can lead to grave spiritual harm.
For example, one person’s “Spirit-given” intuition may totally contradict another person’s intuition and even stand in direct opposition to Scripture. How can one be certain of the source of these extrabiblical revelations (1 John 4:1–3)? What if you “feel the Spirit” leading you to commit adultery, get an abortion or reject some other clear teaching of the Word of God? Imagined revelations can result in divisions among Christians, confusion, doubt and sin.
What’s more, building one’s Christian life around subjective experiences of any kind leaves a person woefully uncertain about the nature of God, forgiveness and salvation. If your church teaches that speaking in tongues is the one sure sign that you’ve been saved, yet you’ve never received the gift of tongues, what must you believe about the state of your soul?
The primary reason, however, that we should be skeptical about such “immediate” and “experiential” workings of the Holy Spirit is simply this: He does not promise to be present in our lives in this way. The Spirit’s work is always bound up closely with the revelation of the incarnate Christ, who lived, suffered, died and rose again for us. Jesus says of Him, “But when the Helper comes, whom I will send to you from the Father, the Spirit of truth, who proceeds from the Father, he will bear witness about me” (John 15:26, emphasis mine). The Spirit is not some “force” to experience but the Third Person of the Holy Trinity, who speaks to us an unchanging, undivided, consistent message: the eternal Gospel of Jesus Christ crucified.
If the Holy Spirit seems unconcerned about whether we feel an emotional high during Sunday worship or receive divine guidance about whether to buy a Ford or a Chevy, it’s doubtless because He wants to give us something even better: “a living hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead … an inheritance that is imperishable, undefiled, and unfading, kept in heaven for you” (1 Peter 1:3–4).
A biblical Lutheran understanding of the Holy Spirit
In the Small Catechism, Martin Luther gets right to the heart of the Spirit’s saving work in his explanation to the Third Article of the Apostle’s Creed:
I believe that I cannot by my own reason or strength believe in Jesus Christ, my Lord, or come to Him; but the Holy Spirit has called me by the Gospel, enlightened me with His gifts, sanctified and kept me in the true faith. In the same way He calls, gathers, enlightens, and sanctifies the whole Christian church on earth and keeps it with Jesus Christ in the one true faith.
When Luther specifies the Gospel as the means by which the Holy Spirit works, we again notice how the Spirit binds himself to the Word of God and not to human experience. In this, he echoes Jesus, who says, “When the Spirit of truth comes, he will guide you into all truth, for he will not speak on his own authority, but whatever he hears he will speak, and he will declare to you the things that are to come. He will glorify me, for he will take what is mine and declare it to you” (John 16:13–14; see also Rom. 10:17).
The verbs Luther uses in his explanation tell us much about the person and work of the Spirit. It is, first, the work of the Spirit to call us to faith in Christ by the Gospel. Nobody can come to Christ on his own. You could sooner believe that the sky was neon green than you could believe the truth of the Gospel without the Spirit first calling you to faith. “To this he called you through our gospel,” Paul writes, “so that you may obtain the glory of our Lord Jesus Christ” (2 Thess. 2:14; see also 1 Cor. 6:11; Eph. 4:4; Rev. 22:17). The Spirit also gathers us into one holy Church, the communion of saints, the Body of Christ (Eph. 4:4–6; Matt. 28:19; 1 Peter 2:9). He enlightens dead hearts and blind eyes to recognize and receive their crucified and risen Savior (1 Cor. 2:6–16; 12:3; 2 Cor. 4:6; Rom. 8:7–9). Luther further elaborates upon this work of the Spirit in the Large Catechism: “The Holy Spirit reveals and preaches that Word, and by it he illumines and kindles hearts so that they grasp and accept it, cling to it, and persevere in it” (LC II, III, 42).
Finally, the Spirit sanctifies us. He makes us holy. Sanctification in a wider sense refers to the entire work of the Spirit, from creating faith in us, to helping us lead a devout life, to bringing us to resurrection and eternal life. This leading to faith is usually accomplished by the Spirit’s work in Baptism, when the Word and promises of God, connected with water, wash us clean from sin and unite us to the death and resurrection of Jesus. St. Paul says: “But you were washed, you were sanctified, you were justified in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ and by the Spirit of our God” (1 Cor. 6:11, see also John 3:5–6).
The blessings of a Lutheran pneumatology. (The Study of the Holy Spirit)
Great blessings come to us when we fully embrace a Lutheran understanding of who the Spirit is, how He works and where He can be found.
First, we learn the proper role of emotions in the Christian faith. Though some like to portray Lutherans as emotionally cold and distant (at least compared with Pentecostals), we know that the Holy Spirit’s work through sacred Scripture does indeed affect our feelings and emotions. We know, too, though, that these emotions — which run the gamut from the anguish of Good Friday to the joy of Easter morning — arise as a result of God’s revelation. They do not serve as a means of God’s revelation.
Second, a Lutheran pneumatology gives us a right understanding of the way in which the Spirit guides our lives. Many decisions confront us where we cannot easily discern the best choice. Christians need not seek a special message or revelation from the Spirit where He does not promise to be. Given a palate of possible appropriate choices, Christians are free to use their God-given wisdom as informed by Scripture to choose responsibly from among them. There may not always be a single God-pleasing option. We can rest in the assurance that God can use us for good in any station in life as we apply our God-given abilities and wisdom to serve our neighbor, family and others. Although we cannot be certain of specific guidance from the Spirit, we can be confident of the Spirit’s general guidance when He produces His fruit in us: “Love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, self-control” (Gal. 5:22–23).
Finally, since a Lutheran view of the Holy Spirit emphasizes the Spirit’s work through the single voice of sacred Scripture, it promotes unity, order, clarity and certainty, both in our hearts and in the Church. This is in contrast to the chaotic mess of thoughts, emotions and intuitions that may mislead us, creating confusion, disorder and uncertainty. By understanding that the Spirit communicates through Scripture, Christians can build their lives upon a solid foundation of what they know comes from God.
The Spirit in the Divine Service
This biblical Lutheran view of the Holy Spirit becomes beautifully clear for us each week in the Divine Service. In the Invocation, the Spirit reminds us of our Baptism and assures us that He has drowned our old sinful selves and raised us to new life in Christ. In the rich Law and Gospel content of the Confession and Absolution, the readings and the sermon, the Spirit works through Scripture to create in us repentance and contrition, forgiveness, hope and faith in the resurrection of Jesus. As we confess our faith in the creeds and render our prayers and offerings to the Lord, the Holy Spirit magnifies our voices and our gifts, raises them up to our heavenly Father and adds His prayers to ours, making up for all we lack (Rom. 8:26–27). In the Lord’s Supper, as we receive Christ’s body and blood for the forgiveness of our sins, the Holy Spirit delivers to us “pardon and peace” and strengthens us in “faith toward [God] and in fervent love toward one another.”
Throughout the Divine Service, we may feel peace or anxiety, joy or sadness, excitement or boredom — or even all of the above! What we feel or don’t feel, however, does not and cannot change the reality of what’s happening. The Spirit is present among us, busily at work where He has promised to be: in the Word, in the Sacraments, wherever two or three are gathered in Christ’s name (Matt. 18:20). By His grace, we leave the sanctuary resting in the peace of God, with His Word in our heads and His love in our hearts, equipped and ready to do the good works He has prepared for us.
The Rev. Dr. Curtis P. Giese is professor of theology at Concordia University Texas and author of both the volume on 2 Peter and Jude and the forthcoming volume on James in the Concordia Commentary series.
This article originally appeared in print in the May 2019 issue of The Lutheran Witness.
Rev. Richard A. Norris
Trinity Lutheran Church
25 Lakeview Street
Lake Placid, Florida 33852
863-441-4168
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