Thursday, October 25, 2007

Episcopalians in Open Revolt - From Virtue Online



Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori, Oceanographer

Posted by David Virtue on 2007/10/21 18:50:00 (4275 reads)
REALIGNMENT, DEFIANCE MARK ANGLICAN COMMUNION'S PROGRESS

News Analysis

By David W. Virtue
www.virtueonline.org
10/21/2007


The Anglican Communion is roiling from crisis to crisis as one Anglican province after another faces fleeing parishes, break-ups, endorsements of same-sex rites, and confusion at the very highest levels of the church over what it means to be Anglican.

In the American Episcopal Church, the ink was barely dry on a statement from the Joint Standing Committee of the Anglican Consultative Council endorsing TEC's House of Bishops request for the curtailment of same-sex rites and future pansexual bishops, when Los Angeles Bishop J. Jon Bruno turned a blind eye allowing a same-sex couple's nuptials to be regularized in a cardinal parish in his diocese.

Undaunted by calls for constraint by the Archbishop of Canterbury, clergy and laity in the Diocese of California went even further and called on Mark Andrus, Bishop of California, to allow a trial use of three same-sex blessing rites in his diocese. "The Commission on Marriage and Blessing celebrates the intention of the Episcopal Diocese of California to support and bless both same-gender and heterosexual couples in godly relationship, while hoping for the day when 'marriage equality' will be the reality in our church and state," the group said in an introduction to the report.

Andrus himself, it should be pointed out, is not without unanswered questions in his own closet. When he was a priest in the diocese of PA, a scandal of an alleged sexual nature with another priest erupted, resulting in a confidentiality agreement being struck with then Bishop Allen Bartlett that nothing should be revealed. However, when Andrus was elected Suffragan Bishop of Alabama, the liberal dominated Standing Committee of the Diocese of PA refused to give its consent.

It isn't just the Episcopal Church that is showing its defiant face towards Canterbury. Two Canadian dioceses - Quebec and Montreal - went to bat last week announcing that they would permit the blessing of same sex unions, with Quebec getting the tacit approval of the new Canadian Primate Archbishop Fred Hiltz. To date none of these flagrant in-your-face acts has met with public condemnation from Lambeth Palace.

Even as liberal and revisionist dioceses showed their public face of defiance, orthodox cardinal parishes in the dioceses of Central Florida and Pittsburgh announced they are leaving the Episcopal Church with nine parishes in Central Florida telling Bishop John W. Howe they are calling it quits with TEC. While this comes as no big surprise, as talk of orthodox flight has been quietly talked about for several months, it poses a major headache for Howe, an Evangelical, who finds his loyalty to the institution challenged by his loyalty to the gospel, a gospel TEC no longer embraces. The story in this diocese is far from over. As many as 20 parishes could flee, making it the second largest orthodox flight from the Episcopal Church after the Diocese of Virginia - a diocese currently embroiled in multi-million dollar lawsuits over property ownership.

Even as orthodox parishes flee TEC, four dioceses - three Anglo-Catholic (Quincy, Ft. Worth and San Joaquin) and one evangelical (Pittsburgh) - will hold conventions to determine their own future in a post-Christian denomination known more for theological and moral innovation than for creedal and biblical adherence. This poses an ecclesiastical and legal nightmare for Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori as she traverses the world mouthing peace and reconciliation with the Eucharist as ecclesiastical entertainment in one hand, and Millennium Development Goals to save the planet in the other. The lawyers, of course, will be the winners whether Mrs. Jefferts Schori wins or loses the rights to retain Episcopal properties. The court of public opinion will see this as a public relations disaster for the church, with secular liberals more convinced than ever that the church is part of the problem, not a part of the solution to providing peace on earth and goodwill to all persons of non-gender specific identities. The subtext in all this is that our sins of homophobia and racism can be washed away in the deep spiritual waters of the now much ballyhooed baptismal covenant. Fiat lux.

On the international scene, the slithering evil of pansexual behavior has now reached deep into the heart of Africa, causing the disintegration of the Anglo-Catholic Province of Central Africa. There has never been, in the history of the rise of Christianity in Africa, such a sight as African bishops vying over whether sodomy is good and right in the eyes of God. The dioceses of Harare and Manicaland have withdrawn from the province even as the pro-gay Bishop of Botswana, Trevor Mwamba wants the province to embrace Western modalities of sexual behavior. A breach, here in the heart of evangelical Anglican Africa, could spell disaster on this continent as it would allow the deep financial pockets of the American Episcopal Church and Trinity Church Wall Street to move in for the coup d'etat, lining the pockets of simpatico African bishops in the name of "mission" and the fight for global acceptance of homoerotic behavior now firmly entrenched in North American Anglicanism.

In England this past week, the Archbishop of Canterbury found himself facing a revolt from inside his own church. Church of England Evangelicals, fed up with having liberal bishops reign over them and the refusal of anybody to discipline recalcitrant revisionist bishops, announced that they had had enough. Some 1700 priests and parishes who belong to REFORM said they would now ordain their own clergy in an open revolt against their bishops, if the liberal drift continues. Coupled with this has been the long time cry of Forward in Faith Anglo-Catholics who have been bucking for some time for a third province with an all male clergy, who are equally fed up with the CofE's acceptance of women priests and the possibility of women bishops. REFORM told Dr. Rowan Williams that evangelicals would increasingly defy Church rules and their own bishops by parachuting in outsiders to carry out irregular ordinations of "orthodox" candidates.

BUT IN A MOVE that has distinct overtones of possible future schism through historical spin, Canon Gregory Cameron, the Deputy Secretary-General of the Anglican Communion, recently publicly distanced Anglicanism from Protestantism. In an article in the London-based Church Times, Cameron spoke of an Anglican "dialogue with the Protestant traditions" making it clear that he regarded Anglicanism as lying beyond the pale of Protestantism.

The distinguished Professor of Historical Theology at the University of Oxford, Dr. Alister McGrath took Cameron to task by ripping his interpretation of Anglican history saying that historians generally consider "Anglicanism" as one of the most remarkable and influential forms of Protestantism to emerge in England.

"From an historical perspective, the English national Church must be regarded as a Protestant variant - the 'Protestant Episcopal Church of England and Ireland', as state and parliamentary documents regularly describe it. And, as many readers will recall, the body which now prefers to describe itself as 'The Episcopal Church' was originally entitled 'The Protestant Episcopal Church in the United States of America.' (Indeed, this remains the Church's legal title)," wrote McGrath.

"We need to appreciate that the sixteenth-century Reformation was a complex phenomenon. The forms of Protestantism which emerged in the great imperial cities (such as Strasbourg), territories (such as Saxony) and nations (such as England or Sweden) had their own distinct characteristics. Some, for example, retained the episcopacy and a fixed liturgy; others discarded one or both. Yet each represented a local implementation of the Protestant agenda. From the reign of Edward VI onwards, English Church leaders began to use this term to refer to themselves, and see themselves as being connected with the great reforming movements and individuals on the continent of Europe."

McGrath blasted the ACC leader saying "Canon Cameron appears to belong to the revisionist school of thought which is trying to airbrush out Anglicanism's Protestant heritage and tradition. (The same agenda can be seen in the 1977 decision of the Episcopal Church in the United States of America to drop the word 'Protestant' from its name in common usage.)

It is an unwise strategy for two reasons. First, it is historically indefensible. Cameron may wish that Anglicanism was not Protestant; he cannot, however, rewrite history to suit his tastes. His form of revisionism has itself been revised, and found to be untenable. But, much more importantly, understanding Anglicanism's history allows us to appreciate what may be about to happen within the Anglican Communion, in the face of renewed tensions over issues of sexuality. To understand this point, we need to consider the Protestant concept of a 'denominational family'."

RECENTLY orthodox Anglicans meeting in Pittsburgh announced the formation of a new ecclesiastical structure which, in time, will no doubt lead to a new North American Anglican Province. When that happens, it will be interesting to see if Dr. Williams recognizes this group or chooses to ignore them, siding with the Episcopal Church as the sole legitimate representatives of Anglicanism in North America.

If he does not, one thing is for sure, there will be no reversal of the realignment currently underway in worldwide Anglicanism. Revisionist Anglicans across the communion will continue to act defiantly against Scripture, tradition and reason, pushing pansexuality and attempting to outlaw those whose consciences cannot accept women to the priesthood or episcopacy.

There is now no stopping the train of renewal and reformation for orthodox Anglicans across the world. It has left the station. The only thing left to consider is what the Anglican Communion will look like after the great schism has occurred and who the leaders will be.

New Poll - Greatest Theologian




The Seed-Planting Church


by Dr. Waldo Werning (LCMS)



Proposing Biblical principles, this book shows how the church can be revitalized by God’s design. It displays a nurturing seed-planting model in place of a maintenance harvesting style of church. Dr. Kent Hunter (LCMS), The Church Doctor, writes, “Powerfully practical... will change your church from a bureaucracy to the movement God has called Christianity to be. I have already begun using this material in my work with churches.” 168 pages

The Seed-Planting Church #304
Price: $12.00


***

The new poll near the bottom of the page asks, Who is the greatest theologian of the Lutheran Church? This is your chance to vote for Waldo Werning, who has worked closely with WELS, ELS, and LCMS Church Growth gurus.

Poll Results - How Does the True Christian Church Grow?


Smells and bells high-church. 2 (5%)

Blitz the community with marketing. 0 (0%)

Seeker Services and cell groups. 0 (0%)

Only through the Means of Grace. 38 (95%)


GJ - No comment needed.

Jack Preus and Polemics



LCMS President J. A. O. Preus, aka Jack Preus,
aka Chairman JAO


I was in the LCA when Jack Preus was elected LCMS president and newly ordained when Seminex erupted. Going to Notre Dame introduced me to LCMS President Pfotenhauer's liberal grandson, who moved his congregation into the LCA. Another Pfotenhauer grandson was WELS. Another was Pentecostal. That used to describe the three-way split of Lutherans in America: liberal, orthodox, Pentecostal.

I have read the documents about the split many times, from the apostate perspective, and from the conservative side. I wrote "liberal" instead of apostate at first, but apostate is far more precise. The Seminex leaders were evil, deceptive, and always howling about how mistreated they were. Doubtless some were not given fair treatment, but overall the Seminex split was a disaster for the apostates and a victory for the conservatives.

I admire Jack and Robert Preus for being polemical when they might have simply used their credentials for a comfortable life. Jack knew how to make a point. He was certainly a politician, playing both sides all the time. Nevertheless, the Word of God did the impossible, breaking up a system built to promote apostasy. Imagine moving schoools around today to do something similar, like getting rid of Church Growth.

Did the Barry administration do anything in nine years? Barry did nothing about Benke, reminding us of LCMS President Benken doing nothing about everything

Did Bohlmann do anything except protect the apostates?

Young pastors today do not realize the shock of having intellectual Lutherans (Jack and Robert) defend Lutheran Orthodoxy when all the denominations were in retreat. Yes I know that WELS and the ELS broke with Missouri a little earlier, but that failed to register on the radar of most Americans.

Jack Preus was loathed by all the LCMS headquarters people. He had many District Popes against him. The media excoriated him.

Robert suffered more abuse overall, in my opinion. Toward the end of his life LCMS officials went out of their way to humiliate him as often as possible. I remember a teaching offer dangled in front of him by Johnson at St. Louis. Robert wanted to do this summer school course and wrote that he did. Johnson "forgot" or overlooked that response. That was minor compared to other slaps and put-downs. The cross is never separated from the teaching of the true Word.

Christian News played a major role in getting the word out to people while bypassing the official channels. LCA pastors routinely denounced CN. Later I realized the WELS loathed CN for the same reasons - the information could not be massaged and controlled.

Church and Change Now Has a Theme Song



Church and Change Theme Song
(sung to the tune of Radio Ga Ga)


I'd sit alone and read at sem,
My only friends are somewhat fem.
And everything I had to know,
I got it from my Church Growth notes.
Church Growth notes.

You gave us all those Schwaermer stars
Through wars of words -- from Fuller czars.
You made us laugh -- you made us cry ,
You made us strut our piety.

So don't become forgotten fads,
Some yellowin' books, filled with ads.
Who just don't reach and just don't teach,
And just don't buy me a place near a beach.
This is your time, you have the power,
You've yet to live your finest hour.
Church Growth.

All we hear is Church Growth ga ga,
Church Growth goo goo ,
Church Growth ga ga.
All we hear is Church Growth ga ga,
Church Growth blah blah,
Church Growth what's new?
Church Growth, Waldo still loves you!

We watch the shows -- we watch the stars,
On DVDs for hours and hours,
We hardly need to use our brain,
How doctrine has gone down the drain.

Let's hope you never quit old friend,
Like all good fads on you we depend.
So stick around cos we might lose face,
When we're confronted by the Means of Grace.
This is your time, you have the power,
You've yet to live your finest hour.
Church Growth. Church Growth.

All we hear is Church Growth ga ga,
Church Growth goo goo,
Church Growth ga ga,
All we hear is Church Growth ga ga,
Church Growth goo goo ,
Church Growth ga ga ,
All we hear is Church Growth ga ga ,
Church Growth blah blah,
Church Growth what's new?
Church Growth, Olson still loves you!

This is your time, you have the power,
You've yet to live your finest hour,
Church Growth.

All we hear is Church Growth ga ga,
Church Growth goo goo,
Church Growth ga ga ,
All we hear is Church Growth ga ga.
Church Growth blah blah,
Church Growth what's new?
Church Growth, Paul Kelm still loves you!
Loves you.

***

Brian P Westgate has left a new comment on your post "Church and Change Now Has a Theme Song":

I wish I knew that tune, because that's quite the parody!

GJ - Brian needs to listen to classical music! A music video of Radio Ga Ga is easy to find. The robot is from Metropolis, one of the greatest sci-fi movies of all times.

James Adams' Preus of Missouri



Pope John the Malefactor, center, in India


I was reading Preus of Missouri again. Every century I pick up a book about Lutheranism or the Reformation, to stay even with the synodical leaders. I know from experience that they are a studious lot.

I happen to own Pope John's copy of Preus of Missouri, probably through a book sale. I thought I left the night light on in the library, but the glow came from this iconic book, which should really be in the rare books collection of Bethany Lutheran College. In the high-security showcase: "SP John Moldstad actually owned this book. Scholars are divided about whether he read it."

Robert Preus left his priceless collection to Bethany rather than Concordia, Ft. Wayne.

I chuckled when I read Preus of Missouri's description of the Little Sect on the Prairie as "hyper-orthodox." The journalist's grasp of theology was definitely mainline, but he tried to be fair and largely succeeded.

Neuhaus played a significant role in the Seminex split, leaving the LCMS, joining ELCA, and now prominent in the Church of Rome. Leigh Jordahl was a student of Jack Preus at Bethany. Leigh married a Gullerud (CLC president) and became ELCA by steps. Jordahl was friends with Wilken, who joined Rome. (Jordahl had some minor involvement with my dissertation at Notre Dame, as an advisor.)

Bethany itself is central to Lutheran history of the last century. Al Barry and Oswald Hoffman studied there. Robert Preus earned the first seminary degree there, leaving Luther Seminary just before graduation. Jack Preus had a faculty position at Bethany, etc. Preus relatives at Bethany College included Ylvisaker and Norm Madson.

Once upon a time, the Little Sect on the the Prairie had courage. On November 22nd, 1938, the Norwegian Synod (now the ELS) sent a letter to LCMS President Behnken. Missouri was getting close to the American Lutheran Church without expecting a repudiation of errors, such as unionism, Lodge membership, etc. The Admonition was signed by two Preus relatives: S. C. Ylvisaker and Norm Madson. It was also signed by Christian Anderson and H. M. Tjernagel. The ELS followed with a longer message in April of 1939, signed by the same four leaders, sent to all LCMS pastors and professors.

The Norwegian Synod was impoverished and tiny in size. They did not have Marvin Schwan as a sugar-daddy yet. But they had faith in the efficacy of the Word. The Word proved efficacious, hardening Missouri's attitudes against orthodoxy. Behnken was definitely a see-no-evil president.

Can anyone imagine the ELS writing a similar admonition to WELS? I cannot. For one thing, the ELS is so eager to parrot WELS that they have nothing to say to correct WELS.

No synod has repudiated the Church Growth Movement and meant it. Instead they have spoiled the Egyptian compost heap while denying their involvement. The ELS likes to hold itself above WELS but is no different.

***

Anonymous has left a new comment on your post "James Adams' Preus of Missouri":

Oh yes, the holy Preus name. They can certainly do no wrong can they! Robert left to join the unionists in Missouri. Rolf gets kicked out of the ELS and sends his kids to Constantinople...I mean Fort Wayne. Smart theologians who evidently have no concept of fellowship. I guess if you can't stand the heat you might as well jump into the fire.

***

GJ - If Anonymous reads the Adams book, he will see that Jack and Robert grew up among three synods: Big Norwegians (eventually ELCA), Little Norwegians (ELS), and LCMS. I think Jack was a Missouri member for 20 years while he was growing up. Governor Jake Preus was an all-synod man. Founding Lutheran Brotherhood and other causes made Jake sceptical or maybe indifferent about church organizations.

Jack and Robert Preus did more to change Missouri in the twentieth center for the better than anyone else. Their publishing efforts alone were worthy of note. Too bad Lutherans do not read good material anymore. Robert's last work was an excellent repudiation of moving toward Rome. UOJ is also repudiated in the clearest possible language.

I do not consider the Preus name holy. I am saddened that the men who started to change Missouri went after each other and handed victory to the apostates. Bohlmann was of course a Bohlmann loyalist, so he may not count. The same is true for Waldo Werning. According to legend, Jack was just as much an antagonist toward Robert as Bohlmann was. The Otten brothers have kept the same Bronze Age Missouri position.

Everyone in a synod is a unionist today. Scaer is fond of saying, "Why join the community ministers group? Just go to LCMS circuit meetings. Each one is a rainbow coalition."

WELS is united behind Leonard Sweet, Reggie McNeal, and Fuller Seminary. They have their own Holy Office of the Inquisition set up: Church and Change. There are pastors who dissent, but they are being disciplined. The buddies of these errorists? - the CG gurus of WELS.

The Little Sect on the Prairie is silent about false doctrine. In 1939 the quoted Walther as saying, "Indifference is unionism." That was then, this is now. The ELS certainly echoes and imitates the worst errors of WELS.

The Church of the Lutheran Confession (sic) protects the two worst false teachers from the consequences of their errors.

ELDONA disagrees about justification by faith, unles Stefanski(associated with but not a member of ELDONA) has read the Book of Concord or the Gospel of John and changed his mind. Stefanski is a UOJ fanatic.

Etc.

Causes for apostasy are:

1. Lack of study.
2. Blood is thicker than doctrine.
3. Loyalty to classmates (who are often relatives).
4. Loyalty to the seminary, whose professors are often relatives.
5. Veneration of Holy Mother Synod, Immaculate and Infallible.