News

LM-A News

We publish a regular newsletter which is distributed via email. Its purpose is to encourage and support confessional Lutherans, by offering

  • devotions

  • teaching articles

  • a weekly memory verse

  • profiles of our members and interviews with a range of interesting people

  • news and upcoming events

  • prayers

The newsletter is available by subscribing below. You can access each issue in printable form on the right-hand side of this page. The lead article from each issue is also available below, so you can catch up on any that you missed.

Preparing for Sunday

As you look forward to the Divine Service on Sunday, you may like to meditate on the readings for the week:

To read the Hymn of the Day and the collect for Sunday, please visit the Worship page and download the service order or insert for Sunday. Lectionary Notes are included each week.

Printable Copies of Our Newsletters

You may know of people in your family or people in your area who would love to read this newsletter but can’t access it for various reasons.

Please feel free to print off the following PDF versions of recent newsletters to share as part of your ministry of love and support for your brothers and sisters in Christ.

Libby Krahling Libby Krahling

Help in our helplessness

Our help is in the name of the Lord, who made heaven and earth (Psalm 124:8 ESV).

The painting of Jesus praying in the Garden of Gethsemane captures his focus on the Father. In perfect faithfulness, he willingly became the helpless one - arrested, beaten, and crucified. His agony was real. He knew his blood would be shed in place of ours. His sweat fell like drops of blood as he prayed, ‘Not my will, but yours, be done’ (Luke 22:42). In His suffering and death, he restored our connection to the Father, so that our attention might turn away from ourselves - from our sin, our efforts, our striving - and toward living as faithful children in the presence of our Heavenly Father.

Before God we are helpless. Our sin has caused a lack of fear, love, and trust in God. Like Adam and Eve, we turn from him, forget his help, and attempt to help ourselves. Yet from the beginning God created us for relationship and mutual faithfulness. Eve was given to Adam as a helper, but in the moment of temptation neither helped the other remain faithful. They turned from God, hid from him, and their will - and ours ever since - set itself against God.

We still have freedom in everyday matters. We can help ourselves to what’s in the fridge or the pantry.  But when it comes to saving ourselves from death, we are utterly helpless. We cannot stop the ‘conveyor belt’ of this world that carries us to the grave. We cannot make ourselves holy, prevent ourselves from hurting others or being hurt, nor can we escape death. Deep down, humanity knows what Scripture and the Lutheran Confessions affirm: the human will is bound by sin and death.

Recognising our helplessness, however, does not stop temptation. We are tempted to minimise our sin: ‘I’m not that bad. I’m better than others.’ We are tempted to believe that politeness, positivity, or good manners can substitute for repentance. But Jesus says, ‘There is joy before the angels of God over one sinner who repents’ (Luke 15:10). Heaven rejoices over repentance, not respectable disobedience.  The opposite temptation - despairing in our helplessness and refusing God’s help – is just as dangerous. Self-pity is no more faithful than self-righteousness.  So, what turns us from both pride and despair? How is the curse of Eden reversed?

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