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Ask the Pastor

† Theological musings and answers to selected questions by a confessional Lutheran pastor.

Name:
Location: Concordia, Missouri, United States





25 January 2009

The Beauty of Lutheranism


Katie StamNo, this isn’t a metaphorical excursion into the nuances of Lutheran theology. I simply mean that a panel of judges has decided that Katie Stam, a Lutheran teacher’s kid from Seymour, Indiana, possesses the inward and outward beauty necessary to be named Miss America 2009.

Miss Stam, a communications major at the University of Indianapolis, suffered a throat infection and developed laryngitis during pageant week. You couldn’t tell it from her talent presentation, as she sang Via Dolorosa, a song confessing faith in the blood of Christ cleansing us from our sins.

The new Miss America also appears to understand vocation and service to her neighbor. Her platform is centered upon community service, something in which she involved herself long before the pageant.

Find out more by reading There She Is ... Miss (LCMS) America at Happenings. There you can also discover my familial connection with her home town.

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24 January 2009

Vocation, Cows, Gates, Old Testament

How I Spent My Saturday

Check Like a Cow Staring at a New Gate at my Happenings blog for a bit about my (early) celebration of the commemoration of the Conversion of Saint Paul. For many of my brother pastors, the post’s title is enough of a clue for you to guess its central subject.

If not, here are some additional key words to whet your appetite: Sell, Kuhlman, Schurb, Dahlke, Mehl, Hummel(!), vocation.

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22 January 2009

Sermons Uploaded


After wading through some technical glitches, I finally started uploading sermon audio once again. Picking up where I left off, I’ve linked to five services from last summer at my Happenings blog.

◊  Pentecost 7: A Prophet’s Reward
◊  Pentecost 8: Rest for the Weary
◊  Pentecost 9: Bumper Crop
◊  Pentecost 10: The Seeds of Satan
◊  Pentecost 11: Treasures New and Old

If you don’t want to wait for me to write the accompanying articles, feel free to navigate directly to my sermon directory and download whichever services you desire. They’re in date order through this past Sunday (18 January). The list includes some midweek services plus homilies delivered at St. Paul Lutheran High School and the Lutheran Good Shepherd Home of Concordia, Missouri. There are also a wedding and a couple funerals. Gaps exist either because of file corruption or because I was out of town and didn’t preach on a particular Sunday.

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15 January 2009

The Sins of the Fathers


Q: I’ve prayed about this for a long time. I’m a Christian who dabbled in the occult years ago. I hate myself for what I used to believe in and pray constantly for forgiveness. I know that I am forgiven but after hearing about the “sins of the father,” I fear that I may have endangered my child’s soul. I wasn’t pregnant when I practiced but still feel that I may have hurt her. Right now my child is 3, so I try to have her pray with me on occasion, but at her age I don’t know if it will help. Please, tell me what to do.

PentagramA: First, continue giving your worries and fears to God but ask that He increase your faith in Him. Don’t let the Devil, who once used the occult to ensnare you, now accomplish the same through doubt and guilty feelings.

Trust that when God forgives you, He completely wipes away the sin and refuses to remember it: “As far as the east is from the west, so far does he remove our transgressions from us. (Psalm 103:12)” You remain trapped by a common human failing. We often have difficulty forgetting our sins that God has already forgiven for the sake of His Son.

Regarding worshiping false gods, both Exodus 20:5 and Deuteronomy 5:9 warn, “You shall not bow down to them or serve them; for I the Lord your God am a jealous God, visiting the iniquity of the fathers on the children to the third and fourth generation of those who hate me.” First of all, this was part of the Law given specifically to Israel.

Even if it would pertain to Gentiles, I think it’s as much, if not more so, “descriptive” rather than “prescriptive” — that is, the passage is primarily a warning that sinful thoughts, words, and deeds may not only bring direct harm to the children but also may have the consequence of establishing and passing along sinful patterns to the offspring. Think, for example, of families recovering from the damages done through previous generations’ addictions and hatreds.

Little VisitsYou aren’t modeling evil behavior. Instead, you live and teach a godly life which includes regularly praying with your little one. Since our Father always listens to His children, her faithful prayers “will help.” Moreover, you might be surprised how she will respond to age appropriate devotional materials. In them she can learn more about Jesus’ love for her.

I remember my parents reading books like Little Visits with God from Concordia Publishing House to me and my siblings. Mom and Dad didn’t only show the example of faith, they also gave us its content, the Gospel, taught in the form of short stories. And even when their sinful humanity sometimes surfaced, God’s unfailing Word still pointed us to Jesus and to our forgiving heavenly Father.

Your daughter may only be three but that doesn’t mean that she cannot possess saving faith. Jesus welcomed little children into His presence and also flatly stated that they can and do believe, “for to such belongs the kingdom of God” and “whoever does not receive the kingdom of God like a child shall not enter it. (Luke 18:16-17)” Therefore, dedicate yourself to faith-building by teaching the Scriptures at home and bringing her into the Lord’s house.

The Philippian JailerThink about Paul and Silas answering the terrified Philippian jailer. “They said, ‘Believe in the Lord Jesus, and you will be saved, you and your household.’ (Acts 16:31)” There is no age limit to a “household” — either you are part of it or you are not. When he heard about new life in Jesus, the jailer “was baptized at once, he and all his family. (v. 33)” Baptism and the Word ushered his earthly household into “the household of faith. (Galatians 6:10)”

You believe that you possess this same new life in Christ: Have you brought your household, including your dear daughter, to receive Holy Baptism, “the washing of regeneration and renewal of the Holy Spirit (Titus 3:5)”?

See also the earlier columns Forgiven but Feeling Guilty, To the Third and Fourth Generation, and Raising Godly Children.

Scripture quoted from The Holy Bible, English Standard Version™, © 2001 by Crossway Bibles.

Send email to Ask the Pastor.

Walter Snyder is the pastor of Holy Cross Lutheran Church, Emma, Missouri and coauthor of the book What Do Lutherans Believe.

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Newspaper column #570:3

The Origin of Souls


Q: From your perspective, where do souls come from? Every day it seems there are more and more people in the world. Where were these souls 100, 200, 2000 years ago?

A: They were nowhere because they were not. There is no “First Bank of Souls” where preborn spirits live until God attaches them to a human body. Beginning with Adam, Scripture doesn’t say that we “receive” a soul. Instead, Genesis 2:7 tells us that “the man became a living creature (or soul).” We aren’t “flesh machines” with “soul inhabitants.” We are, body and soul, living beings.

For an extended discussion on this topic, please see That’s the Spirit (and the Soul)!

Scripture quoted from The Holy Bible, English Standard Version™, © 2001 by Crossway Bibles.

Send email to Ask the Pastor.

Walter Snyder is the pastor of Holy Cross Lutheran Church, Emma, Missouri and coauthor of the book What Do Lutherans Believe.

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Newspaper column #570:2

Another Bride for Adam?


Q: Did Adam have a wife before Eve? Genesis 1:26-27 shows that God created man and woman at the same time. Genesis 2 shows when Eve was created from the rib of Adam.

AdamA: Genesis 1 and 2 don’t tell of separate wives for Adam. Instead, each tells the Creation account from a different perspective. The initial day by day report, poetic in form, proceeds in a step by step manner. Each day, God did something, and it was good. Finally, after He’d created and formed everything else, God made man. Then He called His Creation “very good. (1:31)”

Note that each time He’s mentioned from 1:1-2:3, Genesis calls Him “God.” Why not His personal name, Yahweh (the Lord)? Probably because until the sixth day there was no one to call on His name. Genesis first establishes from the divine point of view that “God created the heavens and the earth. (1:1)”

EveOnce man is introduced as the final gem of His creative talent, the story is told again as an account of the relationship between God and man. Therefore, we now hear about “the Lord God” and His intimate relationship with humanity in this second telling. Genesis 2:18-25 doesn’t mean that God made a replacement wife, for if this was a new woman then 2:7 would mean that the Lord God had also made a replacement man, since this is a second account of his creation, also.

Instead of messing around with duplicate first parents, the simple explanation is that we first receive a bare history, followed by an intimate biographical sketch. The second chapter doesn’t contradict the first. Rather, 2:4-25 provides details to the flat statement that “God created man in his own image, in the image of God he created him; male and female he created them. (1:27)”

Among those hung up over a proto-wife for Adam are many invested in the writings of the Jewish Kabbal. They insist that a woman named Lilith was his bride before Eve. However, these stories never ring true when compared with Holy Scripture.

Illustrations from the Web Gallery of Art.

Scripture quoted from The Holy Bible, English Standard Version™, © 2001 by Crossway Bibles.

Send email to Ask the Pastor.

Walter Snyder is the pastor of Holy Cross Lutheran Church, Emma, Missouri and coauthor of the book What Do Lutherans Believe.

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Newspaper column #570:1

04 January 2009

Epiphany Hymn


MagiI wrote this hymn a few years ago and am reposting it for anyone who might like to use in in a worship setting or for private devotions. I cannot imagine many circumstances where I wouldn’t grant permission for its use as long as the copyright information and authorship are noted and the lyrics remain unchanged.

The Wise Men Traveled works with several other L M (Long Meter) tunes. However, I wrote it with this particular melody in mind. The only downside is that When Christ’s Appearing Was Made Known, an Epiphany hymn in Lutheran Worship, uses the same music. Other hymns in various hymnals, including On Jordan’s Bank the Baptist’s Cry, are also set to Puer Nobis.

The Wise Men Traveled from Afar
L M
Text by Walter P. Snyder, 1957–
St. Matthew 2:1–12
Suggested tune: Puer Nobis Nas­ci­tur

  1. The Wise Men traveled from afar
    To worship Him who, by a star,
    Was shown to be the Royal Son —
    King David’s Heir, Anointed One.

  2. A Child they found in Bethlehem,
    By Holy Ghost conceived, yet man:
    The Father’s Son in flesh and blood
    Was fully man and fully God.

  3. Their incense honored Deity
    And gold was gift to royalty;
    While myrrh foreshadowed death and grave
    As sinful men He came to save.

  4. Yet tomb was not His final end;
    He rose — our Wisdom, Savior, Friend.
    The Morning Star still beams His light
    And scatters Satan’s gloomy night.

  5. Salvation, pardon, life, and health —
    Richness beyond all earthly wealth —
    Through Word and water, body, blood,
    Christ gives these gifts of highest good.

  6. To God the Father and the Son,
    With Holy Spirit ever One,
    Be honor, glory, hymns of praise
    By men and angels ever raised.
— W. P. Snyder © 2004
May not be used or reproduced without permission

Previous articles concerning the young Christ Child’s distinguished visitors include Unbiblical Christmas Carols, Jesus and the Wise Men, and Names of the Magi.

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