Christ on Trial

This May, we humbly ask for your prayers and support for the Lutheran Center for Religious Liberty’s efforts to contend for the freedom to proclaim the faith. Your partnership helps ensure that the Gospel may be spoken clearly, faithfully, and without fear in our communities and across our nation.

Always on trial. Can't believe he said that. Who is he to tell me? St. Paul was long ago thrown under the bus. Critical scholars try to turn Jesus into something He's not. An old friend, claiming to be Christian, rails at, I kid you not, the virgin birth. Something about men controlling women's bodies. Some charges are just lies, turning Christ into a revolutionary, one who seeks to topple Caesar or destroy the temple. Claims of resurrection are strong, but usually avoided as inconvenient. Religious leaders put Christ on trial for getting in their way, stealing their thunder, threatening their grip on the purse strings of the parishioners. But the mob we will always have with us. Crucify Him, crucify Him! But why? Because of His claim to be Lord. If Jesus is Lord, then I am not. I have to do what He says. Harrumph! So I embrace rainbow pride, though it was the Lord who put the rainbow up in the sky in the first place. Who wants a mansion in the sky when I can make a lot of money now? So one leaves his family? The heart wants what the heart wants. But He dies for your sins. Who are you to tell me I am a sinner? I don't need your saving.  

The Lord was put on trial, and remains on trial, in every generation. Often times it's by proxy. See Jaden Ivey, Paivi Rasanen, Jack Phillips, or Barronelle Stutzman. In such trials, truth is called hate, and the twitter mob roars in approval. Why? Maybe it's to preserve the ritual of sleeping in on Sunday or a Sunday brunch. Who is this man to get in my way? Maybe it's teaching that contradicts our cultural orthodoxies. Jesus is Lord? Are there not a thousand claimants to that title? A woman is told by the Lord to honor her husband and flies off the handle. But told to wear a burka? Well, that's ok. Just as long as Jesus is not Lord.

So go on parade. Shout out, “My body, my choice.” Make it a spectacle. Add to it a veneer of piety. But whatever the matter, whatever the idol, whatever we don't want to give up, Christ must be always on trial. Either that, or we'll find ourselves in the dock. Might be better to put down the accusations, and invite Him to be our advocate before the charade comes to an end. And if He will not be our advocate, He will be our judge, and the spotlight of truth, not my truth but the truth, will be uncomfortable.

The Rev. Dr. Peter Scaer joined the Concordia Theological Seminary, Fort Wayne, Exegetical Department in 2000. He now serves as professor and chairman of that department.

Be Informed
Modern man still wants to reject being made in God’s image, and this has big implications for understanding the value of life from conception to natural death.  

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Be Equipped
Dr. Seltz speaks to how America’s First Amendment protection of religious liberty is the blessing that safeguards your right—and responsibility—to share God’s Good News with those in your life. One liberty serves the other for the Christian.

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Be Encouraged
“In grief, the world often feels empty. The absence of loved ones weighs heavily, leaving our days feeling hollow and incomplete without their presence. And yet, Scripture tells us that in these moments of deep sorrow, God draws near. He does not stand at a distance, waiting for us to be strong enough to move on with our life. He comes to us, holds us in our brokenness, and carries us when we cannot stand.” –Rev. M.L. Smith, Director of International Missions of Lutheran Church–Canada

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May 2026 Prayer Partner Thursday