Tim and Jack welcome back Nick Graff, a former Marine Corps sergeant and special forces member, to discuss the aftermath of Seminex and its implications for the modern Lutheran Church—Missouri Synod.
• The aftermath of Seminex resulted in a more confessionally unified LCMS while also creating a spirit of disunity
• Contemporary debates about worship styles often conflate adiaphora (non-essential matters) with doctrine
• "Liturgical pietism" can potentially make the liturgy, rather than Christ, the focus of worship
• Political identities increasingly supersede baptismal identities in church conflicts
• American politics have become more tribal, affecting how Christians relate to one another
• "Backdoor ecumenicism" allows non-Lutheran theological concepts to enter through political associations
• The church tends to focus on power struggles rather than creating hospitable spaces for sinners
• "Sinners belong in church" remains a foundational Lutheran principle
• Only Christ—not human efforts to enforce conformity—can bring order to a fallen world
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