Päivi Räsänen and Christian Suffering

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.

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So I see, here and there, Christians speaking about persecution and how we should expect it, how we should not be surprised or thrown off our game. But really, that is for the persecuted to say, not for the onlooker. Peter may be beaten and rejoice that he has been counted worthy to suffer for the name of Christ, but that is for him to say. The question for us is whether we will stand by the one persecuted, whether we will take up their cause, whether we are willing also to have our names and reputations dragged through the dirt.‍‍ ‍

Paivi is indeed a cheerful warrior. She has kept a smile on her face, even as she has run through the gauntlet. But think of it. She has spent twenty years being dragged in by the police, being forced to sit accused in a courtroom. I think more locally, to faithful Barronelle Stutzman the flower designer, to Jack Phillips the cake decorator, or Indiana's John Kluge. They had precious few friends along the way and a lot more people who would say, "Prayers ascend," or opine on Christian suffering. But suffering is always ok if it is someone else who is facing trouble for a belief that we should be speaking and living out in our own lives. ‍‍ ‍

So, we ask ourselves, what have we done to earn the scorn of the LGBTQ ideology that seeks our destruction? If we have gone largely unscathed, we should ask why. There are simple things we can do, like refusing to use false pronouns, by refusing to attend a so-called gay marriage. It can be actually writing, which will indeed mean that many who we call friends will think differently about us. It means publicly honoring those who stick out their necks. It means holding up as heroes those who are true heroes, not as if we ourselves are heroes, and not as philosophers on the sideline who say, "That's the way it is for Christians." ‍‍ ‍

If others like Paivi have taken bold steps or have had the spotlight placed upon them, we must be willing to walk into the light, into the courtroom of a public opinion that despises us. This is true of politicians who shy away from "controversial issues," but also church leaders and church members who do the same. ‍ ‍

‍ ‍It just so happens that the name of the game is Genesis, the foundation, the truth of God's creation written into natural law. None of this changes if we sit on the sideline. I say this first to myself and then to others. Call it a small fine for Paivi, but then think of those whose careers are put in jeopardy because they did not toe the LGBTQ line, because they refused to speak the lie. If the world likes us, if the world, if friends do not know what we believe, and if we do not speak and act according to the truth, well, that's on us. Perhaps, it's testifying, or perhaps it's a letter to the editor, or organizing something in the church. But these are no peripheral issues, not simply adjacent to the Gospel, lest we become like the weeping women of Jerusalem, who cry crocodile tears as our Lord is led to the cross, to whom our Lord says, "Weep for yourselves."

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.

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Be Informed
The latest Guttmacher Institute report on abortion includes some telling statistics. Click here to learn more.

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Be Equipped
Get a quick glimpse into growing practices of intimidation and outright illegality carried out by the secular statists in our culture, who are usurping the religious liberty protections of the Church and the rights of parents with respect to their children.

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Be Encouraged
“If we want to save more Trinitarian-valued lives, then we need to knock a Humpty Dumpty way of thinking about words off the wall. We need to speak of the reality behind the word ‘abortion’ and use such a time as this to speak of the reality behind the Word made flesh to dwell among us and in us and for us. You have been called for such a time as this.” –Rev. Dr. James I. Lamb, former Executive Director of Lutherans For Life

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June 2026 Bulletin Blurbs