Thursday, January 22, 2009

Coming Soon - Review, Deutschlander's Theology of the Cross



This book is better than any Lutheran could expect or hope.


I just received a review copy of Deutschlander's Theology of the Cross. This is a theology book for all synods and for all denominations. I think it will become a classic, like Krauth's Conservative Reformation.

I will write a review as soon as I finish the book.

Northwestern Publishing House is to be commended for offering a masterpiece like this in time for Lent.

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The Theology of the Cross
Reflections on His Cross and Ours
Series: Impact Series
Daniel M. Deutschlander

A book on Christian doctrine that reminds readers that all biblical doctrine relates to Scripture's central teaching that God sent his Son to save lost sinners. The Old and New Testaments make it clear that our salvation is found in the cross of Christ. However, there is a seeming paradox between the theology of the cross and the theology of glory. Sinful people tend to overlook the cross and its demands and, instead, focus on the glory that they think they should now enjoy because they call themselves Christians. This is a matter of urgent concern. Deutschlander helps us to see Christ's cross as our cross. He reminds us that our good works have no value for our salvation. Yet good works are valuable as fruits of faith done out of gratitude to God for his gift of salvation. It deepens our understanding and appreciation for God's gift of life in Christ. It warns us of Satan's efforts to turn us from Christ to ourselves. It comforts us with the assurance that the cross of Christ leads to heavenly glory. Softcover, Size is 5 3/8" x 8.5" inches, 292 Pages. Published 2008.

Review by Wisconsin Lutheran Seminary Professor James Korthals.

Catalog Item Number: OL-150746. Order at: (800) 662-6022.

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Anonymous has left a new comment on your post "Coming Soon - Review, Deutschlander's Theology of ...":

I'm looking forward to reading this. I would encourage everyone to listen to Prof. Deutschlander's lecture on the Western Rite: Its Development and Rich History and its Relevance for Our Worship Life Today. It's in two parts on the Wisconsin Lutheran Seminary web site.

http://www.wlsessays.net/node/2047


http://www.wlsessays.net/node/2048

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GJ - I suggest ordering early - as many as needed, because the initial printing will sell out as soon as people catch on. I hope CPH has the sense to offer it through their catalogue, perhaps to atone for other offerings of the past.

This book would be great for adult Bible studies, for Lenten series, for pastoral study clubs, for confirmation gifts, and for any occasion gifts.

PSST - For those of you who like to plagiarize sermons: Here is a great place to start. There is even a Lenten series appendix in the back. Go ahead. You know how to do it. Just give credit where it is due this time. Thanks Paul, Ski, John, and Matt.

SP Mark Schroeder - Success Perspective




How do you define success?

President Mark Schroeder

By most standards, his ministry was not much of a success.

Becoming a pastor or a missionary was never in his plans. In fact, it was the farthest thing from his mind. Preparing himself for a high-powered secular career, he attended a prestigious university. But sometime later, in spite of his reluctance, his mind was changed. God called him into the ministry.

From almost the beginning he was embroiled in public controversies and disagreements with his co-workers and fellow believers. He never stayed long in any one congregation. No matter where he went, there were those who had no use for him and who did all they could to make his life and work miserable. Often he would leave for his next congregation quickly, painfully aware that not everyone appreciated his efforts.

He never viewed himself as a particularly gifted preacher; he often stated that he was not up to the task either in terms of his speaking skills or his ability to craft well-reasoned and logical arguments. He looked at his own personal failures and remarked to himself and others that he was not worthy to be doing this work. He struggled continually with some kind of ailment, either mental or physical or spiritual, that made his life and work difficult (although he didn’t mention what it was). In one congregation he served, some of the members reinforced his views of himself, making it clear that they much preferred the pastor who followed him.

Throughout his ministry disagreements with co-workers would continue. They would argue and disagree about the strategy and direction that the ministry should take. Sometimes the disagreements were harsh and personal. Some of his closest friends and co-workers actually abandoned him when he needed them most.

One congregation seemed to fall apart shortly after he left, with members becoming tolerant of open immoral behavior, quarreling with each other, and easily adopting teachings and doctrines that were not true.

In the end, he died alone, and the world did not much notice.

His was not a very successful ministry -- unless you measure “success” in ministry by other standards. The pastor and missionary whose career had little going for it on the surface was, in fact , the greatest missionary that this world has seen. This pastor, judged to be a failure by any human standards, was the Apostle Paul.

Paul would agree that his personal abilities and accomplishments were few and far between. But he did not – nor should we -- measure the success of his ministry in those terms. This was the man who recognized that the words he preached were not his words; they were the words of God himself. He recognized that the power of his message was not in himself, but in the gospel of Jesus Christ. He had no desire for his ministry to be measured in terms of human glory or accomplishment ; his was a ministry of the cross, proclaiming that God’s way of saving people through the cross, while foolish to the world, was nothing less than the wisdom and power and love of God. Paul’s purpose was not to meet the “felt needs” of people, but to lead them to see their real need: the need for forgiveness and redemption from a Savior who bled and died on the cross. His mission was not to make the church grow in terms of numbers; his mission was to pummel hardened sinners with God’s law in all its condemning force, and to follow with the precious news of forgiveness bought and paid for with the blood of the Son of God. He knew that his role was to plant the seed with the Word of God and that others would water the seed the same Word. But his confidence rested in knowing that it was God and God alone who would make it grow.

What kind of pastor do you want to serve as the shepherd of your congregation? A powerful and dynamic speaker who draws people by the sheer force of his personality? Someone with fantastic organizational skills? Someone who is up on all the latest techniques for connecting with people? Someone who seems to be “successful?” Or would you prefer someone like the Apostle Paul: always preaching Christ, always pointing to the cross, always demonstrating a love for souls by faithful proclamation of law and gospel?

Success, I suppose, all depends on how you define it.

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Anonymous has left a new comment on your post "SP Mark Schroeder - Success Perspective":

Interesting that Joe Krohn is silent when it comes to Pres. Schroeder's perspective.

I wonder if he is worried his church will be bounced from the syond. Then again the COP called for the ad hoc committee and the DPs are the ones who have allowed free reign for the Rock and Roll churches.

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Bailing Water comments:

Anonymous said...
I like President Schroeder and hope he can, with God's help and the support of the members, root out the liberals who've infested our synod.

January 22, 2009 6:38 PM
Anonymous said...
Wow - what a relief this article is, and thanks for posting it. I haven't read the Feb. issue of FIC.

I'm sure Prez. S. will rattle a few cages with this article.

I am wondering who will be placed on the ad hoc. I'm sure there will be a lot of political manuevering by the C&Cers.

January 22, 2009 8:10 PM

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GJ - Don't worry, when Gunga Don Patterson gets done with his latest zebra-hunting trip, he will advise Doctrinal Pussycat Glaeske on the things he can say - to appear critical of Church and Change. Yes indeed, one WELS leader told me about Glaeske actually saying something critical once. A second pronouncement is somewhere on the Net: I copied it to Ichabod.

The DPs have done nothing so far, but they are starting to feel the utter disgust of the congregations and one segment of the ministerium. There are some pastors in WELS who have studied the Confessions and the Scriptures. The best way to find them is to search the backwaters of WELS. The best calls were handed to Church Growth zombies for decades. How well has that worked?

Here is one little example of Church Growth at work. Curt Peterson came to WELS from Missouri, loving the Church Growth Movement. WELS treats colloquy pastors as lepers, even lower than Bethany program pastors. Yet Curt was immediately on the world missions board with Valleskey and in a large congregation in Milwaukee. Coincidence? Nevertheless, God's justice eventually reveals itself. Curt, after complaining bitterly about criticism of the Church Growth Movement, became an atheist and joined Freedom From Religion - as a former conservative Lutheran pastor.

Valleskey has quite the touch. I was told his hand-picked successor at Apostles had to leave the ministry, due to depression.

I said, "Oh? What was her name?"

My informant said, "Who told you?"

Chemnitz: "The devil breaks wind before leaving the room"




Anonymous has left a new comment on your post ""Doom Has Come Upon Us All! Behold, Lutherans Emph...":

Ooh...I'm really scared now. (insert cutesy pic here) I have yet to see an arguement (sic) on here that proves (scripturally) that C&C is in error. It is all random rhetoric, hyperbole, speculation and lies. (insert another cutesy pic here with cutesy mis-spelled caption)

What a joke.

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GJ - Chemnitz quoted an old proverb about an mephitic decree from the Council of Trent, "They say the devil always breaks wind before leaving the room."

The Change and Chicanery leaders wanted to strut around, leading people to and fro. They put their names out on the Internet, bragging on their websites, and filled the ether with their odious secret emails. But they howled when people began reading the truth about them.

With not a drop of martyr's blood in their own veins, Church and Chicanery leaders have been bleeding foundations dry to support false doctrine from Fuller and Willow Creek. St. Mark, Depere, the Mother Church of C and C, is a member of the Willow Creek Association. They are rolling in loot because they have the answers, so why do they need money? They should be giving, not taking.

St. Marcus hides the name Lutheran for its television show, which God has blessed with everything but money and sound doctrine. "I have been young and now am old, but I have never seen the righteous go hungry or his children begging for bread." That verse works the other way too. St. Marcus and St. Mark (the odd couple of C and C) beg for a reason.

If these congregations are so successful, as they crow, why are they so dependent on foundation grants and charity from the synod? VP Patterson should be ashamed to have his well established congregation begging the synod to pay for his vicars.

Everywhere I look, I see Church and Chicanery leaders with their hands out, looking for a hand-out. They are not givers but takers. They absorb vast amounts of Love Shack salary and benefits while driving the synod down financially and numerically - but in the name of growth! Even at Citibank, with $2 trillion in assets, that kind of growth gets a doofus fired.

If these C and C leaders (Doebler, Kelm, Parlow) know so much, as they claim, why do they need to crib their sermon material from false teachers? Like most plagiarists, their laziness (spiritual sloth) is exceeded only by their dunderhead assumptions.

We can find the originals of the sermons they copied from the Internet. We can find the same artwork. Worst of all, we can find the same doctrine.

I predict that some (not all) the congregations will leave WELS for the LCMS. They will make a big stink before they leave, as Chemnitz suggested.

Kieschnick eats up this stuff, loving women's ordination more than Church and Change.

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Anonymous has left a new comment on your post "Chemnitz: "The devil breaks wind before leaving th...":

Hmmm....not much strutting going with you Mr. Ichabod, is there? What a putz....It's interesting, all of your arguments could actually be turned around on you and all the Ichabodians. Now that is food for thought. How many folks are in your parish again, Greg? Ooh. That's gonna leave a mark.

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GJ - We broadcast to the world for free and make the files available to everyone. The exact number is no one's concern, certainly not mine. We have regular participants from one coast to another, and that astonishes me.

Some recent anonymous (what else?) claims have been:

1. No one reads Ichabod, except A. Nony Mouse on a daily basis. So do I generate the world map through secret software known only to me?
2. I invent positive comments and publish them myself. Sure, I also make up the names of Lutheran laymen who post. And I create the followers list on my own too.
3. Plus - "I don't believe this," and "You haven't proven that." The answer is - find another site, such as Oprah's or ELCA's, and find satisfaction there.

Thanks again, Mouse, for confirming that Ichabod is a thorn in your side.

"Doom Has Come Upon Us All!
Behold, Lutherans Emphasizing the Biblical Means of Grace!"



How many Rock and Roll WELS churches would there be
without grant money?


Anonymous has left a new comment on your post "We Built This Synod on Rock and Roll":

Very funny parody. Word has it that the Rock and Roll church did get a partial grant.

Also, the C&Cers (Kelm, Parlow, Hunter, Gunn, Patterson, Becker, & others) are in alarmist mode about the latest from Pres. Schroeder.

Looks like the fireworks will be going off soon.

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GJ - Faithful Lutherans - post your comments about this news, so people can tell where the real support is. More importantly, study what Freddy Finkelstein wrote earlier and follow his advice.

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Anonymous has left a new comment on your post "SP Mark Schroeder - Success Perspective":

I have it from a reliable source that the COP's latest conference was actually in Texas and not far from the Rock and Roll church in Round Rock. Matt Doebler was in attendance even. I also have it from a reliable source that Christ the Rock will be having a worship service this Sunday. Seems CTR is actually preaching the Word of God in it's (sic) truth and purity.

These are interesting, anonymous, misspelled claims. Doubtless Gunga Don Patterson ran interference for Doebler. They may have a common affection for Mars Hill Church preaching. However, being at a COP meeting does not suggest orthodoxy. Instead, it suggests questions being asked.

Today I had major problems getting to the Rock and Roll Church website. The website crashes. Anyone else?

We Built This Synod on Rock and Roll



The original.


Joseph F. Schmidt's excellent parody:

Chorus:
We built this synod, we built this synod on Rock and Roll
Built this synod, we built this synod on Rock and Roll

Say you don’t know me or recognize my face,
Say you don’t care who goes to that kind of place.
Knee deep in the hoopla sinking in your fight,
Too many Fuller grads eating up the night.

Joey plays the mamba, listen to the radio, don’t you remember
We built this synod, we built this synod on Rock and Roll.

Chorus:
We built this synod, we built this synod on Rock and Roll,
Built this synod, we built this synod on Rock and Roll.

Someone always playing corporation games,
Who cares they’re always changing corporation names.
We just want to dance here someone stole the stage,
They call us irresponsible write us off the page.

Joey plays the mamba, listen to the radio, don’t you remember,
We built this synod, we built this synod on Rock and Roll.

We built this synod, we built this synod on Rock and Roll,
Built this synod, we built this synod on Rock and Roll.

Its just another Sunday, in a tired old street.
Doctrine’s got the choke hold, oh then we just lost the beat.

Who counts the money underneath the bar?
Who rides the wrecking ball in two rock guitars?
Don’t tell us you need us, cuz we're the ship of fools
Looking for America, embedded in your schools.

Don’t you remember (member)(member)

Joey plays the mamba, listen to the radio, don’t you remember,
We built this synod, we built this synod on Rock and Roll.

We built this synod, we built this synod on Rock and Roll,
Built this synod, we built this synod on Rock and Roll,
Built this synod, we built this synod on Rock and Roll,
Built this synod, we built this synod on Rock and Roll.

(we built, we built this synod) built this synod (we built, we built this synod).




VP Patterson's Rock and Roll Church in Round Rock has a group called Little Rockers. Do they teach toddlers how to snort coke and trash hotel suites?

The new sermon series is shamelessly borrowed from Mars Hill.

Joe Krohn likes to post all the time and even has his own blog to defend and promote Rock and Roll Churches?

Did they get the grant, Joe? $200,000 from Antioch?



Mark Driscoll of Mars Hill, preaching.