What does “Lutheran” mean?
While it isn’t popular to talk about “denominations” these days, we are pleased to introduce you to this group of Jesus followers. We walk together! In fact, that is what the word “synod” means: walking together.
We walk together, we work together, we struggle together, we weep together and we rejoice together. Sometimes it can get really hard.
But we are people who follow Jesus. And we confess, together, that HE is the Risen Lord and that He alone can restore this broken world! Of course, the mystery in that amazing fact is that He has commissioned all those who believe in Him and follow Him to be His instruments for spreading His promises to the world!
We share an unrelenting passion for God’s Word and the centrality of Jesus revealed in Scripture.
What's amazing about this, is that we don't limit “God's Word” to just those words written down. But we believe that those written words are proclaimed and brought to all of us in tangible, concrete ways!
We not only walk together, we have a common confession. This simply means: We say the same things! Together, we say “Jesus is LORD.” Together, we say: “this” is what it looks like to submit to Him, to proclaim Him, to follow Him, and much more.
The word “Lutheran” does not mean we think Martin Luther was some sort of higher man.
On the contrary! He was a normal man, a broken man, who through his own STRUGGLE of asking “Who is God?” and “What do I think of Him?” was led to a moment which he describes this way:
“At last meditating day and night, by the mercy of God, I began to understand that the righteousness of God is that through which the righteous live by a gift of God, namely by faith. Here I felt as if I were entirely born again and had entered paradise itself through the gates that had been flung open.
— Preface to the Complete Edition of Luther's Latin Works (1545) by Dr. Martin Luther, 1483-1546
His “discovery” led to the ignition of a chain of events in the 1500s which we now call the Protestant Reformation, a time in the history of the world when everything began to change—again. Most notable for us, was when these reformers stood up in the midst of a boiling cauldron of political, social, and religious pressures and confessed their faith to Emperor Charles V, in Augsburg, in June of 1530. We now call that the Augsburg Confession.
We are part of a very ancient church!
This moment in the history of Christianity (and the world!) was a defining moment for people who were seeking to follow Jesus. It is a moment that we continue to be defined by and thus we continue to confess! We are part of a very ancient church. And yet, that ancient church—the very Body of Jesus Himself—is still doing what she has always done: proclaim God's Word in spoken, written, and sacramental form.
So when we say we are a Lutheran Church in Denham Springs, Louisiana, we are not saying our church is “about” Martin Luther. Instead, we are saying that we are walking together with those who do what the universal, ancient church did and what all churches should do:
Point People To Jesus!
Luther was, through his own struggles, and his own suffering, returning us to where it all started, to the right foundation. To Jesus. He taught phrases like: “By Faith Alone” through “Grace Alone” by way of “God’s Word Alone”. He led efforts to revitalize Christian education by way of his Small Catechism and many other writings, including his efforts to help translate the Bible into the common language of his people. He helped encourage people to get back on the right track.
And isn't that what our family is supposed to do?
This is why we believe, teach, and confess The Lutheran Confessions because they faithfully point us to Jesus by way of God’s Word. And, they help us navigate the many challenges which the universal church has faced since Jesus ascended into heaven and will continue to suffer in until His return.
Learn more through these resources: