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L AYMAN L UTHERAN THE September - October 2014 Your Partner in HIS Mission! . . . . . . . . . 2 . . . . . . . . . 6 . . . . . . . . . 9 . . . . . . . . 16 . . . . . . . . 19 Non-Profit Org. U.S. Postage PAID St. Louis, MO. Permit No. 619 Lutheran Hour Ministries 660 Mason Ridge Center Drive St. Louis, Missouri 63141-8557 see page 3 Advancing the WITNESS WHEN IT COMES TO ADVANCING THE WITNESS for the Lord Jesus Christ over the years, take the examples of The Lutheran Hour and a former speaker, Dr. Oswald Hoffmann. By Samuel E. McPeek By Samuel E. McPeek Sharing Your Story Oncology and Project Connect Korean Partnerships Gospel in China The Mormons…WHO They Are, WHAT They Believe
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Page 1: The Lutheran Layman

LAYMANLUTHERANTH

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September - October 2014 Your Partner in HIS Mission!

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Non-Profit Org.U.S. Postage

PAIDSt. Louis, MO.Permit No. 619

Lutheran Hour Ministries660 Mason Ridge Center DriveSt. Louis, Missouri 63141-8557

see page 3

Advancing the

WitnessWhen it comes to advancing the Witness for the Lord Jesus christ over the years, take the examples of The Lutheran Hour and a former speaker, dr. oswald hoffmann.

By samuel e. mcPeekBy samuel e. mcPeek

sharing Your story

oncology and Project connect

Korean Partnerships

gospel in china

the mormons…Who they are, What they Believe

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2 The Lutheran Layman September-October 2014

Dr. Gerald Perschbacher (LL.D.), Editor • Andrea Thompson, Layout

Subscription: $5. Printed bi-monthly. Send color photos for use. Photos sent to the paper may not be returned. Lutheran Hour Ministries, The Lutheran Hour, Bringing Christ to the Nations, BCTN, By Kids...For Kids, JCPlayZone, Life...revised, Living for Tomorrow, This is the Life, On Main Street, Ayer, Hoy y Siempre, Cristo Para Todas Las Naciones, Esta Es La Vida, Para el Camino, Woman to Woman, Family Time, Teacher to Teacher, Reaching Out and The Hoffmann Society are ® registered marks, or SM service marks. The Puzzle Club is a service mark and trademark of Int’l LLL. Copyright 2014, Int’l LLL

Bringing Christ to the Nations — and the Nations to the Church

LAYMANThe Lutheran

Vol. 85, No. 5 September-October 2014

by Rev. Gregory SeltzSpeaker of The Lutheran Hour

spEAkiNg Up

sometimes the task of witnessing or sharing our faith is difficult because

we are aware, even painfully so, of the reality of our own NEED FOR GOD’S GRACE. It’s true, we not only need it, we need it 100% just like everyone else. In 2 Cor. 4, the apostle Paul says it this way:

“But we have this treasure in Jars of clay to show that this all-surpassing power is from God and not from us!”

Treasure in “jars of clay”? That means that God can work in and through people just like us to bring others to faith in Him. The question is not so much “are we fully ready to be a witness like that?” The real question is, “Will we let God do His work in us so that others can see Him in our lives and know that God loves them, too?”

To be a witness is to let God’s story be told in and through your life. In the good times, times of success, that’s often easy to do. But, it’s the times of waiting on the Lord, times

of trusting in Him when we can’t see the momentary solution, those are the times when our story is often most “shareable,” most authentic to those who don’t know Jesus as their Savior. To know the power of faith in Him in the times of the “refiner’s fire,” in the time when we feel most like a “clay pot,” those are the times that often build a “story of faith that can bless others, too.

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with Rev. Gregory Seltz

“Will we let God do His work in us so that others can see Him in our lives and know that God loves them, too?”

sharing Your Story of His Story!

I love the story told of a group of women that were studying the book of Malachi. In Chapter 3, they came across verse three which says: “He will sit as a refiner and purifier of silver.” They wondered what this verse was teaching about God and about trusting in God in their lives. So, the following week, one of the woman called up a silversmith and made an appointment to watch him while at work.

As she watched the silversmith work, he held a piece of silver over the fire and let it heat up. He explained that in refining silver, one needed to hold the silver in the middle of the fire, where the flames were the hottest as to burn away all the impurities.

The woman thought about God holding us in such a hot spot. She then asked the silversmith if it was true that he had to sit there in front of the fire the entire time the silver was being refined. The man answered: yes, that not only did he have to sit there holding the silver, but he had to keep his eyes on it the entire time it was in the fire. If the silver was left even a moment too long in the flames, it would be destroyed.

The woman was silent for a moment. Then she asked the silversmith, “But how do you know when the silver is fully refined?”

He smiled at her and answered, “Oh, that’s easy—when I see my image in it.”

To “tell our story” is to let God work in our lives so that not only can He see His image in us, but that others might see Him in us, too. When that happens, God’s treasure is shared, God’s image is reflected, others see Jesus, in us, as their Savior, too. Will you let God create such a story in you, whether in triumph or trial? Others will be blessed if you do! n

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The Lutheran Layman September-October 2014 3

Recent academic research on the matter brought this to my attention. So did my personal recollection.

You probably can relate to the following. Like many who grew up in the 1950s and 1960s, I had a predictable Sunday morning routine. After getting up, dressing, and eating a quick breakfast, my parents, sister, and I piled into the car and rode to church, attending Sunday school and worship services. After church, we headed home and had our usual Sunday dinner. A major part of that routine included listening to The Lutheran Hour.

I remember the announcer’s words as he announced, “Bringing Christ to the Nations: The Lutheran Hour” with Dr. Oswald Hoffmann. The accompanying organ music, the singing of the choir, as well as the booming voice of “Ossie” Hoffmann still resonate in my heart. In part, Hoffmann’s preaching and the ministry of The Lutheran Hour instilled in me a desire to become a pastor and kindled my love of preaching through my seminary training and into my role as a Lutheran pastor. So, you see, I am a product of that witnessing that was advanced by the Holy Spirit.

Of course, being a good pastor is more than just being a good preacher. While pastors are called to proclaim the Gospel every time they enter the pulpit, it is also important that they demonstrate the Gospel to others through pastoral care. In my research, I discovered special examples of Dr. Hoffmann exhibiting the heart of a pastor through his preaching. He further exemplified it in the personal and private correspondence he shared with listeners (shown above). It is significant to say that his words and actions were cloaked in the Good News of Jesus Christ, the Great Shepherd of the sheep, thus carrying on the mission of “Bringing Christ to the Nations.”

Indeed, this truly is a fitting example for every

believer. Yes, the love of the Lord is conveyed far beyond the time of worship or the length of a broadcast of The Lutheran Hour.

While on the air, Dr. Hoffmann addressed the always pressing needs, especially those of loneliness and of isolation. In his sermon, “That Forsaken Feeling,” he said loneliness was “one of the most haunting and depressing of human emotions.” It is a human experience common for listeners who heard this sermon in 1956, and those who might be touched by it today. The topic is timeless. The Gospel is ageless.

In speaking to the listener’s need, Dr. Hoffmann offered this assurance:

“God sent His Son into the world, not just to show us the way, but to be the Way. In Christ there is forgiveness for all human failure, the forgiveness which is God’s own guarantee of the fact that He is personally interested in us and wants us personally to be His own. What is more, God is reaching out to you to give you this forgiveness. He is reaching out right now, as I am talking to you.”

Clearly, The Lutheran Hour advanced the witnessing by focusing on the subject (loneliness) and the listener (people like you).

Loneliness can be addressed from many different angles. While a motivational speaker might encourage the audience to “think positive,” a self-help guru could give the listeners 10 steps to overcome loneliness. However, there is a higher plane for the Christian witness. The pastoral preacher proclaims the greatest truth that “God is reaching out to you to give you forgiveness.”

By God’s grace, a good indicator of Dr. Hoffmann’s pastoral effectiveness can be found in the

correspondence that he received from listeners all over the world, with different ages and religious backgrounds. For instance, a Jewish rabbi addressed his letter to Hoffmann with respect: “Rabbi Oswald Hoffmann.” The letter was hand written entirely in Hebrew, which Hoffmann could read. This offered an opportunity for the Speaker to share the Good News in Christ, which he did with regularity when the opportunity arose.

The Gospel is in a class by itself. Through the Holy Spirit, the message of this Good News of God’s grace through Christ touches many lives. They, in turn, can share their Gospel-joy with others.

Here is an example of what I mean. It is from a letter Hoffmann received from a teenager in Malta: “I am a teenager…16 years old, and I always listen to your programme, for it is very interesting and helpful. Sometimes I feel very unhappy, but when I hear your programme my eyes run over with tears of joy. I have told my friend to listen to you, too. Please send me the gold cross you are offering.” That symbol was to remind the teen of God’s goodness.

A listener from England wrote to express gratitude for the program and its impact: “I was low spiritually, my own fault, really. But the Lord in His mercy restored me last Friday as I listened to God’s Word.” One thing Dr. Hoffmann firmly believed was that the Gospel is the main thing and that it needs to be proclaimed as the Good News that it is. It is the power of the Gospel that restores and brings healing to life.

Although Dr. Hoffmann received thousands of letters each year, he took time to respond to those that were addressed to him personally. At times the correspondence continued for a long period. He replied to each writer as though he knew them personally—like a pastor responding to members of his congregation. For example, in responding to a Christmas card from a single woman in Louisiana, Hoffmann told the writer that he will share the card with his family since “it is a fine way for them to get to know a person to whom I have written for a long time.”

After sharing news about his own family, he addresses the writer’s concerns: “I am sorry that you experienced the sadness of bereavement at Christmastime. We know what that means. Just at this time last year, my wife’s mother who was very good to all of us, entered the hospital with a heavy cold and was discovered to have a lung cancer. She died in February, with a fine confidence in the

I remember the announcer’s words as he said, “Bringing Christ to the Nations: The Lutheran Hour” with Dr. Oswald Hoffmann. The accompanying organ

music, the singing of the choir, as well as the booming voice of “Ossie” Hoffmann still resonate in my heart.

from page 1from page 1

Advancing the

Witness

see next page

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4 The Lutheran Layman September-October 2014

By gerald Perschbacher

in many respects, life is more complicated now than it was 20 or more years ago. Still, the needs of people remain much the same. In the

midst of this is the sharing of God’s Good Word through Lutheran Hour Ministries and the work of Christians in many endeavors.

But life is full of curves, surprises, and walls, too. Many of those we do not expect.

“Surprise, surprise,” said Rev. Gregory Seltz, Speaker of The Lutheran Hour. His message by that title aired on March 27 of this year. He revealed: “Blessings…come when you’re not expecting them, from people from whom you wouldn’t expect them; opportunities arise…where you didn’t think they would…that kind of thing happens a lot when you engage the Lord Jesus in and through His Word because He

resurrection from the dead through our Lord Jesus Christ. The absence of the usual packages that came at Christmastime from St. Paul, Minn., is a poignant reminder to all of us how much we miss her. Christmas also remind us that Christ came so that we might have hope in Him. He is the Conqueror, and not even death can stand in His way. With faith in Him, we march on in the victory He has won for us through His death and resurrection.”

Dr. Hoffmann concluded: “Have comfort in Christ. You are not alone. He stands by you and so do we who are members of His body, even as you are.”

By sharing personal information about his family as well as describing a loss that he and his family had experienced, the Reverend Doctor established empathy with the writer and built a pastoral relationship.

I easily related to this as I read his response. I was impressed by the connection with the sermon that I mentioned earlier, “That Forsaken Feeling.” In that particular sermon he mentioned how individual people “don’t count much today.” They can often see themselves only as a part of “that great glob of humanity, one of those faceless people who go to work in the morning and come home from work in the evening.” However, then he applied the Gospel: “God is paying attention to you . . . He will never leave thee or forsake thee.”

It would have been easy to do, but Dr. Hoffmann did not send a form letter to a faceless listener. Instead, he shared information about his family and their experience of personal loss. He went out of his way to demonstrate that God was near. By so doing, the Gospel was advanced through the words and witness guided by God Himself!

While Dr. Hoffmann often replied with words of comfort and consolation, there were other times when he had to confront, admonish, and convince those who wrote to him.

For instance, in a letter dated July 26, 1966, a woman from the Midwest wrote, “We have a problem and need some advice on it….My sister got married to a Negro man this month. . . .” Written in the midst of the civil rights movement and given the sentiments about interracial relationships

from previous page

Advancing . .

todAy

Advancing theWitnessof the time, the stress was understandable.

What would YOU have said?Dr. Hoffmann replied this way: “As you

say in your letter, you do have a problem. The problem is not with your sister but with yourselves. You must recognize this first of all.” The Speaker of The Lutheran Hour did not sugarcoat his words in a lengthy response. He acknowledged what the sister’s marriage was to face “in a social climate which is characteristic of much of our country. The fact must be faced by people who get married and want to stay married. After all, God wants marriage to last.” Dr. Hoffmann urged tolerance, even acceptance: “Treat your new brother-in-law as the man he proves himself to be, giving him the consideration you would give to any brother-in-law, no more and no less.”

Finally, he encouraged the writer to see her situation as an opportunity: “I pray for you that you may see your Christian duty to your sister and her husband as an opportunity for Christian growth which a lot of other people never have—an opportunity to grow in grace and in the knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ.”

This advice resonates today as people face personal and social challenges. These challenges likewise give us the opportunity to bear witness to God’s unconditional love for us through His Son, Jesus Christ.

Throughout his ministry as Speaker of The Lutheran Hour, Dr. Oswald Hoffmann sought to live out the mission of “Bringing Christ….” The messages of The Lutheran Hour brought tears of joy and consolation to countless radio listeners, as it did to the teenager in Malta. Through The Lutheran Hour God’s Word brought encouragement to people around the globe. A woman from England corresponded with Hoffmann and was assured that she and others were not alone—Christ was with them. They, too, had an opportunity to bring Christ to a friend or family member. n

Since 2003, Rev. Samuel McPeek has been pastor of Faith Lutheran Church in Lafayette, La., and has made several research trips to LHM headquarters as he works toward his doctoral degree.

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is not merely a benevolent Stranger, He is the Lord of the Universe, the Savior who died on the cross for you and me, and He loves us with an everlasting love! When you get to know Him by faith, you will not only be surprised, you’ll be graced, blessed, forgiven, redeemed!”

Seltz added, “Human beings are notorious for building emotional and spiritual walls of separation. When someone hurts us, rather than dealing with it, calling for repentance, unleashing the power of forgiveness, we would rather simmer in our feelings of disrespect and anger, putting up emotional walls preventing any sort of healing. When there are problems in our communities, it’s much easier to wall it out or wall it in, to make sure that it isn’t in our backyard rather than engage our neighbors together as partners in real community solutions. Walls, emotional fortifications, barriers; as

broken human beings, we’re very good at turning in on ourselves because of sin and fear, and keeping people out of our lives, even keeping God at bay.

“Human walls don’t come down easily, either. In

northern Peru, the Incan civilization has disappeared off the landscape except for one important feature, the walls. Even though everything else of this civilization of people is gone, their walls still stand. This is the bad thing about human walls; even when they are supposed to, they don’t come down easy.

“But as Jesus demonstrates…that’s no way to live. That’s the way of emotional thirst, the way of a soul that’s parched, dehydrated, slowly deteriorating….

Amid that set of circumstances, God’s Word enlivens even the hardest heart and life “to believe, to be satiated with Christ’s living water of forgiveness, life, and salvation, receiving the love of One who overcame everything so that we might live. We not only have this life for ourselves, we have this for the sake of others in our lives, too. With such a persevering love from God, how can we but not do all that we can to climb every mountain, descend through every valley, strive to overcome any obstacle to share the love of Jesus Christ with those God brings into our lives?”

Thus the need—and opportunity—to advance the witness through listeners touched and moved by the Holy Spirit. It’s something not left exclusively to pastors, teachers, or other church workers. It is meant to involve the laity, every Joe and Jane, every Letitia, Sam, Cora, Henry, Claire, TJ, and Victorio who is a believer in Christ.

Believers LIVE the life of faith, struggling to be better at it each day. That’s not easy. But they strive “not to judge (or) to criticize, but to imitate the love of Jesus Christ, a love that can engage people right where they are and bless them. You can go there because you have a Savior who has gone there for you and promises to love those people who are dear to you with a love that is beyond your and our imagination,” Seltz noted.

Even though the witness to Christ is being advanced, walls of disbelief often are constructed against it. Why? Pastor Ken Klaus, Emeritus Speaker of The Lutheran Hour, spoke on the subject in his April 27, 2014, message, “What Will it Take?” He directed these words to the skeptical non-believer.

“Most of us are disinclined to put our trust in the words of any human being. We might be willing to concede that we are being given a version of the truth, but we still aren’t ready to say, ‘This truth is whole, absolute, and verifiable.’

“So, my friend, what would it take for you to believe? The question is all important. Your eternal destiny, heaven, and hell rest on the answer you give. What will it take for you to believe? What proof can I offer? If I say, ‘Millions have been comforted by knowing the living Jesus,’ you will reply, ‘Other religions also offer comfort to their adherents.’ If I say, ‘The Bible is truth,’ you will reply, ‘Other books make the

same claim.’ What will it take? I could tell you to look at the prophecies which Jesus fulfilled. That is an explanation which carries some weight. It is a claim which no other faith can make. But that calls for work on your part, and you who have dismissed God’s Word and the Savior’s story, are not inclined to do that kind of investigation.

“So what can I say to convince you? I will say this: ‘Where is Jesus’ dead body?’ That’s it: ‘Where is His corpse?’ The Jewish leaders most certainly wanted to stop this new faith before it got a serious foothold. Why didn’t they produce Jesus’ body? It should have been a simple thing for them to do. And if they couldn’t do that, why didn’t they come up with a Jesus look-alike? It wouldn’t have taken that much. Bodies decompose quickly in the Judean heat. Puncture a corpse with some nail holes; whip the back of the corpse; scar the head with a crown of thorns and voila, you have a Jesus clone.

“Why they didn’t produce a body, some body, anybody’s body and say, ‘This is Jesus!’—they didn’t because they couldn’t. That’s right, they couldn’t. They couldn’t claim Jesus’ body had been stolen; they couldn’t say His tomb had been robbed; they couldn’t say these things because it was common knowledge that crucified Jesus, dead Jesus was alive and well. James saw Him; Peter saw Him; the 10 disciples saw Him; the 11 disciples saw Him; the two Emmaus disciples saw Him; more than 500 people at one time saw Him. All of these folks saw and knew Jesus was not dead. That is why, on Pentecost, after a short sermon, thousands believed in the risen Redeemer. On that day God’s plan of salvation became clear to them. They knew death had been defeated, sin and Satan had been conquered. No longer was the grave their final destiny; no longer was hell their ultimate end. Because Jesus lives, His believers live. That is the fundamental, the incontrovertible proof of Christianity. Jesus lives—and because He lives we can join with a no-longer-doubting Thomas and say, ‘My Lord and my God.’ If you do, your life will be eternally changed for the better.

“An exaggeration? Not at all…. If the living Jesus is Someone you need and long for, we stand ready to make sure the introduction which has begun today is complete. That is why we extend this invitation to you….”

As current messages say much the same, the witnessing is advanced by the grace of God and empowered by His Spirit. Neighbors invite neighbors to hear the Good Word. Friend encourages friend to tune in. Pastors proclaim it. Relatives pray for it. Supporters just like you are dedicated to this cause, the cause of Christ.

The advance of the witnessing will not die. It cannot die. For God is alive and active. And where He is, His Word goes and grows. n

The advance of the witnessing will not die. It

cannot die. For God is alive and

active. And where He is, His Word goes and grows.

The Lutheran Layman September-October 2014 5

Pastor seltz

Pastor Klaus

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6 The Lutheran Layman September-October 2014

oncology center, emergency shelter— two Places Project Connect is Right at home

By Paul schreiber

it was one woman’s battle with cancer that launched a novel use of a Project Connect booklet and started a chemotherapy-turban outreach program

called Project Joanna at the turn of the century. It operates as a ministry of Grace Lutheran Church in Vestal, New York.

Church member Rita Schultz tells the story: “Fourteen years ago my sister, Joanne, was diagnosed with breast cancer. During her treatment she experienced hair loss. This ministry was born out of my desire to provide her with turbans. With the help of our Lutheran Women’s Missionary League group we came up with the idea of attractively packaging a turban, a card with our prayer for patients, a stamped postcard that could be returned to us to request prayer by name or a Bible, and the Lutheran Hour Ministries’ booklet Coping with Cancer.”

Project Joanna was Up and Running in new YorkThe effort was called Project Joanna not only for Rita’s sister but also

for Johanna in the Gospel of Luke. She was healed by Jesus and became a supporter. Now after 14 years of God’s grace, the project has provided over 5,000 packages to two local oncology centers. “We have also developed and given out dozens of start-up kits for other churches to implement this ministry,” Schultz adds.

As an outreach in time of deep need, Project Joanna hits the mark. Knowing what cancer patients go through, Schultz sees the cancer kits as a “warm hug on a cold day.” And the outreach is most welcome. Schultz tells of the “woman who said even though her husband is an atheist he was

very touched by our kindness and even included a donation.” Another reply stated that “though I am not thrilled about the hair loss, your gift makes it easier knowing that people, (whom) I do not know, care enough to fashion head coverings for people like me.’” Another woman addressed the Project Connect booklet itself. A note from her said, “I found your Coping with Cancer booklet very helpful and inspirational. It’s a true keeper.”

Schultz’s favorite response came from Mary who wrote, “This kind support is so meaningful. It makes me feel I am not alone and have support from unknown friends. I never realized the value of this. What your work has inspired in me is the desire to reach out to just one person who needs support. Your good deed has inspired me to take action.”

In the end, Schultz said it was her life that she believes has been impacted the most. “For as long as I can remember I have prayed ‘give us this day our daily bread’ without much thought. Then I started Project Joanna. In the beginning I worried constantly about finding the funding to keep this going, but after a year or two I realized I always had exactly what I needed and not a penny more: my daily bread. For example, several years ago while purchasing fabric I had the clerk add up what she had cut, and it was exactly what was left in our account, but I needed six more yards. She asked me what I was using all this for and I explained.

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The Lutheran Layman September-October 2014 7

Then I said, ‘Go ahead and cut it. God has always provided what I need.’ Just then the woman next in line said she would pay for it. Her son Paul was suffering through cancer treatments and would we pray for him.”

Schultz and those who work with her know the Source who sustains this ministry. “We praise the Lord for always providing the material resources we need—like your booklet—and the financial resources to continue this ministry. After 14 years my sister is cancer free and we quietly carry on.”

Booklets help in michigan, tooRita Schultz’s story is not the first LHM has heard about the effectiveness

of Project Connect’s Christ-centered volumes. They are used in numerous helpful ways. In Shelby Township, Michigan, Shepherd’s Gate Lutheran Church participates in the Macomb County Rotating Emergency Shelter Team (MCREST). This consortium of approximately a hundred area congregations shelters men, women, children, and families for up to 90 days. Hosting congregations provide meals, shower facilities, transportation and, when able, laundry services for their guests. MCREST assures not only safe shelter, meals, and friendship, but many other services that help transition families and individuals into the community.

Among the hundreds of booklets Shepherd’s Gate has ordered are Forgiveness is a Choice, Has God Abandoned Me?, Depression: Understanding the Pieces of the Puzzle, Raising Your Children with Respect, Self-Control in an Addictive World, Unlocking the Prison of Guilt, There is More to Anger than Getting Mad, Beyond Divorce, Why Should I Go to Church?, and many others.

In order to complement “National Back to Church Sunday” in 2013, one Lutheran congregation’s outreach committee’s co-chairperson ordered and distributed the booklet, Prayer: When You Don’t Know What to Say, as an encouragement to the members

of her committee. “I would like to have our church become known as a praying church. We have a prayer group in my home each week to pray for the needs in our church, so I was excited to see this booklet offered,” she said. This year “National Back to Church Sunday” is September 21.

Sometimes it involves just giving the booklets away, nothing more. A retired Lutheran pastor wrote, “It struck me as a practical outreach booklet (Live the Six: Learning to Live as an Everyday Missionary) I could distribute in a number of ways: to our Sunday night in-home Bible study, to my daughter who attends a non-denominational small church that is reaching out to others. That’s just a couple of possibilities.”

making a difference in Port angeles and elsewhere

Then there’s St. Matthew Lutheran Church in Port Angeles, Washington. The church operates a soup kitchen and a “Celebrate Recovery” ministry. Large orders of Project Connect booklets are distributed to individuals and visitors taking part in these two community-impact efforts.

Lutheran Hour Ministries receives frequent comments about how these topical booklets have made a big difference in somebody’s circumstances or added fresh insight to someone’s perspective. We welcome these stories and hearing about the innovative approaches people use to get these booklets into the hands of those who need them.

You, also, may Benefit!As food for thought on how you or your church might use Project Connect

more effectively, please consider these ideas:

• For guys in men’s groups or Bible study groups, have you considered giving a relevant booklet to a new guy in your group? Ladies, are there gals in your Bible study group who would benefit from a booklet that addresses a particular need?

• Can you query area nursing homes and assisted-living centers about a display rack? Both are excellent venues for booklets. Residents have time on their hands, and there are many visitors.

• How about adding a booklet like Why Should I Go to Church? to new member take-home materials?

• What about area recovery centers dealing with substance abuse, marital issues, alcohol, or anger management? Offering booklets here is an ideal situation.

• Ever considered including a booklet like Reasons to Believe or The Bible: What? When? Why? in visitor packets at your church?

• Could there be display opportunities at area funeral homes, doctors’ offices, family diners, hospitals, and VA institutions?

• How about using a title like What Happens When I Die? as a giveaway when making evangelism calls?

Clearly, a little imagination goes a long way. Be sure to keep us posted on the exciting ways you share and utilize Project Connect booklets. To help spur your thinking, go to www.lhm.org/projectconnect and check the page of “Project Connect Tips.” There you will find several good ideas for reaching others within your community with these powerful, easy-to-read volumes. n

Paul Schreiber is on the staff of Lutheran Hour Ministries as senior editor for the United States Ministries division.

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8 The Lutheran Layman September-October 2014

in the early 1950s when the first “Lutheran Hour float” made its way

along the byways of Pasadena, Calif., preliminary to the Rose Bowl foot-ball game, no one knew that the en-try started a tradition that continues well into its sixth decade with several thousands of volunteer Petal Push-ers active in the project. Over those

years, the float has offered a Chris-tian presence unlike any other due to the wide range of media coverage.

The 2015 Rose Parade theme is “Inspiring Stories” which is a natural for the new Lutheran Hour Ministries float to center on Christian faith and life under the entry, “The Bible…God’s Story.” Thus, the float will highlight “the story of God’s

salvation…revealed through the real stories of real people throughout the course of time,” reports Lou Marting, on behalf of the Float Committee.

The float project is spearheaded by the Southern California District of the International Lutheran Laymen’s League and receives support from various individuals throughout North

America. One of the most o b v i o u s l y s u c c e s s f u l e n l i s t m e n t s involves the Petal Pushers from coast to coast who literally push flower petals and otherwise apply natural plant material to decorate the float. They also work on c o m m e rc i a l

float entries in order to gain a financial base for the float project which is funded through the district.

The 2015 LHM entry will show the Nativity, Noah’s Ark, and a huge version of an open Bible conveying the Word of God and how He has been active in history. A large image of Christ will be depicted midway in the float. Live riders will be costumed

to represent Biblical personalities to show how God’s activity over the centuries has been with real people. The very presence of the float in the parade indicates that God remains active in today’s world.

Often as past LHM floats made their majestic way along the parade route, countless thousands of individuals gave the sign of the cross, bowed, removed their caps, or showed other means to honor the reminder that Christ is the Savior. The 2015 entry is expected to receive an equally sincere reception.

What specific messages will be amplified? Noah followed God’s instructions by faith and swung to action to build the Ark, thus saving mankind from total destruction. Moses, with all his human frailties and faults, was still a key conveyor of God’s grace, foreshadowing the greatest of all saviors, Christ Himself. This message is carried to the Nativity wherein God was manifested in man. The float rounds out the images by showing how Jesus, at His baptism, was acclaimed by God the Father as the beloved Son of God.

The parade is a fine venue to promote the Good News of Christ Jesus to many millions of people worldwide who will be watching the coverage by media outlets. The purpose of the float is to provide a Christian witness and hope in Jesus

Christ to the unchurched, who view the float in person and through the media. Dick Gast is the committee’s general chairman, while wife Lynn chairs the coordinated effort of nearly 4,000 volunteer Petal Pushers. See www.petalpushers.org for details on the project or how to become a volunteer. n

new Year’s Float Promotes

‘god’s story’By gerald Perschbacher

coloring contest!

students in preschool through 8th grade are invited to enter

the Petal Pushers’ 2015 Rose Parade float coloring contest. Go to: www.petalpushers.org/contest/FloatColoringPageContest.pdf for the download. Postmark entries by November 1 of this year. Entrants are to be sure to complete all information on the coloring contest entry page. Information on rules, prizes, and age levels for entries can be obtained at www.petalpushers.org. Lutheran Hour Ministries Float Committee, P.O. Box 20044, Riverside, CA 92516-0044. n

The float will highlight “the story of God’s salvation … revealed through the real stories of real people throughout the course of time.”

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The Lutheran Layman September-October 2014 9

Lutheran Hour Ministries welcomes many visitors to its St. Louis headquarters each year. One of

LHM’s guests this past spring was the Rev. Dr. Chul-Hwan Kim, president of the Lutheran Church in Korea (LCK), who was en route to Vancouver, British Columbia, to attend the tenth Convention of Lutheran Church—Canada. While at LHM, Dr. Kim graciously fielded a few questions from LHM Communications staff member Greg Koenig about the work of his church and Lutheran Hour Ministries in Korea.

Koenig: What do people in Korea know about The Lutheran Hour?

Kim: The Lutheran Hour has been reaching out in Korea for a long time. When The Lutheran Church—Missouri Synod was planning mission work in Korea in 1958, the Mission Board debated whether to plant new Lutheran congregations or support existing mission efforts with publications and mass media; they settled on publications and mass media—The Lutheran Hour program in particular.

When I introduce myself to other leaders and ask if they know of the Lutheran Church in Korea, very few respond that they do. Then I ask if they’ve heard of The Lutheran Hour and they’ll say, “Oh, yes, we know The Lutheran Hour!”

Koenig: Has the work of Lutheran Hour Ministries had an influence on you personally?

Kim: I have an early memory of Lutheran Hour Ministries that is very powerful and personal. When Dr. Oswald Hoffmann was Speaker of The Lutheran Hour program, he visited Korea in 1984 or 1985, at Christmastime. I heard him preach one of the two sermons he delivered there. He appeared to me to be a very ordinary man—but when he opened his mouth to speak, I felt as if I had been captured by the Holy Spirit. I didn’t understand English, but there was an interpreter, and his sermon affected me deeply. Even now I remember Dr. Hoffmann’s theme: “Are you poor—as poor as Jesus was?”

Afterward I desired to live a pure life and to try to become as wonderful a preacher as Dr. Hoffmann. Today, whenever I think about him, I get some spiritual strength—and this gives me joy.

Koenig: How can ministry partnerships help strengthen your church—and what can partnering with Lutheran Hour Ministries mean for the LCK?

Kim: Partnership is so important, especially nowadays. As a small Lutheran body, we can’t survive without relations with other churches and evangelistic organizations. We must work to meet together with genuine hearts and find ways to help each other. Lutheran Hour Ministries has been a great support to my church and I want to see that continue; this visit is an opportunity for me to learn what LHM is all about and to discover opportunities for us to work together effectively!

Lutheran Hour Ministries began work in Korea in 1959; the Christian resources produced by our ministry in Korea today are valuable evangelistic tools that incorporate Korean traditions. Outreach centers such as Lutheran Hour Ministries—Korea share the Good News of Jesus in more than 30 countries around the world; to learn more, visit www.lhm.org/international. n

Korean church Leader talks about

PArtnershiPs

Rev. dr. chul-hwan Kim, president of the Lutheran church in Korea, visited

Lutheran hour ministries in late may. Pictured with dr. Kim are from left, asia Regional director gunya nathalang, executive director Kurt

Buchholz and international ministries director dr. douglas Rutt.

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10 The Lutheran Layman September-October 2014

recognizing a crossroAds and knoWing what

Beyond the

crossroAds

to do about it can set a fresh pace for the future.

t he 79-year-old man stood in his church building and noticed how two hallways crossed. Each led to a

different destination. Then it struck him. “Our churches are at the crossroads.”

The man is Al Weatherly, a member at St. Peter Lutheran Church in Macomb, Mich. With firsthand experience in Christian churches of different denominations, he realized that congregations in general were not caring about their youth as they ought. That concern was heightened in later years as Al took on a variety of church positions. In this regard, he is much like many adults in the Int’l LLL who support Lutheran Hour Ministries. He also is much like many older adults in The Lutheran Church—Missouri Synod who wish more youth can be involved on a congregational level.

For youth, that period of life is “a critical time for them….What do we do with the youth from the time they are confirmed until the time they are married” and have children of their own?

The idea of the two crossing corridors kept reappearing in his mind. It still does.

Al is not alone in thinking that congregations should “carefully lead our youth and younger adults into a closer bond with our Lord…all Lutheran congregations need a full-time youth director to properly lead these young people to a deeper and more fulfilling relationship with Jesus!”

It’s not a new idea. Yet, in some places, congregations may not have realized they are at or have passed the “crossroads.”

If you are like Al, you probably see several dangers as youth drift away from church involvement. One is the attitude, “Don’t worry, they’ll come back if they want to.” Sadly, this is even stated by some pastors who may use it as a means to lessen their feeling of responsibility

By gerald Perschbacher

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The Lutheran Layman September-October 2014 11

or who use it out of sheer desperation over not knowing what to do.

Al also notes that there is an option to retain

youth in a given area. “Rural congregations where there are few young people should try and contact these youth to possibly help those older people in the congregation with tasks around their farms or homes.” If young confirmands aren’t needed and connections to local society and the church are not maintained, youth “will drift away and many will not worship again…(or) on a very limited basis. It is more difficult to ‘bring back’ these people at the age of 21 to 25 than it is to properly lead our confirmed up through age 25!”

Congregations often have a children’s choir and an adult choir, but there is none for the youth whose singing voices are beyond that of young children, and who may feel uncomfortable to be labeled as a full adults. Al floats the idea of forming a youth choir for contemporary services “as praise singers and instrumentalists” or “forming a youth choir for the traditional services.” The same holds for forming Bible study groups and other special gatherings for youth.

Crossroads. There are needy efforts by congregations that can include youth to drop off church information to homes around town, helping others in need, mission trips to places like Mexico, New Orleans (in the aftermath of storms and hurricane), and Guatemala. “They are feeding the homeless in downtown areas. They can also put on Bible-oriented skits at church services. They can distribute food to those less fortunate. They can help senior

members of the church by cutting grass, shoveling snow, getting groceries, and even driving them to worship service,” Al adds.

Properly explained as service activities in the cause of Christ, youth can thus know they are needed and that their actions carry spiritual significance.

He goes on to say that “people of all ages should

become involved in their church because this is a vital part of the joy of being a Christian. Your life will be greatly improved and your spirit uplifted when you serve the Lord!”

Al is no novice to coming up with good connections for sharing the love of God in word and deed. Besides his prior involvement with churches, he saw a present need in contacting visitors to his church. “I came up with the idea of dropping off free travel mugs to everyone who worshiped with us for the first time. I took on this job and became known as the ‘Mugger.’ I also drop off a brochure telling everyone about our church and its programs and service times, etc. …I tell them all about St. Peter Lutheran and its many programs.”

He didn’t stop there. Over four years while serving the congregation in evangelism, he questioned visitors and recorded their responses. He reported the findings: 78 percent of those

visited had young families with adults aged 21 through 35. Of those, three out of four preferred contemporary services. In

further results, Al concluded that among those surveyed, up to 60 percent liked

contemporary worship while 40 percent liked

traditional.

Eventually, a contemporary service was begun. While the new sanctuary was reserved for traditional worship, the contemporary service was conducted in the 350-seat old sanctuary. “We quickly

outgrew the old church,” Al adds, and moved into the new sanctuary. Contemporary worship is “the largest attended service at our church…and very well attended by the youth.”

There can be hope for inner-city churches, too, as Al sees it. As young people move into old areas of big cities such as Detroit, old factory buildings are converting into condos and lofts. Small boutique stores appear on first floors. “The core downtown inner city is alive and thriving.” Al says such congregations can be “poised to grow again.”

Recognizing a crossroads and knowing what to do about it can set a fresh pace for the future. n

al Weatherly stands poised to deliver a church mug at

the home of a visitor, plus holds

a brochure on what his congregation

offers. But perhaps the greatest

experience for visitors is meeting with al after their

time at church.

New sanctuary of St. Peter Lutheran Church

in Macomb, Mich.

“… What do we do with the youth from the time they are confirmed until the time they are married and bring back children of their own?”

Dr. Gerald Perschbacher is editor of The Lutheran Layman.

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12 The Lutheran Layman September-October 2014

a smile spread across my face as I read the bright text on my iPhone: “Gotta go. Church early tomorrow.”

My children can run their fingers across the screens of their smart phones so fast that their texts take less time than my phone calls. I am not so proficient at the ubiquitous touchscreen keyboard. Nevertheless, I haltingly tapped the letters in response, “Church? Have you been going?”

“Yeah. Talk later.” Jill likes to communicate via text, but I prefer the ancient yet much more accurate form of communication: talking. However, I let her go with a final text, “Later,” and made a mental note to give her a call later.

The smile? Well, that’s because I remember our conversations of a couple years ago. If you remember my previous article, Jill and I had occasional conversations about Christianity and popular culture, and several of these conversations made me question whether she was a Christian. It appeared to me that Jill was falling prey to popular misconceptions about (and within) Christianity—the Bible should not be taken literally; Jesus was historical, but was not God (nor ever claimed he was); churches were for indoctrination only; etc. And now, Jill said she had to quit texting me at 11 p.m. on a Saturday because she had to go to church in the morning. Yes, I was smiling.

At the time, I had no idea what was the reason for the apparent change of heart. My former colleague and friend had moved half way across the country to take a new job. Although we texted and emailed regularly, we had not seen each other since. I had no idea if our car-pooling conversations and my follow up was the cause for the change. In reality I knew it wasn’t; it was the Holy Spirit she had received in Baptism at a Lutheran church several decades ago. It really didn’t matter why. All that mattered was that Jill was going to church.

Looking back now I see things I did wrong and things I did right in those discussions with Jill, but I was trying to follow Peter’s advice to the churches in Asia Minor:

“But in your hearts revere Christ as Lord. Always be prepared to give an answer to everyone who asks you to give the reason for the hope that you have. But do this with gentleness and respect” (1 Peter 3:15).

Of course this is one of the key verses supporting the importance of

Christian apologetics, but have you spent the time to consider this verse in detail?

“Always be Prepared”This is more than the Boy Scouts’ motto; this

verse tells us to consider why we believe, which means we have to focus on what we believe. Further, Peter’s message here is not a casual suggestion reserved for theologians, academicians, or pastors; he is talking to YOU and doing so with clear instructions. This is where I did things right with Jill—I study God’s Word; I study apologetics (the discipline of defending your faith); I study and think about why I am a Lutheran. I also am not shy about having conversations about things “religious.” When the subject came up with Jill, I was ready.

“Do this with Gentleness and Respect”Peter tells us that we are not to be argumentative or pushy when

talking about our faith. We are not supposed to be looking for a debate about God. Peter even goes further; we are to present our reasons gently, respecting the person asking. This may be where I failed with Jill a little—I was definitely debating her on the subject. She studied religion in college and I am sure I took this as an opportunity to “cross swords” with her liberal religious training.

“Revere Christ as Lord”This is the important point. In all things, we are to love Jesus. This was why

I was smiling, because it appeared Jill was revering Christ as Lord now. n

Phil Krauss llChairman, Int’l LLLBoard of Directors

onthemove

Defending My Faith – Part 2

WITH PEOPLE AROUND THE WORLD !

Support the outreach efforts of our International Ministry Centers. Get involved at your level at

Support the outreach efforts of our International Ministry Centers. Get involved at your level at

CONNECT

WWW.LHM.ORG/PARTNER 800.944.3450, EXT. 4164

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The Lutheran Layman September-October 2014 13

by Kurt BuchholzExecutive Director

Lutheran Hour Ministriesonthemove

Look around. People are sent to do all sorts of jobs. Carpenters are called to work on new construction

or make repairs to homes and businesses. Computer experts and Internet technicians are in demand to straighten out problems with PCs, laptops, smart phones, and more. In businesses that have an intricate communication system, they remove the old, install the new, then come back for servicing. Electricians service downed power lines and connect new installations. Plumbers are sent to install and keep things moving as intended.

Specialization is a key fact these days. When a person turns seriously ill, physicians, surgeons, nurses, paramedics, and others in the medical field are ready to help. When there is a problem in farming, the farmer seeks the advice of others who hold the answer. Assembly lines are brought to a halt until the mechanic is sent for a special repair.

When it comes to your personal wellbeing, you call an expert, someone you trust who has the necessary skills and your best interests in mind.

When the call for help goes out, we expect someone to be sent—someone who knows what he or she is

doing—someone who can handle the problem.

Whether you realized it or not, all Christians are “sent.” This was a paramount subject at the recent LHM Outreach Conference held in Detroit, where hundreds of people just like you searched their hearts and lives to sharpen their ability to be “sent.” Just like you, they are dedicated to the task of “being sent” and are active in supporting and praying for Lutheran Hour Ministries.

This type of sending is fit for eternity. It is blessed and guided by God every step of the way as fallible people do His infallible work through outreach—sharing and living the Good News that Christ is the one-and-only Savior for all people.

You say you are not an expert? Well, if you know your Savior better than the person next to you, maybe you are more of an expert than you think! When we realize the importance of God in our lives, our outlook turns more “heavenly” with His help. And that is a gift only He gives. In effect, you can share that expertise with others and point the way to Christ.

LHM offers many ideas how you can become more expert in your walk of faith, especially so that others (to whom you are sent!) can know it. Read the articles and notices on these pages to see what I mean. As your partner in His mission we can help you be better equipped as you are sent to those God has put along the

way as you journey through life.Specialization may be in you already. You

have a special way of communicating with your family. Your friends are open to your personality and ability which often make a common ground of friendship. There probably are individuals who seek your advice. To them, you are an expert.

You don’t have to feel like an expert to be one. You simply live it. This is true in the highest sense when you cross paths with a non-Christian. As your belief in Christ is shared and your motivation in life is enriched by His grace, I am convinced that good things are bound to happen.

That’s the fulfillment of being sent—by Him. [John 20:21] n

By Brad neathery

in our communication with supporters, Lutheran Hour

Ministries currently is celebrating the impact and legacy of Martin Luther’s inspired work: A Mighty Fortress is Our God.

Luther composed the piece centuries ago, yet it remains one of our best-loved hymns. Even today, Luther’s words give an accurate portrayal of every Christian’s fight of faith. As one translation puts it:

A mighty fortress is our God,A sword and shield victorious;

He breaks the cruel oppressor’s rodAnd wins salvation glorious.

The old satanic foeHas sworn to work us woe.

With craft and dreadful mightHe arms himself to fight

On earth he has no equal.

ceLeBRating A Mighty Fortress is Our God

Christ eradicated the enemy’s power over us. We are saved by grace through faith. Yet not everyone has enjoyed that assurance.

Christians recognize the need for the Savior among billions who are desperate and lost. Our calling is to share the Gospel with these souls. Yet in this sin-darkened world, Lutheran Hour Ministries faces resistance as we pursue this calling.

That’s why Lutheran Hour Ministries gives thanks for the many that stand firm with us in proclaiming Christ’s

salvation—people like you who stand with us through your prayers, advocacy and financial support!

Lutheran Hour Ministries is thankful to be able to offer you new ways to simplify your support. You can go online to set up an automatic gift or make a gift through PayPal. Both options are easily available when you click the donate button on

www.lhm.org. Of course, your gifts of support through the mail or phone are always appreciated as well.

As Luther wrote, our God is the only one who “wins salvation glorious” for sinners here on earth. What more can we do than share this truth with others? Thank you for supporting Lutheran Hour Ministries in this mission of love. n

Brad Neathery serves as the assistant director of Ministry Advancement for LHM.

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14 The Lutheran Layman September-October 2014

By gerald Perschbacher

as Lutheran Hour Ministries shares the Good News in Christ Jesus, it is applied differently in

the lives of people. Here is how that proclamation and Word of Witness has entered the lives of others—some of whom may be just like you.

Anita said, “I wake up early every Sunday morning to listen to you (The Lutheran Hour) at 6:30 a.m.… WSB in Atlanta. Interestingly enough, my mother, a Baptist minister’s wife, was raised as a Lutheran and often said that she didn’t KNOW that she could have a personal relationship with Christ based on her Lutheran upbringing.

“Mom died in 1982 at the young age of 55 yrs. I was initially drawn to your radio program to better ‘understand’ my mother. In the meantime, I became a minister’s wife, also. As I serve

with my husband (who serves on staff as a missions pastor) I find myself drawn to preparing my Sundays by listening to you!”

Anita then said she was spiritually challenged but very encouraged by the weekly broadcast. One in particular was “so helpful.” On a national news broadcast that same week, she listened to “two evangelical pastors denounce their Christian faith as untrue and not to be believed.” But The Lutheran Hour held true to the Word of God. “Thank you

for your constant ministry! AND to those Lutherans that I know in the area…I refer your radio program to them.  Now that it is accessible online…the early hour is not a problem! God bless you!”

When LHM’s Men’s Network was held at a retreat area in British Columbia, Canada, 15 men represented six congregations, evenly divided between Canada and the United States. This was better participation than expected since Lutherans are not numerous there.

One participant remarked that he loved the Revelation Bible study. “It helped explain the book in terms that I can understand. I see it is a book of comfort.” He mentioned he was raised in England as a Jew, came to Canada, then married a woman who was raised as a Muslim. Now they are both Lutherans and thank God for the Good News in Christ. At the event in Canada, LHM offered yet another opportunity for strengthening his faith.

One retreat participant watched part of the Men’s NetWork video but didn’t stop there. He went home that evening, signed up for the Men’s NetWork online, then downloaded the rest of the study. The next morning he admitted he worked on it most of the night because he found it so interesting.

Sometimes memorable events take place around the Gospel. A few years ago in Texas, a weekend Men’s NetWork presentation was made. Three men and their sons were in the group. Each was thankful for the experience that they shared with their sons. It was a significant moment in their lives—and one they were not prone to forget.

From canada to georgia and Points Between …

But The Lutheran Hour held true to the Word of God.

“Thank you for your constant

ministry!”

hoW lhm fits with you

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The Lutheran Layman September-October 2014 15

From canada to georgia and Points Between …

nominations for candidates to serve on the Board of Directors for the International

Lutheran Laymen’s League/Lutheran Hour Ministries are being requested now for next spring’s

election. Lutheran Hour Ministries members (donors who give a gift to the ministry between Oct. 1, 2013, and March 31, 2015) will vote in the Spring 2015 election via mail-in or Internet ballots for the roles of vice chair and four director positions. You are urged to prayerfully consider the God-given talents, skill sets, passion for outreach ministry and service to the Lord of potential nominees who are members of a congregation of The Lutheran Church—Missouri Synod or Lutheran Church—Canada. To download a nominations form, or learn more about eligibility requirements for nominees, visit www.lhm.org/nominations. Nominations must be received by Oct. 1, 2014, to be considered. n

Board Nominations oPen for 2015

LHM’s Daily Devotions online triggered John to write. He told the story of how a friend in Florida was talking with his doctor during an examination. The doctor thought the patient was a preacher. But no, the patient was a layman. He told the doctor, “Do you know what’s worse than being lost? When no one is looking for you.” John added, “It takes a few moments for the true value of that response to sink in.  What if there were no evangelists, what if there was no visitation or Bibles placed in hotels and motels, hospitals, jails, military induction centers or schoolyards?  What if no one was searching for the lost? I am a subscriber to the LHM Daily Devotions and enjoy your messages daily. Keep on ‘Keeping On’!”

A man who works on a boy’s

ranch listens to The Lutheran Hour. Difficulties at home resulted in the need for the special ranch. “As I drive to the ranch four nights a week, I pray for each of the boys in my house by name. They range in age from 15 to 17. I wonder how many will make it to their 30th birthday.” Through it all, the man gains strength from hearing the Good News of the Lord Jesus Christ. “I catch your program each Sunday a.m. as I drive back from the ranch…God Bless.”

LHM is making a difference. How does LHM fit with YOU? Share your comments by writing to [email protected]. n

Note: dr. gerald Perschbacher is a longtime staff member of the int’l LLL and its Lutheran hour ministries. he serves as editor of The Lutheran Layman.

Lighter, Fresher, easier Look For Men’s NetWork

Lighter, Fresher, easier Look For Men’s NetWork

available now, the new and improved website for the Men’s NetWork is up and running. Crammed full of the solid ministry resources and

content users have come to expect, the look of the website is more open and accessible. Links on getting started, registering for the MNW, and subscribing to the weekly e-newsletter can all be found under “Startin’ Up” at the top or the bottom of the page. Under “More Stuff” you will find details on finding a group near you, Operation Barnabas, Grillin’, cool merchandise, Facebook, ways to support the MNW, and other options. Under “Events” there’s news on our annual fishing tournament, a local and regional calendar for finding a group or an activity, international impact trips available, and “Braggin’ Rights,” where your men’s group can show off a bit.

On the homepage, a scrolling window highlights what’s currently up, just released, or coming around the corner, while ongoing or soon-to-be events are listed in the right-hand column. And, as always, the website is headquarters for all MNW Bible studies. Here you’ll find everything from Home Run King and He Who Dies With The Most Toys … Still Dies—both of which go back to the early days of the MNW—to more recent releases like The Great Deceiver and Noah—The Man, The Ark, The Flood. Definitely, one of the slickest features is the website’s new layout. It’s now “tablet friendly” and sizes to fit, eliminating the need to scroll left and right.

For the big picture on the Men’s NetWork, you can go to www.lhm.org/men and sample it for yourself. n

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16 The Lutheran Layman September-October 2014

The Gospel in

By david g. KohlBy david g. Kohl

For decades, Bringing Christ to the Nations—and the Nations to the Church has been the

motivating drive for Lutheran Hour Ministries, thanks to the Holy Spirit.

Outreach to the Chinese world has seeded a distinguished field of technology, political events, and media usage from the earliest days of radio to the wonders of high-speed Internet, and social media. Innovations keep the Message in the forefront by God’s grace, augmenting interactions between individuals, groups, and officials. Important are individual believers, anxious to spread the witnessing.

In the early 1920s, pioneer broadcasting sparked the

imagination. Early leaders of the Missouri Synod’s Walther League took the initial challenge. Several were connected to Concordia Seminary, St. Louis—among them was Dr. Walter A. Maier (future founding

Speaker on The Lutheran Hour).They used cutting-edge technology

in the “Roaring Twenties.” By 1926, regular AM transmissions from the new 500-watt station aired regularly scheduled “Gospel Voice” programs, received in all parts of the country except the Pacific Coast states. But what about the Far East and specifically China?

At least three “radio-head” seminary graduates accepted calls to the China Mission—Henry O. Theiss (1928), Reinhold Mueller (1929), and Adolph Koehler (1931). Koehler’s letters describe the careful packing of his precious AC Super-Wasp as he and his bride honeymooned across the Pacific. He and Theiss established a ham link, which used Morse

code radiotelegraphy, between remote Shihnan and the mission headquarters at Hankow—a distance of 400 mountainous miles.

But before 1930, The Lutheran Hour was merely an idea. And when

it launched in October of that year, it was a domestic broadcast in the United States. Foreign audiences in Asia were not reached. But they would be, one day.

More “radio-minded” Lutherans gained entry to China. In December of 1936, Theobald Breihan, a fresh graduate from Concordia Teachers College in Chicago, organized a choir at the mission school in Hankow and performed over 20-watt station XHJA. A link allowed missionaries at the Hankow Seminary to present live programs over the Huachung Broadcasting station twice on Sundays beginning March 8, 1936. Missionaries spoke on the live broadcasts. Listeners were encouraged to contact one of seven mission chapels in the Wuhan area, and a Bible correspondence course

was begun. These activities ceased with the Japanese military occupation in June of 1937. Religious broadcasting went on hiatus until 1946.

Eight new seminary graduates arrived in 1946 and The Lutheran Hour renewed its work in China under R.J. Mueller and the tireless

efforts of Paul Martens in Hankow. In Chungking, Captain Chaplain Theodore Mikolon received permission to broadcast the Gospel 15 minutes each Sunday on a local Chinese network. Programs on 16-inch pre-recorded discs from St.

Louis were distributed by airplane. Program schedules were

published in newspapers. An office was established in Hankow, then Shanghai. Missionaries Mueller and Paul Kreyling operated the sites with Chinese staff, answering inquiries and managing a Bible correspondence course.

With transition to Communist rule in 1949, mainland broadcasts ended. In 1952, globe-trotting Dr. Eugene Bertermann, advisor to Dr. Walter A. Maier who went to glory in January of 1950, arranged for a locally generated Cantonese broadcast schedule in Hong Kong. Isaac Mah and Paul Chang did the Cantonese speaking. Music was created by a choir from fledgling Concordia Lutheran School, directed by Lorraine Behling and Ruth Proft. The women used their apartment to tape programs on a donated recorder courtesy of Ruth’s father and specifically used for The Lutheran Hour upon Lorraine’s request.

The program was a well-known presence until regulations disallowed religious broadcasting in July of 1954. Still, at a November rally in King’s Theatre, Rev. Elmer Thode preached to a crowd of 500, of whom 360 earned Bible course completion certificates. For years, David Chiang, a convert through The Lutheran Hour, promoted program efforts in British Honk Kong. Extending the reach, the Japan Lutheran Hour opened in Tokyo, served by former China missionary Kreyling.

The Lutheran Hour was

Lutheran Hour Ministries has been involved with churches in the People’s Republic of China to train lay volunteers in sharing the Good News of Jesus. “Equipping the Saints” workshops, training lay evangelists, and supplying reliable resources to new believers have brought in converts in recognized churches and in house churches. LHM also used MP3 outreach along with Chinese-language Bibles and audio sermons.

Parallel with LHM projects are the efforts of Concordia Welfare Education and Foundation, and projects of the Lutheran Church-Hong Kong Synod. Coordinated efforts also occur with student service projects from the International schools in Hong Kong (HKIS and CIS); China (CISS and BCIS); and Taiwan (CMS) in south and southwest China. n

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The Lutheran Layman September-October 2014 17

established in Taiwan, initiated in 1952 by missionary Roy Suelflow, building on the work of Olive Gruen and Herb Hinz. Early broadcasts were of English programming produced in St. Louis. Under

missionary Del Gremmels, local language programs began. Taiwanese-speaking missionaries Norm Walter and William Dingler introduced Taiwanese broadcasts. Radio towers were specifically aimed at Hong Kong/China, the Philippines, and Japan. Local towers served mini-markets in six other cities on the island. The response was strong. In 1956 there were 35,468 names on The Lutheran Hour’s correspondence list.

A “Mission by Mail” program began in 1957 with hymns, prayers, liturgy, Scripture readings, and sermon being mailed each week to those unable to be served in any other capacity.

Missionary Norm Walter assumed directorship in 1958. Both classical and indigenous music were added, and 15-minute devotional broadcasts were generated. Under John Spreier, new Chinese music replaced the western.

Missionary Ardon Albrecht came on board in 1962. He later was a guiding light for Lutheran Television’s This is the Life when he relocated to America. In Taiwan, traditional programming expanded into television and audio tape ministries

under Director Henry Go H. J. Wu. Mandarin programs were sent to Korea and the Taiwanese programs were broadcast into Malay Peninsula. Outreach later benefited from the leadership of Delmar Glock, Delwin Schneider, Ralph Phipps, and the Mass Media work of Tommy Thompson.

Much mail from the Mainland told how the Red Guards burned Bibles in the Cultural Revolution. In response, Taiwan missionary Ardon Albrecht, business manager Richard Henningfield, and director Wu raised funds through special broadcasts to fund an experiment. On March 22, 1967, ten thousand

How LHM Works in China TodayLutheran Hour Ministries has for many years enjoyed a strong collaborative relationship with two

Christian Protestant organizations approved by the Chinese government: the China Christian Council (CCC) and Three-Self Patriotic Movement (TSPM). This relationship makes it possible for LHM to publish and distribute Chinese-language daily devotions and a variety of other printed Christian materials across the country. LHM is currently involved in a project with the CCC’s Ai Ji Press in Shanghai to publish a translation of Dr. Robert Kolb’s book The Christian Faith: A Lutheran Exposition that can be read by the majority of people in mainland China (see related article, on next page).

Lutheran Hour Ministries also produces Chinese-language audio resources, including an audio Bible, hymnals, and a variety of Christian education presentations. Originally provided on cassette tapes and later on CDs, these tools have now been updated and bundled together for distribution on an MP3 audio player.

Lutheran Hour Ministries provides Equipping the Saints (ETS) evangelism workshops to laypeople through the CCC/TSPM’s network of churches. These intensive seminars train local Christian laypeople to share the Gospel at the grassroots in their communities. In addition to interactive training in how to witness effectively, participants receive LHM-produced print and audio resources to use and share with others.

This fall Lutheran Hour Ministries will celebrate 25 years of partnership with the China Christian Council and Three-Self Patriotic Movement and 20 years of ministry work through the Ai Ji Press. LHM Executive Director Kurt Buchholz, International Ministries Director Dr. Douglas Rutt and Asia Regional Director Gunya Na Thalang will attend a special October celebration in Shanghai to help commemorate these mission milestones. n —Greg Koenig

copies of the Gospel of John were flown to Quemoy island, within sight of the Mainland. There, bundles of the specially printed booklets were attached to helium weather balloons. Prevailing winds carried them across the straits. It was an experiment. Since people could not respond, the idea was not repeated.

Correspondence courses informed inquiring listeners since earliest days. Missionaries and assistants responded to each lesson returned. Many gatherings and rallies were held in

Hong Kong, Macau, and Taiwan during which new believers were baptized. Correspondents were always encouraged to affiliate with a local Lutheran congregation when possible. Hundreds of baptisms were recorded.

Each indigenous program was an episode of family drama, written, produced, and broadcast from 1966-71 under the guidance of Director Wu. Inspired by the Chinese attraction to traditional temple drama presentations, Wu created a format identifying the Christian message with stories of daily life and

With the goal of producing Bibles in China, the Amity Foundation was initiated as a multi-national faith-based partnership in 1985. Primary players included Christians in China, the Religious Affairs Bureau, the Three-Self Patriotic Movement, and the United Bible Societies, upon whose Board was the late Dr. Oswald Hoffmann, a Speaker of The Lutheran Hour.

Since it began in 1987, the printing division has produced 100 million copies with over 60 million distributed in China. Amity Foundation has expanded into disaster relief, church-run social work, and medical education.

For many years LHM has worked with YILN, a secular press, as well as the China Christian Council’s Ai Ji Press to publish books and booklets in the simplified Chinese language. Daily devotions and congregational resources have been made.

During the 1990s, nearly 1.5 million cassette tapes with varying Christian audio resources were distributed in China by Lutheran Hour Ministries. These resources included a 12-cassette series on the Apostle’s Creed, Christian music, sermons, and more. These resources have now been converted for distribution on CDs. n

January 1941: missionary families

paused to hear The Lutheran Hour

from manila.

see next page

Page 18: The Lutheran Layman

By greg Koenig

thanks to a project supported by Lutheran Hour Ministries, an important resource

for understanding Christian belief will soon be available in the most-used language in the world. The Christian Faith: A Lutheran Exposition was written by Concordia Seminary St. Louis professor Dr. Robert Kolb and released in 1993 by Concordia Publishing House. It is frequently recommended for its clear, cogent explanation of Christian theology from a Lutheran perspective.

“Recently, China Lutheran Seminary [CLS] in Taiwan obtained permission to translate Dr. Kolb’s book into Chinese,” says Lutheran Hour Ministries International Director Dr. Douglas Rutt. Students who could read the book in English had found it very helpful—but instructors, including CLS President Dr. Thomas Yu, believed that it should be made available to all of the seminary’s students, and a Chinese translation was proposed.

Lutheran Hour Ministries acquired the rights

Lhm Instrumental in translation of theology Book

challenge. Pre-recorded programs included evening devotions, scripture readings, plus prayers. Worship services were broadcast with sermon helps and pre-recorded music. Missionary Albrecht usually carried a tape player and several tapes as he visited Taiwanese villages.

Comments of appreciation came from other denominations. A Roman Catholic writer appreciated the apostolic efforts of “brothers in the field” and complimented the “formula and method of work worthy of imitation in every way.”

The Chinese in America were not forgotten. In San Francisco, Pastor Wilbert Holt and deaconess Amy Mui started a local Chinese version of The Lutheran Hour in 1969 over the “Voice of Chinatown” station KFAX. It was sponsored originally by the Lutheran Laymen’s League.

Witnessing opportunities in China are increasing each year. The constitution of the People’s Republic of China makes it possible for congregations to proclaim the Gospel legally, worship formally, train church workers openly, and produce and distribute Christian materials publicly. Throughout its history in Asia, The Lutheran Hour has utilized creative, innovative, and expansive use of emerging technology to bring Christ to Asia. n

David Kohl resides on the West Coast. His deep desire to compile a history of Lutheran outreach to China has resulted in two recent books on the subject.

For details, see www.lutheransontheyangtze.com, or www.amazon.com. He may be reached at [email protected].

With their bicycling missionaries and famous Tabernacle Choir, the

Mormons are an intriguing religious group that often perplexes Christians. Explore them in the latest Bible study video release from

the Men’s NetWork, The Mormons: Who They Are, What They Believe.

Learn how to defend your faith with the companion Project Connect booklet of The Mormons: Who They Are, What They Believe. Receive 10 FREE copies with your DVD purchase when you enter the code LMMormons14 at LhM.org/MorMoNs or call 1-800-876-9880. Offer ends September 30.

Watch the video for FREE today!lhm.oRg/mEn

18 The Lutheran Layman September-October 2014

The Gospel infrom previous page

from Concordia Publishing House for The Christian Faith to be translated, and support from Concordia Seminary St. Louis funded both the process of translation and the printing of several hundred copies by the Taiwan seminary’s press.

“This is the most significant Chinese book on the exposition of the Lutheran faith in the past 86 years!” wrote President Yu when the books were printed. “Not only our students but also [others] who are interested in understanding the Lutheran faith will be delighted [at] Dr. Kolb’s lucid exposition.”

Rutt says this was only the beginning, however. “Our interest in this translation extends beyond Taiwan,” he says. “The text of this version uses traditional Chinese characters for the benefit of Taiwanese readers. We have taken an additional step and had it converted to simplified Chinese—which is commonly read throughout the People’s Republic of China and elsewhere; any of the more than 1 billion people who read simplified Chinese could understand this newly rendered version.

“After conducting research to gauge interest in mainland markets, we will have the book printed by the Ai Ji Press in Shanghai and distributed by the China

Christian Council,” Rutt adds. If interest is high, he says, Lutheran Hour Ministries is prepared to produce as many as 20,000 copies in the initial printing. n

Greg Koenig is a member of Lutheran Hour Ministries’ Corporate Communications team.

dr. thomas Yu holds a copy of the Kolb book now available in china.

dr. thomas Yu holds a copy of the Kolb book now available in china.

Page 19: The Lutheran Layman

The Lutheran Layman September-October 2014 19

a new Men’s NetWork Bible study examines those master marketers of works-based

righteousness: the Mormons. The Mormon Church (The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints) is a religious movement that boasts 15 million members, putting it in the top five of U.S. “Christian denominations,” according to the National Council of Churches. Yet, from its feel-good, family-oriented TV commercials to its Grammy- and Emmy-winning Mormon Tabernacle Choir, the Mormon Church is not all it seems from the outside.

In The Mormons: Who They Are, What They Believe, viewers will get an insider’s look into this baffling and actively proselytizing religious movement. From its clean-cut bicycling missionaries and imposing Salt Lake Temple to its cryptic rituals and closed-door secrecy, the Mormons have had a sizable impact on the religious landscape in this country. But what is it that makes this group distinctive, and how does it differ from other Christian churches?

This six-session Bible study will look at this unorthodox group’s 19th-century origins (Joseph Smith, The Book of Mormon, Brigham Young, armed conflict with civilians and state militias); the discrepancy between Mormon beliefs and orthodox Christian teaching and faith; the meaning of some of its odd rituals (baptism of the dead, endowments for the living and dead, temple garments, celestial marriage); and the prominence of the temple in the life of a Mormon. Featured prominently throughout will

be comments from individuals who have been deeply immersed in the Mormon belief system. It will show how some members, upon exiting the Mormon Church, found themselves bewildered and disillusioned, often cut off and ostracized by their families, ready to abandon religious faith altogether. Real-life stories from those on the inside as well as other expert commentary add depth and authenticity to this fascinating study. A discussion guide supplements the video, further exploring the Mormons through Scripture-related passages and numerous Internet links.

The content and presentation of The Mormons gives the viewer an excellent behind-the-scenes insight into the practices and beliefs of this opaque religious group. Though the impulse may be to brush them aside if their missionaries arrive at your door, their visit is an opportunity to share the life-saving Gospel of Christ with them—one that is freely given, available to all, and doesn’t hinge on a never-ending list of demands the person must fulfill in order to find true salvation.

With this new DVD release, LHM is making a special offer: when you buy this DVD you will receive 10 FREE Project Connect booklets of The Mormons: Who They Are, What They Believe! (See the article at the right.) To take advantage of this, you must go to our special ordering page at www.LHM.ORG/MORMONS and enter the coupon code, LMMormons14. Hurry, this offer ends September 30! n

Paul Schreiber serves as senior editor for LHM’s United States Ministries division.

Written as a companion piece for the Men’s NetWork Bible

study of the same name, The Mormons: Who They Are, What They Believe offers a probing look at the basics of this religious movement founded in the early 19th century by Joseph Smith. The Mormon Church (The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints) is an influential religious movement. From its feel-good, family-oriented TV commercials to its Grammy- and Emmy-winning Mormon Tabernacle Choir to its earnest bicycling missionaries, the Mormon Church is high profile all the way.

Authored by Rev. Wayne Palmer, Lutheran Hour Ministries’ theological editor and writer, this concise booklet sheds light on a religious group that, despite its peculiar teachings and practices, has grown to more than 15 million members worldwide. Inside you’ll find details on Mormon history; the three heavenly kingdoms; pre-mortal existence, Mormon views on Jesus, heaven, hell and Satan; and more. Also provided are tips for engaging in meaningful and respectful conversations with Mormons, which include pointers on how to have an open and ongoing dialogue where Christ can be shared.

For instance, when speaking with Mormons, Palmer reminds the reader to be friendly and non-confrontational: “You don’t have to have all the answers, or know all the right Bible passages. Simply lay some ground rules from the start: ‘I will let you share your faith testimony with me if you will then let me share my faith testimony with you.’ Insist to be given an opportunity to share your faith. Listen attentively and politely. Don’t interrupt, but ask questions to learn their understanding of the Mormon faith. Share your faith in Christ respectfully. Be confident and humble.”

To this Palmer adds an important point: “Strive to build a sincere friendship. Usually people who come out of the Latter-day Saints had a close friend who talked to them about the Lord.” As always, there’s no substitute for the well-meaning concern Christians can show toward those who are outside the faith.

You can take advantage of an opportunity to get 10 of these booklets FREE by buying a copy of The Mormons DVD from the Men’s NetWork. (See the related article to the left.) To take advantage of this, you must go to our special ordering page at www.LHM.ORG/MORMONS and enter the coupon code, LMMormons14. Hurry, this offer ends September 30!

For more titles from Project Connect, please go to www.lhm.org/projectconnect and see what’s available. n

Pc Booklet complements new Bible study

660 Mason Ridge Center Dr. • St. Louis, MO 63141-85571-800-876-9880 • www.lhm.org

6BE157

Who They are, What They Believe

MormonsMormonsThe Mormon Church (aka The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints) is an intriguing—and perplexing—religious movement. From its feel-good, family-oriented TV commercials to its Grammy- and Emmy-winning Mormon Tabernacle Choir to its earnest bicycling missionaries, the Mormon Church is high profile all the way. Founded in the early 19th century, this religious group boasts more than 15 million members and 85,000 missionaries, ranking it in the top five of “Christian denominations” in the U.S., according to the National Council of Churches.

This Project Connect booklet by Rev. Wayne Palmer supplies essential information on the basics of this religious sect founded by Joseph Smith. Here you’ll find fascinating details shedding light on Mormon history, including their particular beliefs and teachings on Jesus, the nature of God, pre-mortal existence, heaven, hell and Satan. Also provided are tips for engaging in meaningful and respectful conversations with your Mormon neighbors or those missionaries who may arrive at your front door.

The

The the mormons…

By Paul schreiberBy Paul schreiber

to learn more about The Mormons and all the other Men’s NetWork Bible studies that are available, go to www.lhm.org/men.

Who they Are,

WhAt they Believe

Page 20: The Lutheran Layman

20 The Lutheran Layman September-October 2014

We areto share the Gospel!

Outreach Conference inspires attendees

By chad Fix

More than 700 people converged on the GM Renaissance Center in

Detroit, Mich., July 24-27 as Lutheran Hour Ministries hosted its National Outreach Conference under the theme of SENT, based on John 20:21: “Jesus said to them again, ‘Peace be with you. As the Father has sent Me, even so I am sending you.’” The conference energetically empowered Christians to engage in a lifestyle of living out, and speaking out, the Gospel of Jesus and offered a venue where church workers and laity who have the desire to see their congregations grow came to learn, network, and worship together.

Rev. Gregory Seltz, Speaker of The Lutheran Hour, shared how most people think that evangelism, or sharing the faith, is about learning correct answers or developing effective strategies. But he stressed that while these are important features of faith sharing, there is something even more important.

“The vital attitude for evangelism today is about knowing, and trusting,

that HE SENT US!,” said Rev. Seltz. “When talking about the attitude of being SENT, it’s about establishing

a mindset of saying ‘I’m not going to stop until I get this done.’ Jesus didn’t wait for me to come to Him. He was chasing me down with His grace. And that’s the kind of active people we’re supposed to be to our neighbors and friends.”

Going into our communities is more important today than ever before. “Thinking about the church and witnessing has changed,” said Alan Hirsch, a renowned mission expert who currently serves as the director of FORGE Mission Training Network. “We must get among the people we’re trying to reach by being willing to go where they are and listening ... they will tell us the answers.”

More and more congregational members are personally taking the message of Jesus Christ into their communities, but many Christians still have a hard time understanding

that evangelizing the lost is a job for anyone other than pastors and church staff.     

“Jesus calls His people to live in community, living life together as we seek to share the Gospel with our friends, neighbors, coworkers, and city,” said Jon Dansby, St. John AM campus pastor at The Austin Stone Community Church in Austin, Texas. “We want to be a movement; we want to be rapidly growing, dynamic, multiplying disciples—just like the early church. To do this, every believer has to get involved in the mission. It’s important for us as lay people to act like missionaries to our own friends by giving up everything but the Gospel for the sake of the Gospel and making sacrifices for the ones being reached while remaining faithful to the Gospel.”

While Christians have generally regarded the church as an institution to which unbelievers must come in

order to receive the Gospel, Dansby says we need to start engaging these individuals at places such as bars, coffee shops, and parks through entertainment options that non-Christians enjoy at times throughout the week that are convenient for them.

“In today’s church setting we find that the non-Christian is often taking on the role of a missionary more than the Christian,” said Dansby. “We ask them to move away from their preferences into situations where we are more comfortable. We are actually asking them to be more like Jesus than we as Christians are willing to be.”

While the calling of being SENT may seem like a daunting task, you can simplify it by focusing on one thing. “We have a God bigger than anything He will call us to do,” said Jon Acuff, a New York Times best-selling author. “There is nothing He can’t handle...the Cross qualifies us. There is a whole world of people who need to be reached, and God is calling us, you, to them. God knows how it will play out and will provide the Light on our path.”

Rev. Seltz offered a powerful motivation when he encouraged attendees to respond to God’s call: “There will be people in heaven just because they got to know Jesus, just because they got to know you. Now go—be SENT!” n

Chad Fix manages corporate communications for Lutheran Hour Ministries.

Page 21: The Lutheran Layman

Every time a new generation enters the work force, companies face a simple decision: adapt and win or

ignore and lose. New York Times best-selling author Jon Acuff shares this message frequently with companies and individuals through his four books, speaking engagements, and social media posts (he’s become a social media expert with blogs that have been read by four million people and more than 215,000 Twitter followers). While much of his presentation at the LHM Outreach Conference focused on reaching Millennials (The Pew Research Center defines Millennials as individuals born between 1981 and 1996), Acuff shared several tips that will make it easier to share the Gospel with people of any age.

Give Your Time – “Time equals love. You can’t reach somebody if you’re not willing to give your most valuable resource: time. If you really want to show someone they’re important, turn your phone off at lunch and just be present. Are there people in your life whom you haven’t given your time to get to know?”

Be Honest – “Be honest, not perfect. When you pretend you don’t have any weaknesses, the other person won’t trust your strengths.”

Go First – “Go first with your story so you can give the other person the gift of going second. It can be tough for people to want to start a conversation because they don’t know what boundaries to set or are afraid of sharing too much information.”

Use Laughter – “God loves laughter; just look at all the funny stories in the Bible. We all need laughter in our lives, but it is important to use satire instead of mockery. Satire shares the truth by presenting an idea; mockery creates a wound by attacking an individual.”

Know that God Qualifies the Called – “I realize that a lot of us won’t feel qualified; it can feel overwhelming to be SENT. But when you read the Bible and see all the people that God used to do His work, from David to Jonah to Moses, you see how these were people who had so many personal issues. We wonder, ‘Who am I’ and we want God to tell us why we are qualified. His answer: ‘I will be with you!’ That’s why we can be SENT.” n

“on the second Saturday of every month the LLL men of Trinity Lutheran Church,

New Port Richey, Fla., serve breakfast to around 100 homeless men, women, and children who live in the woods behind a charity building called Volunteer Way,” reports Dr. Arnold Kromphardt, assistant pastor of Trinity Lutheran Church and a former pastoral advisor for the International Lutheran Laymen’s League.

“Other churches and individuals pitch in on weekdays. Some of our men help then, too!”

For over 20 years Volunteer Way has assisted people caught in poverty. As a food bank, it has distributed over seven million pounds of food every year to food pantries, soup kitchens, residential programs, seniors, homeless people, families, and other charitable organizations. Volunteer Way also helps local county charities with food, personal items, and medical equipment. But if it were not for the effort of volunteers like the men at Trinity, the results would slow substantially.

Kromphardt says that their volunteering has a religious orientation.

From left: Rich moore, Ray

Rosczyk, and manfred schatke

are among the LLL men of trinity who volunteer to feed

the needy. Photos courtesy of Dr.

Arnold Kromphardt

two homeless guests smile as they are fed and spiritually nurtured by the LLL volunteers from trinity Lutheran in new Port Richey, Fla.

“We are able to eat with the individuals who come and have a chance to share our faith with them. Each meal begins with a prayer. Brochures on the tables bear witness to Jesus Christ. They are always invited to attend Trinity services. Every now and then, some do.  

“These homeless come from all over the U.S.A., some even from Canada. They don’t seem to have any family where they might live. Their home in the woods is usually a tent with a rope surrounding the plot, thus keeping snakes from invading their ‘home.’ Every now and then they might get a lawn-mowing job and earn a few dollars for their effort.”

The LLL men of Trinity are reminded of the need when they see some of the children standing by the road weekday mornings to

catch the school bus. “At school they get breakfast, lunch, and dinner” while the facilities at Volunteer Way “offer a chance to take a shower, and every now and then to get a haircut from a volunteer barber.” 

The LLL men of Trinity say they remember Jesus’ words: “Inasmuch as you have done it unto one of the least of these My brothers, you have done it unto Me.” n

You’ve Been

Now What?

The Lutheran Layman September-October 2014 21

“Inasmuch as you have done it unto one of the least

of these My brothers, you have done it unto Me.”

men

in floridarise to the need

Page 22: The Lutheran Layman

By greg Koenig

in June, Sixto Guevara returned to Panama City from El Jovo, a community deep in the interior of

Panama. The Lutheran Hour Ministries—Panama volunteer’s assignment had been to provide the people of El Jovo with much-needed food, clothing, medicine and Christian literature on behalf of Lutheran Hour Ministries’ values-based education program, Project JOEL. But it was also an exploratory trip, and Sixto had news: El Jovo was a strong prospect.

Prospect for what? For La Campaña Botas Rojas—the 2014 Red Boots Campaign. Warning: this story may surprise and delight you—especially if you’re acquainted with ‘Red Boots.’

The Red Boots Campaign began eleven years ago in 2003. Lutheran Hour Ministries—Panama had begun deploying outreach teams to remote communities across the country to teach people the Gospel message that is the true meaning of Christmas. They showed Lutheran Hour Ministries’ animated holiday video Red Boots for Christmas and then invited people who attended to contact the ministry center for a free Red Boots book. Calls for the books that came in during daytime hours were fielded by LHM’s Wendy Perez; any calls that came during evening hours were recorded on an

answering machine, and Wendy would follow up the next day.

One message left on the machine caught everyone’s attention. The voice belonged to a little girl; she said she lived in the mountains of the Cordilleras and had watched the video. She did not ask for a book; she said, “I want you to bring me some red boots. I have no shoes—I’ve never even put on a new pair of shoes.” Director Edilberto Mendez notes that at the time, about the only way she could have made that call was to walk, in the dark of night, to her village’s lone pay phone. But the most heartbreaking thing, he says, was that she had not included any information about who she was or how to get in touch with her.

“We decided to call her ‘Anita,’” says Edilberto. And to do their best to honor her, they launched a crusade to help meet needs like hers. What else could they call it but the “Red Boots Campaign”?

Sixto, then just a teen, together with fellow volunteers Edwin Lasso, Joseph Ballesteros, Aneth Cerrud and Gabriel Gonzales, joined LHM’s Wendy Perez and Project JOEL Coordinator Porfirio Franco to form the Red Boots team. They promoted the campaign in schools across the Panama City area—anywhere they presented Project JOEL programs. From September through

November, they encouraged students to donate clothes, food, toys, Bibles, and, well, maybe not boots, but certainly shoes. During December the team traveled to hard-to-reach parts of Panama and distributed the donated gifts. One of their first destinations was Cordilleras in Chiriquí province, where Anita had said she lived. Although they were never able to identify Anita, they met the needs of many, many children in these remote villages.

Over the years, the program has grown and flourished. It has been recognized by Panama’s education agency (MEDUCA). Members of the Canal Police and the National Police, as well as private companies and others, have gotten involved. Early Red Boots campaigns shared Gospel-fueled love with 800 children; the most recent campaign, in December 2013, reached almost 4,300.

“Thousands and thousands of children across Panama have been blessed over the years,” says Edilberto, “but this activity actually has a triple result. It provides help where it’s needed, of course. But it also helps educate donors—especially young donors—about the importance of giving, and it motivates them to give. And most of all, it gives everyone involved an opportunity to share the true meaning of Christmas—the love of God, who sent His Son, Jesus.”

As Sixto’s news from the village of El Jovo suggests, it’s time again. As you read this, the staff

and volunteers of Lutheran Hour Ministries’ center in Panama are preparing—getting their

boots on, you might say—to bless thousands more children who are in desperate need of both physical assistance and the spiritual peace that the Good News of Jesus brings. n

Greg Koenig is a member of Lutheran Hour Ministries’ Corporate Communications team.

22 The Lutheran Layman September-October 2014

You can learn a lot more about Lutheran hour ministries—Panama’s Red Boots campaign on their blog, transforminglife.wordpress.com. if you’re interested in partnering with Lhm—Panama or one of Lutheran hour ministries’ centers in more than 30 countries, visit www.lhm.org/partner.

great gifts, good news, and, sometimes, just plain tasty food: Lhm—Panama’s

Red Boots campaign puts smiles on thousands of young faces.

Panama city school children donate and wrap mountains of christmas presents for distribution in remote villages through the Red Boots campaign.

Remember Red Boots? they do in Panama—eveRY YeaR

Page 23: The Lutheran Layman

The Lutheran Layman September-October 2014 23

AthensJerusalemBethlehem

GalileePaphos

KasPatmosEphesus Miletus

PergamumIstanbul

Join Rev. Gregory Seltz, speaker of The Lutheran Hour on the trip of a lifetime!

• SEPTEMBER 28 - OCTOBER 11, 2015 • WWW.LHM.ORG/TRAVELWITHLHM • 800-876-9880 •

By Paul schreiber

this year, back by popular demand, is Rev. Wayne Palmer’s Advent devotional, Home for the Holidays, from

Lutheran Hour Ministries. Warmly received by readers a number of years ago, Palmer reflects on the various “homes” God provides through His Word, Baptism, the Sacraments, and our church family. Drawing on several familiar and family-oriented events of the Christmas season (deciding on a tree, decorating the house, setting up the Nativity display, baking Christmas cookies), he balances treasured holiday memories with the reality that not everyone feels at home with the holidays. While life’s hassles, relationship burnout, and financial stress may leave us out in the cold, there is solace and warmth when we visit the “home” we have at church. There we find our brothers and sisters in Christ will join us in celebrating through Word and Sacrament God’s grace and that home awaiting all believers—our heavenly home.

Palmer knows Christmas isn’t just fun and games for everybody. All sorts of problems can and do rob people everywhere of the true joy of the holiday season. When wearisome matters lie heavy on our hearts, Palmer reminds us it was the Christ Child sent to the world—God in the flesh—who trekked the same road we do and bore the weight only He could carry. It was a burden God the Father placed upon His Son on our behalf. The victory—won by Jesus alone—was secured for all believers through His work on the cross.

This year’s Home for the Holidays goes live September 30. You can find it at www.adventdevotions.net. At that time you can find the downloadable version, which includes a large-font text, bulletin inserts, bulletin shells, and PowerPoint slides. Audio availability begins November 30. Home for the Holidays is also available as an e-mail subscription. For those interested in LHM’s Spanish offering, De Nazaret a Belén – Un camino de Adviento (From Nazareth to Bethlehem – An Advent Journey) by Rev. Vern Gundermann begins Sunday, November 30, and runs through Tuesday, January 6. A printable version can be found online at www.paraelcamino.com/adviento.

Both Home for the Holidays and De Nazaret a Belén are ideal for congregations seeking to connect with those who find themselves outside the church during the holiday season. As an outreach tool, these devotions can be printed and given to others before the Advent season starts as a way for them to move through the Christmas season on a daily basis. Perfect for individual reflection and as a way to kick off a group Bible study, LHM’s Advent devotions remind us all of God’s supreme love as displayed in the life of His Son, Jesus Christ.

And while we’re in the early holiday mode, are you looking for other gifts to pass along this coming Christmas season? If so, try handing out a few copies of Pastor Palmer’s Project Connect booklet, What is Christmas? Full of fond recollections and stories of yesteryear, this little volume reminds us that Christmas isn’t always the bright and cheery affair we hear in songs or see in movies. What is Christmas? shows how the holidays can be a complicated and difficult season. For families working through health and financial issues, strained relationships—even the oncoming death of a loved one—Christmas can be exhausting. Concluding the booklet, Palmer asks the reader, “Where do you find yourself this Christmas?” This is a question we might all ask ourselves as the holiday approaches—remembering that there are many who see Christmas as something to get through rather than an event to be embraced. n

Lhm’s advent devotions can Promote outreach

Page 24: The Lutheran Layman

abdul was stunned. The people from his children’s school had asked his wife to help with the cooking while a team of Lutherans from

the United States ran a medical clinic in his community in rural Kenya. To you and me, the request probably sounds like a routine invitation

to volunteer at a Lutheran school event. But Abdul and his wife were Muslims. Their children were Muslims attending a Christian school. Abdul knew that no Muslim would invite a Christian to help cook

meals for other Muslims—but these Lutheran Christians were prepared to trust his wife with their food.

That was not the most dramatic thing that would happen to Abdul. The medical clinic, a partnership project

involving Lutheran Hour Ministries–Kenya, the Lutheran Church—Missouri Synod, and an LCMS congregation from Cape Girardeau, Mo., would not just lead him to change the way he thought about Christians or about Muslims; it would help change his eternity.

Abdul had come to know other Lutherans over the years. When his son became ill, the congregation at Molo in Nakuru Parish had helped with his hospital bills; and when the boy tragically died of his illness, the congregation helped bury him. A man from the church shared how Jesus had taught His followers to love their neighbors. Muslims, Abdul reflected, are taught to interact with kafirs, unbelievers, as little as possible.

When Abdul had been searching for a good school for his children and had been referred to the local Lutheran academy, he discovered the people there to be just as open and caring as the ones at Molo. And now these same people had honored his wife by asking her to help cook for a group of American Christians!

24 The Lutheran Layman September-October 2014

By greg Koenig

“What was clear to all of us was this: we are tools in the Holy Spirit’s hands.”

god’s Love Pursued him

taylor Brown (at left) and Lhm–Kenya’s Peter scotch present a Bible to abdul on the day of his baptism.

His wife agreed—and Abdul even came along.Day by day Abdul watched. The LCMS Mercy Medical

Team from St. Andrew Lutheran Church in Cape Girardeau tended everyone who came for treatment. A team from Lutheran Hour Ministries–Kenya provided spiritual care for patients and their families, sharing the Gospel through one on one presentations, through evangelism materials and Bible Correspondence Course opportunities—even through evening film showings. One theme ran through everything they did: God’s love is what this is about.

“One morning Abdul decided to go through the line and get his vision checked,” recounts LHM–Kenya Director John Maina. “After his exam, Abdul joined a small group in the witness tent, where LHM–Kenya volunteer Geoffrey Gunyali offered a simple, personal explanation of the Gospel and Christian faith—and even invited questions. It was then that Abdul realized that the Holy Spirit had been preaching the message of Jesus to him for a long time.

“That day, Abdul came to faith,” says John Maina. “In fact, at Abdul’s baptism, his sponsors were Lutheran Hour Ministries–Kenya staffer Peter Scotch and Taylor Brown, a member of the LCMS medical team from Missouri!

“Later, the Christians from the United States marveled as Abdul shared the story of his journey to Christian faith,” says John Maina. “What was clear to all of us was this: we are tools in the Holy Spirit’s hands.” n

ABdul’s story

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By greg Koenig