Praying Colors, Morning and Evening

This February, we’d love if you would renew your prayers and support for the Lutheran Center for Religious Liberty’s efforts to contend for the freedom to proclaim the faith.

I’ve also sometimes struggled, I’ll confess, to reconcile my own civic duty to honor our nation’s flag with my Christian call to “fear, love and trust in God above all things.” The melody blaring from a speaker mounted high upon a tower reminds me eerily of church bells “chiming and calling” Christians to Sunday worship (LSB 645), or of a muezzin summoning Muslims to daily prayer. Although colors isn’t meant to be a spiritual act of devotion, the striking resemblance it bears to such ancient religious practices is hard to ignore. 

“Render to Caesar the things that are Caesar’s, and to God the things that are God’s” (Mark 12:17). It’s easy enough to do when I’m dividing my taxes and my tithes. The receipts tell the story. But what about my respect? My reverence? Those don’t come with itemized receipts. Where do I draw the line between the honor I owe my country and the worship I owe to God alone? 

As a Christian, can I — should I — observe colors? 

A call to prayer

Perhaps you’ve already guessed my answer to that question. In Christian freedom, honoring Luther’s “Two Kingdoms” theology, I can observe colors, and I do … but with a twist.

As I stand at attention — on my deck, along the jogging trail, by the swings in the playground — my mouth is silent, but my heart is not. While colors rings out around me and the flag is raised and lowered each day, I pray. 

In the morning, while “The Star Spangled Banner” is playing, I pray for our nation. I thank God for the blessings and freedoms we enjoy and beg that He would make us worthy of them. I pray mercy for — and relief from — the oppression and injustice that have darkened our shared history. I ask that His Spirit would be poured out upon His people, that they witness boldly and faithfully, so that all within and beyond our borders would hear the blessed Gospel of Jesus Christ, turn from sin and be healed. I pray for wise and virtuous leaders. I pray for unity. I pray for peace at home and abroad. I pray, above all, that God’s will would be done in our land — and in every land.

Click here to read more from Rachel Bomberger in The Lutheran Witness.

 

Be Informed
A few months have passed, but many are still pondering the evilness of Charlie Kirk’s assassination, the reactions, the good, the bad, the ugly responses, and the way forward for a civil society. Click here to learn more about these topics from a faithful perspective.

Be Equipped
Wesley Smith of the Discovery Institute discusses the extreme devaluing of life shown as Illinois Governor JB Pritzker signed a bill legalizing assisted suicide. Pray for Illinois!

Be Encouraged
“We have the restoration of nature itself and of the moral law—recognized repeatedly in the Declaration—that constitutes the rights inherent in our humanity. Here we have the family, property, justice, work, learning, conscience, and worship. . . . Everything we know, we know through our perception of nature and our understanding of the Divine.” –Larry Arnn

Previous
Previous

The Cross on my Forehead

Next
Next

March 2026 Bulletin Insert