Tuesday, March 22, 2011

ELCA Presiding Bishop Promises:
"It Gets Better"

"Please, Brett. No jokes about the title."


ELCA NEWS SERVICE
March 21, 2011
'It Gets Better' Book Features ELCA Presiding Bishop
11-035-JB
[Click for larger image] ELCA Presiding Bishop Mark S. Hanson recorded a video for the 'It Gets Better' project in October 2010.     CHICAGO (ELCA) -- An essay written by the presiding bishop of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA) is featured in a new book, It Gets Better: Coming Out, Overcoming Bullying, and Creating a Life Worth Living. The Rev. Mark S. Hanson's essay is a transcript of his "It Gets Better" video, which was posted on the project's YouTube channel in October 2010.
     Hanson's essay was selected for inclusion by Dan Savage and Terry Miller, the founders of the project and the editors of the book. The two men launched the "It Gets Better" project when they created a YouTube video that reached out to lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender youth facing harassment and bullying.
     What followed was a worldwide phenomenon. According to the book's notes, more than 6,000 "It Gets Better" videos with messages of hope and encouragement have been posted to date, with more than 20 million views the first three months.
     In his essay, Hanson offers reassurance to young people who are gay, lesbian, bisexual or transgender, saying, "You are a beloved child of God."
     "Your life carries the dignity and beauty of God's creation," Hanson said. "God has called you by name and claimed you forever. There is a place for you in this world and in this church." 
     Hanson, the father of six children and four grandchildren, writes that words have the power to both harm and heal people. "Sometimes the words of my Christian brothers and sisters have hurt you, and I also know that our silence causes you pain," he wrote.
     Hanson adds that as a Christian, he trusts God is working in the world for justice and peace "through you and through me. It gets better," he said.
     Among the many writers whose essays are featured in the book are President Barack Obama; the Rev. V. Gene Robinson, bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of New Hampshire; Ellen Degeneres, entertainer; U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton; U.S. Sen. Al Franken of Minnesota; U.S. Rep. Nancy Pelosi of San Francisco; and Suze Orman, author and financial adviser.

"Brett, stop enabling Jackson!"

Are the Young Too Stressed?



grumpy has left a new comment on your post "Another Stab At Michigan Lutheran Seminary":

I have noticed that the younger generation of pastors often complain about being overworked and overstressed, unable to balance work and family, etc., etc., etc.....

It is interesting that an "oldster" like Prof. Zeiger would need to take over from a "youngun" like Pastor Frey....

The future does not look rosy if this trend is widespread. Unfortunately, I have seen this myself among some of the youngsters out there....

Grumpy "Hey kid, stay off my lawn" Lutheran...

Essay Backs Bruce Church's Arguments about Seminary Education




Is It Time To Write the Eulogy?


A large number of the mainline seminaries are selling their buildings and property, cutting faculty, and eliminating degree programs. Those that are not, are competing for a shrinking pool of prospective students and rely on scholarships and lower academic standards to attract the students that they do have...


Denominations have left seminarians to pay for their educations, saddling them with debt that they cannot comfortably repay because beginning salaries for clergy are often below the poverty level. And, at the same time, they have offered alternative routes to ordination bypassing seminary entirely, leaving those who do go to wonder why they worked so hard to accomplish the same goal. What we will never know is how many prospective clergy are lost because they conclude that if the ministry is something you can do without preparation it isn't really worthy of their attention....

In some cases a seminarian can wait five to seven years before learning if she will be ordained, and in the meantime he is forced to run a gauntlet of committees and requirements that is more akin to hazing for membership in a fraternity, than it is serious preparation for ministry.

Synod President Biographies Are Full of Holes


WELS SP Mark Schroeder


Three Synod Trifecta

May 5-6, 2011
Lecturer: The Reverend President Mark G. Schroeder, Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod. President Mark Schroeder graduated from Wisconsin Lutheran Seminary in 1981. He served in the parish as the Pastor of Faith Evangelical Lutheran Church in Fond du Lac, Wisconsin. He then served as president both of Northwestern Preparatory School in Watertown, Wisconsin and of the newly formed Luther Preparatory School on the Watertown campus and guided the amalgamation of two synodical preparatory schools into the new Luther Preparatory School. In July, 2007, he was elected president of the Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod. President Schroeder married his high school sweetheart Andrea (Kuester) in 1977 and they have been blessed with four children.

***

GJ 

- He was assigned to Fond du Lac in 1981.
- He accepted a call to Maitland, FL in 1987. Oops. Left out of the bio.
- He accepted Call to Northwestern Prep in 1990.
- He accepted Presidency of new “Luther Prep School” in 1996.
- He was elected Synod President in 2007.

I have noticed this before. No one would ever know that Joel Gerlach left WELS. That was erased from his bio. When I mentioned that, based on local narratives, someone wrote, "I found that in the conference notes." He came back, of course, to make the synod safe for Church Growth. That is ironic, since Gerlach apparently left over a doctrinal issue.

During the Al Barry supremacy, the denizens of LQ made a big deal over my synod membeships. Someone born and bred LCMS was de facto superior (as long as everyone forgot about Cascione, who was rejected by the ELS and founded the Cascione Synod). I brought up Al Barry's extensive synodical history, which included the church basement seminary plus Bethany (ELS) plus a WELS vicarage and finally Missouri. That could not be found in the Concordia Historical Institute bio. Perhaps McCain photoshopped the bio during his brief tenure at the CHI.

Jack and Robert Preus belongws to three synods.

Why the Gap with Schroeder?
One person offered this opinion - a short call would not be listed by WELS pastors, according to custom.

The funny thing is, I remember the call to Florida. At the time, my WELS friends told me that anyone who got too critical of Church Growth was given a call out of Florida. Florida was Radloff's baby. He graduated with Valleskey, so the two of them would be good sources about how CG started in WELS.

I was starting to publish in Christian News about Church Growth. I got a letter from Pastor Mark Schroeder in Florida. He asked me for resources about Church Growth because he was assigned a paper about it for his conference. I sent a packet to Florida. In a few weeks I saw that he was called to be the president of the Watertown prep.

He has been Synod President for almost four years now. He has not acknowledged in public that Church Growth doctrine exists in WELS. Sweeping changes include:
  1. The CG VP Wayne Mueller was replaced with Fuller grad VP Jim Huebner.
  2. Church and Change has done everything it wanted, and still has a website active, with so many nodes growing that the original cancer site no longer matters.
  3. Church and Change founder Steve Witte (DMin, Gordon Conwell) was promoted to the Asian board first, then promoted to seminary president there.
  4. Church and Change founder John Parlow has gone with various groups to such events as the Babtist Drive conferences hosted by Andy Stanley.
  5. Church and Change leader Don Patterson (a district vp, woo-hoo) has led a group of suckers to Exponential, a pan-demon conference in Orlando each year.
  6. Shrinker leaders like Aderman, Patterson, and Bivens write for FICL, dominate FICL.
  7. Major domo Mark Jeske does whatever he wants, in whatever synod he wants.

Call me over-speculative, but I believe the Florida exile represents the unmentionable in WELS, Missouri, and the ELS today - Enthusiasm, Church Growth and worse, denying the Efficacy of the Word, UOJ.

One man put this in his office: "The unspoken is often the most significant thing."

That must be true, because there have many efforts to silence me. All I do is post or publish what is easily obtained from the libraries and the Net. I mention the unmentionable.

Their Shrinkers can give R-rate sermons, so bad that children are warned to stay away. But the truth is treated as pornography.

My Definition of Irony - Intrepids Lindee and Webber Praising Krauth!

Tuesday, March 22, 2011


C.P. Krauth explains how orthodox Lutheran Synods descend into heterodoxy

Charles Porterfield KrauthThe name Charles Porterfield Krauth (d. 1883) may be unfamiliar to most WELS Lutherans. Perhaps this is because he was not WELS. Regardless of the reason, this unfamiliarity is most unfortunate, for Krauth was, in fact, a leading figure of the confessional Lutheran movement in 19th Century America, and his contributions to confessionalism remain vitally important. He was a Lutheran of the early Eastern synods and a student of Samuel Schmucker (d. 1873) – who taught that the Augsburg Confession was rife with error, envisioned a future for American Lutheranism which espoused union with Reformed and Methodist Christians, advocated a theological formula for doing so, and even founded an organization to advance these ideas. Krauth grew to oppose Schmucker, his former teacher, eventually retiring from parish ministry to combat unionism full-time and to work toward establishing confessional unity among Lutherans in America under the Unaltered Augsburg Confession. To this end, and under Krauth's leadership, the General Council was formed in 1867, serving as a significant and positive force for the advancement of Lutheran confessionalism. That work still being "relevant", portions of the General Council's output has even appeared on Intrepid Lutherans in the past – the Explanation of the Common Service being published on this blog last July (which is now available in book form from Emmanuel Press, should the reader desire a personal copy). Regarding Krauth and his significance, Rev. David Jay Webber (Little Sect on the Prairie), in his fine essay Charles Porterfield Krauth: The American Chemnitz, quotes a figure who should be familiar to WELS Lutherans – C.F.W. Walther:

***

GJ - There is just one little problem with Lindee and Webber gushing about Krauth. Both of them teach against justification by faith, unlike Krauth.

The General Council theologians recognized and emphasized the efficacy of the Word in the Means of Grace. I believe Knapp's peculiar notion of double-justification was unknown in the General Council, although it was a fetish of Walther and Pieper.

Krauth taught in harmony with Luther because he was trained in an anti-confessional atmosphere, knowing far more about the union spirit than anyone.

In contrast, Walther became a Christian through Pietism, came from Pietistic circles, and arrived in America with a Pietist bishop-for-life, Stephan. Walther's struggle was over leadership rather than doctrine, and he quickly became the new bishop-for-life. He also picked his successor, F. Pieper.

Spener and Halle were both such halle-wed names in the 19th century that no one could question anyone or any idea from there. Nor did people like to admit that Pietism turned to pure rationalism so quickly.

Walther and Pieper were good examples of the 19th century American ideal, a union of the Reformed and Lutheran ideals. All Lutheran-Reformed unions ended up Reformed, with the ones more influenced by Lutheran doctrine lasting longer. Krauth wrote about that as an example from church history.

The Walther sect grew so rationalistic that it took a major revolution to install a synod president with intellectual ties to Lutheran Orthodoxy (Jack Preus).

If that were not bad enough, WELS and Missouri sent all their leaders through Fuller Seminary and rewarded anyone with a Fuller degree. This happened because everyone was fussing over the canon law of Pietism rather than teaching the Means of Grace. May I pray with my maiden aunt on her deathbed if she is ALC but really orthodox? "Yes!" "No!" "Well, it depends. Are you sure she will die?"

Lindee is correct in pointing out the three stages of error, which first came from Augustine. He and Webber are good examples of UOJ Enthusism being the third stage of error in the Synodical Conference. UOJ is the only "doctrine" taught by the Synodical Conference now, and they all agree about it. They might as well merge so they can circle the drain together.

Church and Change's websty and programs are intact. But don't let me catch you talking about justification by faith.


---

"The Holy Spirit works through the Word and the Sacraments, which only,
in the proper sense, are means of grace. Both the Word and the Sacraments bring
a positive grace, which is offered to all who receive them outwardly, and which
is actually imparted to all who have faith to embrace it."
Charles P. Krauth, The Conservative Reformation and Its Theology, Philadelphia: The United Lutheran Publication House, 1871, p. 127.

Krauth's statement is incompatible with Lindee and Webber claiming that grace comes to people without and before the Word.

The Blessing of the Compost, Reprise


Iggy Antiochus wanted a photo of the Blessing of the Compost at the Lutheran School of Theology at Chicago (ELCA).

Another Stab At Michigan Lutheran Seminary

Voss called as next MLS president


On March 14, the Michigan Lutheran Seminary Governing Board called Rev. David Voss from Memorial, Williamston, Mich., to serve as president of Michigan Lutheran Seminary (MLS), one of two preparatory schools operated by the synod.

A 1983 graduate of Wisconsin Lutheran Seminary, Voss has also served at Faith, River Falls, Wis.
Rev. Paul Prange, administrator of WELS Board for Ministerial Education, notes that Voss has experience in educational administration at his current congregation, which would serve him well as president of MLS.

Rev. Jonathan Schroeder from Faith, Sharpsburg, Ga., returned the call as MLS president last week. The position has been vacant since Sept. 17, 2010, when Rev. Aaron Frey resigned the position. Dr. William Zeiger, vice president of MLS, is serving as president during the vacancy.


***
GJ - Did you wonder why Anonymous Blogger Tim Glende went Medieval about my truthful description of Aaron Frey resigning? I did too. They graduated the same year at The Sausage Factory, where the claim of infallibility is backed by "I drank a lot of beer with him!" That is how Rich Krause defended the Harmless Heretic Larry Olson. Krause neglected to mention that Olson picked up a quickie DMin from Fuller, which qualified the Very Rev. Dr. Olson to supervise Krause for a similar drive-by DMin. Notice that all the WELS Shrinker DMins call themselves "Dr." all the time. Hahahaha.

Glende still has an alleged statement from Aaron Frey on his blog. The trouble is - there is no proof that statement was ever made. It did not appear on Frey's FB page or blog when I saw it. Keep on making stuff up, Tim, as much as your conscience allows.

I am looking for the new WELS call report, to settle some factual matters with Anonymouse, above. For some reason it is not posted yet.


WELS Discipline - Never at Rest - Always Searching Out and Destroying...Lutheran Faith

Jesus is his rice!



Brett Meyer has left a new comment on your post "Two events designed for lay members | Wisconsin Ev...":

CrossTrain Ministries Coaching Network

This ministry is being partially funded by Grace in Action (GIA) and WELS Kingdom Workers.

Small Group Leadership
(Pastor Jeff Gunn)

The means of grace are the key to people growing in their faith. One way to deliver the means of grace to the people of our congregation is via a groups system. "Growth groups" are gatherings of 12-15 people in homes of the congregation for the purpose of sharing the word of God with one another, praying and worshipping with one another, enjoying fellowship, serving in the congregation and community, and reaching out with the gospel. In this portion of our coaching network we will discuss the groups system: why it is beneficial, how it operates, how to set a groups system up and get it rolling, what the challenges to running a groups system are, how to deal with problems with groups, and how to continue to expand groups to meet the various needs and character of the congregation.

BIO

Jeff Gunn is pastor of Crosswalk Lutheran Ministries in Phoenix, Arizona. A teenage convert to Christ, Jeff was brought into the WELS fellowship through a neighboring family, an experience that God used to develop a life-long passion for outreach with the gospel. He graduated from Wisconsin Lutheran Seminary in 1982 and subsequently served for 14 years in the Central Africa country of Zambia. Six of those years were spent living in the bush, pastoring multiple village congregations. In the next eight years, Jeff continued to serve congregations as a pastor, but also served as WELS field coordinator for the Zambia Mission, and as a professor at the Lutheran Bible Institute and Seminary in Lusaka. Jeff's 14 years serving in Zambia have given him a unique perspective on the management of the ministry of the gospel. Since returning to the U.S. in 1996, Jeff has served as religion instructor and assistant principal at Arizona Lutheran Academy for five years. In 2001, he became Director of Native American Missions for the WELS. Finally, in 2004, Jeff received the call to launch CrossWalk Church on the campus of Arizona Lutheran Academy. Starting with about 30 people in 2004, God has blessed this ministry so that today there are two services and 500 people worshipping each Sunday at CrossWalk. CrossWalk uses a contextualized approach to worship, weekly growth groups, and ministry teams as key components to its approach to gospel ministry in a church that describes itself as a "church for unchurched people."

http://www.nextdisciple.com/giaprojects/crosstraincoaching.html

Two events designed for lay members | Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod (WELS)

Two events designed for lay members | Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod (WELS)

Another Church and Change episode sponsored by WELS,
promoted by SP Mark Schroeder.



The theme of the 12th Biennial WELS Kingdom Workers Convention is "Equip to Serve." As Mr. Bill Meier, national executive director of WKW, explains, "We have all been called to serve our Lord, Jesus, no matter what our station in life." He adds, "We are inviting all WELS members to join us as we celebrate the opportunities the Lord gives us to serve and explore which opportunities best fit each of us." In addition to workshops to better equip attendees to personally do mission work, WELS home and world mission workers will give presentations on their mission experiences.
WKW is a parasynodical organization whose purpose is to engage Christians in outreach ministry and assist WELS missions in their task of making disciples of all nations. Last year, 3,000 WELS members were engaged in WKW ministries.

***

GJ - Kingdom Workers is another lobbying group, cloned from Church and Change, doing the work of Church and Change, promoted by the Synod President.

Rich Krause is another Shrinker with a drive-by DMin supervised by Larry Olson, of all people.

Etc. Etc.

Intrepid Lutherans: Dr. Martin Luther on the Christian's obligation to evaluate doctrine

Intrepid Lutherans: Dr. Martin Luther on the Christian's obligation to evaluate doctrine


MONDAY, MARCH 21, 2011


Dr. Martin Luther on the Christian's obligation to evaluate doctrine


Dear Readers,

Now that we have attempted to clarify what is and is not adiaphora – mostly what it’s not – we need to address the following questions:
  1. Who is to decide which teaching and practices are true and correct and which are not?
  2. Who has the right to judge doctrine?
  3. Is this something that only seminary professors and district praesidia may do?
Early in the Reformation Luther was faced with similar questions. In the following treatise he very clearly emphasizes that it is not church leaders especially, but rather everyone and all Christians equally – the sheep of Christ! – who have the power and right to judge doctrine.

This treatise was published in May of 1523, of which we publish the first half, below. The translation is from Luther’s Works, Vol.39, page 305 and following. Some sections have been highlighted for emphasis, and headings have been added for clarification.

Pastor Spencer

If Rob Bell is right, then God, Jesus and the Bible are wrong « Churchmouse Campanologist

If Rob Bell is right, then God, Jesus and the Bible are wrong « Churchmouse Campanologist


As my American readers will know, Rob Bell, Fuller Theological Seminary alumnus, has a new book out called Love Wins: A Book About Heaven, Hell, and the Fate of Every Person Who Ever Lived.
The book has created a firestorm because of Bell’s apparent universalism, which he has denied.  Bell ispastor of the Mars Hill Bible Church in Grandville, Michigan. (His church is not to be confused with Mark Driscoll’s Mars Hill Church in Seattle, Washington.)  He is prominent in the emergent church movement — which, incidentally, the Archbishop of Canterbury endorses — and has written books about his theology.  As such, Bell is directly or indirectly responsible for thousands of souls around the world and, in some sense, for their salvation or condemnation.

Monday, March 21, 2011

ELCA Exit Percentages

Does this outfit make me look ELCA?


ALPB Online

Of the 609 congregations I am aware of that have taken votes to leave the ELCA, whether successful or unsuccessful, this is the breakdown by Predecessor Church Body:

  • AELC, 3 congregations,  0.5% of the total leaving. [GJ - The AELC sponsored Seminex, which was also the official seminary of the gay Metropolitan Community Church. The AELC also dominated the ELCA merger decisions, which led to gay quotas and voting on whether to use Father, Son, and Holy Spirit in the constitution. The Trinity won that one by only three votes.]
  • ELCA, 17 congregations, 2.8% of the total leaving. [GJ - ELCA lost some of its own brood!]
  • LCA, 215 congregations, 35.3% of the total leaving. [GJ - The liberal tradition is fed up too.]
  • ALC, 374 congregations, 61.4% of the total leaving ELCA. [GJ - The ALC started Lutherans Concerned for Lesbians and Gays, so they cut their own throats.]
  • Grand Total, 609  congregations.

I would like to find the overall ratio of Predecessor Church Bodies within the ELCA to determine how these figures compare to the overall membership of the ELCA. I recall some speculation that the former ALC congregations might have been more open to joining the LCMC, while former LCA congregations might have bided their time until the NALC got started. Time will tell if those ratios change.

Church and Changers, Their Allies in Various Sects,
And Their DP Enablers


One of the wickedest offenses possible to commit against the Church is the stirring up of doctrinal discord and division, a thing the devil encourages to the utmost. This sin usually arises in certain haughty, conceited, self-seeking leaders who desire peculiar distinction for themselves and strive for personal honor and glory. They will give honor to no one, even when they recognize the superiority of his gifts over their own. In their envy and vengefulness they seek occasion to create factions and to draw people to themselves. Many are deceived and immediately respond to the new doctrine presented in specious words by presumptuous leaders thirsting for fame. Many weak but well-meaning ones fall to doubting; many become reckless pleasure lovers, disregarding all religion and ignoring the Word of God. Even they who are called Christians come to have hard feelings against one another, their love grows cold and faith is extinguished. Christians, then, should be careful to give no occasion for division and discord. They must strive against them, submitting to all suffering and performing all demands to prevent, so far as possible, any disturbance of the unity of doctrine, of faith and of Spirit.

Devotional Readings from Luther’s Works for Every Day of the Year, Augustana Book Concern, Rock Island, IL, 1915, p.376 – October 25th Reading on Ephesians 4:3 Endeavoring to keep unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace. John Sander. Contributed by Grey Goose.

Exeunt Omnes - Stage Right

We have added popcorn and soda to the worship experience,
based on the results from our marketing survey.



ALPB

I promised to report on my progress in getting information about possible new start-ups in the ELCA and about congregations whose votes to leave did not net a 2/3rds majority either the first or second time. I was given a name to contact at the ELCA, and sent her an e-mail on the 10th of March. I have not received any response. I haven't even gotten a statement that the information isn't available, just silence.

But, from other sources I learned:

Waters of Grace, Frazee, MN is a New ELCA Start

  1. Evangelical Lutheran Church, Gallupville, NY, Left ELCA and joined the NALC
  2. Hegland Lutheran Church, Hawley, MN, Left the ECLCA (sic), and joined the LCMC
  3. St Mark Lutheran Church, Middleburgh, NY, Left the ELCA and joined the NALC
  4. North Immanuel Lutheran Church, Pelican Rapids, MN, Left the ELCA and joined the LCMC

Sunday, March 20, 2011

Reminiscere - The Second Sunday in Lent

The Last Supper, sepia, by Norma Boeckler.




Reminiscere Sunday, The Second Sunday in Lent, 2011


Pastor Gregory L. Jackson

http://www.ustream.tv/channel/bethany-lutheran-worship

Bethany Lutheran Church, 10 AM Central Time


The Hymn #652 I Lay My Sins on Jesus 1:24
The Confession of Sins
The Absolution
The Introit p. 16
The Gloria Patri
The Kyrie p. 17
The Gloria in Excelsis
The Salutation and Collect p. 19
The Epistle and Gradual
The Gospel
Glory be to Thee, O Lord!
Praise be to Thee, O Christ!
The Nicene Creed p. 22
The Sermon Hymn # 454 Prayer Is the Soul's Sincere Desire 1:41


Dividing Line

The Hymn # 281 The Savior Calls 1:29
The Preface p. 24
The Sanctus p. 26
The Lord's Prayer p. 27
The Words of Institution
The Agnus Dei p. 28
The Nunc Dimittis p. 29
The Benediction p. 31
The Hymn # 374 Grace Tis a Charming Sound 1:91

KJV 1 Thessalonians 4:1 Furthermore then we beseech you, brethren, and exhort you by the Lord Jesus, that as ye have received of us how ye ought to walk and to please God, so ye would abound more and more. 2 For ye know what commandments we gave you by the Lord Jesus. 3 For this is the will of God, even your sanctification, that ye should abstain from fornication: 4 That every one of you should know how to possess his vessel in sanctification and honour; 5 Not in the lust of concupiscence, even as the Gentiles which know not God: 6 That no man go beyond and defraud his brother in any matter: because that the Lord is the avenger of all such, as we also have forewarned you and testified. 7 For God hath not called us unto uncleanness, but unto holiness.

KJV Matthew 15:21 Then Jesus went thence, and departed into the coasts of Tyre and Sidon. 22 And, behold, a woman of Canaan came out of the same coasts, and cried unto him, saying, Have mercy on me, O Lord, thou Son of David; my daughter is grievously vexed with a devil. 23 But he answered her not a word. And his disciples came and besought him, saying, Send her away; for she crieth after us. 24 But he answered and said, I am not sent but unto the lost sheep of the house of Israel. 25 Then came she and worshipped him, saying, Lord, help me. 26 But he answered and said, It is not meet to take the children's bread, and to cast it to dogs. 27 And she said, Truth, Lord: yet the dogs eat of the crumbs which fall from their masters' table. 28 Then Jesus answered and said unto her, O woman, great is thy faith: be it unto thee even as thou wilt. And her daughter was made whole from that very hour.

Second Sunday In Lent
Lord God, heavenly Father, grant us, we beseech Thee, by Thy Holy Spirit, that He may strengthen our hearts and confirm our faith and hope in Thy grace and mercy, so that, although we have reason to fear because of our conscience, our sin, and our unworthiness, we may nevertheless, with the woman of Canaan, hold fast to Thy grace, and in every trial and temptation find Thee a very present help and refuge, through Thy beloved Son, Jesus Christ our Lord, who liveth and reigneth with Thee and the Holy Ghost, one true God, world without end. Amen.

Dividing Line

[Note – many extras are included in this sermon and others, so people can do additional research and reading. These sermons really sermons plus resources – unless I run out of time. Then they are sketches. If Lenski offends Mequonites looking for something wrong – good. It may be the only time you ever opened Lenski.]

Lenski:
Matthew 15:22) And lo, a Canaanite woman, having come out from those borders, cried out, saying: Show me mercy, Lord, son of David! My daughter is badly demon-possessed. “Lo” pictures the case as being remarkable. Even here in this distant section Jesus and his miraculous power are known (4:24). Writing for readers of Jewish descent, Matthew uses “Canaanite,” recalling the Old Testament account that the Jews had not completely exterminated the Canaanites as God had commanded. This woman was a descendant of that old pagan race. Mark (7:26), writing for Gentile Christians, calls her a Greek in the sense of a Gentile, to mark her religion; and a Syrophoenician by race, using the more modern term for her nationality. Before Jesus could enter her country, she “came out from those borders” to find Jesus at the edge of Galilee. Mark 7:31 makes it certain that Jesus afterward went through Sidon, but this woman took no chances—he might turn back from the border and so get beyond her reach. Jesus wanted no man to know of his presence, but word got out, nevertheless. When Mark tells us that he was in a house, this means only that he was in retirement and doing no work among the people. It does not place the following scene in the house, for v. 23 transpires in the open.
Jesus and his disciples had probably just dined in the house, which would make the reference to “the children’s bread” in v. 26 the more suggestive. As he leaves the house to go on, the woman is there, having, perhaps, anxiously waited for him. With the aorist imperative she begs for an act of mercy, and ἔλεος always means pity for the suffering, for the sad and painful consequences resulting from sin and our sinful state; while χάρις always refers to the guilt of sin. She begs the act of mercy for herself, but her sad state is due to the terrible state of her little daughter who is demon-possessed. The mere verb is enough—there is no need to add the particular havoc the demon wrought. On the actuality of demoniacal possession see the notes on 4:24.
When the woman combines “Lord” with “son of David,” she understands “Lord” in the higher sense as being in fact the Messianic title. She plainly reveals that she has knowledge of the Messianic hopes of Israel and had heard that they were being connected with Jesus as the promised great descendant of King David. It is not necessary to regard her as a Jewish proselyte, and it is quite enough to believe that knowledge had come to her from the reports that had been carried into her heathen land. She surely had tried the remedies offered in her neighborhood for her daughter’s recovery, all of which had proved ineffective. Then she heard of Jesus and how he with a mere word had expelled demons from poor sufferers like her daughter. These reports found fertile soil in her heart. How she had longed to reach this mighty Helper! Now he had come to this far corner of Galilee, and here she finds him with her fervent prayer.
23) But he did not answer her a word. This apparently strange silence on the part of Jesus must not be separated from what follows. And his disciples, having come forward, kept requesting him, saying, Dismiss her, for she is yelling from behind us. The picture presents Jesus walking on in silence, the woman following him with her frantic cries. The imperfect ἠρώτων is descriptive, and the verb denotes respectful asking. One after another of the disciples comes up to Jesus and joins in this request. The verb “dismiss her” is neutral in force and leaves to the discretion of Jesus whether he will dismiss her by granting or by denying her request. Yet the disciples had never seen Jesus deny anyone pleading for help, although at times he had delayed a little while (John 4:47, etc.; Matt. 8:5, etc.), namely whenever some question had first to be settled. It is fair, therefore, to conclude that the disciples think of a dismissal by granting the woman’s prayer. They indicate, however, that they are not moved entirely by pity for her distress. Jesus did not want his presence to become known, but the outcries of this woman were bound to attract public attention. It was quite a scene for thirteen men to walk along with a woman shouting ὄπισθεν, not “behind them,” but with the greater precision of the Greek, “from behind them,” R. 645. The thing may also have appeared unseemly to the disciples.
24) The motives that prompt the action of Jesus are by far more profound. He, however, answering said, I was not commissioned save to the sheep that have been lost of Israel’s house. Since Jesus is about to cross the boundary of the Holy Land and to go into Gentile territory for a brief time, all those present must know that this in no way implies a transfer of his ministry from the Jews to the Gentiles or even an inclusion of the Gentiles into his Messianic ministry. The working of this miracle was not to be understood as ushering in the performance of a great number of additional miracles among the Gentiles of this territory. The divine plan, according to which Jesus “was commissioned,” was to work out redemption in the Jewish nation and not elsewhere; as soon as it had been worked out, it would be carried to all the world. Moreover, this would begin in less than a year, following the next Passover. With this divine plan Jesus was in fullest accord, and his great work was already hastening to its climax. These mighty facts must be thoroughly understood. That is why Jesus delays and explains them in advance in the most impressive way and does not postpone the explanation until after the woman has gone.
Lenski, R. C. H.: The Interpretation of St. Matthew's Gospel. Minneapolis, MN. : Augsburg Publishing House, 1961, S. 593

There are many approaches to this miracle of healing, but it remains one of the difficult ones. Everyone has questions about this healing and what Jesus said. Perhaps it is best to start at the ending, which explains the entire story.

Matthew 15 28 Then Jesus answered and said unto her, O woman, great is thy faith: be it unto thee even as thou wilt. And her daughter was made whole from that very hour.

Lenski:
The greatness of this woman’s faith, here openly praised by Jesus, lies not in its strength and its intensity which overcome obstacles set up by Jesus and grow greater as these obstacles were increased. The greatness lay in submissively accepting and in rightly understanding what Jesus said about his Messianic mission. Her great distress did not dull her ears or darken her mind to Jesus’ word. The view that she overcame the reluctance of Jesus to help her attributes to Jesus what was foreign to him and gives a wrong turn to the narrative.
Lenski, R. C. H.: The Interpretation of St. Matthew's Gospel. Minneapolis, MN. : Augsburg Publishing House, 1961, S. 600.

I see a theme which is carried out many times in John’s Gospel, where it is clearer. Jesus always speaks at His level, as the Son of God with divine authority. He speaks at this level while the answers from His disciples and the followers are always at another level, sometimes picking up on words and phrases but missing the point.

For the Woman at the Well, John 4, Jesus spoke of providing water so that the woman would never thirst again. This is clearly a metaphor, but the woman responded about the labor of hauling water from the well each day.

During the washing of the feet of His disciples, Jesus corrected Peter about washing the feet of the first pope (according to Rome). Once this is explained, Peter asks for his hands and his head to be washed, too.

KJV John 13:5 After that he poureth water into a bason, and began to wash the disciples' feet, and to wipe them with the towel wherewith he was girded. 6 Then cometh he to Simon Peter: and Peter saith unto him, Lord, dost thou wash my feet? 7 Jesus answered and said unto him, What I do thou knowest not now; but thou shalt know hereafter. 8 Peter saith unto him, Thou shalt never wash my feet. Jesus answered him, If I wash thee not, thou hast no part with me. 9 Simon Peter saith unto him, Lord, not my feet only, but also my hands and my head. 10 Jesus saith to him, He that is washed needeth not save to wash his feet, but is clean every whit: and ye are clean, but not all. 11 For he knew who should betray him; therefore said he, Ye are not all clean. 12 So after he had washed their feet, and had taken his garments, and was set down again, he said unto them, Know ye what I have done to you? 13 Ye call me Master and Lord: and ye say well; for so I am. 14 If I then, your Lord and Master, have washed your feet; ye also ought to wash one another's feet. 15 For I have given you an example, that ye should do as I have done to you.

I see the main explanation for this healing miracle to be in Jesus’ own words of commendation, praising the woman for her faith.

This is truly the dividing line in the entire Bible, the difference between believers and unbelievers. Everyone is flawed and sinful. We are all equals in that respect.

But relatively few believe the Word of God and trust only in the wisdom of God. This miracle teaches that complete trust and shows how faith motivates people in spite of all evidence to the contrary.

So, let’s look at this miracle as one which shows us how this woman’s complete trust in the mercy of Christ moves every action and word.

Matthew 15:22 And, behold, a woman of Canaan came out of the same coasts, and cried unto him, saying, Have mercy on me, O Lord, thou Son of David; my daughter is grievously vexed with a devil.

How do we know she has faith? She offers her confession in her request or prayer – O Lord, Son of David. In the Greek speaking lands, Lord is used for the ultimate leader. No doubt the New NIV or future ones will make it mean “Sir, or Mr.” Lord can be used for lower level leaders, but it is often used for God. Revelation clears up any doubt by using “Lord of Lords, King of Kings,” a beautiful expression about Christ as the Savior and Creating Word.

Here the woman, though not a Jew, acknowledges that Jesus is the promised Messiah (Son of David).

Her trust means that she believes Jesus would hear her and grant her prayer for her daughter – possessed and thrown about with a devil. Some like to come up with a modern medical diagnosis. Such things keep publishing houses busy. But we should take it for what it is – demonic possession, which is far more dangerous and frightening than a seizure disorder, which can be modified with painkillers or alcohol. This also means the mother is certain Jesus has power over the demons, which is true.

23 But he answered her not a word. And his disciples came and besought him, saying, Send her away; for she crieth after us.

Anyone can claim that he knows why Jesus did not answer a word. These are very bright people. Without ever meeting me, they know my motivations better than I do, and they are happy to explain them, as long as they remain anonymous.

Jesus did not respond. It does not say, “He refused to answer.” It does not say, “He pretended not to hear.” It does not say, “He was forcing her to say more.” We only know that He was silent at this point while the disciples pleaded for Him to dismiss her for all the asking and crying out.

The disciples provide a useful contrast, which shows us how much this woman was pleading to Jesus. They did not want to hear another word – she was persistent.

We should always ask ourselves why a particular story was provided for us through the inspiration of the Holy Spirit. The world is not big enough to hold all that Jesus said and did, as John wrote in his Gospel.

So why is this difficult miracle given when others would be more soothing? The phrase “said not a word” is significant.

Many believers pray earnestly for a particular need, especially when parents and grandparents pray for children. There seems to be no answer, which is a severe trial. I have met parents whose child went through surgeries and treatments for 20 years and more. I have known parents of children with incurable ailments, where many treatments are tried and offer only partial help.

Some fall into the temptation of unbelief. But this woman is an example of constant motivation by faith in Jesus. A child-like faith keeps asking. Most of us have had experiences of children asking again and again, always smiling and trusting and loving. As Luther said, “They only expect good things.” They are certain that a few dozen more requests will do the job.

24 But he answered and said, I am not sent but unto the lost sheep of the house of Israel.

Jesus responded to the disciples with this statement, above. This is a simple statement, so we should not look for motivation behind it. That is only guesswork. As I tell my Biblical students all the time, when turning them from the theories to the text itself, “The text is what we know for sure. Everything else is theory.” They are in awe of textbooks which claim this or that. I want them to be in awe of the Word of God rather than the opinions of man.

Jesus was sent to the Jews first, then to the Gentiles, as Paul said about his own work. This did not keep Paul from being an apostle to the Gentiles, nor did it impede his work with the Jews. The Word brought success in both groups, so much that Paul was hated and persecuted.

25 Then came she and worshipped him, saying, Lord, help me.

The worshiping should not be overlooked. This showed her complete trust in Him, even before she had any definitive answer. Her prayer was simple. She knew Jesus heard her words before. She said, “Lord, help me.”

26 But he answered and said, It is not meet to take the children's bread, and to cast it to [the little pet] dogs.

The term Jesus used here is not the same as “dogs.” This is the diminutive version of the word, suggesting indoor, pet dogs, allowed to have scraps. They are not the same as the outdoor, feral dogs, which would never be allowed in the house.

If we read it just as “dogs,” Jesus does seem insulting. But this is just a common observation, which anyone can observe today. We have a begging table, made of glass. Our three dogs gather under it and look upward as we eat, adopting the “starving puppy” look or the “loving, happy pet” look, both good as coaxing extra food. The do not sulk or get angry at being neglected and ignored. They have complete trust that they will get their portion and then some.

Therefore the woman’s response is in perfect keeping with the term used by Jesus. Notice that this explanation assumes they are speaking Greek to each other, not Aramaic. I doubt where the subtlety is there in Aramaic, and it would make no sense for Jesus or the woman to use a limited dialect as opposed to a world language. (Thanks to Yoel for this insight.)

27 And she said, Truth, Lord: yet the [little] dogs eat of the crumbs which fall from their masters' table.

She used the same term as Jesus, showing her faith in what He was teaching. His mission was to gather believers among His own people, and that was first in the limited time He had.

Yet so vast was His ministry of grace, that the scraps from that would please her and satisfy her.

28 Then Jesus answered and said unto her, O woman, great is thy faith: be it unto thee even as thou wilt. And her daughter was made whole from that very hour.

Jesus granted her prayer, and her daughter was healed at that moment, showing the power of His Word, since the daughter was not there on the journey.

Application
We can see how significant this is for all believers at this time. This is really a miracle story to help believers.

I know about many of the trials and difficulties facing our audience. Some are indicated in the prayers. Others are communicated privately.

More than that, it seems as if God is silent about the apostasy around us. If we watch religious TV, we can see an outright phony teaching blatant false doctrine in the name of (and with the financial support of) two “conservative” Lutheran synods. And he is the only media voice of those two synods combined. How can this continue?

This miracle shows us that the scraps are more than enough. God’s grace is so abundant in His Means of Grace that He will accomplish His will through His Word. If most choose to abandon and abuse it, they will get their reward from juggling with the Word, a dangerous project.

Those who utterly trust in Christ will never be separated from Him by all the trials and misfortunes of this life. God promises to make the Word more abundant through those crosses and to strengthen our faith in spite of them – because of them.

Our faith is not in us, because trials show us how weak we really are – impatient, angry, doubtful. Our faith is in God, and strengthened by His Word.

Quotations

"But see in this example how Christ like a hunter exercises and chases faith in His followers in order that it may become strong and firm."
Sermons of Martin Luther, ed., John Nicholas Lenker, Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1983 II, p. 149. Matthew 15:21﷓28.

"In like manner Moses must precede and teach people to feel their sins in order that grace may be sweet and welcome to them. Therefore all is in vain, however friendly and lovely Christ may be pictured, if man is not first humbled by a knowledge of himself and he possesses no longing for Christ, as Mary's Song says, 'The hungry he hath filled with good things; and the rich he hath sent
empty away,' Luke 1:53."
Sermons of Martin Luther, II, p. 149.

"All this is spoken and written for the comfort of the distressed, the poor, the needy, the sinful, the despised, so that they may know in all times of need to whom to flee and where to seek comfort and help."
Sermons of Martin Luther, II, p. 149.
"Now what does the poor woman do? She turns her eyes from all this unfriendly treatment of Christ; all this does not lead her astray, neither does she take it to heart, but she continues immediately and firmly to cling in her confidence to the good news she had heard and embraced concerning Him, and never gives up. We must also do the same and learn firmly to cling to the Word, even though God with all His creatures appears different than His Word teaches. But, oh, how painful it is to nature and reason, that this woman should strip herself of self and forsake all that she experienced, and cling along to God's bare Word, until she experienced the contrary. May God help us in time of need and of death to possess courage and faith!"
Sermons of Martin Luther, II, p. 150.
WHAT WE LEARN
"As for example when we feel in our conscience that God rebukes us as sinners and judges us unworthy of the kingdom of heaven, then we experience hell, and we think we are lost forever. Now whoever understands here the actions of this poor woman and catches God in His own judgment, and says, Lord, it is true, I am a sinner and not worthy of Thy grace; but still Thou hast promised sinners forgiveness, and Thou art come not to call the righteous, but, as St. Paul says in 1 Timothy 1:15, 'to save sinners.' Behold, then must God according to His own judgment have mercy upon us."
Sermons of Martin Luther, ed., John Nicholas Lenker, Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1983 II, p. 153. Matthew 15:21﷓28; 1 Timothy 1:15

Saturday, March 19, 2011

The New NIV Will Inspire WELS To Achieve Greater Depths in False Teaching

The chairman of the WELS translation advisory council could not be reached for a comment.



Genesis 4 (New International Version, ©2011)

Genesis 4

Cain and Abel
 1 Adam[a] made love to his wife Eve, and she became pregnant and gave birth to Cain.[b] She said, “With the help of the LORD I have brought forth[c] a man.” 2 Later she gave birth to his brother Abel.
Footnotes:
  1. Genesis 4:1 Or The man

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GJ - The apostates of the NIV business, and it is a rockin' business, have chosen to do a Living Bible style version with anti-Biblical notes. This note (a) is offering the concept that Adam was not a real person but just the Hebrew word for "a man."

2011 NIV Adam[a] made love to his wife Eve and she became pregnant...


KJV Genesis 4:1 And Adam knew Eve his wife; and she conceived, and bare Cain, and said, I have gotten a man from the LORD.

1984 NIV Genesis 4:1 Adam lay with his wife Eve, and she became pregnant and gave birth to Cain. She said, "With the help of the LORD I have brought forth a man."

NKJ Genesis 4:1 Now Adam knew Eve his wife, and she conceived and bore Cain, and said, "I have acquired a man from the LORD."

VUO Genesis 4:1 Adam vero cognovit Havam uxorem suam quae concepit et peperit Cain dicens possedi hominem per Dominum

LUO Genesis 4:1 Und Adam erkannte sein Weib Eva, und sie ward schwanger und gebar den Kain und sprach: Ich habe einen Mann gewonnen mit dem HERRN.

The nasties in WELS like to claim, without knowing me, that I do not know Greek. My publications suggest otherwise. WELS graduates do not know Greek or Hebrew or English.

All previous translations used "Adam knew Eve and she conceived," but the New NIV uses Jes/Ski approved language which short-circuits the metaphor and cheats the readers. I can only guess how many Jes/Ski victims will make future Bibles even worse.

All WELS experts are Fuller-trained, and it shows.

Gerhardt the Hymn-writer



Narrow-minded Lutheran has left a new comment on your post "Commit Whatever Grieves Thee":

Gerhardt hymns are beautiful, especially considering the rough life he had. He would not have been considered a success with today's "prosperity gospel." As I recall, he lost most of his children. He also fought the Prussian Union during a time of great unrest. This is also from memory, but I believe he wrote "Why Should Cross and Trial Grieve Me" after burying one of his children (TLH #523).

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Gerhardt

http://www.bach-cantatas.com/Lib/Gerhardt.htm

http://www.stempublishing.com/hymns/biographies/gerhardt.html

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GJ - Kierkegaard has a good essay on this, which is too long to recapitulate here. Narrow thinks it is odd that a man with so many difficulties could write such eloquent and thankful hymns. Those who live in ease and comfort, with no illness to plague them or their families, seldom bear much spiritual fruit.

Gerhardt lost all his children except one, and his wife also died. The DPs of his day treated him like dirt. The Olde Syn Conference today is united in its embrace of false doctrine, but they give lip service to Paul Gerhardt. The same thugs of today would have led the mob driving Gerhardt away, as they do today with a different set of victims.

If the pastors of the Olde Syn Conference want to be president of a seminary, they should:
  1. Plagiarize another man's work and deceive people about it.
  2. Found a Fuller-clone movement, lead people astray, and attend Gordon Conwell Seminary for a drive-by DMin.
  3. Attend Fuller and lie about it, promote the Church Growth Movement at every possible opportunity and pretend to study it for the first time, under duress.
  4. Pretend to oppose false doctrine while kissing up to false teachers, finally landing a sinecure at the Little Schoolhouse on the Prairie, using that position to drive out faithful Lutherans.

The Lutheran Landslide | Blogs | NCRegister.com

The Lutheran Landslide | Blogs | NCRegister.com


The Lutheran Landslide

Increasing Number of Lutherans are Coming into the Catholic Church

 Friday, March 18, 2011 8:18 AM Comments (33)

Father Richard John Neuhaus
One of the most under-reported religious stories of the past decade has been the movement of Lutherans across the Tiber.
What first began with prominent Lutherans, such as Richard John Neuhaus (1990) and Robert Wilken (1994), coming into the Catholic Church, has become more of a landslide that could culminate in a larger body of Lutherans coming into the collectively. [GJ - Wilken was head of theology for a time at ND, my least favorite person there.]
In 2000, former Canadian Lutheran Bishop Joseph Jacobson came into the Church.
“No other Church really can duplicate what Jesus gave,” Jacobson told the Western Catholic Reporter in 2006.
In 2003, Leonard Klein, a prominent Lutheran and the former editor of Lutheran Forum and Forum Letter came into the Church. Today, both Jacobson and Klein are Catholic priests.
Over the past several years, an increasing number of Lutheran theologians have joined the Church’s ranks, some of whom now teach at Catholic colleges and universities. They include, but are not limited to: Paul Quist (2005), Richard Ballard (2006), Paul Abbe (2006), Thomas McMichael, Mickey Mattox, David Fagerberg, Bruce Marshall, Reinhard Hutter, Philip Max Johnson, and most recently, Dr. Michael Root (2010).
“The Lutheran church has been my intellectual and spiritual home for forty years,” wrote Dr. Root. “But we are not masters of our convictions. A risk of ecumenical study is that one will come to find another tradition compelling in a way that leads to a deep change in mind and heart. Over the last year or so, it has become clear to me, not without struggle, that I have become a Catholic in my mind and heart in ways that no longer permit me to present myself as a Lutheran theologian with honesty and integrity. This move is less a matter of decision than of discernment.”
It’s been said that “no one converts alone,” suggesting that oftentimes the effect of one conversion helps to move another along a similar path. That’s exemplified through Paul Quist’s story. He describes attending the Lutheran “A Call to Faithfulness” conference at St. Olaf College in June, 1990. There, he listened to, and met, Richard John Neuhaus, who would announce his own conversion just months later. [GJ - Neuhaus' Ad Fontes conference was designed for the same purpose, I believe. David Scaer arranged for Neuhaus to speak to The Surrendered Fort, aka Concordia, Ft. Wayne, where many graduates nodded in agreement with Neuhaus' propaganda.]
“What some Lutherans were realizing was that, without the moorings of the Church’s Magisterium, Lutheranism would ineluctably drift from it’s confessional and biblical source,” wrote Quist.
Many of the converts have come from The Society of the Holy Trinity, a pan-Lutheran ministerium organized in 1997 to work for the confessional and spiritual renewal of Lutheran churches. [GJ - Perhaps it was designed to be the farm team for Roman priesthood?]
Now, it appears that a larger Lutheran body will be joining the Church. Father Christopher Phillips, writing at the Anglo-Catholic blog, reports that the Anglo-Lutheran Catholic Church (ALCC) clergy and parishes will be entering into the U.S. ordinariate being created for those Anglicans desiring to enter the Church.
According to the blog, the ALCC sent a letter to Walter Cardinal Kasper, on May 13, 2009, stating that it “desires to undo the mistakes of Father Martin Luther, and return to the One, Holy, and True Catholic Church established by our Lord Jesus Christ through the Blessed Saint Peter.” That letter was sent to the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.
Surprisingly, in October 2010, the ALCC received a letter from the secretary of the CDF, informing them that Archbishop Donald Wuerl had been appointed as an episcopal delegate to assist with the implementation of Angelicanorum coetibus. The ALCC responded that they would like to be included as part of the reunification.

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GJ - The ALCC looks ELDONA-sized, at the most.

ELDONA is linked here. A bishop's hat seems hyperbolic for a circuit pastor. They amalgamated with the Rolf Preus Little Sect on the Prairie come-outters, minus Rolf Preus, who went Canadian, eh?