Synod Stories

Synod Stories

Synod Stories 11: Gen Z Lutheran on Dating Crisis & Church Revival

1 h 30 min · 13 de ene de 2026
portada del episodio Synod Stories 11: Gen Z Lutheran on Dating Crisis & Church Revival

Descripción

Ray Sexton is only 20 years old, but he sees the crisis clearly: his generation is struggling to date, marry, and form faithful Lutheran families. In this frank conversation, Ray shares his journey as a lifelong LCMS member in Springfield, Missouri, his plans for seminary, and why he believes the Lutheran Church needs a complete renovation. We discuss the cultural forces making Christian relationships nearly impossible, why three out of four confirmed Lutheran teens leave the church, and what it means to be a confessional Lutheran in a generation drowning in hookup culture and political extremes. Ray doesn't pull punches—he talks about ultra-conservative rabbit holes, the myth of congregational autonomy, and why the LCMS needs to stop hiding in its "little box." This episode offers a rare window into what young, thoughtful Lutherans are actually experiencing and thinking. Whether you're a parent, pastor, or just curious about the next generation of the LCMS, Ray's perspective will challenge and inform your understanding of where the church is heading.

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15 episodios

episode Synod Stories 15: Marine-Turned-Pastor on Worship, Confession & AI artwork

Synod Stories 15: Marine-Turned-Pastor on Worship, Confession & AI

Rev. Isaac Wirtz didn't grow up wanting to be a pastor. He was heading toward CIA interrogation work when a misfiled seminary application, a Marine's willingness to be the dumbest guy in the room, and a nagging sense that the harvest was ready redirected his life to Fort Wayne and eventually to Mount Olive Lutheran Church in Tucson, Arizona—where he now serves as pastor and hosts the Christian Combatives YouTube channel. In this conversation, Brian Yamabe and Pastor Wirtz cover the full range of congregational life: liturgical worship in the desert Southwest, the chalice and close communion, why Wirtz does all his own readings, and how tens of hours of daily Bible study underlie a 15-minute Sunday sermon. They also wade into harder territory—women's roles and the orders of creation, the worship wars (Wirtz doesn't think they're over), open communion discipline, the Concordia University system, and the pastoral shortage reframed as an overabundance of unsustainable congregations rather than a lack of men. The episode closes with an urgent and encouraging word: the LCMS needs to show up online, and the way to compete with Catholic money and Reformed personality culture is for Lutherans to build each other up.

Ayer1 h 13 min
episode Synod Stories 14: AI Reads Committee 7 — All 29 Convention Overtures artwork

Synod Stories 14: AI Reads Committee 7 — All 29 Convention Overtures

What happens when you feed every overture in LCMS Convention Committee 7 into an AI and just start asking questions? In this solo episode, Brian Yamabe walks through all 29 overtures headed into the University Education committee at the 2026 LCMS National Convention — using an actual AI conversation as the analytical engine. The questions are Brian's, drawn from real experience: he served as a Board of Regent at Concordia Portland through its closure, was named in a $325 million lawsuit, and watched firsthand as synodical accountability collided with Oregon nonprofit law. The AI's responses are condensed from the originals. And yes — it got some things wrong. That's part of the conversation. This episode covers the sharpest structural conflict in Committee 7: converting the Concordia University System from corporation to commission, the prior approval process and the legal exposure nobody's proposing to fix, regent fiduciary duty under multiple state laws, and why 11 near-identical overtures arrived from districts across the country. It closes with Brian's honest reflection on what AI can and can't do — and why the church needs a serious answer to that question before it's too late.

Ayer42 min
episode Synod Stories 13: Confessions, Cryptids & the Baptist Belt artwork

Synod Stories 13: Confessions, Cryptids & the Baptist Belt

Pastor Willie Grills of Zion Lutheran Church in Alexander, Arkansas came to confessional Lutheranism the hard way — through Reformed circles, the Confessions, and a seminary formation that took him from Peru to Iowa before landing in Baptist country. In this conversation, Brian and Willie work through the real debates surrounding pastoral formation in the LCMS: the history from apostolic discipleship through the modern seminary, the SMP program's original purpose versus how it's being used today, and what uniform confessional training actually buys the church. They also talk about what it means to be Lutheran in a place where Lutherans get mistaken for Mormons, why the Mid-South District has one of the lowest vacancy rates in the Synod, and the worship identity question that underlies much of the confessional debate: what happens when a Lutheran service is indistinguishable from the evangelical megachurch next door? And yes — we get to cryptids. Willie explains how the collapse of New Atheism has created a cultural hunger for the supernatural, why now is the moment for the church to speak into it, and how he became the LCMS's only resident Bigfoot expert, courtesy of Art Bell and a gap in the market.

20 de abr de 202659 min
episode Synod Stories 12: Pastoral Formation with Dr. Adam Koontz artwork

Synod Stories 12: Pastoral Formation with Dr. Adam Koontz

One of the hottest topics heading into the 2026 LCMS Convention is pastoral formation and Dr. Adam Koontz just attended a gathering in Las Vegas where district presidents, pastors, and church leaders spent a day and a half hashing it out. This conversation goes deep. Pastor Koontz shares what he learned from sitting at tables where he was the only defender of residential seminary education, why the online vs. in-person debate is really a proxy for deeper ecclesiological disagreements, and what actually happens when you pass the buck on pastoral certification. We discuss the LCMS's lack of a coherent mission strategy, why expecting more from pastors isn't unkind, and how genuine listening created surprising hopefulness even in contentious conversations. This is essential listening for anyone who cares about the future of Lutheran pastoral ministry.

27 de ene de 20262 h 45 min
episode Synod Stories 11: Gen Z Lutheran on Dating Crisis & Church Revival artwork

Synod Stories 11: Gen Z Lutheran on Dating Crisis & Church Revival

Ray Sexton is only 20 years old, but he sees the crisis clearly: his generation is struggling to date, marry, and form faithful Lutheran families. In this frank conversation, Ray shares his journey as a lifelong LCMS member in Springfield, Missouri, his plans for seminary, and why he believes the Lutheran Church needs a complete renovation. We discuss the cultural forces making Christian relationships nearly impossible, why three out of four confirmed Lutheran teens leave the church, and what it means to be a confessional Lutheran in a generation drowning in hookup culture and political extremes. Ray doesn't pull punches—he talks about ultra-conservative rabbit holes, the myth of congregational autonomy, and why the LCMS needs to stop hiding in its "little box." This episode offers a rare window into what young, thoughtful Lutherans are actually experiencing and thinking. Whether you're a parent, pastor, or just curious about the next generation of the LCMS, Ray's perspective will challenge and inform your understanding of where the church is heading.

13 de ene de 20261 h 30 min