Seth Udinski, FISM News
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FISM News has reported multiple cases of ministers shamefully preaching church services dressed in drag this past year, both in the United Methodist Church. But sadly, this debauchery is not limited to one denomination. On Sunday, a Lutheran pastor preached a sermon, a children’s sermon no less, as a drag queen.
Aaron Musser, a recently ordained pastor at St. Luke’s Lutheran Church in Chicago, took the pulpit to teach to the children at the church on Sunday, Dec. 19 dressed in a blonde wig, heavy makeup, and white dress.
Musser told the children of the church to open his sermon,
I have an awesome story to share with you today. I am also a boy most of the time when I’m here. But today, I’m a girl.
Certainly, this man is to blame for profaning the pulpit and bringing shame to the gospel of Jesus Christ in such a way, but blame must also be placed on St. Luke’s Lutheran. The mere fact that this church has ordained an openly homosexual pastor is shameful. The fact that this church and its elders allowed and encouraged him to dress in drag and “preach” to their children is inexcusable.
The church made an announcement to the congregation the week before Musser’s sermon,
Wear garments/accessories that make you feel 100%, like the best version of yourself.
This development highlights the grave need for Christians to courageously teach their children the truth, and to protect them from those who do not. We live in days where it is no longer only the secular culture that is seeking to mislead, desensitize, and indoctrinate the youth, it is also coming from within the “church.” We must be sure to stand firmly on the Bible as our source for truth and morality and call out those who are wolves in sheep’s clothing.
Jesus, who set the ultimate example for loving and caring for the little ones, spoke about this in Matthew 18:5-6:
Whoever receives one such child in my name receives me, but whoever causes one of these little ones who believe in me to sin, it would be better for him to have a great millstone fastened around his neck and to be drowned in the depth of the sea.