I'm a pretty immature Christian, on milk and just learning about faith in Christ so please don't flame me for asking what may be a really dumb question.
An old saying: There are no stupid questions, there are only questions unasked. ... er, something like that...
We know that the Holy Spirit draws up to Christ and brings us to faith, it is not of our own choosing regardless of what some believe, right?
I think that we are brought to faith, but what we choose to believe, and what we choose to not believe, is something that we choose as humans (
imperfect humans, mind you

).
The Holy Spirit gives us faith, spiritual sight, an awareness of our sin and separation from God. He chooses us and leads us to grow in our Christian walk. Am I right so far?
Sounds good to me, except the "spiritual sight" part. Do you mean spiritual
insight as in helping us to realize that there's more to life than our own wants and needs, or do you actually mean spiritual
sight as in seeing spirits...? sorry, I may be looking a li'l deep into this one, but I wanna be sure so that we're on the same page.
Since it is the Holy Spirit that chooses and leads and directs us in our faith why are there so many different denominations? Why does God allow sincere Christians to be Pentacostals, or Methodists or Catholics or Lutherans? The theology's are so different and it drives Christians apart rather than uniting the body of Christ.
Why does God allow it? Well... this is
my own thought, and idk how particularly Lutheran it is, but, lemme give you a quick parable:
A couple has their first child. As an infant, it needed help and attention and direct love from its parents in order to survive. However, as the child grew older, it became more independent; it still needs its parents' help to overcome some obstacles, but it can basically manage on its own,
to a point. Eventually, there will come that rebellious age where the child wants to do what it wants, and not be held down by its parents. So, the child'll go out, do some bad things, eventually get caught, and then realize that it still needs its parents. The child grows older, and as such becomes more and more independent. Eventually, the child is its own adult, and lives out on its own, and makes its own choices; however, this child still will come to its parents when it needs help, and its parents are always going to be there for the child so long as the child is willing to accept help from the parents.
... end of parable. Now, interpretation!
Parents=God. Child=World. When the world was young and first created by God, He had to be there to help guide them, or else they couldn't survive (which is my strange reason as to why God is so prevalent and in direct contact with the people of the Old Testament). However, as the world grows older, it breaks off from its Parent, but still has some connections with it (the church).
So, key point of this: Why does God allow multiple denominations? Because He doesn't need to step in and get directly involved with us (and tell us what is truly right and wrong between the denoms) as He had to do in the Old Testament, because now we can know better (Bible, Jesus' example). I mean, God could sit and guide us all by the hand, but then we would never grow up, we would never mature our faiths.
So, which one is ultimately right? In my mind, LCMS

lol... but, in all honesty, we'll find out when He comes back
Maybe this is one of "those" questions that has no clear answer but it seems clear that there are Christians in and out of many differant denominations all who believe they have the correct interpetation of the Bible and certainly have a strong faith and relationship with Jesus. I struggle with trying to understand why the Holy Spirit just doesn't bring everyone to the LCMS doors and give us all the same faith.
Well, I think every denom. wonders why the Holy Spirit hasn't brought all the other denoms. to their doors and make them all united under their own doctrines. But, unfortunately, in this lifetime, we'll probably never see that. But, in the life and world to come, we who faithfully believe in Jesus Christ as our one and only Savior, and who live as He taught us (to the best of our imperfect abilities), will be united with God in Heaven. Yay! lol...
Is this a really stupid post?
Nope. It's a good question, one that many ask, few have good answers to, and probably one that I think every Christian ponders at least once in their lifetime. Never feel afraid to ask a question, there's a lot of us who love to sound smart-*COUGH* I MEAN want to help...

lol... (slight jab at myself, to be honest)...
Well, I hope your faith continues to grow in Him who sets us free, and that there's a whole mess of us here who are willing to help you if you ever are struggling with something.
