Friday, March 2, 2012

Probably from Paul McCain, MDiv,
Anonymously on the Fake Blog

Paul McCain brags about graduating from a Roman Catholic high school,
Our Lady of Perpetual Obligation.
Father Neuhaus helped McCain get the pope's ear.
Imagine the tingle!

Anonymous said...


Everyone needs to keep in mind that Jackson never received a good, solid Lutheran theological education. He is, in spite of all his blustery bragging about his degree, truly unequipped theologically to even understand must (sic) of what he talks about on the Internet.


***
GJ - Split infinitive, too? Read this statement out loud without laughing. It ranks with the Anonymouse comment - "You are a gutless coward."

McCain forgets to mention that he asked me to review Marquart's book for Christian News, that he favorably reviewed my book.

Several of my doctrinal books are used all over the world. A St. Louis seminary professor gave me a very positive review of Catholic, Lutheran, Protestant.

Professor Marquart did the same with CLP, published in the Ft. Wayne journal. Perhaps McCain did not read the book or the review.

This was published in Logia, a journal founded on Marvin Schwan's adultery indulgence, sold by McCain himself, as I recall. McCain's former friend and ally, Herman Otten, has ordered several cases lately, and it is still sold by Northwestern Publishing House.

Catholic, Lutheran, Protestant: A Doctrinal Comparison of Three Christian Confessions, by Gregory L. Jackson. St. Louis: Martin Chemnitz Press, 1993. 269 pages. Paper. $13.95


Some credentials imply a unique qualification for a task. Dr. Jackson’s credentials seem uniquely suited to writing this book, a doctrinal comparison of the three major confessions in western Christendom. He was a WELS parish pastor, and has earned an STM from Yale and a PhD from Notre Dame. As one would expect from his resume, Jackson has done a commendable job of compiling and setting forth the doctrinal positions of orthodox Lutherans, Roman Catholics, and generic Protestants. As an outline of the topic, a collection of quotations from primary documents, and Bible study material, this book is well worth the purchase price. It deserves a place in the pastor’s study next to Handbook of Denominations and F. E. Mayer’s Religious Bodies of America.