ICHABOD, THE GLORY HAS DEPARTED - explores the Age of Apostasy, predicted in 2 Thessalonians 2:3, to attack Objective Faithless Justification, Church Growth Clowns, and their ringmasters. The antidote to these poisons is trusting the efficacious Word in the Means of Grace. John 16:8. Isaiah 55:8ff. Romans 10. Most readers are WELS, LCMS, ELS, or ELCA. This blog also covers the Roman Catholic Church, Eastern Orthodoxy, and the Left-wing, National Council of Churches denominations.
Martin Luther Sermons
Bethany Lutheran Hymnal Blog
Bethany Lutheran Church P.O. Box 6561 Springdale AR 72766 Reformation Seminary Lectures USA, Canada, Australia, Philippines 10 AM Central - Sunday Service
We use The Lutheran Hymnal and the King James Version
Luther's Sermons: Lenker Edition
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Sunday, May 22, 2011
Larry Olson, DMin, Fuller Seminary -
Denying the Efficacy of the Word
"We cannot add anything to the Word, but we may be able to remove the human barriers which might be in the way of the Word."
Lawrence Otto Olson, D. Min., Fuller Seminary, "See How It Grows: Perspectives on Growth and the Church," EVANGELISM, February, 1991, Parish Consultant for the WELS Board of Parish Services and his district's Coordinator of Evangelism. p. 3.
"While I would not encourage it, it would not surprise me to see my name in some future writing of yours. If it does appear there, please use my given name, Lawrence."
Lawrence Otto Olson, D. Min., Fuller Seminary, "A Response to Gregory L. Jackson, Ph.D.," Christian News, 3-28-94, p. 23.
DP Buchholz Offers First Contribution
In the Beyond Belief! False Doctrine Graphics Folder
"The forgiveness acquired by Jesus for all at the cross gives us confessional Lutherans, among all the church bodies of the world, the highest motivation to share our Savior. In contrast to the “Jesus Saves” churches, we don’t preach a salvation that is incomplete and just waiting for the sinner to do something to complete the transaction. We proclaim boldly, “Jesus Saved,” past tense, finished, certain."
Jon Buchholz, WELS Convention Essay, 2005.
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GJ - The problem with this statement is its crypto-universalism, claiming that the whole world has been absolved/forgiven and that everyone is saved.
Some WELS Congregations Are So Bad That Even Babies Are Face-Palming
Daniel Baker has left a new comment on your post "Dour Rejoinder from AC V":
The "(sic)" keeps me on my toes too, albeit I hate to see myself produce inadequate spelling and grammar to begin with.
The real Ichaslang to add is "popcornite," if I do say so myself.
***
GJ - Popcornite is being added to the Icha-slang lexicon, with some other suggestions, including Ichawidow and Ichapeek.
Labels:
Icha-slang
WELS Appleton Photo Gallery - Publicly Displayed for Everyone on Facebook
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Jimmy James has left a new comment on your post "Narcissicism Alert":
OK. I need some explainin' here.
Are the photos of "Pastor Tim" Photoshopped? Or is he actually taking photos with such swine as Katy "I Kissed a Girl" Perry and the nasty, vulgar "Black Eyed Peas"?
I mean....my dad would have been fired from his pastoral position for having a beer in a local tavern. So I sure can't imagine him getting photographed with Black Sabbath or Queen! (Let's just say the 70's rock star equivalency of whom Pastor Tim was seen commiserating....)
***
GJ - These are some of the photos, exactly as they were published, mostly on Facebook. Ski's pilgrimage to the Drive Worship Conference included the photo with Andy Stanley, the Babtist, and Ski's admitted worship with them. Ski's blog remained published after I linked it - he just took the link away.
I imagine there is a lot more underground publishing going on among Church and Changers, plus secret list-serves or email lists. I know others do that, because they have told me.
A blog can be limited in viewing to certain people, using specified email addresses. A website can have a log-in.
I simply publish what I think should be known, and everyone it is my work.
Labels:
MLC; Ski; MLS;Tim Glende; WELS
"Our Sect Will Never Crumble the Way ELCA Is Crumbling,"
They Dream.
Greenfield church bolts ELCA over gay clergy issue
Others may follow, but at least 3 will stay with ELCA
11:38 PM, May. 19, 2011 | 349 Comments
Pastor Larry Gember watched St. James Lutheran Church member Harry Morgan use a claw hammer to remove the initials ELCA from the front of the church's exterior Wednesday. / Rob Goebel / The Star
North American Lutheran Church
» History: Founded Aug. 27, 2010, at a conference in Ohio, by Lutherans upset over the liberalizing of the church, particularly on issues of homosexuality.» Membership: More than 207 congregations have voted to join the North American Lutheran Church since August.
» Headquarters: Hilliard, Ohio.
» Beliefs: "We believe that the mission of the church is to preach the Gospel and to make disciples for Christ. We believe that making disciples in our congregations, in our communities and nations, and around the world must be a priority of the church in the present age."
» Leadership: The Rev. Paull Spring, bishop; the Rev. John Bradosky, general secretary; the Rev. Larry Gember, Greenfield, Indiana regional dean.
Evangelical Lutheran Church in America
» History: Formed from The American Lutheran Church, The Association of Evangelical Lutheran Churches and The Lutheran Church in America on Jan. 1, 1988.» Membership: 4.8 million members and about 10,500 congregations across the U.S. and the Caribbean.
» Headquarters: Chicago.
» Beliefs: "The ELCA is a community of faith that shares a passion for making positive changes in the world. Our faith is built around a strong belief in God as made known to us in Jesus Christ. Through worship, service and education, we practice our faith, grow our relationship with God and experience God's grace in our lives."
» Leadership: The Rev. Mark Hanson, presiding bishop; the Rev. Bill Gafkjen, bishop, Indiana-Kentucky Synod.
-- Compiled by Star library
GREENFIELD, Ind. -- A Hancock County church has become the first in the Indianapolis area to leave the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America over the issue of allowing clergy who are openly gay.
Others might soon follow suit, but two Hamilton County congregations and another in Indianapolis have decided to stay with the denomination. A Noblesville church plans a vote in July.
The trend reflects the controversy sparked nationwide among churches when, in 2009, the Evangelical group decided to allow openly gay men and women to serve as ordained clergy at its affiliate churches. For orthodox theologians such as Larry Gember, pastor of St. James Lutheran Church in Greenfield, the decision went a step too far.
"The primary issue is not sexuality," Gember, 59, said Wednesday. "It's that the authority of Scripture is being undermined."
Gember's congregation voted April 10 to sever ties with the ELCA, and the church is holding a "Celebration of Unity" at noon Sunday. The idea, Gember said, is to move past the divisiveness.
A few dozen members left, Gember said -- many relocating to another Lutheran church in nearby New Palestine that remains affiliated with the ELCA.
Gember's church is now affiliated with the North American Lutheran Church, which formed in August in response to the Evangelical group's 2009 decision and a general sense that it was becoming too liberal.
Statewide, at least 14 Indiana congregations have affiliated with the NALC since the 2009 decision on gay clergy. Some of them are start-up churches composed of Lutherans who previously attended ELCA churches.
Even churches that have remained with the ELCA have experienced disunity over the issue.
In Indianapolis, the Cross and Crown Lutheran Church congregation voted in January 2010 to remain with the ELCA. It lost more than 200 members, who left in response to the vote's outcome. The pastor was among those who left, helping form another church called Spirit of Joy.
The interim pastor now serving the Cross and Crown congregation said she strongly supports the ELCA's acceptance of gay and lesbian pastors.
"There are people with fine gifts for ministry, and I don't think the church should exclude them just because of their sexuality," said Karen Husby, 59, who has served the congregation since June. "With the ELCA, everyone is welcome at the table, and Jesus Christ is at the center of that table."
The turmoil over the issue has been a difficult chapter in the Lutheran experience, said Bill Gafkjen, bishop of the ELCA's Indiana-Kentucky Synod.
"The real issue is, can we be a church that disagrees about things like that and still work together in mission?" Gafkjen said. "How is it we live together fruitfully and faithfully with serious differences and find our common mission as members to bear witness to . . . the crucified and risen Christ?"
He emphasized that any gay clergy would be expected to be, if not celibate, faithful within the context of a committed lifetime partnership -- just as a heterosexual minister would be expected to be either celibate or faithful within marriage.
"This is not about promiscuity," he said. "There is accountability."
King of Glory Lutheran Church in Carmel has also decided to stay with the ELCA, though church leaders held numerous forums and meetings with the congregation rather than put it to a vote.
"Bringing this issue to a vote is to say this vote is God's will," said Paul Swartz, senior pastor. "A majority vote does not determine the word of God."
Christ the Savior Lutheran Church in Fishers voted in November to remain with the ELCA, even though more than half the voters wanted to break their allegiances with the group.
Fifty-three percent voted to leave, while 47 percent voted to stay, said senior and founding Pastor Joe Freeman. The anti-ELCA group was just shy of the two-thirds majority needed to leave.
"It's been a painful journey for the congregation and denomination, but it's been a defining feature and we are moving forward with the mission of the ministry," he said.
In Noblesville, the pastor of Bethel Lutheran Church is encouraging his flock to leave the ELCA when the issue comes up for a vote July 17.
"I just want us to stay biblically centered and theologically grounded in the traditional orthodox style," said Pastor Doug Gast, 60. "I believe our (ELCA) hierarchy has kind of lost the grounding in the authority of Scripture."
A member of the Indianapolis gay community who studies theological issues said too many Christians regard gay relationships as representing a cardinal sin.
"If you're gay, God made you that way," said Steven Giovangelo, 63, who lives in the Irvington neighborhood. "And God does not say you're evil or wrong because of that."
However the Lutheran debate unfolds, it is nothing new, said Carol Johnston, a theology professor at the Christian Theological Seminary in Indianapolis.
"These kinds of disputes about what Scripture means and how it is interpreted in a changing culture are actually in the New Testament itself," Johnston said. "This was going on since the very beginning of the church."
In addition to the conflict among Lutherans, the Greenfield pastor leading the move to break away from the ELCA has experienced his own internal turmoil, he said. Both his brother and best friend, Gember said, are gay.
Gember has spent time in gay bars and at gay events, he said, and for years during the 1980s and 1990s advocated for more liberal church policies toward homosexuality.
"Gay people are welcome in my church," he said.
---
ALPB Online, George Erdner
Between Zion Lutheran and these three from Pastor Barnhart's blog:
1. ST. JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH, STARBUCK, MN unanimously passed second vote to leave the ELCA.
2. FRANKLIN LUTHERAN CHURCH (SOLDIER'S GROVE) VIROQUA, WI passed second vote to leave the ELCA, 38-19. LCMC
3. HOPE LUTHERAN CHURCH, LADYSMITH, WI passed first vote to leave the ELCA, 113-21.
4. SALEM LUTHERAN CHURCH, SALISBURY, NC passed second vote to leave the ELCA 199-14. Joining NALC and LCMC.
We now have 500 Congregations that have left the ELCA.
Pessimists who can only see the negative and darkness might mourn about this. ECLA "company men" will attempt to diminish this as unimportant. But those of us who are positive and optimistic about the renewal of mission that accompanies a new beginning for a congregation as it affiliates with a new denomination will rejoice in this milestone as a significant event worthy of prayers of thanksgiving.
Others might soon follow suit, but two Hamilton County congregations and another in Indianapolis have decided to stay with the denomination. A Noblesville church plans a vote in July.
The trend reflects the controversy sparked nationwide among churches when, in 2009, the Evangelical group decided to allow openly gay men and women to serve as ordained clergy at its affiliate churches. For orthodox theologians such as Larry Gember, pastor of St. James Lutheran Church in Greenfield, the decision went a step too far.
"The primary issue is not sexuality," Gember, 59, said Wednesday. "It's that the authority of Scripture is being undermined."
Gember's congregation voted April 10 to sever ties with the ELCA, and the church is holding a "Celebration of Unity" at noon Sunday. The idea, Gember said, is to move past the divisiveness.
A few dozen members left, Gember said -- many relocating to another Lutheran church in nearby New Palestine that remains affiliated with the ELCA.
Gember's church is now affiliated with the North American Lutheran Church, which formed in August in response to the Evangelical group's 2009 decision and a general sense that it was becoming too liberal.
Statewide, at least 14 Indiana congregations have affiliated with the NALC since the 2009 decision on gay clergy. Some of them are start-up churches composed of Lutherans who previously attended ELCA churches.
Even churches that have remained with the ELCA have experienced disunity over the issue.
In Indianapolis, the Cross and Crown Lutheran Church congregation voted in January 2010 to remain with the ELCA. It lost more than 200 members, who left in response to the vote's outcome. The pastor was among those who left, helping form another church called Spirit of Joy.
The interim pastor now serving the Cross and Crown congregation said she strongly supports the ELCA's acceptance of gay and lesbian pastors.
"There are people with fine gifts for ministry, and I don't think the church should exclude them just because of their sexuality," said Karen Husby, 59, who has served the congregation since June. "With the ELCA, everyone is welcome at the table, and Jesus Christ is at the center of that table."
The turmoil over the issue has been a difficult chapter in the Lutheran experience, said Bill Gafkjen, bishop of the ELCA's Indiana-Kentucky Synod.
"The real issue is, can we be a church that disagrees about things like that and still work together in mission?" Gafkjen said. "How is it we live together fruitfully and faithfully with serious differences and find our common mission as members to bear witness to . . . the crucified and risen Christ?"
He emphasized that any gay clergy would be expected to be, if not celibate, faithful within the context of a committed lifetime partnership -- just as a heterosexual minister would be expected to be either celibate or faithful within marriage.
"This is not about promiscuity," he said. "There is accountability."
King of Glory Lutheran Church in Carmel has also decided to stay with the ELCA, though church leaders held numerous forums and meetings with the congregation rather than put it to a vote.
"Bringing this issue to a vote is to say this vote is God's will," said Paul Swartz, senior pastor. "A majority vote does not determine the word of God."
Christ the Savior Lutheran Church in Fishers voted in November to remain with the ELCA, even though more than half the voters wanted to break their allegiances with the group.
Fifty-three percent voted to leave, while 47 percent voted to stay, said senior and founding Pastor Joe Freeman. The anti-ELCA group was just shy of the two-thirds majority needed to leave.
"It's been a painful journey for the congregation and denomination, but it's been a defining feature and we are moving forward with the mission of the ministry," he said.
In Noblesville, the pastor of Bethel Lutheran Church is encouraging his flock to leave the ELCA when the issue comes up for a vote July 17.
"I just want us to stay biblically centered and theologically grounded in the traditional orthodox style," said Pastor Doug Gast, 60. "I believe our (ELCA) hierarchy has kind of lost the grounding in the authority of Scripture."
A member of the Indianapolis gay community who studies theological issues said too many Christians regard gay relationships as representing a cardinal sin.
"If you're gay, God made you that way," said Steven Giovangelo, 63, who lives in the Irvington neighborhood. "And God does not say you're evil or wrong because of that."
However the Lutheran debate unfolds, it is nothing new, said Carol Johnston, a theology professor at the Christian Theological Seminary in Indianapolis.
"These kinds of disputes about what Scripture means and how it is interpreted in a changing culture are actually in the New Testament itself," Johnston said. "This was going on since the very beginning of the church."
In addition to the conflict among Lutherans, the Greenfield pastor leading the move to break away from the ELCA has experienced his own internal turmoil, he said. Both his brother and best friend, Gember said, are gay.
Gember has spent time in gay bars and at gay events, he said, and for years during the 1980s and 1990s advocated for more liberal church policies toward homosexuality.
"Gay people are welcome in my church," he said.
---
ALPB Online, George Erdner
Between Zion Lutheran and these three from Pastor Barnhart's blog:
1. ST. JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH, STARBUCK, MN unanimously passed second vote to leave the ELCA.
2. FRANKLIN LUTHERAN CHURCH (SOLDIER'S GROVE) VIROQUA, WI passed second vote to leave the ELCA, 38-19. LCMC
3. HOPE LUTHERAN CHURCH, LADYSMITH, WI passed first vote to leave the ELCA, 113-21.
4. SALEM LUTHERAN CHURCH, SALISBURY, NC passed second vote to leave the ELCA 199-14. Joining NALC and LCMC.
We now have 500 Congregations that have left the ELCA.
Pessimists who can only see the negative and darkness might mourn about this. ECLA "company men" will attempt to diminish this as unimportant. But those of us who are positive and optimistic about the renewal of mission that accompanies a new beginning for a congregation as it affiliates with a new denomination will rejoice in this milestone as a significant event worthy of prayers of thanksgiving.
The Fourth Sunday after Easter
Cantate, The Fourth Sunday after Easter, 2011
Pastor Gregory L. Jackson
http://www.ustream.tv/channel/bethany-lutheran-worship
Bethany Lutheran Church, 10 AM Central Time
The Hymn # 199 Jesus Christ is Risen Today 1:83
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 # 262 A Mighty Fortress 1:86
The Holy Spirit and the Word of God
The Communion Hymn #308 Invited Lord 1:63
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 #46 On What Has Now Been Sown 1:62
Fourth Sunday After Easter
Lord God, heavenly Father, who didst through Thy Son promise us Thy Holy Spirit, that He should convince the world of sin, of righteousness, and of judgment: We beseech Thee, enlighten our hearts, that we may confess our sins, through faith in Christ obtain everlasting righteousness, and in all our trials and temptations retain this consolation, that Christ is Lord over the devil and death, and all things, and that He will graciously deliver us out of all our afflictions, and make us forever partakers of eternal salvation, through the same, Thy Son, Jesus Christ, our Lord, who liveth and reigneth with Thee and the Holy Ghost, one true God, world without end. Amen.
KJV James 1:16 Do not err, my beloved brethren. 17 Every good gift and every perfect gift is from above, and cometh down from the Father of lights, with whom is no variableness, neither shadow of turning. 18 Of his own will begat he us with the word of truth, that we should be a kind of firstfruits of his creatures. 19 Wherefore, my beloved brethren, let every man be swift to hear, slow to speak, slow to wrath: 20 For the wrath of man worketh not the righteousness of God. 21 Wherefore lay apart all filthiness and superfluity of naughtiness, and receive with meekness the engrafted word, which is able to save your souls.
KJV John 16:5 But now I go my way to him that sent me; and none of you asketh me, Whither goest thou? 6 But because I have said these things unto you, sorrow hath filled your heart. 7 Nevertheless I tell you the truth; It is expedient for you that I go away: for if I go not away, the Comforter will not come unto you; but if I depart, I will send him unto you. 8 And when he is come, he will reprove the world of sin, and of righteousness, and of judgment: 9 Of sin, because they believe not on me; 10 Of righteousness, because I go to my Father, and ye see me no more; 11 Of judgment, because the prince of this world is judged. 12 I have yet many things to say unto you, but ye cannot bear them now. 13 Howbeit when he, the Spirit of truth, is come, he will guide you into all truth: for he shall not speak of himself; but whatsoever he shall hear, that shall he speak: and he will shew you things to come. 14 He shall glorify me: for he shall receive of mine, and shall shew it unto you. 15 All things that the Father hath are mine: therefore said I, that he shall take of mine, and shall shew it unto you.
The Holy Spirit and the Word of God
This is one of the most important passages about justification, how we are forgiven our sins. The context is Jesus’ parting messages, very important to have the disciples aware of what will come.
Nevertheless, the disciples are rather dense about what will develop and fail to ask about where Jesus is going.
John 16:5 But now I go my way to him that sent me; and none of you asketh me, Whither goest thou? 6 But because I have said these things unto you, sorrow hath filled your heart.
The sending of Jesus by the Father is very important, because He will send the disciples to represent Him in exactly the same way. They will speak His Word just as He has always spoken His Father’s Word.
Their limitations will be overcome by Jesus sending the Holy Spirit to guide them.
I was thinking about the spread of Pentecostalism today, when I spoke to a friend from Ohio. Robert Preus made this point in a lecture – that Pentecostalism grew because ministers failed to teach the Holy Spirit’s work, concentrating on the Quest for the Historical Jesus. That was when the Bible was being attacked and the modernists became unsure that we knew anything at all about Jesus.
The Pentecostals thrived in the vacuum, in part by teaching the miraculous in the Bible when the modernists were using the Word of God as a tool for political activism. (The Left-wing activism political activism owes its origin, in part, to this religious activism, which became known as the Social Gospel. The term Social Gospel faded after 1930, but the activism grew. FDR’s socialist program was almost identical to the Social Gospel’s program, which was laid out about 30 years before.)
The Pentecostals have no concept of the Holy Spirit’s work in the Bible, but few Lutheran clergy can claim any more insights. The trouble is that pastors do not do the work in Biblical studies that they require to understand the Christian faith and the Bible as the Book of the Holy Spirit (Luther’s term).
The Bible is not understood by applying a series of theories about what one faction or another thinks, trying to maintain loyalty to one group of men or another, ignoring the real leaders of the Lutheran Reformation. Nevertheless, the only solution is individual study, because these insights are more learned than taught. If someone does not dwell upon the Word of God, the knowledge remains superficial.
This is why many laity are superior to clergy in their knowledge of the Bible. This whole section (not just this lesson) in John, about the Holy Spirit, shows us why. The Holy Spirit only works through the Word of God. That means that the Holy Spirit never works through a seminary degree or even a doctorate in Biblical studies.
A doctoral paper on John will ask whether the Gospel was written in 300 AD or 100 AD, never asking the real questions addressed by John, the disciple Jesus loved. Biblical scholarship today gets Talmudic in its ability to stay away from the original text while debating theories and interpretations.
When ministers use the study of Greek or Hebrew to prove why they are always right, they are missing the most basic message of the Bible – the Word of God is plain, clear, and simple for all to understand, yet so profound that we can study it a lifetime and still find many new insights from day to day, never completely mining the spiritual treasures. In fact, the more we delve into the Bible, the more it unfolds to us and the more we see its infinite riches.
Once we had a Bible study about 1 John, in Greek, in Columbus. That has the simplest Greek in the New Testament. The pastor of the biggest church and the district vp could not even start to read the Greek, so I really question how well trained the WELS pastors are, no matter what they claim. The point is this – claiming to know Greek or even knowing Greek quite well is not a winning point. The issue is whether we know and comprehend what the Spirit reveals in the Word of God.
7 Nevertheless I tell you the truth; It is expedient for you that I go away: for if I go not away, the Comforter will not come unto you; but if I depart, I will send him unto you.
The Comforter is one way to translate this unusual word. Advocate is another. Lenski uses the Greek – the Paraklete, which may not help anyone. The term is defined by what the Holy Spirit does. The Son sent the Holy Spirit for a three-fold work – verse 8.
8 And when he is come, he will reprove the world of sin, and of righteousness, and of judgment:
He will reprove the world in three ways:
A. Of sin.
B. Of righteousness.
C. Of judgment.
Reprove means to convict. Lenski has an interesting distinction. Either this word means to convict beyond any questioning, so the subject must admit its truth, or – it means convicting the subject so that the reality is beyond question, whether admitted or not.
Lenski:
The verb to reprove may mean “to convict” so that the conviction is fully admitted by those convicted, or “to convict” so that, whether the conviction is admitted or not, its reality is beyond question. Here the latter sense prevails. For “the world,” upon which the Paraclete of the disciples works his conviction, will in part be won by that conviction and in part remain obdurate under that conviction. Yet all who do not bow in repentance will, nevertheless, stand convicted like guilty criminals who may still deny the guilt which has been fully proved against them.
Lenski, R. C. H.: The Interpretation of St. John's Gospel. Minneapolis, MN : Augsburg Publishing House, 1961, S. 1081
This means that the Word always convicts. Some respond to the conviction by repenting and believing in the Gospel. Others respond by becoming angry, hardened, and blind, rejecting the Gospel completely.
The three-fold conviction is explained by Jesus. We would be happy for an explanation from the Evangelist, John. But this explanation comes from Jesus so we should pay special attention to it. This is the Son of God explaining the work of the Holy Spirit through the Word – convicting in three ways.
A Of sin, because they believe not on me;
B Of righteousness, because I go to my Father, and ye see me no more;
C Of judgment, because the prince of this world is judged.
A Of sin, because they believe not on me;
This unique explanation, which is in harmony with the rest of the Bible, destroys all notions of forgiveness without faith.
Jesus is also teaching us here – “The foundational sin is unbelief, which leads to all other sin. The answer is to preach the Gospel Promises to create faith, not to pound carnal sin as if the Law will cure the problem of sin.”
We are born in unbelief and original sin. If we did not have the Gospel given to us as newborns, in infant baptism, we would have to be converted later by the invisible Word. That does happen.
But it is folly to say we are born already forgiven. So with infant baptism comes infant faith, which Luther calls the purest form of faith.
With adults, in this sectarian society, it is easy to fall into the thinking that problems of sin are answered by more Law. We think that way by default, because we are wandering sheep. But to do so means we are saying, “The x-ray shows I have a broken arm. Now I need more x-rays to heal it.” Or – “The blood test condemns me as a diabetic. I need more blood tests to alleviate my condition.”
“They believe not on me.”
This is our constant state (by default) and we need the Means of Grace to correct it. Another way of phrasing this is to say, “They do not utterly trust in Me.”
Notice that Jesus put this in negative terms to rule out vague agreement as faith. George Allen called Jesus the Son of God in “Oh God.” He also called Moses and Mohammed the sons of God, rendering the first statement meaningless.
The preaching of the pure Word means telling the entire audience that justification, forgiveness, comes from utter trust in Christ, or in faith in Christ alone and His righteousness.
This comes as great comfort to believers, who say, “I believe, help my unbelief.”
This message is also a rebuke, which is why those who love wolf-preaching demand “practical, how-to messages” instead of Gospel sermons.
When Ski came to Appleton, he acted as if no one had heard the Gospel before. That is law, man-made law, pure snake oil. His answer was to copy and paste Groeschel sermons, giving the law as their answer, their antidote. The Pietism in his audience warmed to that message. Glende was doing the same thing with Groeschel’s anti-Lutheran approach. The results are in – members must obey their lupine leaders or be thrown out of their congregation in a secretive, dishonest, brutal way – reserved for Holy Week.
A Of sin, because they believe not on me;
To paraphrase Chytraeus, this includes doubting the gracious love of God. It happens this way. Christians undergo many trials and bear various crosses. As Jesus said, we must take up our crosses daily. When believers feel they are getting a bad deal, too much trouble, or pain when others have rewards, this is doubting the goodness of God.
God allows evil to some extent, which the Holy Spirit transforms into a blessing through faith. If God simply turned us over to our own devices, we would quickly destroy ourselves (Romans 1). There are many cases of this happening. Those who turn away from the Faith are examples of this process. It can happen rather quickly. One minister was leaving the liberal Lutherans for the conservatives. Next he was having a rough time, so he joined the apostate UCC, the equivalent of becoming an atheist, but with a polite cover of being a Rev, an open-minded Rev.
Afterwards we can see God’s providence (literally – God seeing ahead, knowing our needs). What looks like a bad turn in the road is a good one. So it is a sin to doubt God’s goodness because we do not utterly trust in Christ.
Otherwise we are stuck in the synthetic faith of the sectarians, who say, “I believe in God because I am prosperous, as long as I am prosperous.”
Lenski:
The thought is not that the world knows nothing about sin. Its daily crime list contradicts that, as well as its moralists with their repressive and reformatory measures. What the world lacks and the Spirit supplies is something that goes far deeper, something that actually convicts in regard to sin. This is not the fact that sin is sin, or that the real essence of sin is unbelief. The Spirit is not to repeat the work of Moses in preaching the law. The conviction in regard to sin lies in one direction: “inasmuch as they do not believe in me.” Yet note that this is the capital sin. For to believe in Jesus is to be saved from sin, to have sin forgiven; and thus not to believe in Jesus is to remain in sin, to perish forever in sin. The Spirit’s work in regard to sin is to confront the world with the terrible fact of its unbelief in Jesus, which means, with the fact that this unbelief leaves it in its damnable sin, doomed and damned forever, in other words, that only he who believes escapes from his sin. This conviction in regard to sin naturally operates in two ways. It will crush some hearts so that they will be frightened at their unbelief and cry out like the 3,000 at Pentecost, “Brethren, what shall we do?” Acts 2:37, and thus be led to repent and to believe. Or it will further harden those who resist this conviction; they will go on, convicted though they are, more obdurate than before, fighting against this conviction until they perish. In this the Spirit will do exactly what Jesus did in 7:33, etc., and again in 8:22–24: “I said, therefore, unto you that ye shall die in your sins; for except ye believe that I am he, ye shall die in your sins.”
Lenski, R. C. H.: The Interpretation of St. John's Gospel. Minneapolis, MN : Augsburg Publishing House, 1961, S. 1082.
B Of righteousness, because I go to my Father, and ye see me no more;
This phrase always makes me start over, and that is the intention of the Word of God, to make us puzzle over a section and learn it better. The Spirit’s mission is only through the teaching and administration of the Word.
Therefore, this is a way of saying, “The Word which you preach will convict the world of righteousness, because you will teach them, sent by Me just as I was sent by My Father.”
The only way of being justified is through faith in Christ – that is convicting the world of righteousness, the righteousness of faith, as the Formula of Concord states.
That means no longer trusting in emotions, which are the opposite of faith. Do we feel terrible? Guilty? Depressed? Angry? Disappointed? Crushed by troubles? Regretful over past mistakes and sins? The world would have us worship our emotions, pet them, love them, and admire them. Many people spend their lives talking about their emotions. The wolf-preachers get up and talk about their insecurities and their ovine audiences follow them off the cliff.
This preaching of righteousness means – No matter how you feel, Christ has died for your sins and given you the Gospel, so you can receive his righteousness in faith. Utter trust in Him is just the opposite of feelings, and they overcome our frail, volatile, fickle feelings. Luther said wisely that Satan attacks us through our emotions. No fact in the world (health, money, freedom) can stand up to our feelings. Money? What if I lose it tomorrow? Health? But that could change. Freedom? That does me no good. I am woebegone.
One writer had four typewriters because he feared that his machine would stop working and he could not write. He was an atheist, a real genius in many ways, but his emotions controlled his stash of typewriters. Asimov. He wrote and published 400 books, including 3 autobiographies.
The foundation for all we do as believers is utter faith in Christ, in the goodness and mercy of God. Even illness and death among believers serves to glorify His Name.
C Of judgment, because the prince of this world is judged.
Satan is the prince of this world. He controls everything up to the point where he is allowed. He is judged, condemned. That is not the team to join, although he makes it appealing. His guys have the best parishes as ministers and the best jobs. A loud-mouthed atheist is going to do well as a university professor. A known believer in academics will have a hard time.
But Christian in Pilgrim’s Progress has a good answer to Satan. I used to work for you but no longer. Your pay is terrible, for the wages of sin is death.
Satan would like to have any remaining believers. He will fight for each one, not for those already in his hellish flock.
Knowing that he is condemned gives us strength against temptations, especially when our emotions attack us.
As Luther said to Satan, I may a thousand times worse than what you say, but Christ is my Savior, and He forgives my sins.
The Holy Spirit keeps this message before us in the Gospel, so we are forgiven of our sins, fully and freely – each and every day.
Quotations
(1) "Almighty Father, bless the Word Which through your grace we now have heard Oh, may the precious seed take root, Spring up, and bear abundant fruit. (2) We praise you for the means of grace As homeward now our steps we trace. Grant, Lord, that we who worshiped here May all at last in heaven appear." Scandinavian, The Lutheran Hymnal, St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1982, Hymn #52
"It is a glory which every preacher may claim, to be able to say with full confidence of heart: 'This trust have I toward God in Christ, that what I teach and preach is truly the Word of God.' Likewise, when he performs other official duties in the Church--baptizes a child, absolves and comforts a sinner--it must be done in the same firm conviction that such is the command of Christ. He who would teach and exercise authority in the Church without this glory, 'it is profitable for him,' as Christ says, (Matthew 18:6), 'that a great millstone should be hanged about his neck, and that he should be sunk in the depths of the sea.' For the devil's lies he preaches, and death is what he effects."
Sermons of Martin Luther, ed. John Nicolas Lenker, Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1983, VIII, p. 227. Twelfth Sunday after Trinity 2 Corinthians 3:4-11; Matthew 18:6
"Such a divine kingdom can be governed, built up, protected, extended and maintained only by means of the external office of the Word and Sacraments, through which the Holy Spirit is powerful and works in the hearts etc., as I have often said in speaking on this theme."
Sermons of Martin Luther, 8 vols., ed., John Nicholaus Lenker, Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1983, V, p. 238. Twentieth Sunday after Trinity, Matthew 22:1-14
"The church is recognized, not by external peace but by the Word and the Sacraments. For wherever you see a small group that has the true Word and the Sacraments, there the church is if only the pulpit and the baptismal font are pure. The church does not stand on the holiness of any one person but solely on the holiness and righteousness of the Lord Christ, for He has sanctified her by Word and Sacrament." What Luther Says, An Anthology, 3 vols., ed., Ewald Plass, St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1959, I, p. 263. Matthew 24:4-7.
"Thus also the devil is angry because God wants to trample him under foot by means of flesh and blood. If a mighty spirit were opposed to him, he would not be so sorely vexed; but it greatly angers him that a poor worm of the dust, a fragile earthen vessel defies him, a weak vessel against a mighty prince. God has placed his treasure, says St. Paul, in a poor, weak vessel; for man is weak, easily aroused to anger, avaricious, arrogant, and weighed down with other imperfections, through which Satan easily shatters the earthen vessel; for if God would permit him, he would soon have utterly destroyed the whole vessel." Sermons of Martin Luther, 8 vols., ed., John Nicholaus Lenker, Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1983, V, p. 268. Twenty-first Sunday after Trinity, John 4:46-54; 1 Peter 5:8; Ephesians 6:12.
"In the Word of God there is not only a speaking about God, but in and through His Word God Himself speaks to us, deals with us, acts upon us. Therefore the Word of God is also an efficacious means of grace through which God regenerates, converts, and sanctifies man. This efficacy the Word of God possesses always; it is always united with the Word, never separated from it." E. Hove, Christian Doctrine, Minneapolis: Augsburg Publishing House, 1930, p. 27.
"To the Lutheran the sermon, as the preached Word, is a means of grace. Through it the Holy Spirit calls, gathers, enlightens, and sanctifies the whole Christian church on earth. It is a constant offer of pardon; a giving of life, as well as a nourishing and strengthening of life. In the Reformed churches the sermon is apt to be more hortatory and ethical. It partakes more of the sacrificial than of the sacramental character. The individuality of the preacher, the subjective choice of a text, the using of it merely for a motto, the discussion of secular subjects, the unrestrained platform style, lack of reverence, lack of dignity, and many other faults are common, and are not regarded as unbecoming the messenger of God in His temple. Where there is a properly trained Lutheran consciousness such things repel, shock, and are not tolerated." G. H. Gerberding, The Lutheran Pastor, Minneapolis: Augsburg Publishing House, 1915, p. 278.
"Is the success of preaching as a means of grace conditioned by the observance of similar principles by the preacher? Undoubtedly. For it is not preaching itself, but the Word as preached which is a means of grace. This demands not only that nothing be preached but what comes directly or indirectly from Holy Scripture, but also that the contents of Holy Scripture be preached in due proportion and in the proper order." Henry Eyster Jacobs, A Summary of the Christian Faith, Philadelphia: General Council Publication House, 1913, p. 293.
"The doctrine of the means of grace is a peculiar glory of Lutheran theology. To this central teaching it owes its sanity and strong appeal, its freedom from sectarian tendencies and morbid fanaticism, its coherence and practicalness, and its adaptation to men of every race and every degree of culture. The Lutheran Confessions bring out with great clearness the thought of the Reformers upon this subject." "Grace, Means of," The Concordia Cyclopedia, L. Fuerbringer, Th. Engelder, P. E. Kretzmann, St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1927, p. 299.
"She desired nothing besides this Word, nor did she ask for more than merely to touch His garment, which she used as an external means and sign to gain the desired help. Likewise, we need nothing more in our lives and in the kingdom of faith than the external Word and Sacraments, in which He permits Himself to be touched and seized as if by His garment." Sermons of Martin Luther, 8 vols., ed., John Nicholaus Lenker, Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1983, V, p. 350. Twenty-fourth Sunday after Trinity, Matthew 9:18-26
"The Christian's faith trusts in the ordinary means. Prayer is not a means of grace. Means of grace are divine appointments through which God uniformly offers blessings to all who use them. Faith is the means by which the blessings are received and appropriated. God gives us bread, when we ask it, not through the channel of prayer, but through the ordinary channels of His providence. He gives us grace when we ask it, not through prayer, but through the ordinary means appointed for this end, namely the Word and Sacraments. He who despises these will as little have grace as he who refuses to accept bread produced in the ordinary way of nature. Faith asks with confidence, and trusts in the ordinary means of God's appointment for the blessings asked." Matthias Loy, Sermons on the Gospels, Columbus: Lutheran Book Concern, 1888, p. 387.
"For we can definitely assert that where the Lord's Supper, Baptism, and the Word are found, Christ, the remission of sins, and life eternal are found. On the other hand, where these signs of grace are not found, or where they are despised by men, not only grace is lacking but also foul errors will follow. Then men will set up other forms of worship and other signs for themselves." What Luther Says, An Anthology, 3 vols., ed., Ewald Plass, St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1959, II, p. 914. Genesis 4:3.
"From this it follows that they act foolishly, yea, against God's order and institution, who despise and reject the external Word, thinking that the Holy Spirit and faith should come to them without means. It will indeed be a long time before that happens." What Luther Says, An Anthology, 3 vols., ed., Ewald Plass, St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1959, II, p. 915.
"Another defect of Reformed preaching is its contempt for the Means of Grace. They will tell you that the Holy Spirit needs no vehicle, neither ox-cart nor aeroplane, to enter the heart of man; and by this rationalistic argument they think to have done away with the Means of Grace. But notice how they set about immediately to construct their own Means of Grace. Luther told them in his day:'If the Holy Spirit needs no vehicle, no preaching, then why are you here? And why are you so earnest in spreading your errors? It seems that what you really meant to say was that the Holy Spirit does not need true prophets, but He is very much in need of false prophets.' If the Holy Spirit needs no Means of Grace, who do these Reformed churches undertake their campaigns of revivalism?" Martin S. Sommer, Concordia Pulpit for 1932, Martin S. Sommer, St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1931, p. iv.
"However, here the Lord speaks quite differently, and says: 'The Holy Spirit will convict the world in respect of sin, because they believe not on me.' Unbelief only is mentioned here as sin, and faith is praised as suppressing and extinguishing the other sins, even the sins in the saints. Faith is so strong and overpowering that no sin dare put it under any obligation. Although sins are present in pious and believing persons, they are not imputed to them, nor shall their sins condemn them." Sermons of Martin Luther, 8 vols., ed., John Nicholas Lenker, Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1983, III, p. 127. Fourth Sunday after Easter, Second Sermon John 16:5-15.
"Godly and believing persons know their sins; they bear all their punishment patiently, and are resigned to God's judgment without the least murmur; therefore, they are punished only bodily, and here in time, and their pain and suffering have an end. Unbelievers, however, since they are not conscious of their sins and transgressions, cannot bear God's punishment patiently, but they resent it and wish their life and works to go unpunished, yea, uncensured. Hence, their punishment and suffering are in body and soul, here in time, and last forever beyond this life." Sermons of Martin Luther, 8 vols., ed., John Nicholas Lenker, Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1983, III, p. 131. Fourth Sunday after Easter, Second Sermon John 16:5-15.
"Therefore the Holy Spirit rightly and justly convicts, as sinful and condemned, all who have not faith in Christ. For where this is wanting, other sins in abundance must follow: God is despised and hated, and the entire first table is treated with disobedience." Sermons of Martin Luther, 8 vols., ed., John Nicholas Lenker, Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1983, III, p. 141. Fourth Sunday after Easter, Third Sermon John 16:5-15.
"Lo, how the dragon's-tail of the devil and all hell must follow unbelief! The reason is, that he who does not believe in Christ, has already turned away from God and quite separated himself from Him." Sermons of Martin Luther, 8 vols., ed., John Nicholas Lenker, Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1983, III, p. 142. Fourth Sunday after Easter, Third Sermon John 16:5-15.
Dour Rejoinder from AC V
AC V has left a new comment on your post "Bored Scours the Popcornites And The Incensed":
Daniel said: "I need a (sic) from Dr. Jackson."
New word for Ichaslang Lexicon:
(Sic)ophant: One who feels the need to put a "(sic)" behind an error in a blog comment as a way to ridicule an opponent by pointing out the original writer's mistake.
***
GJ - But you err in your Human Nature, AC V. The sic is a polite way of saying that the material was copied verbatim, knowing that there was an error in it. Sic only means "thus," far gentler than your caustic "sic-ophant," which is intended to be insulting.
I have to admit having a lot of fun with the technical term, energized by the way it drives some people crazy.
I cannot in good conscience call an immoral, legalistic, Enthusiastic sect by the the pompous name of Church of the Lutheran Confession (sic). Honestly compels me to add sic so that no one is misled by the misleading title.
Likewise, the skunkpatch known as LutherQuest (sic) is famous for being anti-Luther. There may be a quest, but there is no Luther in those discussions, unless an outsider intrudes upon their orgies of self-congratulation.
Don't be bitter, AC V. You are getting a free ride with your anonymous comments. Where else can you get the advantage of 1500 page-reads a day?
The Lutheran Leaders of WELS Are Gone
Hey we woke up this morning. Ask Mrs Ichabod - "WHAT DO WE DO NOW?"
Just thinking about the church year. My Gausewitz catechism even explained the Latin meanings for Lent and Sundays after Easter. So it can be done. We do not have to be dumbed down. I guess what I like is what you have said that the closer to Luther the closer to Scripture. I think lay folks expect their pastors to be Lutheran not Roman or Baptist.
I like all the animal pics on Ichabod because it fits with the subject matter and the pictures of past REAL Lutherans like Luther, Chemnitz, andA merican guys like that Krauth guy give their words more meaning because it shows who they were.
It would be nice if we had leaders like any one I just mentioned.
29a
***
GJ - Independent of this comment, I had a long conversation with someone. He asked me to name five WELS pastors I respected. I was thinking. He made it easier and said, "They can be dead."
We agreed on Bading, SP Brenner, Slick Brenner, Hoenecke, Mudslide, and Corky.
Brief history of WELS - After Gausewitz and Hoenecke's deaths, there was the Protestant split, which was very nasty, with Koehler being fired as seminary president.
That made anti-intellectualism the solution in WELS. And they sought mediocrities with no personality to teach at The Sausage Factory. The reasoning was - Augie Pieper and Koehler were both strong personalities, so they needed colorless professors.
Myths are powerful, even if untrue. WELS is in love with its Wauwatosa Myth, which means praising one more form of unionistic Pietism. I see that myth behind the defenestration of Gausewitz' superior catechism and its replacement by the false-teaching Kuske catechism.
Labels:
ELCA; ELS; LCMS; WELS
When Lito Was a Calvinist
LPC has left a new comment on your post "Bored Scours the Popcornites And The Incensed":
Daniel,
Your comments reminds me when I was a Calvinist. In that circle, there is a debate on who really really is a true rightful claimant of the label "reformed".
Most of the time, people who claim they are confessional takes the moral high ground that they are "quia" subscribers.
I laugh because so far those I have encountered claiming "quia" subscription have been found to be UOJers.
I hope you are not a UOJer because technically that ain't Lutheran no matter how grand standing the UOJer does.
LPC
Narcissicism Alert
rlschultz has left a new comment on your post "Tim Glende Did Not Transform This Narcissist":
This is a prime example of an exaggerated sense of self worth. What type of individual would want to have their picture taken with such a self-absorbed snob and then post it on the Net? What is worse are the fans who rationalize this brand of sociopathic behavior.
Labels:
Black-eye Peas,
Katy Perry,
MLS;Tim Glende; Ski
Bethany Spends $17 Million on Honsey Hall
bruce-church (http://bruce-church.myopenid.com/) has left a new comment on your post "Lutheran Seminary Fraud: Students Are Bankrupting ...":
It looks like the money for recently completed Honsey Hall at Bethany in Mankato must have come 100% from their endowment fund. It was begun in 2008 and completed by Fall 2010, but between 2008 and 2009, Bethany's endowment fund dropped in value by $17 million, the exact cost of the new building:
http://www.blc.edu/facilities/honseyhall/
http://www.blc.edu/news/bethanyreport/2008/III/?Story=5
http://www.blc.edu/webservices/webcam/?cam=HH
http://mankatofreepress.com/local/x1048526671/New-building-rising-at-BLC
http://gallery.blc.edu/v/campus/honseyhallconst/Honsey+Hall+Construction-12.jpg.html
http://www.usnews.com/education/articles/2010/02/02/which-schools-had-the-worst-performing-endowments
1 Jacksonville University $23,268,585 -59.7%
2 Southern Connecticut State University Foundation $7,050,102 -42.8%
3 Bethany Lutheran College $28,729,702 -37.6%
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The $17,305,000 drop in Bethany's endowment fund from 2008-2009:
http://www.nacubo.org/Documents/research/2009_NCSE_Public_Tables_Endowment_Market_Values.pdf
p. 15 of PDF:
629 Bethany Lutheran College MN 28,730 46,035 -37.6
Labels:
Bethany College
Brett Meyer Links the UOJ Enthusiasts
Brett Meyer has left a new comment on your post "Ichabod Averages 1500 Page-reads Per Day":
This is the link to the current LutherQuest (sic) UOJ thread:
http://www.lutherquest.org/discus40/messages/13/93321.html?1306013684
Click on the first archive link to get to the initial post.
Yes, they continue to coo into each other's ears in support of the false gospel of Universal Objective Justification.
This is the link to the current LutherQuest (sic) UOJ thread:
http://www.lutherquest.org/discus40/messages/13/93321.html?1306013684
Click on the first archive link to get to the initial post.
Yes, they continue to coo into each other's ears in support of the false gospel of Universal Objective Justification.
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