Lessons in the Lutheran Confessions

Scripture Text: Romans 11:5–6

Are we to make sacrifices? Yes. For example, John teaches us that we ought to lay down our lives for our brothers and sisters. Paul teaches us to offer our bodies as living sacrifices.

Lessons in the Lutheran Confessions

Scripture Text: 1 Corinthians 1:4–9

By definition, confirmation and extreme unction, or last rites, are not sacraments. They do not contain the clear command of God in Scripture, nor do they have a promise of his grace.

Lessons in the Lutheran Confessions

Scripture Text: Psalm 95:6–9

We find in God’s gracious commands, in the sacraments, the essence of New Testament. For these things must be received in faith. We must come before the Word with soft, believing hearts.

Lessons in the Lutheran Confessions

Scripture Text: Jude 1–3

The sacraments are not merely indicators of who we are, in the sense of someone thinking that since a group baptizes in water, and ceremonially eats bread and drinks wine, they must be Christians.

Lessons in the Lutheran Confessions

Scripture Text: Isaiah 41:8–10

There are times when it is difficult to believe that God really loves us. When we sin, we sense an estrangement with God that must somehow be overcome. The instinct is to make an offering...

Lessons in the Lutheran Confessions

Scripture Text: 2 Corinthians 13:9–10

There are no confessed sins that Christ Jesus cannot or will not forgive. Therefore there is no confessed sin for which a minister of the gospel cannot and should not give absolution.

Lessons in the Lutheran Confessions

Scripture Text: Matthew 18:15–18

The purpose of the keys involves both peace and terror. For those who believe in Christ and confess their sins, there is the comfort of knowing that they are forgiven because Christ alone is God’s satisfaction.

Lessons in the Lutheran Confessions

Scripture Text: Romans 4:22–25

Where is it written? Where do the Scriptures teach that we pay the price of freedom from eternal death? How do our punishments replace the excelling merit of Christ’s satisfaction for sin?

Lessons in the Lutheran Confessions

Scripture Text: Jeremiah 31:16–17

In order for us to produce good fruits, we must depend upon God’s promises. We must have faith in him. Otherwise, we would eventually despair of doing much, if any, good.

Lessons in the Lutheran Confessions

Scripture Text: Luke 3:7–14

Repentance means a changed mind. We might think of it as a change of heart. It follows that a real change of heart would include different fruits or results in that person’s life.

Lessons in the Lutheran Confessions

Scripture Text: Psalm 51:7–12

God will do what he must for the good of those he loves—even if it means inflicting them with some corrective troubles. Perhaps the psalmist’s bones were not actually broken but...

Lessons in the Lutheran Confessions

Scripture Text: Jonah 3:6–10

When a child says, “I’m sorry,” sometimes a parent responds, “Then act like it.” This is no different than the relationship that a child of God has with the Father.

Lessons in the Lutheran Confessions

Scripture Text: Acts 9:3–8

Many people think that our troubles originate in our sins. Often enough, this is precisely the case—but not always. Sometimes our troubles are meant to point us and others to the glory and the power of God.

Lessons in the Lutheran Confessions

Scripture Text: James 1:2–4

We should learn to regard our troubles as signs of impending grace. God is at work in these afflictions. When we have gotten to the other side, we can see that suffering drew us back to God, and caused us to rely upon him, and persevere.

Lessons in the Lutheran Confessions

Scripture Text: 1 Peter 1:14–19

In the reasoning of God, we are to be holy, yet we are not holy, nor can we become holy, so God makes us holy through Christ. This does not make sense to our natural reason.

Lessons in the Lutheran Confessions

Scripture Text: Hebrews 9:22–24

God may impose certain punishments for sins, by way of making an example of some people, and to discipline others. But these punishments are corrections and examples, not a means of grace and forgiveness.

Lessons in the Lutheran Confessions

Scripture Text: Romans 8:18–23

Martin Luther proclaimed in his sermon, “On the Hymn of Zacahrias,” that as long as we are clothed with this flesh, sin is not extinguished, nor can be wholly subdued.

Lessons in the Lutheran Confessions

Scripture Text: Hebrews 12:5–6

God disciplines his children because he loves them. He does not require this discipline as some means of grace. For how could this be grace, if it is required of us to endure?


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