Fred Luter, pastor of Franklin Avenue Baptist Church, New Orleans, was honored by New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary and Leavell College on Oct. 12, with the announcement that a commemorative brick paver would be placed in his honor in the seminary’s Legacy Plaza reading “Fred Luter, the pastor of New Orleans.”
Jamie Dew, NOBTS and Leavell College president, pointed to Luter’s wide influence and the impact he has made for God’s kingdom as he presented the award.
A life of preaching, ministry
“[God’s] hand has been and is all over your life and your preaching and your ministry,” Dew said to Luter. “You are not just the pastor of Franklin Avenue, you are the pastor of New Orleans, and brother, we are grateful for you.”
The presentation coincides with Luter’s 35th anniversary as pastor of Franklin Avenue Baptist Church, New Orleans. Luter is a past president of the Southern Baptist Convention.
Dew noted that Luter began as a street preacher on New Orleans streets, then stepped into the role of pastor for a “very small” congregation. Today, that congregation – Franklin Avenue Baptist Church, Luter’s only pastorate – numbers a membership in the thousands with satellite campuses in Houston and Baton Rouge.
The chapel service marked Founders Day, held in October to note the seminary’s first classes were delayed a month due to the 1918 Spanish Influenza outbreak in the city. Commemorative brick pavers placed at Legacy Plaza, the courtyard at Leavell Chapel, honor friends and loved ones of NOBTS and Leavell College.
God’s faithfulness through the ups and downs
One of NOBTS’ most popular chapel speakers, Luter spoke to a full audience, drawing from Lamentations 3:22-23 to remind listeners of God’s faithfulness.
Noting that life is unpredictable, Luter quoted a phrase from the movie “Forest Gump” that compared life to a box of chocolates meaning “you never know what you’re going to get.” The ups and downs of life, particularly during the COVID-19 pandemic, have affected everyone, regardless of station or position in life, Luter explained.
“So, the question of the hour is … how have the trials and tribulations of this life affected you?” Luter asked.
Jeremiah, the author of Lamentations, experienced the same discouragement and despair that many today feel, Luter explained, admitting that today’s shifting culture and sinfulness can make it seem that life is “like a box of chocolates.”
“But for the believer, but for the Christian, but for the child of God, there must be a point in your life when your fear is replaced by faith … where your anxiety is replaced by adoration … where your hopelessness is turned into hopefulness,” Luter said.
Not deleted, defeated, or depleted
While Lamentations 3:1-20 show the depths of Jeremiah’s despair, Luter said he was grateful that Jeremiah’s story doesn’t end there. Jeremiah’s despair lifts when the prophet (verse 21) remembered God’s faithfulness, Luter explained, and he urged listeners to remember God’s faithfulness and focus on Him despite weariness from the pandemic and the grief and discouragement it has brought.
“For the child of God, despair never has the last word,” Luter said. “Despair is not an option for the child of God … God, and God alone is our hope.”
Luter pointed out that because of God’s faithfulness, believers are not deleted, defeated, or depleted.
“Mercy is God not giving us what we deserve,” Luter said. “No one is righteous. All of us should have been deleted … however, because of God’s mercy, we are not deleted. We are not consumed.”
Believers are not defeated because God’s compassions never fail, even if it seems “the enemy” is winning, Luter said. He added that he was weary of COVID and weary of funerals, explaining that the virus had claimed 15 in his congregation. Yet, God’s compassion, mercy, grace, goodness, truth, and faithfulness never fail, Luter explained and pointed to Calvary.
“The same God that raised Jesus from the tomb provides compassion for you and me,” Luter said. “Why? Because His compassions fail not.”
In closing, Luter said believers are not depleted because God’s mercies are new each day and cannot be “used up.”
“One thing you never have to worry about is the faithfulness of God. One thing you can hold onto is the faithfulness of God,” Luter said. “Every day you wake up God gives us new mercies. They will never run out. They are never depleted. Great is His faithfulness.”
EDITOR’S NOTE — This story was written by Marilyn Stewart, and was originally published by New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary.