Jeremiah 29:4-7 | Matthew 5:14-16
Jeremy Richards
On June 1, 1886, the Second German Baptist Church in Hells Kitchen, New York ordained their new pastor, a recent graduate of Rochester Theological Seminary. His name was Walter Rauschenbusch. Rauschenbusch was the son of August and Caroline Rauschenbusch. August had come to the United States as a German Lutheran missionary, but later became a Baptist. Walter’s Christian upbringing was pietistic, focusing on the personal – personal faith, personal sin, personal salvation, and personal religious experiences. Despite the ways Rauschenbusch’s faith would change and grow as he got older, he never saw this as a negative thing, only as incomplete in and of itself. He said of his upbringing, “I was brought up in a very religious family, and I thank God for it.”[1] At the age of 17, after a rebellious period, he began to pray for help and, in his words, he “got [his] own religious experience.” This experience would stick with him for the rest of his life.