7/13/2025 Recorded Service; https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p23SkDMdJBE Sermon at 26:00
This Sunday Pastor Emillie begins a summer series called Holy Disruptors, which examines people who radically shaped and changed Christianity as it was known and experienced in their times. What better figure to start with for a Lutheran congregation than Martin Luther himself?
Martin Luther stands in history as a major figure of holy disruption. He cracked open the certainties of a broken religious system to let the light of grace shine through. Luther was not perfect, but his life testifies to the strange and often scandalous work of the Holy Spirit: stirring transformation through imperfect vessels.
At the heart of Luther’s disruption was a deep encounter with grace. In Ephesians 2:1–10, Paul proclaims that we “were dead through the trespasses and sins” but were made alive in Christ, not by works, but by grace through faith. Luther clung to this promise, not as an abstraction, but as oxygen to a suffocating soul. In an era when forgiveness was sold through indulgences and mediated by the church hierarchy, Luther saw the cross, raw, unpurchaseable, liberating, as the radical center of Christian life. The grace that Martin preached is not earned; it is a gift. He wasn't the first to articulate this, but given the advent of the Gutenberg press, this moment was alive in history
While Luther was a central figure after his 95 Theses were published, there were other reformers (e.g., Jan Hus, John Wycliffe, later Zwingli and Calvin) who challenged Church authority and taught similar doctrines.
This theological earthquake disrupted the church and echoed far beyond it. Luther believed that if the Gospel truly freed people, it must free every part of their lives. This included their relationships, their vocations, and even their marriages. In a bold and controversial move, Luther insisted that clergy need not be celibate. His own marriage to Katharina von Bora, a former nun, was a living protest against a system that separated spiritual authority from embodied love. Their home became a place of reform, theology, table fellowship, and laughter. Luther’s marriage lifted up the priesthood of all believers and grounded faith in the gritty holiness of domestic life.
Pastor Emillie's sermon focused on Luther's Gospel of Grace and how hard it was for her to accept what seems initially like what Dietrich Bonhoeffer called "cheap" versus "expensive grace", and Bonhoeffer's Sunday in this series is upcoming..
Luther saw in Ezekiel 36:24–28 a vision of what God does when people return to the divine heart. “I will sprinkle clean water upon you… I will remove your heart of stone and give you a heart of flesh.” That prophetic promise resonated with Luther’s sense that faith is not about external compliance but inward transformation. Luther's was a call for the Church to receive a new heart. This heart was not hardened by legalism or corruption, but softened by grace, alive in love, and poured out for others.
Pastor Emilllie also preached about a shadow in Luther’s legacy that must not be ignored. The purity mentioned in Ezekiel verses leads to a darker part of our Lutheran legacy.
In his later years, Luther turned to bitter and violent rhetoric against the Jewish people. His anti-Semitic writings were vicious, dehumanizing, and tragically influential. In our time, they stand in direct contradiction to the Gospel he so passionately defended. These writings were used to justify unspeakable violence, especially in Nazi Germany centuries later. For a man who championed the heart of flesh over the heart of stone, this hatred is a grievous and heartbreaking stone lodged in his legacy.
There were people in our past Wednesday discussion who, unsurprisingly, were unaware of this side of his writings. Pastor Emillie also pointed out how his insistence that everyone follow Christianity over Judaism was salvation based on an individual doing something. In other words, on their works.
Creator did not attempt to whitewash this part of Luther’s writing. Instead, we held it in tension. We lamented. We repented by letting it sharpen our awareness that even people we view as heroes are capable of harm. Holy disruption does not sanctify everything a person does. Instead, it reveals that God works through us, not because of our righteousness, but often despite our brokenness.
I must admit it was odd to revisit this history with Epstein and other conspiracies being touted in our national headlines today. Unchecked power (political or religious power) or idolizing an individual tends to lead to abuse. Hopefully, we can resist the temptation to engage in that..
Martin Luther was a disruptor, not for the sake of power or rebellion, but for the sake of renewal. He cracked open the Church so that grace could breathe again. He envisioned clergy who could love and marry, homes where theology could be lived, and people who could trust God’s mercy more than their own merit. Yet he also spoke words that shattered other lives. These are words we must name, reject, and never forget.
To follow Christ is to enter the work of holy disruption with humility. It means confessing where our institutions fall short, where our heroes fail, and where the Spirit still moves, making all things new.
We honor Luther not by emulating everything he said, but by carrying forward what was most true in his witness: that salvation is by grace, that hearts can be remade, and that no system, not even the church itself, is above reform.