Trinity Lutheran Church - Ardmore, OK

Trinity Lutheran Church - Ardmore, OK We are a congregation of the Lutheran Church - Missouri Synod Rev. Phillip Borntrager, Pastor

06/01/2026
04/28/2026

Grace Alone: Law and Gospel - an Introduction to Lutheran Faith

04/19/2026

Thank you Jesus for your precious blood.

04/19/2026

While Americans overall have grown less religious, young men have bucked the trend and now outpace young women for the first time.

09/26/2025

Once again, you’re invited to read and consider a very insightful commentary on the role of CHURCH IN SOCIETY… it’s not my words, but being shared from another brother in the church.

Somewhere along the way, many of us absorbed the idea that the church exists to make the world a “more Christian” place. We’ve been taught to see the church as a kind of moral improvement society, a political lobby, or a culture-shaping machine whose primary task is to influence the world toward Christian values.

But biblically speaking, that’s never been the church’s mission. The church is not God’s tool for national renovation or cultural domination. It’s not the chaplain to Caesar, the PR department for a political party, or the engine of moral reform. The church is the community of the broken, gathered around the news of God’s grace for sinners in Jesus.

Martin Luther insisted that the church exists not to enforce cultural morality but to deliver Jesus’ saving grace through Word and Sacrament. The church, he argued, is a spiritual institution first—not a political or cultural force. For those who claim things were better in Luther’s day and that he would take a different approach today, history says otherwise: moral decay and hostility to God’s law are the norm, not the exception. Our times are no more hostile than any other; to think otherwise is ignorance of history.

Some will say, “But what about when culture celebrates what the Bible condemns? Isn’t it the church’s job to speak out?” The truth is confrontational—but not in the way we often think. The truth that confronts us is that, regardless of your moral or political views, we are all great sinners in desperate need of a great Savior.

Even Jesus, when standing before Pilate, made it clear: “My kingdom is not of this world.” If it were, his followers would have fought to establish earthly power. But his kingdom is altogether different—rooted in weakness, not strength; in grace, not law; in a cross, not a sword. And when Jesus taught us to pray, “Your kingdom come, your will be done, on earth as it is in heaven,” he wasn’t calling for a cultural or moral takeover. He was pointing to the way God’s kingdom comes—through the proclamation of the gospel, as sinners are rescued, forgiven, and set free.

And this is where we often get confused: culture warring and cultural engagement are not the same thing. Culture warring is about winning power; cultural engagement is about bearing witness. One seeks to control; the other seeks to confess.

Jesus didn’t send his disciples into the world to Christianize empires or legislate virtue. He sent them to announce forgiveness, to proclaim good news, to baptize sinners, to feed the hungry, to comfort the grieving, to bear one another’s burdens. The church is not a factory producing “better people”; it’s a recovery place announcing that, because of Jesus—the “suffering servant”—the sick are healed, the guilty are pardoned, and the dead are raised.

When we confuse the church with a culture-war movement or a moral majority, we trade the scandal of grace for the seduction of power. And in doing so, we lose the very thing the world most desperately needs: a community that doesn’t point to its own goodness, but to Jesus’ finished work for sinners like us.

The church doesn’t exist to make America more Christian. The church exists to make Jesus known. That’s a far more beautiful—and far more liberating—calling.

09/19/2025

A Brother in ministry lifted these thoughts and I believe they are worth a few moments of time for prayerful consideration. 🙏. Blessings on your day‼️

There are certain jobs where torment is written into the contract. A soldier expects bullets. A doctor expects midnight calls and bloody hands. A farmer expects hail and drought. But the pastor’s torment is stranger. It doesn’t come from outside. It comes from the very people he is sent to serve.

Congregations don’t need fire and pitchforks. Their weapons are subtler, sharper. Silence. Shrugs. The sigh during the sermon. The complaint about the hymn. The whispered gossip in the parking lot. The “We liked it better before you came.” ““The church would grow if you preached like Pastor So-and-So.” Or worst of all, polite indifference; eyes glazed over as if Christ Himself had nothing worth saying. These are the cuts that wear a pastor down. They close the smoke hole above his head, leaving him gasping for divine air.

And yet he stays. He stays because Christ keeps him there. He stays because the same Christ who was scowled at in the synagogue, betrayed by His disciples, and crucified by His own people is the Christ who still chooses to bear torment through the frail body of His pastors.

The prophets warned us. Amos thundered against the ease of Zion. Zephaniah condemned those who “settled on their dregs.” Malachi cried out against hollow offerings. Pastors still swallow these words like fire and speak them into congregations that would rather not hear.

And here is the fierce truth: when you torment your pastor, you torment Christ. Yet Christ does not abandon you. He stays. He preaches. He forgives. He breaks bread and pours wine. Even through torment, He places Himself in your empty hands. —D.

Address

1624 Harris Street NW
Ardmore, OK
73401

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