Saturday, October 15, 2011

Luther Rocks - Fired



Luther Rocks:


'via Blog this'

Shots Fired...
...across the bow that is:  See here.


They have stood up to the wrong teaching of objective justification in the WELS; they have stood up to the WELS leadership pushing for the NNIV; while also contending for the proper use of the Means of Grace.  Now they have incorporated; established officers and articles of incorporation (governing).  If I didn't know better I'd say they are in a state of confession.



Our prayers are with you.



The Word of the Lord endures forever!

Always Glad To Answer Jack Kilcrease, Son of WELS Pastor, Trained by ELCA, Teaching for the Antichrist, Doctrinal Expert for Paul McCain, MDiv


Dr. Jack Kilcrease

About Me

I am a layperson in the Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod and an adjunct professor of Theology and Humanities at Aquinas College in Grand Rapids. I grew up in Oregon and attended Luther College in Iowa (B.A. History and Religion) and Luther Seminary in St. Paul, MN (M.A. Doctrine and Theology). I graduated in 2009 from Marquette University with a Ph.D in Systematic Theology. My master's thesis was a comparison of Luther and St. John of Damascus concepts of Christology and atonement. My doctoral dissertation was a critique of the atonement theology of Gerhard O. Forde and my suggestion of a confessional Lutheran alternative. I am also the author of the following articles: "The ELCA, Homosexuality and the Orders of Creation," "Gerhard and Chemnitz on the Salvation of the Unbaptized," "Evangelical and Catholic? The Conservative Reformation's Scriptural Principle and the Catholicity of the Gospel," "Kenosis and Vocation: Christ as the Exemplar and Agent of Christian Freedom," "Gerhard O. Forde on the Law: A Confessional Lutheran Critique" (Forthcoming). I am married to the historian Dr. Bethany M. Tanis (now Kilcrease).



Dr. Jack Kilcrease has left a new comment on your post "Kansas City Bishop Is First To Be Charged Criminal...":

"ELCA paid $40 million for covering up the abusive past of a man they were too happy to ordain."

As a conservative Lutheran, I of course do not believe that we should cast stones at any one. In that you make a good point.

But, seriously, I mean, where do you get this stuff? Do you have any actual evidence of this? I personally don't care much for the ELCA, but this claim about the 40 million dollars doesn't sound very credible to me. I will totally believe it if you can come up with evidence.

Your response: Blah, blah, blah. You miss spelled (sic) a word. Blah, blah, you're secretly a Catholic. Blah, blah, UOJ is universalism. Blah.

No need for a response then.

***

GJ - The lawsuit was settled for about $40 million, acknowledged in the ELCA news archives. If Jack wants to find it, he can spend some time doing research instead of proving how foolish he is.

Jack should be quite familiar with ELCA, since he went to one of their seminaries.

The story was widely discussed and so scandalous--even for ELCA--that several publications dealt with the details. Here is one by their well known Lutheran Forum editor. Below -

By Rev. Russell E. Saltzman

Copyright 2004 by American Lutheran Publicity Bureau - Kelmed without permission, for scholarly purposes.

This is very serious, very messy and potentially very, very costly to the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA). We are speaking of the lawsuit against Trinity Lutheran Seminary, Columbus, OH and the ELCA. We have mentioned it before (Forum Letter: 33:1).

The suit was instigated by the families of the teenage boys who fell victim to sexual molestation by Gerald Patrick Thomas. Thomas is the 1997 Trinity graduate who, at the time of his arrest, was serving an ELCA congregation in Marshall, TX. His 2002 conviction on multiple counts of sexual abuse resulted in a prison sentence of 397 years, reputed to be the most severe penalty ever meted out in such a case by any criminal court. The only comparable sentence we have heard about is 270 years given to a Catholic priest. The lawsuit is seeking more than $300 million from the ELCA and will be heard before Judge Bonnie Leggat in her Harrison County, TX district courtroom —— the same judge, incidentally, who presided over Thomas’’ criminal trial.

Were you to visit and click under the district court’’s jury docket schedule, you will find John Alfred Doe, et al vs. Evangelical Lutheran Church of America, et al scheduled for April 5, provided no settlement is reached in the meanwhile. We know that negotiations were held early February. We know, too, that the plaintiffs are confident, very confident, of going to trial.

Given the materials related to the case that we have in hand, we can understand why.

Depositions and memos

Forum Letter is in possession of the deposition of James M. Childs, one of the defendants named in the suit. At the time Thomas was a seminarian, Childs was Trinity’’s academic dean and is now director of the ELCA’’s sexuality task force. We also have several other depositions given by ELCA officials during discovery, including that of ELCA Presiding Bishop Mark S. Hanson, made in Chicago at the Lutheran Center last September 22. Additionally, we have copies of numerous internal seminary memos related to Thomas’’ internship and behavior while a student at the seminary, and we have memos from Bp. Kevin Kanouse, bishop of the ELCA Northern Texas/Northern Louisiana Synod related to the arrest of Gerald Thomas. Bp. Kanouse within days of Thomas’’ arrest specifically alerted a seminary official to a possible lawsuit.

From these items we now know that at least some Trinity officials were well aware of Thomas’’ problematic behavior with adolescent boys, and they were aware of it prior to his certification for call. They knew that while on his internship Thomas provided alcohol to adolescent boys in his apartment and allowed them to watch a same-sex male pornographic video. There was police involvement at the time, but no charges were filed.

Question in dispute

This incident did not end his internship, which concluded in the normal fashion. He returned to Trinity Seminary for his final year. The incident did merit an ""incident report"" by his internship supervisor, Pr. Melvin Swoyer, which is also in our possession. Seminary officials never shared the report with Thomas’’ synodical candidacy committee, though at least one memo speculates about the impact such a report might have upon a candidacy committee.

Further, seminary officials knew that a pastor in charge of an after-school youth program in Columbus, OH, where Thomas worked during his senior year, had also raised concerns about Thomas over the manner of his involvement with male youth in the program.

To be clear, the seminary faculty did not specifically vote to approve Thomas’’ candidacy. Instead, of three recommendations available to the seminary —— approve, deny, postpone —— the faculty took no action. None of the appropriate blanks were checked. In effect, the faculty rendered a ""no comment"" on the fitness of his candidacy for certification. We do not know what questions, if any, the candidacy committee may have raised given Trinity’’s lack of recommendation.

The issues around Thomas’’ behavior on internship and with the after-school program were addressed with Thomas.

How thoroughly and how seriously the seminary addressed those questions is the subject in litigation.

He was urged to seek therapy because of his unstable ""boundaries"" with teenage male youth. He never did, nor did anyone at the seminary insist. Moreover, they claim they could not. In the depositions we have seen, all plead a lack of authority to compel or require any student to seek therapy. That is probably so, absent a threat of dismissal. But there was not, in the seminary’’s opinion, reason to make therapy an absolute requirement before certification. Thomas’’ inaction in seeking therapy did raise concern with at least one seminary official, but by that time Thomas was certified with a call in hand to Marshall, TX.

Casting a wide net

Among those named as ELCA defendants from Trinity Seminary are: Brad Binau (who conducted several sessions with Thomas post-internship), Allan Sager (internship director), Dennis A. Anderson (seminary president at the time), Leland Elhard (then on faculty, now retired), Don Luck (faculty), Mark Ramseth (current president). Defendants from the Northern Texas/Northern Louisiana ELCA Synod include: Mark Herbener (synod bishop when Thomas was called to Marshall, TX), Kevin Kanouse (Herbener’’s successor and bishop at the time of Thomas’’ arrest), Earl Eliason (an assistant to Herbener, of whom more in a moment). Named as ELCA defendants are: H. George Anderson (presiding bishop during that period) and Mark S. Hanson (the present presiding bishop).

The plaintiffs, of course, cast as wide a net as possible hoping to haul in a big catch. Our opinion, the only names of merit in the lawsuit are the synodical and seminary officials.

Disingenuous discipline

Nonetheless, the deposition of Bp. Hanson reveals the plaintiff’’s interest, keen interest, in ascertaining just exactly how rigorously ELCA disciplinary policies on sexual misconduct are actually enforced. Any pattern of non-enforcement common throughout the ELCA arguably strengthens the plaintiff’’s case for negligence regarding Thomas.

In this respect, Hanson is asked about his period of service as a synod bishop. He is questioned, ""When you were synod bishop, did you have a lesbian minister in your synod?"" Hanson: ""I literally would have to take time to think through who was in the synod."" Next, ""Did you have a lesbian minister in the synod while you were bishop that was engaged in a committed sexual relationship with another lesbian and would not take a vow of celibacy?"" Hanson: ""I was never given allegations of that kind of behavior about one of the rostered persons in my synod by anyone.""

This may seem more than a little disingenuous. It is not, as some might suspect, a reference to the illicitly ordained Anita Hill who was never on the synod roster. Instead it refers to another pastor presently on the clergy roster of the St. Paul MN Area Synod.

Zipper troubles

What is evident is that some synod bishops construe an absence of formal allegations —— never mind how well-known the problem may be —— to mean it does not exist and therefore does not merit intervention by a church authority. The crisis of the Roman Catholic scandal, we point out, isn’’t just that some pastors acted badly, but that so many bishops failed in their responsibilities to enforce policies in existence. The similar factor here – which admittedly is an oversimplification – is the "old church" culture that would not directly confront rumored heterosexual misconduct, in the hope it could be dealt with "pastorally" among "old boys" in a "friendly" and "paternal" way. That often amounted to nothing more than allowing the pastor to receive another call. The egregious problem of pastors with multiple incidents of "zipper trouble" is one the ELCA has been forced to face. Meanwhile, though, since the ELCA does not know what to teach about homosexuality, the "paternal," "pastoral" approach, disgraced as a way of dealing with heterosexual predator offenses, seems to be alive and well when the context is homosexuality. In short, the once "tolerated" list of ""acceptable" kinds of sexual misconduct has been replaced by another one.

Little distinction

Questions surrounding disciplinary enforcement grew much sharper as the plaintiff’’s attorney raised in one deposition the instance of former Bp. Mark Herbener’’s assistant, Earl Eliason. Eliason installed Thomas at Marshall, TX in June 1997. Just four months earlier, Eliason had pled guilty to misdemeanor charges of lewd behavior with several men in a public restroom. No public action was taken by the synod bishop; what private action may have been taken is unknown. Eliason remained on Herbener’’s staff until Herbener’’s term expired. He took retirement shortly afterward and then resigned from the ELCA clergy roster in early June 2002, four months after the Marshall, TX lawsuit was filed.

It must be said the plaintiff’’s attorney makes little distinction between gay men attracted to teenage boys and gay men content with more age-appropriate partners. Yet the suggestion here is that in cases involving homosexual men and women, ELCA discipline amounts to a wink and a nod whatever risks exist, even when the risk is posed to adolescents and children.

When standards for pastors said to be devised in part to limit potential liability arising from misconduct are not enforced, a liability insurer conceivably is let off the hook. The insurance against liability is good only so long as the disciplinary policy, upon which the guarantee is based, is in fact put into effect.

This is what Trinity Seminary officials are accused of doing —— winking, nodding, going along, failing to enforce church policy.

Is that what happened?

As we said earlier, and we wish to stress it again, the issues around Thomas’’ behavior as an intern and as a student were addressed. At litigation is, were they adequately addressed? Testimony from the seminary officials involved asserts that the answer is clearly yes. As best they could view things at the time, there was not enough evidence to warrant Thomas’’ dismissal.

But this isn’t to say a Texas civil court jury will not view matters differently.



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bruce-church (https://bruce-church.myopenid.com/) has left a new comment on your post "Always Glad To Answer Jack Kilcrease, Son of WELS ...":

Evidently, Jack was studying German in Dresden, Germany, when the lawsuit occurred in 2004, and he didn't hear about it. However, only two years after this mega-lawsuit involving the ELCA and homosexuality (mentioned several times in the press release about the case), Jack Kilcrease wrote an article on the ELCA and homosexuality, and yet he didn't know about this case. Of course, that's the norm for studies of homosexuality in the church--discussing deviant sexual behavior without any reference to crime statistics and criminology studies, and the actual experience of the church in these matters:

Homosexuality mentioned several times in press release about court case:
http://www.foclnews.org/Articles/Saltzman1401.htm
----------
Kilcrease's ELCA and homosexuality article:
http://theologicalresources.wordpress.com/2006/10/

Logia: A Journal of Lutheran Theology, Vol. XV, No. 4 (Reformation 2006)
“The ELCA, Homosexuality, and the Orders of Creation”, by Jack D. Kilcrease III.
--------
Kilcrease maybe in Germany in 2004 went the suit occurred:

http://www.aquinas.edu/humanities/faculty.html

Jack Kilcrease grew up in Salem and Portland, Oregon. He attended Luther College in Decorah, Iowa, where he graduated with a B.A. in History and Religion in 2001. He later attended Luther Seminary in St. Paul, MN, where he received an M.A. in Systematic Theology in 2003. He briefly lived in Dresden, Germany where he studied German at the Goethe Institute. In 2009, he received his Ph.D in Systematic Theology from Marquette University in Milwaukee, Wis. 



***


GJ - Jack had to live in primitive conditions in Germany. The bathroom, in the home where he was staying, burst into flames. Fortunately the fire never reached the house.

Mexico's newest export to US: water

Mexico's newest export to US: water:

'via Blog this'

Kansas City Bishop Is First To Be Charged Criminally With Sheltering Abusive Clergyman | Fox News

Kansas City Bishop Is First To Be Charged Criminally With Sheltering Abusive Clergyman | Fox News:

Kansas City Bishop Charged

'via Blog this'

***

GJ - Conservative Lutherans cannot cluck their tongues. They have done far more in covering up multiple felonies, but they excommunicate for disagreeing with His Holiness the DP or SP.

ELCA paid $40 million for covering up the abusive past of a man they were too happy to ordain.

Friday, October 14, 2011

Bentonville Tigers No. 1 High School Football Team in US (Includes first-hand account)

Bentonville Tigers No. 1 High School Football Team in US (Includes first-hand account):



News bulletin from "Podunk-land," as they say in Appleton, Wussconsin, home of the pan-religious Thrivent company.

'via Blog this'

Roth to be installed bishop of ELCA Central/Southern Illinois Synod Oct. 15 - News Releases - Evangelical Lutheran Church in America

Roth to be installed bishop of ELCA Central/Southern Illinois Synod Oct. 15 - News Releases - Evangelical Lutheran Church in America:

'via Blog this'

Born in St. Louis, Roth earned a Bachelor of Arts degree at Concordia Senior College, Fort Wayne, Ind. He attended Eberhard-Karls Universität, Tübingen, Germany, before earning a Master of Arts degree from Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tenn. He earned a Master of Divinity Degree from Christ Seminary-Seminex, St. Louis, and a Doctor of Philosophy degree from Vanderbilt University.

Following his ordination by the Association of Evangelical Lutheran Churches in 1981, Roth was assistant pastor at Grace Lutheran Church, Glen Ellyn, Ill., and prior to that a pastoral assistant at Lutheran Church of the Living Christ, Florissant, Mo.

GJ - Seminex men have done very well in ELCA. Their professors took over the Chicago seminary by working as a united block.

Intrepid Lutherans: Welcome to Intrepid Lutherans, Inc.

Intrepid Lutherans: Welcome to Intrepid Lutherans, Inc.:

'via Blog this'

Thursday, October 13, 2011

Joe Krohn on the Ninevites

Don't think about it too long.

Justification by Faith Alone

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 13, 2011

Ninevites Affirm Justification By Faith Alone
Jonah 3 (KJV)
1  And the word of the LORD came unto Jonah the second time, saying,
2 Arise, go unto Nineveh, that great city, and preach unto it the preaching that I bid thee.
3 So Jonah arose, and went unto Nineveh, according to the word of the LORD. Now Nineveh was an exceeding great city of three days' journey.
4 And Jonah began to enter into the city a day's journey, and he cried, and said, Yet forty days, and Nineveh shall be overthrown.
5 So the people of Nineveh believed God, and proclaimed a fast, and put on sackcloth, from the greatest of them even to the least of them.
6 For word came unto the king of Nineveh, and he arose from his throne, and he laid his robe from him, and covered him with sackcloth, and sat in ashes.
7 And he caused it to be proclaimed and published through Nineveh by the decree of the king and his nobles, saying, Let neither man nor beast, herd nor flock, taste any thing: let them not feed, nor drink water:
8 But let man and beast be covered with sackcloth, and cry mightily unto God: yea, let them turn every one from his evil way, and from the violence that is in their hands.
9 Who can tell if God will turn and repent, and turn away from his fierce anger, that we perish not?
10 And God saw their works, that they turned from their evil way; and God repented of the evil, that he had said that he would do unto them; and he did it not.

Emphasis mine.

Lito Cruz, PhD, on the Jay Webber Defense of UOJ



LPC has left a new comment on your post "Lindee Undercuts the Jay Webber Gambit: UOJ Is Ind...":

What Pr. Jay Webber did in quoting Rambach is so asinine.

1. It is clear UOJers argue by authority and not by Scripture exegesis nor by the Confessions.
2. For goodness sake, why bring to your aid, the quotation of an authority whose authority is dubious and whose reputation is questionable? This is so pathetic and disperate in trying to prop up a sinking boat -which over here in Aus would be called HMS - UOJ.

LPC

---

LPC has left a new comment on your post "Pietists Turn to 1 Timothy 3:16, But Lenski Is an ...":

Clearly UOJers are betting their farm on one verse which they imagine teaches UOJ and that is Rom 4:25. It seems that the Lutheran Pietism's exegesis of this can be traced back starting from Walther back to the Halle Pietists.

I remember Brett and I crossed sword with Kilcrease on this in 2010. Kilcrease should wake up to the data presented in this blog because that Pietist connection is the one he wished to deny yet, UOJ's Pietist connections are becoming as clear as day each time UOJers speak.

LPC
PS. I believe Pr. Rydecki is seing the light and the UOJ issues are now very clear to him. Praise the Lord for this.

Another Love Note from an Anonymous Stormtrooper

Who's the moron?


d3ee1598-f5b2-11e0-b80f-000bcdcb5194 (https://openid.aol.com/opaque/d3ee1598-f5b2-11e0-b80f-000bcdcb5194) has left a new comment on your post "Double-down on Martin Chemnitz":

Wow, you're a total idiot. Seriously? You can't figure out that words mean different things in different contexts- like that the word "justification" can refer to either the act of forgiveness or the act of receiving forgiveness. You moron! You got kicked out of 5 denominations and screwed up your family's medical insurance because you don't have a command of the English language! Unbelievable!

***

GJ - When the arrow hits, the feathers fly. I wonder why two universities have me teaching the craft of writing.  My tummy was shaking with laughter while reading this hysterical post. Such Enthusiasm! Such courage!

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d3ee1598-f5b2-11e0-b80f-000bcdcb5194 (https://openid.aol.com/opaque/d3ee1598-f5b2-11e0-b80f-000bcdcb5194) has left a new comment on your post "Another Love Note from an Anonymous Stormtrooper":

My name is Rev. Rick Jordan. Sorry my name didn't come up. Nice to see your rhetorical strategy of pretending actual rational challenges are laughable is still in place. [GJ - Run-on sentence, gets a D in composition.] Enjoy your cult and your stupid followers.

***

Look at this geneology, a fascination he shares with Jay Webber. Jordan is LCMS.

UOJ Stormtroopers Cannot Forgive the Unforgivable -
Asking Them Questions



SimpleMan has left a new comment on your post "Intrepid Lutherans: The Case of the Disappearing "...":

I'm not saying that I agree with Curia's conclusion, but I find it interesting that he says objective justification is not an official teaching of the WELS, and yet someone has now been taken off from membership in the WELS because of that very teaching which is not an official teaching.

GJ - Joe Krohn simply began to ask some questions and beg the congregation to study the issue. But he also opposed spending $45,000 on Cornerstone, a LCMS-WELS joint business that violates the code of ethical fund raising.

Rick Techlin sinned by studying the issues with other concerned laity and pastors in his district, asking for a meeting. Dugout Doug Englebrecht fired the circuit pastor who dared to discipline Tim Glende, ducked the carefully arranged meeting, and left a letter blaming this blog for the troubles he created with his incompetence and tolerance of false doctrine and plagiarism.

These jittery, thin-skinned false teachers in WELS say they want to reach out with love but they bludgeon their own members. Shepherds do not beat the sheep. Satan does that.

WELS has tolerated this situation since the 1960s, when the radical foundation for all this was created. Since then the old war horses--the real pastors--have been shoved aside or chased out of the Wisconsin Sect. The pastors and laity have tolerated this debacle, joining in shunning the shunned, so now they must pay the price. God allows false teachers to punish doctrinal laxity. "They flay their disciples to the bone." - Luther


Double-down on Martin Chemnitz



Brett Meyer has left a new comment on your post "Pietists Turn to 1 Timothy 3:16, But Lenski Is an ...":

UOJists condemn those who, by the grace and mercy of God the Faither, Son and Holy Ghost, cling alone to Justification by Faith, rebuking Justification before and without faith in Christ.

UOJists declare the whole unbelieving world righteous by God's divine verdict before and without Word and Sacrament working faith in Christ's atonement. This includes the Antichrist.

Christ declares in Proverbs 17:15, "He that justifieth the wicked, and he that condemneth the just, even they both are abomination to the LORD."

Martin Chemnitz wrote against the Calvinists and the Roman Catholics.
At the peak of his career he was the senior editor of the Book of Concord,
the senior writer of the Formula of Concord.
Like Tyndale, he studied under Luther and Melanchthon.


---


WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 12, 2011


Sodomites Refute Objective Justification...

...at least the false teaching of justification.

We know from Scripture that the Lord destroyed Sodom and Gomorrah because there were no righteous people living there.  See Genesis 18 &19. He spared Lot, his wife and two daughters.  Even their righteousness was questionable when you read the account post flight.

From WELS confession of faith:

"IV. JUSTIFICATION BY GRACE THROUGH FAITH

1. We believe that God has justified all sinners, that is, he has declared them righteous for the sake of Christ. This is the central message of Scripture upon which the very existence of the church depends. It is a message relevant to people of all times and places, of all races and social levels, for "the result of one trespass was condemnation for all men" (Romans 5:18). All need forgiveness of sins before God, and Scripture proclaims that all have been justified, for "the result of one act of righteousness was justification that brings life for all men" (Romans 5:18)." 


According to the WELS all men have been declared righteous before God.

But Moses writes by divine inspriration thus:

From the KJV; Genesis 18 - 19:

"23And Abraham drew near, and said, Wilt thou also destroy the righteous with the wicked?24Peradventure there be fifty righteous within the city: wilt thou also destroy and not spare the place for the fifty righteous that are therein?...32And he said, Oh let not the LORD be angry, and I will speak yet but this once: Peradventure ten shall be found there. And he said, I will not destroy it for ten's sake. 33And the LORD went his way, as soon as he had left communing with Abraham: and Abraham returned unto his place...24Then the LORD rained upon Sodom and upon Gomorrah brimstone and fire from the LORD out of heaven;25And he overthrew those cities, and all the plain, and all the inhabitants of the cities, and that which grew upon the ground...27And Abraham gat up early in the morning to the place where he stood before the LORD: 28And he looked toward Sodom and Gomorrah, and toward all the land of the plain, and beheld, and, lo, the smoke of the country went up as the smoke of a furnace."

Emphasis are mine.

Make Smoke, Disappear.
Jay Webber and the Evangelical Lutheran Synod

"Pietists are orthodox when they agree with my opinions."






David Jay Webber said...
I knew that Rambach was a pietist. I was not using his observations on this verse to discredit Chemnitz, but to supplement Chemnitz. His exegesis and reflections stand on their own, and should be evaluated on their own merits, regardless of what he might have said on other topics on other occasions. And it is also clear that on this topic in particular, he was not inventing a new pietist notion, but was recapitulating the orthodox teaching of the orthodox theologian Quistorp. Theologians with pietist leanings were not wrong in everything they said, especially when they were repeating the sound teaching of orthodox theologians of earlier times.


***

GJ - Quistorp is a theologian so obscure that people confuse the father and the son. As one Lutheran layman used to say, "Any excuse will do."

Pietism is Calvinism in the disguise of Lutheran doctrine and worship; therefore, it is neither Calvinism nor Lutheranism. Now we witness the Intrepid interloper, Jay Webber, defending Pietism when it supports his precious UOJ.

Walther was a cell-group Pietist who allied himself with another cell-group Pietist, Stephan. The Stephanites brought their cell group methods over the America, just as Stephan brought his Halle Pietism into his ministry.

Pietists Turn to 1 Timothy 3:16,
But Lenski Is an Antidote



KJV 1 Timothy 3:16 And without controversy great is the mystery of godliness:
God was
  1. manifest in the flesh, 
  2. justified in the Spirit, 
  3. seen of angels, 
  4. preached unto the Gentiles, 
  5. believed on in the world, 
  6. received up into glory. [numbers added by GJ, to show the Trinitarian form].



Lenski:
When and how was Jesus declared righteous by God? In and by the act of raising him from the dead. Men had nailed him to the cross, condemned him to the cross as one accursed of God, for to be hung on wood meant to be declared accursed of God; him God raised from the dead, him God thereby declared righteous. God’s forensic judgment was analytic: Jesus himself was declared righteous; it was not synthetic: another’s righteousness was not imputed to him. On Christ’s sinlessness note John 8:46; Heb. 10:7, 9; 7:26; 4:15. Why this signal act of declaring Jesus righteous? He is made “unto us righteousness,” 1 Cor. 1:30; “he was raised for our righteousness,” Rom. 4:21; “that we might be made the righteousness of God in him,” 1 Cor. 5:21; Rom. 10:4.

The phrases match the verbs; a person would not be manifested “in spirit,” the manifestation would be “in flesh,” for when “flesh” is used to designate the whole human nature, as it is here, it includes body, soul, and spirit and thus the whole visible, bodily life that is manifest to other men and manifesting the kind of person one is. So Christ was manifested “in flesh,” and John 1:14 says, “we beheld his glory,” etc. But one is not justified or declared righteous “in flesh” but “in spirit,” for one’s spirit is judged when a justification occurs; here it was Christ’s spirit of holy obedience unto the death on the accursed cross.
Lenski, R. C. H.: The Interpretation of St. Paul's Epistles to the Colossians, to the Thessalonians, to Timothy, to Titus and to Philemon. Columbus, O. : Lutheran Book Concern, 1937, S. 611.


***


GJ - The misuse of 1 Timothy 3:16 shows how rationalism works. Man has no parallel with Christ, yet they create one in their minds. They attack the majesty of Christ in doing so. They have God declaring Christ righteous in the same way man is declared righteous. They conclude that all of mankind is declared righteous in the resurrection of Christ. Thus they connect this verse and Romans 4:25 with their fake exegesis.


One flaw alone defeats their scheme. Christ did not die as a sinner. He died as the Holy One. The resurrection revealed this holiness to the world.


KJV Psalm 16:10 For thou wilt not leave my soul in hell; neither wilt thou suffer thine Holy One to see
corruption.

To have the world declared righteous, a rolling righteousness that seems to take effect before birth, according to that whack job Ed Preuss, is the fantasy of UOJ. And how does that happen without the Word? No one has explained it, as much as they posture about their exegetical skills.

Somehow this point-in-time world absolution must move forward as people are born, since they are born forgiven, but no one deals with pre-resurrection world absolution. Abraham was justified by faith in the Old Testament so Sodom was justified without faith? Let me be the first to acknowledge confusion.





Lindee Undercuts the Jay Webber Gambit:
UOJ Is Indeed Pietism

Johann Jacob Rambach, Halle Pietist.


From the Intrepid Lutherans, On UOJ:

Rev. Webber,

I've been away from my desk for several hours now, and I notice that I have been addressed in several posts, above, but your last post is foremost on my mind at the moment. I am disappointed. Of course, none of us have ever heard of this theologian you quote with distinction, Johann Jacob Rambach, and use to discredit the orthodox theologian Martin Chemnitz in his exegesis of 1 Tim. 3:16. One of us Intrepids -- not me, not Rev's Rydecki or Spencer, but one of us who does a lot of work behind the scenes -- began feverishly researching this theologian, to find out who he is. You quote Rambach from Schmidt/Marquart, so perhaps you don't really know who he is, either. I assume, in all charity, that you don't.

What our fellow Intrepid found is that Rambach was a confessing Pietist. In fact, several essays from the WELS essay file identify and criticize him as such:

Pietism’s Teaching on Church and Ministry: As Evidenced in its Pastoral Practice
After Three Centuries - The Legacy of Pietism
Agreement on the Correct View of the Authority of Scripture as the Source of Doctrine: The Way to Unity in the Church
A Historical Survey and Brief Examination of the Hymnbooks Used Within the Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod
The Confessional Lutheran Emigrations From Prussia And Saxony Around 1839

When I found out about this, I immediately pulled my copy of Loescher's Timotheus Verinus off the shelf, only to discover that Loescher really had nothing to say about the man. But when I pulled Schmid's History of Pietism down, and search for Rambach, I discovered that he was no ordinary Pietist. He was a Halle Pietist, and a close associate of Hermann August Franke. Schmid, on page 319, identifies Rambach as a Halle Pietist and compatriot of Franke, and credits Rambach for his accomplishments in the area of hermeneutics -- which is, no doubt, how it is that we find him prominently mentioned in F.S Schmidt's work. However, on page 320 Schmid qualifies his praise of such pietists, stating that their accomplishments are low compared to the harm caused by them: the use of such accomplishments was for the purpose of discrediting orthodoxy. And here we are now, treated to the authoritative work of a German exegete of whom we were happily ignorant, who is marshaled for the purpose of discrediting Chemnitz and elevating UOJ, only to discover that this man was a bona fide Halle Pietist, and that he engaged his work, alongside that of Franke and other radical Pietists, to serve the design of toppling Lutheran orthodoxy.

Continued in next comment...
You know, we at IL have been very careful, for the sake of fraternity, to avoid mention of his name or reference to his research on this subject. But the prominent use of a Halle Pietist, who produced his work at the pinnacle of the period of radical German Pietism, to discredit an orthodox theologian like Chemnitz and instead supporting the teaching of Universal Objective Justification, only proves Dr. Jackson's thesis: UOJ did emerge from Halle Pietism. I myself, up to this point, have been skeptical of this thesis, as my own extended and personal contact with confessing Pietists has had me convinced that they are not guilty of distinguishing Objective from Subjective aspects of Justification -- certainly not to the elevation of the Objective! -- as everything for them is Subjective. But rather, I had thought, they are guilty of separating (subjective) Justification from Conversion. You yourself have read Iver Olson's Baptism and Spiritual Life, and know precisely what I am referring to. To me, if there was anything to Dr. Jackson's connection of Halle to UOJ, it was in later Halle Rationalism. But now there can be no doubt. Rambach, a bona fide Halle Pietist, supplied the foundation necessary to topple formerly orthodox teaching on the matter of Justification.

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Jay Webber's post on Intrepid Lutherans:

O.K., one more post, and then I will try to honor Paul's wishes and not post anything else beyond his topical restriction...

I can understand why Chemnitz would read 1 Timothy 3:16 in this way. But his reading does not rule out what I would consider to be a necessary corrolary to such a "personal" justification of Jesus. The 18th-century Lutheran theologian Johann Jacob Rambach makes the following observation in his Ausfuehrliche Erklaerung der Epistel an die Roemer (p. 322), regarding the Lord's payment and satisfaction of sinful humanity's "debt" to God:

"Christ was in his resurrection first of all justified for his own person, Is. 50:51 Tim. 3:16, since the righteousness of God declared that it had been paid and satisfied in full by this our Substitute, and issued him as it were a receipt thereof; and that happened in his resurrection, when he was released from his debtor's prison and set free. But since the Substitute was now justified, then in him also all debtors were co-justified."

Later in that commentary Rambach also writes (in a way that shows that he has 1 Tim. 3:16 in mind):

"The justification of the human race indeed also ocurred, in respect of the acquisition, in one moment, in the moment in which Christ rose and was thus declared righteous; but in respect of the appropriation it still continues till the last day."

GJ - I appreciate Jay Webber confirming my thesis and Doug Lindee acknowledging it. Many people have helped sort out the details and causes. The Knapp connection came from another researcher. The laity have been the most insightful and clear-minded about this. They started me on this research, kept after me to continue, and continued to encourage me.



Luther's greatest single book and
Bunyan's favorite, next to the Bible.
Bunyan wrote Pilgrim's Progress,
once the best-selling English book after the KJV.

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bruce-church (https://bruce-church.myopenid.com/) has left a new comment on your post "Pietism and UOJ? Jay Webber Jumps Up To Prove the...":

Webber got the Rambach quote from volume III of Walther-Baier, pp. 271-3. Here is another translation of that quote:

J. J. Rambach: “Christ was in his resurrection first of all for his own person made righteous, Isa. 50:5, 1 Tim. 3:16, then the righteousness of God declared that from this our surety may be paid out and we are fully freed, and he is like a receipt given, and this happens in his resurrection; there he leaves his shield-tower and is placed on free feet. There now the surety is justified, thus in him also all debtors will be made righteous.” (Ausführliche Erklärung der Ep. and die Römer, p. 322).

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Brett Meyer has left a new comment on your post "Lindee Undercuts the Jay Webber Gambit: UOJ Is Ind...":

Did (W)ELS Pastor Jay Webber happen to remember the name of the Bus that just hit him?

By the grace and mercy of God he will repent of his error concerning the central and chief article of Scripture and turn in God given faith to Christ alone for forgiveness and life.

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

Pietism and UOJ?
Jay Webber Jumps Up To Prove the Connection

UOJ is connected to Pietism via Zinzendorf and Halle University.
Bishop Stephan led his cell-group Pietists out of this congregation to America.

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German Wikipedia


Johann Jakob Rambach (* February 24 1693 in Halle (Saale) , † April 19 1735 in Giessen ) was a German Protestant theologian and hymn writer .
He first served an apprenticeship as a carpenter , he was a disciple August Hermann Francke and theologian , later succeeded him as professor , son of Joachim Lange , 1731 Professor and Superintendent in Giessen, editor of a hymn book with many new songs. In the community life of the evangelical church today is primarily still Rambach "I am baptized in your name" by the song (Protestant hymnal No. 200), which is often sung following a baptism present.
Rambach was twice married. He completed his first marriage with Johanna Elisabeth († 1730), the daughter of the professor of theology Joachim Lange . That same year he married again.
Of his daughters are known Charlotte Elizabeth (born June 15, 1727 in Halle (Saale), † September 8, 1761 in Worms, married May 24, 1746 with the pastor in high school in Giessen and Worms Christian Heinrich Nebel († 1786).) [1] . Her older sister is the well-known from Goethe's poetry and truth pastor's wife Griesbach [2]



Cyberhymnal

Son of Hans Ja­kob Ram­bach, cab­i­net mak­er at Hal­le, Jo­hann left school in 1706, and en­tered his fa­ther’s work­shop. How­ev­er, in the au­tumn of 1707, he dis­lo­cat­ed his an­kle, and dur­ing his re­cov­ery, he turned to his school books, and his de­sire for learn­ing re­a­wak­ened. Ear­ly in 1708, he en­tered the La­tin School of the Hal­le Or­phanage, and on Oc­to­ber 27, 1712, he ma­tric­u­lat­ed at the Un­i­ver­si­ty of Hal­le as a med­i­cal stu­dent. He soon turned his at­tent­ion to the­ol­o­gy, though, and be­came es­pe­ci­al­ly in­ter­est­ed in Old Tes­ta­ment stu­dy un­der J. H. Mi­chael­is. In May 1715, he be­came one of Mi­chael­is’ as­sist­ants, help­ing pre­pare his edi­tion of the He­brew Bi­ble, for which he wrote the com­men­ta­ry on Ruth, Es­ther, Ne­he­mi­ah, and other books. His health be­gan to suf­fer in the spring of 1719, and he ac­cept­ed the in­vi­ta­tion of Count von Henk­el to stay at Pöl­zig, near Ron­ne­burg, where he spent sev­er­al months. By Au­gust, he had re­cov­ered, and went to vi­sit Je­na, where a num­ber of stu­dents had asked him to lec­ture. He set­tled in Je­na in Oc­to­ber 1719, liv­ing in the home of Pro­fess­or Bud­de­us (J. F. Budde). He grad­u­at­ed MA in March 1720, and in 1723 was ap­point­ed ad­junct of the The­o­lo­gic­al fa­cul­ty at Hal­le; as an in­spect­or of the Or­phan­age; in 1726 ex­tra­or­din­a­ry pro­fess­or of the­ol­o­gy; and in 1727, af­ter A. H. Francke’s death, or­din­a­ry pro­fess­or and preach­er at the Schul­kirche. Here he was ve­ry pop­u­lar, both as preach­er and pro­fess­or, but his col­leagues’ jeal­ousy in­duced him to ac­cept an of­fer from Land­grave Ernst Lud­wig of Hess­en, who in 1731 in­vit­ed him to Giess­en as su­per­in­ten­dent and first pro­fess­or of the­ol­o­gy (be­fore leav­ing Halle, he received his Doc­tor of Di­vin­i­ty de­gree on June 28, 1731), and in Au­gust 1732, ap­point­ed him al­so di­rect­or of the Pae­da­go­gi­um at Giess­en. In 1734, he al­most ac­cept­ed an of­fer of the first pro­fess­or­ship of the­ol­o­gy at the new­ly found­ed Un­i­ver­si­ty of Gött­ing­en, but at the re­quest of the Land­grave, de­cid­ed to stay in Giess­en.


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Jay Webber cinches his argument with a quotation from a Halle Pietist:

The 18th-century Lutheran theologian Johann Jacob Rambach makes the following observation in his Ausfuehrliche Erklaerung der Epistel an die Roemer (p. 322), regarding the Lord's payment and satisfaction of sinful humanity's "debt" to God:

"Christ was in his resurrection first of all justified for his own person, Is. 50:5, 1 Tim. 3:16, since the righteousness of God declared that it had been paid and satisfied in full by this our Substitute, and issued him as it were a receipt thereof; and that happened in his resurrection, when he was released from his debtor's prison and set free. But since the Substitute was now justified, then in him also all debtors were co-justified."

Later in that commentary Rambach also writes (in a way that shows that he has 1 Tim. 3:16 in mind):

"The justification of the human race indeed also ocurred, in respect of the acquisition, in one moment, in the moment in which Christ rose and was thus declared righteous; but in respect of the appropriation it still continues till the last day."


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Rev. Webber is a smart guy, but Webber is wrong in this case. I think he is confused because UOJers mix Lutheran doctrine in with their UOJ doctrine. They speak of faith acquiring righteousness in the subjective justification step, but strictly according to their UOJ doctrine, there is no acquiring anything by faith, but instead faith only opens their eyes and they realize that they had been justified all along.

That's sound Lutheran doctrine by Rambach--that in respect to acquisition only, Christ acquired forgiveness and righteousness for the entire world (i.e., universal atonement). The point at issue with UOJ is whether the Father declared the entire world righteous at Christ's resurrection. No, he did not. The righteousness remains in heaven, as Luther's treasure quote tells us, and is only distributed to men as they come to faith, and it is taken back if they apostatize.

***

GJ - I would express the treasure part a different way, Bruce. The treasure of the Gospel is not locked up in heaven but always distributed by the Holy Spirit through the visible and invisible Gospel Word.

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bruce-church (https://bruce-church.myopenid.com/) has left a new comment on your post "Pietism and UOJ? Jay Webber Jumps Up To Prove the...":

Webber got the Rambach quote from volume III of Walther-Baier, pp. 271-3. Here is another translation of that quote:

J. J. Rambach: “Christ was in his resurrection first of all for his own person made righteous, Isa. 50:5, 1 Tim. 3:16, then the righteousness of God declared that from this our surety may be paid out and we are fully freed, and he is like a receipt given, and this happens in his resurrection; there he leaves his shield-tower and is placed on free feet. There now the surety is justified, thus in him also all debtors will be made righteous.” (Ausführliche Erklärung der Ep. and die Römer, p. 322) 

Notre Dame Just Raised 2 Billion Dollars

Bazingo.


Notre Dame is using its extra money to hire famous professors and give scholarships. My PhD there cost me nothing except giving up a full-time income during coursework and comprehensive exams.

The point is - a private school cannot exist anymore without a lot of extra money in endowments. WELS decided to rob the schools in order to pay for missions. Soon they will have neither.

That happens when the advice of Jesus gets turned around. The WELS leaders have been as innocent as serpents and as wise as doves.

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bruce-church (https://bruce-church.myopenid.com/) has left a new comment on your post "Notre Dame Just Raised 2 Billion Dollars":

Why pay more more money into WELS education when they had that glut of Ph.Ds?! Oh wait, they hardly had one Ph.D. My bad.

Once More with Feeling:
UOJ and Church Growth Enthusiasm Go Together



The post below, about UOJ and the Intrepid Lutherans, shows how the false doctrine of UOJ is coming unraveled in WELS and the Little Sect on the Prairie.

UOJ is the natural foundation and fuel for the Church Growth Movement. As Jefferson said in another context, "It is its natural manure."

Lutherans have lost their nerve. They no longer trust the Word of God. They refuse to worship in the beauty of His Holiness. Instead, they mock the Means of Grace by copying the lowest forms of life in Evangelicalism.

Intrepids Open Up UOJ Again,
Plus Comments from Readers



Here is the classic, Knapp-Walther UOJ position:

SEPTEMBER 28, 2011 2:45 PM D. Jerome Klotz said... Pastor Rydecki,

I am not sure I am understanding you, and I do not want to misrepresent your position. Are you asserting that the forgiveness is NOT to be pronounced upon the world? Has this world of sinners not truly been reconciled to the Father by the blood and cross of His Son (I Cor. 5:19)? >[GJ - Merging of Atonement and Justification, so the entire world is absolved of sin without the work of the Holy Spirit in the Means of Grace: Enthusiasm.]

To proclaim such forgiveness is not to confuse objective with subjective justification/reconciliation. To proclaim such forgiveness is to deliver the very message of the Gospel, namely, that Christ has died FOR YOU, has risen FOR YOU, and has reconciled YOU to the Father. Repent, be baptized, and believe: YOU ARE FORGIVEN! [GJ - He should say with Walther and Knapp "Be assured you were already forgiven."]

If we, as I understand you to be arguing, are to water down this objective reality of universal objective justification, then what is it that the sinner grasps hold of and clings to in faith? Does the sinner not receive the forgiveness that has already been won for him in Christ? To speak of justification in any other way implies that our faith is in some way contributive to our forgiveness, i.e., either that our sins were not truly paid for until we believed, or that we could not possibly have known that ours sins were forgiven until we believed. The fact is, however, that we can know that our sins are objectively forgiven prior to our subjective act of faith--which is an act worked in us passive sinners by the working of the Holy Spirit through Word and Sacrament. [GJ - Justification by faith waters down the precious "doctrine" of UOJ.]

In sum, without the objective actuality of forgiveness existing apart from faith, we are left with a faith that exists apart from objective forgiveness, i.e., a faith that clings to itself, or imagines that faith somehow actualizes the potential of forgiveness. [GJ - That is the "your faith is in faith" argument of Rolf Preus and other crypto-Universalists.]

Such preaching robs the sinner of assurance and the radical nature of the grace of the Gospel, being freely (perhaps too freely we think) pronounced upon a world of sinners. [GJ - Justification by faith, according to Paul and Luther, robs the sinner? UOJ accuses believers of heresy - very Waltherian.]

Yet, this forgiveness won in Christ is not beneficial to me the sinner until I have received it, through the Word preached, and through the Sacraments administered. Apart from faith in the actual forgiveness won for me in the crucified and risen Christ, I am cut off from Christ and His saving benefits and am condemned to eternal hell and judgment. [GJ - The second justification makes the first one effective. Everyone is absolved, but not really. Roman Catholics teach that everyone is forgiven, but the sins are never paid for. Same kind of double-talk in double-justification.]

I agree with you that we need to safeguard the doctrine of objective justification from abuse (e.g., to equate it with subjective justification). But to turn objective justification into something potential rather than actual--which is what I am understanding you to be saying--is to destroy the Gospel altogether. [GJ - It is and it is not. Do not think about it too long.]

Please correct me if I have misunderstood you, Pastor.

In Christ, Jerome



***

GJ - Pastor Rydecki has been irritating the UOJ Stormtroopers with his analysis. Lindee now seems to agree with the Book of Concord, too.

Lindee and Webber both imagine that UOJ came up to "combat synergism" in the 19th century.

David Jay Webber said, rather rudely: "Mr. Lindee is mistaken in about two-thirds of his historical analysis. He is correct that the terminology of objective justification was developed in opposition to synergism in the 19th century, but the context was not the election controversy, and it didn't happen first in the Missouri Synod."

I have shown and proven from the actual text that double-justification came from the Halle Pietist Georg Christian Knapp. The two volumes came from years of lectures at Halle, the German translated into English and published in America in 1831, years before the Kidnapper stepped onto the dock of New Orleans.

"His son, Leonard Woods (1807-1878), was born in West Newbury, Mass., on the 24th of November 1807, and graduated at Union College in 1827 and at Andover Theological Seminary in 1830. His translation of Georg Christian Knapp's Christian Theology (1831-1833) was long used as a text-book in American theological seminaries." SourceBishop Stephan, a cell-group Pietist, led Walther, a cell-group Pietist, to America in 1839, so the double-justification scheme preceded them at Halle, where Stephan studied, and in America.


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Brett Meyer has left a new comment on your post "Intrepid Lutherans: The Case of the Disappearing "...":

Kudos to Klotz and Webber for correctly warning that Justification by Faith Alone is incompatible with Universal Objective Justification and those who reject the false gospel of UOJ have rejected the gospel of the (W)ELS completely.

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AC V has left a new comment on your post "Intrepid Lutherans: The Case of the Disappearing "...":

SimpleMan,

In Curia's paper there is not one reference to the Book of Concord. Perhaps that's the reason why Schaller and Hoenecke could not come to consensus on what 2 Corinthians 5:19's "reconciling" means. I.e. does it refer to "Atonement" per Schaller/F. Pieper (the "traditional view) or to "Justification" per Hoenecke/Meyer/Kuske?

Curia's quote from W.H.T. Dau comes close to what the BoC says:

…the entire doctrine concerning the purpose, counsel, will, and ordination of God pertaining to our redemption, call, justification, and salvation should be taken together; …namely, that God in His purpose and counsel ordained [decreed]: 15] 1. That the human race is truly redeemed and reconciled with God through Christ, who, by His faultless [innocency] obedience, suffering, and death, has merited for us the righteousness which avails before God, and eternal life. 16] 2. That such merit and benefits of Christ shall be presented, offered, and distributed to us through His Word and Sacraments. 17] 3. That by His Holy Ghost, through the Word, when it is preached, heard, and pondered, He will be efficacious and active in us, convert hearts to true repentance, and preserve them in the true faith. 18] 4. That He will justify all those who in true repentance receive Christ by a true faith, and will receive them into grace, the adoption of sons, and the inheritance of eternal life. Etc. 5-8. 27] …. Now, God does not call without means, but through the Word, as He has commanded repentance and remission of sins to be preached in His name, Luke 24:47. St. Paul also testifies to like effect when he writes: We are ambassadors for Christ, as though God did beseech you by us; we pray you in Christ's stead, Be ye reconciled to God. 2 Cor. 5:20. - Formula of Concord, Solid Declaration; Article XI “Election”

Did you catch his concluding remarks:

And so I, for one, choose to stand with Hoenecke and those who view the reconciliation in 2 Cor 5:19 and elsewhere as change of “status” before God, a part of the doctrine of justification and not of the atonement, as such. Is Hoenecke’s view the “official interpretation” of the WELS? That all depends on your definition as to what makes an interpretation “official”. If by “official,” one means the interpretation taught as most correct at our Seminary, then I would have to say, “Yes,” on the basis of my instruction there. If by “official,” one means that it is the interpretation found most often in our Synod’s publications, then I would also have to answer, “Yes.” If by “official,” one means that it is the only interpretation allowed by our Synod, then, of course, I would have to answer, “No,” for we have just recently republished Schaller’s Biblical Christology, unedited and without comment when he expounds his views quoted earlier in this paper. Likewise, an article of his espousing the traditional view, also quoted earlier in this paper, appeared unedited and without comment. translated from German Into English, in our own Wisconsin Lutheran Quarterly in 1975—translated by no one less than a grandson of Adolf Hoenecke!"


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Sherlock Holmes 2929 has left a new comment on your post "Intrepid Lutherans: The Case of the Disappearing "...":

I believe that's part of the problem, Simpleman. What is the official doctrinal statement of the WELS? Is there one? If so, where? This We Believe? The WELS Seminary essay file?

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LutherRocks has left a new comment on your post "Intrepid Lutherans: The Case of the Disappearing "...":

We know there were no righteous people in Sodom and Gomorrah when God judged, condemned and destroyed them. But the UOJ gang says they are justified=forgiven.

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SimpleMan has left a new comment on your post "Intrepid Lutherans: The Case of the Disappearing "...":

I'm not sure when objective justification became an official teaching of the WELS. There's even an essay in the WELS seminary files which says that while it is taught, yet it is not an official teaching of the WELS.
http://www.wlsessays.net/files/CuriaCorinthians.rtf

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AC V has left a new comment on your post "Intrepid Lutherans: The Case of the Disappearing "...":

If these men were to debate the issue, whom would you back?

Becker (20th century WELS theologian:

"If justification is universal, it must of necessity be objective. For if the sins of all men have been forgiven in the heart of God, then men are forgiven by God whether they believe it or not."

Abraham Calovius (17th century orthodox Lutheran theologian):

"Although Christ has acquired for us the remission of sins, justification, and sonship, God just the same does not justify us prior to our faith. Nor do we become God’s children in Christ in such a way that justification in the mind of God takes place before we believe."


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Brett Meyer has left a new comment on your post "Intrepid Lutherans: The Case of the Disappearing "...":

Dr. Klotz states, "To argue otherwise is as arrogant as the petulant child who refuses to believe his father's promise, "Dinner is ready!" and foolishly imagines instead that his dinner did not exist prior to entering his mouth!"

Pastor Rydecki responds, "This is just getting foolish. I don't know who's saying what you say here. I've said all along that forgiveness has been acquired by Christ for all. Faith does not "create" forgiveness."

October 11, 2011 8:20PM
http://www.intrepidlutherans.com/2011/09/fraternal-dialogue-on-topic-of.html?showComment=1318394449665#comment-c8420523970004157927

To answer Pastor Rydecki - Your (W)ELS District President, Pastor Jon Buchholz teaches in his 2005 Convention keynote essay what Dr. Klotz is confessing in his defense of UOJ - which, by the way, is the official teaching of the Synod which the Intrepids are in fellowship with.

"God has declared the entire world righteous." This statement is true, as we understand it to mean that God has rendered a verdict of "not-guilty" toward the entire world. It is also true—and must be taught—that the righteousness of Christ now stands in place of the world’s sin; this is the whole point of what Jesus did for us at Calvary. However, once again we’re wresting a term out of its usual context. In Scripture the term "righteous" usually refers to believers." Page 9
http://www.wlsessays.net/node/390

It's only fair to include (W)ELS' beloved Siegbert W. Becker as one who also taught the false gospel of UOJ to it's fullest.

"If justification is universal, it must of necessity be objective. For if the sins of all men have been forgiven in the heart of God, then men are forgiven by God whether they believe it or not." Page 1
http://www.wlsessays.net/node/142

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Brett Meyer has left a new comment on your post "Intrepid Lutherans: The Case of the Disappearing "...":

Pastor Rydecki has been, by the grace of God, faithful in the rebuke of the false gospel of Universal Objective Justification (UOJ) and teaching of Justification by Faith Alone.

It is important to note that while he is making such a good confession he is also opposing the official teachings of the (W)ELS. Dr. Jerome H. Klotz is well versed in the teaching of UOJ and is applying every nuance of its promotion that the Sausage Factory has endorsed. His statement on Oct 11, 2011 7:26PM captures the sentiment well, "Don't they teach this stuff in the seminary???"

http://www.intrepidlutherans.com/2011/09/fraternal-dialogue-on-topic-of.html?showComment=1318393741487#comment-c2071646607328906445