Christ Lutheran Church - Lubbock, TX

Christ Lutheran Church - Lubbock, TX Christ Lutheran Church is a congregation of the Lutheran Church - Missouri Synod.

Christian education for adults is held every Wednesday morning and for all ages is held every Wednesday evening.

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,It has pleased the Lord of Life to call our brother in Christ, Jerry Lynn Tull, out ...
05/01/2026

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,

It has pleased the Lord of Life to call our brother in Christ, Jerry Lynn Tull, out of this vale of tears and into His nearer presence.

We pray that his beloved wife, Sharon, family, friends, and all who knew him will be comforted by the peace of Christ as they grieve his departure from this life even as we hope that all who knew Jerry will lay hold of the mercy and grace of God in the promise of the forgiveness of sins, the resurrection of the dead, and the life of the world to come through Jesus Christ our Lord.

A Christian Funeral will be held at Christ Lutheran Church on Monday, May 4th at 11:00 am. A luncheon reception will follow. Please join us.

Holy Communion at Christ Lutheran Church
04/04/2026

Holy Communion at Christ Lutheran Church

Heavenly Father, we are silenced at the grave of Your Son. In justice You called for Him, who knew no sin, to be made si...
04/04/2026

Heavenly Father, we are silenced at the grave of Your Son. In justice You called for Him, who knew no sin, to be made sin for us. Yet You permitted Your Son to die in innocence. In love He came to us but He was rejected by hate. He taught us obedience but men rebelled against Him.
We confess that a great mystery confronts us at this tomb of sin and death. He was buried behind the great seal of our sin and our death. By faith we know also that He who died is the One who unlocked the great secret of Your love. His home is our tomb. He carried with Him to the grave our sin and our death that He might break their hold on us.
Trusting in our Lord’s promise that He would rise again on the third day, we come not to mourn Him but to confess the sin that He would leave buried. Have mercy on us! Grant us the Easter faith that anticipates with joy the day on which You raised Him from the dead, so that in Him we too shall come forth from the tomb to live with Him in eternity. We pray in His name and for His sake.
Amen.
(“Lutheran Book of Prayer”, Concordia Publishing House, 1970)

"For you were once darkness, but now you are light in the Lord. Walk as children of light."  Ephesians 5:8Join the Saint...
04/03/2026

"For you were once darkness, but now you are light in the Lord. Walk as children of light." Ephesians 5:8
Join the Saints at Christ Lutheran Church for this unique Saturday Easter Vigil Service at 6:30 pm. Service of Baptism and Service of Holy Communion will be observed.

Join us in celebrating Easter Services.
04/02/2026

Join us in celebrating Easter Services.

Come worship at Christ Lutheran Feb 8th
02/07/2026

Come worship at Christ Lutheran Feb 8th

Christ Lutheran Church will hold in person Bible Study (9:00) and Worship Service (10:15) today, January 25, 2026.  Memb...
01/25/2026

Christ Lutheran Church will hold in person Bible Study (9:00) and Worship Service (10:15) today, January 25, 2026. Members and guests, please travel carefully.

This Sunday, Jan 25, we celebrate the Transfiguration of Our Lord.  To consider Christ’s glorious Transfiguration on its...
01/24/2026

This Sunday, Jan 25, we celebrate the Transfiguration of Our Lord.

To consider Christ’s glorious Transfiguration on its own is eye-opening; to hear how Luther describes this glory as yours nearly bursts the eyes from their sockets, bringing hope to the Christian heart. Luther’s use of the Transfiguration to teach the hope we have in the resurrection of the body is truly wonderful, for when you hear the vivid picture of how Jesus’ “face shone like the sun, and his clothes became white as light” (Matthew 17:2), Luther would have you see what this means for your eternal good:

The resurrection of the dead and the future glory and brightness of our bodies are shown. For this was something very remarkable, that Christ was transfigured while yet in the mortal body, which was subject to suffering. What then shall it be, when mortality shall have been swallowed up, and nothing shall remain but immortality and glory?

What a thought! As glorious as the Transfiguration was, yet since Christ was still subject to suffering, it is not even the full picture! Jesus gives but a sneak-peek of what will be. Now that He is crucified and risen, death no longer having dominion over Him, you have hope of the same immortal glory as your Lord.

The hope of another life beyond the present life is quite comforting, especially as we suffer. Luther elaborates on this when discussing what Moses and Elijah appearing with Jesus teaches: “There is added the appearance of Moses and Elias, who prove by their appearing that they had never really died, and that there is yet another life, besides the earthly life, from which they were transferred.”

While Luther also sees Moses and Elijah appearing “in order to testify that Jesus Christ is truly the promised Messiah, according to the law (i.e. Moses), and the prophets, (i.e. Elias),” his concentration here is on the comfort of the life to come, the hope that the faithful have after this present life of labor is over. Just as the Transfiguration testifies to this truth for Moses and Elijah, so too is this your hope, to be transferred from this life of sorrow to life immortal with Jesus and all the saints.

With the hope Jesus’ Transfiguration brings, Luther says, we are able to look at death in a different light:

This appearance teaches us also that we should despise death, and look upon it merely as an emigration or a sleep. In short, this appearance proves that this life is nothing at all in comparison with the future life.

What do you have to fear in death when Jesus shines like the sun for you and is white as light to enlighten you to what He has done on your behalf? No, there is nothing to fear in life or death when you compare it to the future life our Father has in store for you through Jesus Christ, our Lord.

From where does such certainty come? Luther writes, “This appearance proves that sin is overcome. For it necessarily follows as an incontrovertible conclusion, that, where death is overcome, there sin is also overcome.”

The Gospel shines forth in the Transfiguration since it previews Jesus’ resurrection, which guarantees that His death truly did atone for the sin of the world. Never one to bypass the salvation of Christ’s cross, Luther proclaims what Jesus, Moses, and Elijah were discussing together on the Mount of Transfiguration: His exodus from this earth via His crucifixion (cf. Luke 9:31). The fact that Christ foreshadows His future resurrection is a testimony that the cross cannot keep Christ down. Rather, He overcame death and sin and He did it for you and for all.

Jesus was transfigured before three disciples. Why? To strengthen them in the faith. Luther says:

But he permitted those three mentioned apostles especially to see this appearance, in order to guard them against the coming offense of his cross and crucifixion. Yet he accomplished little thereby, for they all were offended with him. Yet this appearance had its advantage after the resurrection, and served to strengthen their faith in Christ, that he was the Son of the living God, and that his kingdom must be regarded in a spiritual sense.

This indeed strengthened the disciples after the resurrection, most evidently St. Peter, who wrote that they heard the voice of God the Father say about Jesus, “This is my beloved Son, with whom I am well pleased” (2 Peter 1:17). This encouraged them to continue to confess Christ even to death. St. Peter goes on to encourage you when he writes that in Scripture you have a “more sure word,” one which “you will do well to pay attention as to a lamp shining in a dark place, until the day dawns and the morning star rises in your hearts” (2 Peter 1:19).

Luther’s treatment of the Transfiguration finally focuses on the Holy Trinity. “The whole, holy Trinity appears here to strengthen the believers; namely, Christ in his transfigured form, the Father in the voice, and the Holy Ghost in the bright cloud.” In your baptized life you are learning more and more who your Triune God is, how He works for your good, three Persons in one divine unity.

The Transfiguration of our Lord is an apt portion of Scripture to consider before Lent begins since we get a sneak-peek at the resurrection before we head into the season of repentance that leads to Easter. Let Luther’s treatment give you hope in the midst of Lent, reminding you of Christ’s resurrection and your own.

The Rev. Stephen K. Preus, February 26, 2017
Luther Church - Missouri Synod Resources, February 26, 2017

PRAYER OF THE CHURCHThe Baptism of Our LordJan. 11, 2026In peace, let us pray to the Lord: Lord, have mercy.In thanksgiv...
01/11/2026

PRAYER OF THE CHURCH
The Baptism of Our Lord
Jan. 11, 2026

In peace, let us pray to the Lord: Lord, have mercy.

In thanksgiving for the revelation of Jesus Christ to us in His wondrous Epiphany in the Jordan, and for the revelation of God’s name and blessing to us in Holy Baptism, let us pray to the Lord: Lord, have mercy.

For all the baptized children of God, that we may daily die to sin and rise to newness of life, let us pray to the Lord: Lord, have mercy.

For all who proclaim Jesus Christ, that through their godly message, many would repent of their sins and join Him in His heavenly kingdom, let us pray to the Lord: Lord, have mercy.

For the family, especially all Christian homes; for husbands and wives, that God would turn them toward one another in love; for fathers and mothers, that God would equip them for their holy duty as teachers of the faith; and for all children, that God would preserve them in the saving faith and certain promises of their Baptism unto life everlasting, let us pray to the Lord: Lord, have mercy.

For the rulers of the nations, that they would submit to the preaching of God’s Word and acknowledge Jesus as the Christ and true King, let us pray to the Lord: Lord, have mercy.

For all those bruised and afflicted in spirit, that Christ would be a servant to them in their hour of need and bring them out of their afflictions, let us pray to the Lord: Lord, have mercy.

For all who have received Holy Baptism, that they would treasure this heavenly gift and so receive the body and blood of Christ for their forgiveness, life and salvation, let us pray to the Lord: Lord, have mercy.

That we who have died to this world in Holy Baptism would ever more and more live in the resurrected life of Christ, let us pray to the Lord: Lord, have mercy.

Lord God, heavenly Father, You manifested Yourself with the Holy Spirit in the fullness of grace at the Baptism of Your dear Son. With Your voice, You directed us to the One who has borne our sins, that we may receive grace and forgiveness. Keep us, we implore You, in the true faith. Since we have been baptized in accordance with Your command and the example of Your Son, strengthen our faith by Your Holy Spirit and lead us to everlasting life and salvation; through the same Jesus Christ, Your Son, our Lord, who lives and reigns with You and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever. Amen.

From eternity, God willed that Christ would be born into a human family and so sanctified the vocation of mother and fat...
12/31/2025

From eternity, God willed that Christ would be born into a human family and so sanctified the vocation of mother and father.

"Blessed is everyone who fears the Lord,
who walks in His ways!
You shall eat the fruit of the labor of your hands;
you shall be blessed, and it shall be well with you.

Your wife will be like a fruitful vine
within your house;
your children will be like olive shoots
around your table.
Behold, thus shall the man be blessed
who fears the Lord.

The Lord bless you from Zion!
May you see the prosperity of Jerusalem
all the days of your life!
May you see your children's children!
Peace be upon Israel!" (Psalm 128).

We pray: Lord God, from whom every family in heaven and earth is named, receive our thanks for the blessings You have bestowed upon all parents, to whom You have entrusted the care of children. Forgive their shortcomings and failures as parents, and grant them Your grace that they might faithfully bring up their children in Your nurture and instruction; through Jesus Christ, Your Son, our Lord, who lives and reigns with You and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever. Amen.

On the 6th day of Christmas, December 30th, the church remembers the Holy Family (Jesus, Mary, and Joseph).  The Feast o...
12/30/2025

On the 6th day of Christmas, December 30th, the church remembers the Holy Family (Jesus, Mary, and Joseph).

The Feast of the Holy Family (Jesus, Mary, and Joseph) was a locally celebrated feast dating back to the 17th century that became a part of the Roman Catholic liturgical calendar in 1921. As such it is primarily a Roman Catholic observance, though some Lutheran and Anglican churches also recognize it. This feast day is not recognized on the LCMS liturgical calendar. However, Lutherans have great respect for the Virgin Mary and Joseph, guardian of Jesus, and have stressed the importance of Christ’s sinless childhood and youth as part of His incarnation.

The point of popularizing this festival was to present Christian families with a positive role model in the Holy Family. As Christians, we can look to Saints Mary and Joseph—our sister and brother in Christ—as models of faith and faithfulness in vocation. Our evangelical heritage prizes the historic saints as examples for encouragement and inspiration, and the Holy Family is no exception. Further, it can be beneficial to contemplate the awesome might of the Second Person of the Trinity, the Divine Logos, incarnated into the humble and helpless form of a tiny baby, a growing toddler, and a reverent boy through reading the Gospel accounts of Jesus’s childhood. For Jesus was true man, meaning He was born a true baby who grew and experience a true childhood. What a mystery to behold this and every day!
https://concordiahistoricalinstitute.org/for-all-the-saints-2022-week-7/

Address

7801 Indiana Avenue
Lubbock, TX
79423

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 2pm
Tuesday 9am - 2pm
Wednesday 9am - 2pm
Thursday 9am - 2pm
Friday 9am - 2pm
Sunday 8:30am - 12:30pm

Telephone

+18067990162

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