Prince of Peace Lutheran Church

Prince of Peace Lutheran Church Prince of Peace Lutheran Church is a congregation of the Northern Great Lakes Synod of the Evangelic We practice Eucharistic Hospitality.

Prince of Peace Lutheran Church is a community which believes in God’s love, knows Jesus as Savior, and is blessed by the presence of the Holy Spirit. Thankful for these gifts we gather to pray and praise, explore God’s word and its’ meaning for our lives, strengthen each other in our witness, and serve each other and our neighbors in the world. SUNDAY WORSHIP
Join us for Worship with Holy Communi

on every Sunday at 9:00 AM. We are fully Handicap Accessible. We have a nursery available for children. Following the service, there is a coffee hour in the Fellowship Hall.

BUILDING IS CLOSED.The Church is closed Jun 10 - 12 due to an insulation project.Contact us via email if you need us - p...
06/10/2026

BUILDING IS CLOSED.
The Church is closed Jun 10 - 12 due to an insulation project.

Contact us via email if you need us - [email protected].

This captured my attention as we are celebrating the 250th birthday of our Great Nation.  Based on the concept of "freed...
06/02/2026

This captured my attention as we are celebrating the 250th birthday of our Great Nation. Based on the concept of "freedom".
..

Just freedom
by Elizabeth Hunter—

“Most merciful God, we confess that we are captive to sin and cannot free ourselves,” I say aloud with my worshipping community. Some weeks I slip back into the old wording I remember from childhood: “we are in bo***ge to sin.” While “captive” and “bo***ge” evoke different visual details, to me they communicate the same message: We can’t pick this lock. Our freedom comes with a Christ-shaped key.

Even though I know this, I’ve often tried to fix a problem by changing something—a mistake that sticks out as a cause, one element that perhaps might change the course of action. It’s tempting to pin a problematic situation on this or that misplaced word, action or moment. So many of us approach problems as if, just by a little careful editing, we can control, avoid or deny all that is wrong in ourselves and in others.

But this goes against everything we confess when we gather to worship God! Do we hear ourselves? We confess that we are not suffering from a single, temporary mistake, or even a series of mistakes that we can control. We are living in captivity—in bo***ge—to sin and can not free ourselves. This is not a one-off situation. Captivity is systemic, something we seem particularly resistant to grasping.

But systemic change is hard. Living in captivity fools us into a false sense of security and control. But who really feels loved when they must maintain a front? We just miss out on the deeper experience of love God makes available to us through our vulnerability.

Holy freedom, which leads to justice, isn’t about narrowing our vision or nit-picking. It’s about borrowing God’s wider gaze as we intentionally listen, learn and take in the big picture. In my work, I know that no one wants an editor to jump into a line edit without first reading the manuscript. Put simply, both the writer and the reader benefit if I read the work and take time to look at the big picture.

In the end, all our red ink, band-aids and glib talking points are for naught. When something is systemic, we can’t liberate ourselves. God’s love and justice free us, giving us room and permission to delight in the gifts of vulnerability, authenticity, service and God’s unconditional love.

I’m reminded of Martin Luther’s famous line from The Freedom of a Christian: “A Christian is a perfectly free lord of all, subject to none. A Christian is a perfectly dutiful servant of all, subject to all.” Does it sound like a contradiction? Not really. We know from the life of Christ that grace and service
operate hand-in-hand.

Thanks be to God for the holy wisdom of corporate confession. Something unlocks inside me, destroying all pretense, every time we say: “Forgive us, renew us and lead us, so that we may delight in your will and walk in your ways, to the glory of your holy name. Amen.”

Elizabeth Hunter is editor of Gather.

This article is from the June 2021 issue of Gather magazine. To read more like it, subscribe to Gather.

05/28/2026

Pie-apalooza is this Sunday. May 31st.

Come for worship.
Stay for the pie!

Pie Sunday is May 31st!  Come join us for worship - stay for a pie-abration!
05/26/2026

Pie Sunday is May 31st! Come join us for worship - stay for a pie-abration!

05/25/2026
A quote from a Celebration of Life from this past weekend.Worthy of sharing.
05/19/2026

A quote from a Celebration of Life from this past weekend.

Worthy of sharing.

05/12/2026

Not to rub it in - but if you missed out on John McHugh last Sunday, you really missed out.

We were fortunate to have him preach on Sunday. And then he spent another hour with us in the Fellowship Hall talking about the Easter story.

Thankful for the experience and we would encourage you to see him if you ever get the opportunity to do so.

05/12/2026

Happy Birthday Pastor Grant!

Address

5030 State Highway 70 W
Eagle River, WI
54521

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 1pm
Tuesday 9am - 1pm
Wednesday 9am - 1pm
Thursday 9am - 1pm
Friday 9am - 1pm
Sunday 8am - 12pm

Telephone

+17154799263

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