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Published On: Nov 01, 2006 04:11 PM
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Evangelical-Charismatic-Lutheran?
After a difficult process lat year, we've decided
to give up on our church plant and find a new church home. Our first visit
today was to a rather unusual Lutheran church. Details below [Read
more].
Finding a new church is always a challenge. When
we lived in San Jose, we were extremely happy with South Bay Covenant Church
(their website is currently down for renovation). When we moved up to
Sacramento for Sandhya's residency, we couldn't find anything local which
captured both the evangelical and charismatic sides of our mutual experience.
So, we went to the Downtown Vineyard, then later to a
not-quite-successful church plant that (sorta) split off into Elk
Grove.Now that we are starting over,
we face the same challenges. We decided to first try a church that, ironically,
is meeting in the community center we had considered for the
vineyard. The name is Living Water, and when I visited the website yesterday I
was surprised to discover that its actually Lutheran! To be precise, American Association of Lutheran Churches, which
is both more evangelical and more charismatic that the ELCA's Faith Lutheran church I grew up in (where my
parents still attend). Evangelical-charismatic Lutheran sounds like a
contradiction in terms, but then again, that pretty much describes my background
so I can't complain!We attended for
the first time today. The church itself feels like a typical post-denominational
church, rather like the post-Baptist churches I've attended. Vineyard-style
worship, casual dress, informal order of service; then again, its a 5-year-old
church plant, so probably very few people come from (or are even aware of) the
Lutheran background, though I'm sure they still catechize people in the Lutheran
tradition when they join.Overall, it
felt very comfortable. The worship was familiar, if perhaps less intense than
I'm used to from the Vineyard or SBCC. Similarly for the sermon, which was
very "radically centered" -- stressing the balance of head (faith), heart (love)
and hands (works) -- bound together by grace and God's power, not human
strength. The pastor has Fuller/Vineyard experience as well as Lutheran
training, so he's probably as close to me theologically as anyone I'm likely to
find. The only downside is that its very white and very young (the pastor, at
forty, looks like the oldest person
there).I don' t know whether we'll go
back, but if nothing else its a convenient fallback option (only five minutes
away). We'll see what God has in store.
Posted: Sun - January 9, 2005 at 02:47 PM
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