Lutheran Church Missouri Synod, 801 N Elm Gordon, NE

Tag: COVID-19

A Christian Response to Plague and Pandemic

A Christian Response to Plague and Pandemic

During the last few weeks, the threat of the novel coronavirus has gone from something foreign and unknown to something that we’re dealing with close to home. Schools have been moved online, ESPN has been showing the national rock-skipping championship because all the other sports are cancelled. People are being asked to stay home in some places. In other places they are being told.

As Christians, how are we to respond to all of this? We hear reports of people panicking and hoarding basic toiletries on the one hand. On the other, some people say this is something only old, sick people have to worry about, so they’re not going to be too concerned or change what they are doing.

Neither response is appropriate for those who follow Jesus.

Our calling is to trust in the Lord Jesus who has defeated death by His death, and to love our neighbor as ourselves.

When any kind of disaster strikes, we should remember that these are not random acts of nature, but acts of God (as even insurance companies acknowledge). For example,  in 2 Samuel 24, when  King David sinfully took a census of the people, the LORD sent a plague that killed seventy thousand people.  David’s response was to pray “Let us fall now into the hand of the LORD; for His mercies are great: and let me not fall into the hand of man.” (2 Sam 24:14).

God works through His Word and in the world to call us to repentance, to teach us to cling to Him for our salvation, to remind us that we depend on Him for our body, and soul, our possessions, and all we have, and to renew our love for our neighbors. We repent of our sin that still brings death into the world: our forgetfulness of God, our habit of damning with God’s name rather than praying or blessing, our neglect of God’s house and His Word, the way we all forget our families and parents like we’re stuck in a Harry Chapin song, our murderous thoughts and words, our lustful and adulterous ways, our greed for gain that is never satisfied, and so much else. Repent and hide in the blessed wounds of Christ, be washed clean and made white in His precious blood, and learn to live in His patience, His humbleness, His love.

Our life may be demanded from us any hour of any day. We like to hide that truth from ourselves. A pandemic quickly spreading through nations pulls that truth into the light of day.  Now is as good a time as any to prepare to meet Your God. Examine your heart. Are you ready to see Jesus sitting on His judgment throne? Confess your transgressions unto the LORD that He may forgive the iniquity of your sin. Seek Him while there is time yet to find Him, for in the flood of great waters we shall not draw near to Him (Psalm 32:5-6). If sin burdens your conscience, I am available to hear the confession of your sins and assure you of the forgiveness of sins,  life, and salvation that our Savior won for you by His suffering and death and His precious blood.

We also make ourselves ready by reconciling with anyone we have sinned against, or anyone who has sinned against us. We have no promise that we will get another day to do it. We would do well to make sure our earthly affairs are in order, so that we can provide for the ongoing needs of the people the LORD has placed into our care even after our lives are ended.

If we do fall sick, it gives us a chance to suffer with our LORD, and to show our faith and confidence in His resurrection and the promise of everlasting life.

With all of that taken care of, while God still grants us our breath, we still must live in the world He has made and still upholds. And in this life, our calling is to serve our neighbor. The Fifth Commandment calls us to help and support out neighbor in every physical need. Right now, we serve our neighbor best by following the advice and directives of the leaders God has given to us in our government and our communities (and by so doing, we also follow the Fourth Commandment). We wash our hands, and do all that we can to avoid spreading disease. We do this not out of fear for our own lives, but out of love for our neighbor: for the elderly, and those whose bodies are already compromised by other diseases and underlying conditions. The elderly and those with compromised immune systems show responsibility by following doctor’s orders.

In practical day-to-day things you can do, make a list of everyone you know who may need extra help if things get worse. Give them a call, let them know you’re thinking about them. Ask them if they need help getting medicine and groceries. Share the hope of Christ that you have within you. Pray that our Lord would forgive us, renew us, and lead us, so that we may delight in His will and walk in His ways to the glory of His holy name.

And in all things, pray that we fall into the hands of the Lord, hands marked by the wounds of His love for the whole world, His everlasting love for each of you.

In the peace of Christ, Pastor Sherman

Why Do We Get Sick?

Although God permits people to become sick, He does not want them to cease praying. In fact, He wants the sick to pray more eagerly. Yes, as the sickness grows more severe, prayer is to become more fervent. We see an example of this in our Lord Jesus Christ, where Luke records: “and being in agony He prayed more earnestly” (Luke 22:44).

“Morning Prayer of a Sick Person: Exhortation.” Starck’s Book of Prayer. CPH 2009.

Nothing in this world happens by chance. God determines the number of the stars and calls them each by name (Psalm 147:4). The Son of God is sustaining all things by His powerful word (Hebrews 1:3), and in Him all things hold together (Colossians 1:17).

When people become sick, it is because God has permitted it. The wages of sin is death (Romans 6:23). Suffering exists for our chastisement and as a means of calling us to repentance. Yet, the same verse from Romans concludes with the comforting promise that “the gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord.”

Two chapters later in the letter to the Romans we are told “that in all things God works for the good of those who love Him, who have been called according to His purpose” (Rom. 8:28) and that “He who did not spare His own Son but gave Him up for us all, how will He not also with Him graciously give us all things.” (Rom 8:32). “Who shall separate us from the love of Christ? Shall tribulation, or distress, or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or danger, or sword?…No, in all things we are more than conquerors through Him who loved us. For I am sure that neither death nor life, nor things present nor things to come, nor powers, nor height nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord.” (Romans 8:35-39).

We trust, that as God has provided for our eternal life in Christ, He also will defend us against all danger and guard and protect us from all evil out of His fatherly, divine goodness and mercy each day. Our times are in His hands (Psalm 31:15), and even as two sparrows are sold for a penny and not one of them falls to the ground apart from the will of our heavenly Father, so too, even the very hairs of are head are numbered (Matthew 10:29-30).

I’m going to paraphrase what Johann Starck wrote in his prayer book. Jesus is with us, even in the midst of sickness–he is here to comfort us and give us strength, and also to teach and guide us, to call us to repentance and show us the way to walk forward. Perhaps in normal times we were not diligent in attending church or fervent in prayer–now that has become something we can’t take for granted. Perhaps we made an idol out of sports, either as spectators or in our children’s lives–now they have been taken from us. Perhaps we thought that our wealth would keep us from having to worry about ultimate things–now the market tumbles and small businesses and farmers are left wondering what the coming months will bring. Perhaps we have not read the Scriptures and stored up a supply of comforting passages while times were good–and now all we have is the supply of toilet paper that we managed grab before the store ran out.

God sometimes lets these things happen to remind us of our faults and reveal our idols. He then turns our eyes back to Him. To turn our eyes back to things that really matter, and to set our hearts on things above. God has given us time home in smaller groups that we may pray more fervently. And for all who have been lovers of God and His Word, now God will show us by means of these events how to put into practice what we have heard from God about patience and submitting to His Fatherly will. These are times for our faith to bear fruit.

Each day that we are able wake up and pray “This is the day the LORD has made,” is a gracious gifts that we can rejoice and be glad in. Times like these remind us it is a gift that might not have come, and yet here it is. We pray the Lord to help make the proper use of it.

Church in the Time of Coronavirus

Church in the Time of Coronavirus
https://www.facebook.com/scjournalstar/posts/2875651479137450
[Update 3]

[Update 2: Due to continuing recommendations, we have decided to switch to live-stream services only for the time being. 4/4/20]

[Update: Community spread cases have begun in the Panhandle. Because of this, a Directed Health Mandate has been issued for Sheridan County and others, which gives the ten person limit the force of law, and extends the date to May 11th.]

Our church has a Facebook page: facebook.com/gracelutherangordon. It will mostly be used for posting things that have appeared here and for live-streaming services.

Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod Resources

Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services COVID-19 Information

Panhandle Public Health District Information

We’re trying our best to stay on top of all the changes that are coming our way. Here’s what you need to know:

Church services will be live-streamed only! Live services will begin Sunday at 8:30am, and an archived view can be watched anytime here.

Weekend Service times (subject to change pending future considerations):
  • Sunday: 8:30am (Live-stream only)

Until March 31st May 11th, we are required to limit gatherings to less than 10 people, including the pastor. This will be strictly enforced. Per clarification from Governor Ricketts, we can have ten people in the church building and another ten in the fellowship hall. After we have met our capacity, we will ask people to return for the next service at a later time. If there are people turned away from the 10am service, we will consider holding another service afterward.

We will be attempting to live-stream services, and we will do our best to make that video available to as many people as we can who may not be able to attend weekend services.

Please Note!

If you are in one of the at-risk groups because of age, underlying health conditions, if you have been asked to self-quarantine due to possible infection, or if you are infected already, Pastor asks you to stay home to avoid infection and protect your neighbor. Please call Pastor and inform him so he can determine the best way to provide you with God’s gifts for the time to come.

We will ask people to maintain a proper distance from each other to avoid spreading disease. We will sterilize the communion vessels before, during, and after distribution. We will follow proper hygiene procedures. We will clean the worship space after each service.

After March 31st if there are no community spread cases of COVID-19, the Nebraska government will revisit these restrictions.


This disease will be a test from God, a time to grow in our faith and dependence on Him for all good things through Jesus Christ His Son. One thing that will be especially important is to make sure that even though our opportunities to gather as brothers and sisters in Christ are limited, we are still letting God’s Word dwell richly in our hearts and our homes. In order to help with this:


Governor Ricketts has said he thinks very highly of our state’s churches and the service to community that the people of God provide. In a conference call with Nebraska clergy, he especially asked for help from the churches in four areas:

  1. That we pray for our government leaders; doctors, nurses, and all medical staff, first-responders and law enforcement, for the sick and dying, and for all their families. Here are some prayers that we use at church that can help in those prayers:
    • Eternal Lord, ruler of all, graciously regard those who have been set in positions of authority among us that, guided by Your Spirit, they may be high in purpose, wise in counsel, firm in good resolution, and unwavering in duty, that under them we may be governed quietly and peaceably; through Jesus Christ, our Lord. Amen.
    • Lord God, be with the doctors and nurses and all others who minister to the needs of those who are ill. Through their wise and compassionate service, grant relief to the suffering and hope to the afflicted so that all may know of Your boundless care; through Jesus Christ, our Lord. Amen.
    • O Lord God, by the sudden deaths of many people in these days, You have shown that Your thoughts are not our thoughts nor Your ways our ways. We thank You for the blessings of body and soul that You have bestowed on the departed. Comfort the members of their families who mourn their deaths, and assist us ever to prepare for Your final summons when we will depart and be with Christ in blessedness and glory; through Jesus Christ, our Lord. Amen.
  2. That we identify the people among us who are self-isolating and quarantined. We should know who they are and what needs they may have in the days to come. This may include:
    • phone calls so they do not feel alone
    • seeing if they need help with groceries or medicine
    • seeing if they need meals delivered
  3. That we consider providing childcare, especially for those called to work extra through all of this, especially medical personnel and first-responders. [I’m really not sure how to do this while still complying with government mandates, and trying to limit the spread of disease. If anyone has any ideas, we’re all ears.]
  4. That we not forget the poor and needy among us. This may take the form of financial assistance for specific needs and providing food and clothing items. (The governor also noted that they are seeking to make it easier for people to access SNAP, unemployment, etc.).

Powered by WordPress & Theme by Anders Norén