Friday, January 13, 2012

Concordia Lutheran Church founder Merkens dies - San Antonio Express-News

Pastor Guido Merkens, who founded the city’s largest Lutheran church and served there for more than four decades, died Wednesday night surrounded by his family. Photo: COURTESY PHOTO / SA
Guido Merkens, one of the megachurch pastors in the LCMS.

Concordia Lutheran Church founder Merkens dies - San Antonio Express-News:


Pastor Guido Merkens, who founded the city's largest Lutheran church and served there for more than four decades, died Wednesday night surrounded by his family.

He was 84.

Merkens came to San Antonio in 1951 to establish the city's first Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod congregation.
Concordia Lutheran Church became the largest congregation in the denomination under his tenure, and continues to be among its biggest nationwide.

Merkens was born in South Dakota, the son of a pastor who moved his family to Pittsburgh for ministry assignments.
As a young man, Merkens delivered groceries, loaded boxcars on trains, drove school buses and was a bartender.
He studied at the University of PittsburghConcordia University in Bronxville, N.Y.; and Concordia Seminary and Washington University in St. Louis.

He was ordained in St. Louis on Sept. 9, 1951, and was sent to start a congregation in San Antonio.
“I knew he wanted to go to a place and start a church from scratch, not reap the benefits of something that was already established,” said the Rev. Bill Tucker, Concordia's current senior pastor. “Clearly the Holy Spirit planted that seed in him.”

The mission church began in an area near Basse and Blanco roads with 37 members.

To Merkens, a former baseball standout, incorporating athletics into the church was imperative, so Concordia Lutheran built an air conditioned gymnasium in 1960.

“They come to play, they stay to pray,” many recall Merkens saying.

The congregation grew to 4,000 members under his leadership. It's now located on a nearly 50-acre complex on Loop 1604 and Huebner Road and has more than 6,000 members.

Merkens was regarded as a church growth expert and conducted hundreds of seminars on that topic around the nation and in 14 countries.

The author of seven books, he also was vice president of the denomination for 15 years.

In 1993, he announced he would “reposition” into other areas of ministry at the church and prepare for his successor.
The Rev. William G. Thompson took over as senior pastor in 1994 and led the congregation to its current location. Tucker succeeded Thompson in 2001.

All the while, Merkens continued to support the church and other ministries.

“He never saw himself as actually being retired,” Tucker recalled. “He saw himself as being transitioned into other parts of ministry.”

After he left the church, Merkens devoted his time to consulting and speaking at conferences as an associate with Pathway Lutheran Ministries.


Read more: http://www.mysanantonio.com/news/local_news/article/Minister-founded-N-Side-landmark-2499537.php#ixzz1jP2Gm1VC


'via Blog this' --- Gratuitous note from ELCA pastor/WELS pal: "I'm sure that you came across this obit. Will wait for you to share the true story complete with all the dirty little secrets that the LCMS covers up."

Pipe organ the pride and joy of Faith Lutheran - Carthage, MO - Carthage Press

01_13faith_brown_01.jpg

Pipe organ the pride and joy of Faith Lutheran - Carthage, MO - Carthage Press:


If you ask Tim and Sarah Buelow to count the 2011 blessings for them and their church, the Faith Lutheran pastor and his wife would undoubtedly list pipe organ among them.

Although delivery of the two-story Bosch Pipe Organ was made to the Carthage church last September and fine tuning continues to take place, excitement over the new addition has yet to fade.

01_13faith_brown_Tim Buelow.jpg

“There are 1,300 pipes and each pipe has to be individually voiced with a couple of adjustments,” the Rev. Buelow said. “The man making the adjustments was called back to his electrical engineering job at Michigan State University, so he comes back when he can.”

Very few people are qualified to do the fine tuning.

“Up until the end of the 19th century, a pipe organ like this was the most advanced piece of engineering that man had invented,” Buelow said. “When you think about all these connections and interwoven pieces, it is just an engineering marvel.”

Sarah Buelow, who serves as the church organist, agrees.

“It is like having a live orchestra instead of just an electronic one like we have had,” she said. “The pipe organ is much more inspiring. It is like getting live feedback, whereas with the electronic organ I don’t get any feedback and don’t know what my audience is hearing. I can hear the pipes talking to me.”

She added that while most churches are going away from organs, there has been a bit of a renaissance with pipe organs.

“We have suggested  that the Carthage Chamber of Commerce put this on its list of local destinations because as a tracker organ this is unique,” she said.

Faith Lutheran bought the organ from Redeemer Lutheran Church in Flint, Mich.

To say the Buelows were overjoyed at getting such a musical marvel would be a huge understatement.

“The pastor at that Michigan church said the organ had been on their insurance policy for $750,000 and all we had to pay was $25,000 for the organ and $25,000 to have it moved and installed,” the Rev. Buelow said.

The organ was made in Kassel, Germany, in 1971 and bought directly from that site by Redeemer Lutheran parishioners, who were looking for the best quality German-made organ they could find.

“Organs can last 300-plus years and this one is only about 40 years old,” Buelow said. “When you combine this engineering marvel of all of these wonderful things that God gave us in creation and the agility that God gave the human mind, you have something to give praise back to God.”


'via Blog this'
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raklatt (http://raklatt.myopenid.com/) has left a new comment on your post "Pipe organ the pride and joy of Faith Lutheran - C...":

The biggest concern might be the difference in climate between Flint, MI, and Carthage, MO. Once the tracker mechanism adjusts to the differences and the fellow from MSU finishes tweaking, Faith should have a fine instrument.

Trackers do give feedback to the organist though they may require a bit more effort than electrical keyboard systems. Pushing down a key operates the mechanical linkage that opens the valve at the foot of a pipe along with others if couplers are in use. The leverage of the linkage is such that some strength is required.

The system is very similar to that which must have been in use in Luther's time.

A good organ is the best instrument to lead a congregation in song.

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GJ - Yes, an organ is ideal for the support of hymns. That is why the Emergents want a rock band instead. An organist must have talent, training, and experience. A rock band just makes noise with percussion instruments. My college students conceded that orchestra musicians can play rock - and some do. But very few rock stars would last five minutes in an orchestra. To demonstrate, I screamed and did a loud TWANG on my air guitar. I said, "How much talent does that take?" The students loved it and asked for a repeat.

Next week I had Mr. Bose play them Pachebel's Canon. They were transfixed and wrote down the name of the piece.

Pietism and Methodism « Churchmouse Campanologist

Wesley and Zinzendorf



Pietism and Methodism « Churchmouse Campanologist:


"John Wesley and the Moravians


At Oxford in 1729, John Wesley’s brother Charles, George Whitefield and other students formed a society called the Holy Club. John Wesley, older and by then ordained in the Anglican Church, had already begun devoting his life to the pursuit of holiness."


'via Blog this'


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GJ - C. F. W. Walther belonged to a Holy Club at Leipzig, but he left that Pietistic circle for Stephan's Pietistic circle.


The Saxon migration was a Pietistic enterprise, not Lutheran orthodoxy at all.


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churchmousec (http://churchmousec.wordpress.com/) has left a new comment on your post "Pietism and Methodism « Churchmouse Campanologist":

Thank you very much, Dr Jackson, for the mention and for the priceless illustration of Wesley and Count von Zinzendorf together -- brilliant!

If it hadn't been for your writing about pietism, I would probably have ignored it.

Many thanks!

Churchmouse

Pro-Life Message



More than 24 years ago, Pam and her husband Bob were serving as missionaries to the Philippines and praying for a fifth child. Pam contracted amoebic dysentery, an infection of the intestine caused by a parasite found in contaminated food or drink. She went into a coma and was treated with strong antibiotics before they discovered she was pregnant. 


Doctors urged her to abort the baby for her own safety and told her that the medicines had caused irreversible damage to her baby. She refused the abortion and cited her Christian faith as the reason for her hope that her son would be born without the devastating disabilities physicians predicted. Pam said the doctors didn't think of it as a life, they thought of it as a mass of fetal tissue. 


While pregnant, Pam nearly lost their baby four times but refused to consider abortion. She recalled making a pledge to God with her husband: If you will give us a son, we’ll name him Timothy and we’ll make him a preacher. 


Pam ultimately spent the last two months of her pregnancy in bed and eventually gave birth to a healthy baby boy August 14, 1987. Pam’s youngest son is indeed a preacher. He preaches in prisons, makes hospital visits, and serves with his father’s ministry in the Philippines. He also plays football. 


Pam’s son is Tim Tebow.

Virtue Online Uses Ichabod Photoshop with Jefferts-Schori Interview Posted from Issues Etc

Ichabod Photoshop and Witty Label:
Episcopal Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori
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GJ - It gives me great satisfaction to find my graphics being used elsewhere. No credit is expected. No permission is required. Not that long ago an ELCA-bishop-as-Satan graphic made its way to the bishop's staff. The bishop's staffmembers were not amused.


I have followed Virtue Online for several years. I have written to David Virtue, a man who follows the legal and doctrinal issues, reporting them carefully. He added his comments to the interview with the notation VOL. That will give readers a better perspective on the Bishop Kate disaster.


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Episcopal Presiding Bishop Spins Church and Its Future

The following interview with Katharine Jefferts Schori took place on Lutheran Public Radio withIssues, Etc. hosted by Todd Wilkens 

By David W. Virtue
www.virtueonline.org 
January 10, 2012

TODD WILKEN Issues, Etc. Host: They have been busy in the last decade or so. They say they have been listening to the "Voice of God" ... first back in the '70s they were among the first of the Protestant denominations to ordain women to the priesthood. Within the last decade they approved the ordination of active homosexuals - lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgendered persons -- and they have made an active and partnered gay man a bishop in one of their dioceses - Gene Robinson. So they have made the news. Why and where is The Episcopal Church headed especially with its relationship with worldwide Anglicanism? Joining us this Wednesday afternoon, January the fourth, to talk about the intersections of faith with issues like poverty, climate change and the economy is Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori. She is the Presiding Bishop of The Episcopal Church USA and author of the news book "The Heartbeat of God: Finding the Sacred in the Middle of Everything." Bishop Jefferts Schori, welcome to Issues, Etc.

WILKEN: What do you mean by that phrase "Heartbeat of God"? 

JEFFERTS SCHORI: That's how I've talked about our understanding of God's "mission" to heal the world and that when people-of-faith are engaged in that work they're participating in the lively creativity of God. 

VOL: What and where exactly is TEC healing the world? Pouring its limited resources into Haiti (largely into a cathedral) is a pittance compared to what agencies like World Vision Inc., Food for the Poor and multiple evangelically based organizations are doing in that country. Most congregations in TEC are now in double digits with the average age in the mid 60s. They are running out of time and money and they are more engaged in getting Medicare and Social Security than "healing the world." Those socially (read sexually) engaged are pushing the LGBTQI agenda with liberal bishops led by Jefferts Schori and her compliant HOB getting in the faces of dioceses like South Carolina to make them conform to their agenda.

WILKEN: On that issue of "people-of-faith" the subtitle of the book is "Finding the Sacred in the Middle of Everything." so it might sound to some like pantheism. Do you believe that the "sacred", as you define it, is found in all religions?

JEFFERTS SCHORI: Yes, I think it probably is. We're not pantheists, many Episcopalians might be understood to as "panentheists". The difference being that pantheists see everything as God and panentheists see God reflected in all of God's creation. When we talk about human beings being made in the image of God that's a piece of what we are talking about and we would extend that to all of creation. 

VOL: So Episcopalians are now panentheists. Really. Panentheism is a belief system, which posits that God exists, interpenetrates every part of nature and timelessly extends beyond it. While pantheism believes that God is the whole; in panentheism, the whole is in God. In panentheism, God is viewed as the eternal animating force behind the universe. Some versions suggest that the universe is nothing more than the manifest part of God. In some forms of panentheism, the cosmos exists within God, who in turn "pervades" or is "in" the cosmos. Panentheism claims that God is greater than the universe. Much Hindu thought is highly characterized by panentheism and pantheism. Theism, on the other hand, conceives of God as personal, present and active in the governance and organization of the world and the universe but is distinct from it. Episcopalians, by and large, that is those who have not completely lost their minds believing what Jefferts Schori, Jack Spong, William Countryman and Mott the Hoople are still orthodox in their faith. For a full and complete analysis of Jefferts Schori's book read Sarah Francis Ives, Ph. D. two articles here: http://tinyurl.com/83ndbph and here:http://tinyurl.com/7nhuupx

WILKEN: But you contrast, or appear to contrast Jesus of Nazareth with the Christ of generations and millennia to come. Is there is difference of the "Jesus of Nazareth' and "the Christ of generations and millennia to come"? 

JEFFERTS SCHORI: Christians would understand both terms. Non-Christians would not necessarily. Jesus as a human figure is someone about Whom Muslims can speak and understand and certainly recognize and revere. And people of other faith traditions would as well. They're not going to have access or interest in "the Christ of millennia to come" the way that Christians do.

VOL: Separating the Jesus of History from the Christ of Faith is an old saw. The truth is there is no dichotomy between the Christ of Faith and the Jesus of History. Anglican theologian N.T. Wright In his book Jesus and the Victory of God, Christian Origins and the Question of God, Volume 2, says that the historical Jesus is very much the Jesus of the gospels: a first century Palestinian Jew who announced and inaugurated the kingdom of God, performed "mighty works" and believed himself to be Israel's Messiah who would save his people through his death and resurrection. "He believed himself called," in other words says Wright, "to do and be what, in the Scriptures, only Israel's God did and was." So you have a choice dear readers, believe what Jefferts Schori says or N.T. Wright.

WILKEN: You talk about hearing the "Voice of God"; I think you devote a whole chapter to it. Where is The Episcopal Church USA today hearing the Voice of God? 

JEFFERTS SCHORI: OK, let me correct that. We are not The Episcopal Church in the USA. We're The Episcopal Church in 16 different nations including the United States. So we're certainly hearing the Voice of God and meeting God in Ecuador and Honduras and Venezuela and Taiwan and in Europe, as well as we are in the United States. There is an ancient understanding that God is met, perhaps most intensely in the poor and the marginalized. I know that St. Francis [of Assisi] called the poor "our treasure"; and that when we encounter the poor the marginalized, we're more likely to meet Jesus, we're more likely to see God present with us in the midst of suffering as well as joy. VOL: Prior to the year of our Lord 2006 (when Jefferts Schori was consecrated) no Presiding Bishop touted TEC's offshore ecclesiastical holdings, but with the rise of the Global South and Mrs. Jefferts Schori's face offs with Dr. Rowan Williams, she has pushed this handful of "overseas" Episcopalians to let the whole Anglican world know that she has some muscle and must be reckoned with even as TEC innovates over sexuality issues and its fortunes sink. It no doubt gives her a feeling of power. For the record TEC has a total of 487 churches in "foreign" dioceses and territories, with an overall ASA of 11,258. There are single churches almost as big as this. St. Martins Episcopal Church in Houston has 7,812 baptized members and nearly 3,000 ASA.

WILKEN: What then is The Episcopal Church hearing in that Voice of God?

JEFFERTS SCHORI: A call to attend to the people on the margins as well as creation that is being abused. Our work, as part of God's mission, is to respond to the needs of the suffering - human beings as well as the rest of creation.

VOL: TEC talk. This is spin for pushing for the acceptance of a variety of pansexual behaviors which the Global South find revolting and unacceptable and which Rowan Williams waffles over. She taunts the Archbishop for being double-minded which is usually termed a 'failure of nerve' for not coming out totally for gay priests, same-sex marriage and rites for same.

WILKEN: You also talk about climate change - manmade climate change I should say - and the Church's obligation there. Do you regard it as sinful to deny manmade climate change or to not take part in combating man's part in that change? 

JEFFERTS SCHORI: Well, human beings have certainly been responsible for accelerating the pace of climate change. I only have to look at the carbon dioxide affluent that has been produced since the Industrial Revolution to see that. I think it is incredibly short sighted, in the sense of blind, to refuse to see evidence in the change of climate. The scientific evidence is overwhelming. There are clearly people who choose not to see that. I think that is not using all the gifts that God has given us.

VOL: And she took her House of Bishops to Quito, Ecuador for an expensive gabfest, which increased the global carbon footprint enormously. She could have held a FREE conference call (dot com) with her bishops then she would never have had to see who was falling asleep listening to her whine about "marginalized peoples" and push the church's pansexual agenda one more time and listen to her liberal bromides about saving the world for God.

WILKEN: Short sighted, but is it sinful in your opinion?

JEFFERTS SCHORI: Sin, in our understanding, is separation from God. And if you cannot see the abuse that human beings have caused to creation, I think that you are in some sense separating yourself from God's creation.

WILKEN: So, is that a yes?

JFFERTS SCHORI: That's certainly a way in which I would understand it.

VOL: Sin is much more than that. It is about rebellion against God himself, against the moral order, selfishness, and unrepentance. It is about missing the mark. One might also add this: "For I am convinced that neither death nor life, neither angels nor demons,[a] neither the present nor the future, nor any powers, 39 neither height nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God that is in Christ Jesus our Lord. (Rom. 8: 38-39)

WILKEN: When I spoke a moment ago and said Episcopal Church USA, you corrected me and said Episcopal Church in a number of nations. Do you make the distinction between The Episcopal Church and worldwide Anglicanism?

JEFFERTS SCHORI: We're [The Episcopal Church] a separate province of the worldwide Anglican Communion. There are 38 national or regional provinces in the Anglican Communion. We're a part of Anglicanism, but we're one part in relationship with a number of other parts. 

VOL: ...and a very small part at that. TEC now has an average weekly ASA of less than 700,000 and declining yearly. That is the size of a small diocese in Rwanda.

WILKEN: There has been some tension between The Episcopal Church and the Anglican Communion. How would you say that tension has been created? How do you think it resolved, if possible? 

JEFFERTS SCHORI: Well, you know, churches going back to the First Century of Christianity have always been in tension, because people never share all of the same ideas and understandings. You know the first great Church fight was about whether or not Gentiles could join the "Jesus Movement". Those tensions have continued through the ages. We're not going to finish with them until the Second Coming. And they can be creative, if they are used creatively. If conflict simply results in division, then it is not creative; it's destructive, generally. But when we can stay in relationship and explore our differences and continue to dialogue about them, usually everybody grows in the process and it ends up being creative rather than destructive. 

VOL: The early church attended to Judaizers and those who wanted to keep some aspect of the law in order to be saved. The "differences" today also involve salvation issues. Dialogue is all but dead. There is already a de facto schism if not a de jure one. The vast majority of the Global South primates are in "impaired and/or broken communion" with TEC. GAFCON/FCA was formed to declare that the Global South was no longer in communion with the ABC. A Lambeth Conference and a Primates meeting in Dublin saw one third of the Archbishops of the Communion in a no show thus declaring that the Anglican Communion was broken. Whether it can be repaired with Dr. Rowan Williams still at the helm is the issue. With him gone and an Evangelical at the head of the Communion it would be a whole new ball game. What about that does Jefferts Schori not understand?

WILKEN: In 2003, I believe, you consented to the election of Gene Robinson as the first openly gay bishop in The Episcopal Church, Now that's been almost 10 years, I think. Do you have any regrets about that move? 

JEFFERTS SCHORI: I knew at the time that it would be a very difficult decision for the wider church, both in The Episcopal Church and across the world. But, no, I believe that I, and others who voted to do that, understood that we were doing that out of a sense of great faithfulness to where we are in this church and to the Call of God in the midst of it. It's not been easy, but at the same time I think that people across the [Anglican] Communion and within this [The Episcopal] Church - a number of them who disagreed with that decision have to realize that it is not a decision that has to divide a community, that we can continue to exist together in a community even if we don't agree. VOL: Total nonsense. A third of the all Anglican Primates are no longer in communion with her over the Robinson consecration and they represent nearly 80% of the entire Anglican Communion. TEC is a sideshow with only money to manipulate poor Anglican African provinces.

WILKEN: You said that the issue of whether or not to ordain active lesbian-gay-bisexual-transgendered persons should not be a "church dividing issue". But, Bishop, as you know, many disagree entirely. Dioceses, parishes, many individuals have left The Episcopal Church for that and other reasons believing that they are "church dividing issues". 

JEFFERTS SCHORI: Some people have left some congregations and some people have left some dioceses over this issue, that's correct. And, yes, they do believe that it is a "[church] dividing issue". At the same time, many people who disagreed with the decision - most people who disagreed with the decision - have remained in The [Episcopal] Church and continue to make common cause with their fellow Episcopalians in the work of healing the world. They believe that our engagement in mission together is more important than disagreement about that [homosexual] issue.

VOL: Really. Then how can she explain four entire dioceses leaving TEC, hundreds of individual churches leaving, with four bishops heading to Rome (with one now heading up the Pope's personal Ordinariate)...and millions of dollars spent on litigation for properties. Two thirds of the entire Diocese of Pittsburgh has left TEC, nearly 80% of the Diocese of Ft. Worth. Those orthodox Episcopalians who stay do so because they don't want to get into a legal battle over property issues like the Church of the Good Samaritan in Paoli, PA and prefer to remain under the radar of a revisionist bishop like Charles Bennison. Another group of Episcopalians quietly scream, "Not in my parish" and politely go their way. The doctrine of inclusion is also not for them.

WILKEN: What are the similarities, how would you describe the similarities and the differences between your church body [The Episcopal Church] and the newly formed Anglican Church in North America?

JEFFERTS SCHORI: Well, the Anglican Church in North American seems to have its primary identity as being opposed to decisions of The Episcopal Church. I certainly hope that they will come to have an identity that's positively rooted in their unique identity, and I think that when they come to do that, that we should be able to build some ecumenical relationships with them. 

VOL: That is a false characterization of ACNA. At the beginning when the AMIA was formed it was in reaction to TEC. ACNA was formed as a safe place for orthodox Episcopalians being hounded out of TEC because of TEC's theological and sexual innovations. More than 100,000 in nearly 1,000 parishes have fled TEC in the last few years and there is no sign that is letting up.

WILKEN: In the last generation - 40 years or so - The Episcopal Church has seen the ordination of women. I think that was in the early 70s. It's first openly gay bishop more recently; and the ordination of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgendered persons to the priesthood. Where do you see The Episcopal Church headed in the next generation - the next 40 years?

JEFFERTS SCHORI: I think the next 40 years are going to be time of significant reformation in the sense of expanding the variety of faith communities -- expanding the ways in which we "make a church" together. You can see examples of that already - things like [the] Common Cathedral Movements; where groups of people gather outside it on a regular basis for church services that those communities often serve the homeless. Where you see people who gather -- there's an example in New York City. Something called a "Dinner Church" where primary beginning of the community has been to gather to cook a meal, and out of that has grown a worshipping community. The phrase that is often used is "emergent" or "emerging church" communities, and I think we are going to see a great flourishing of that. And those communities may or may not be tied to permanent buildings in the way that most mainline denomination congregations are today.

VOL: At the present rate of decline there is every reason to believe that within 26 years The Episcopal Church will cease to exist in any sense as a denomination unless there is serious reformation, renewal and revival. Numbers don't lie. The evangelically driven ACNA will only prosper, but not without problems and "issues" like the ordination of women yet to be resolved. Narrow pathways always come with thorns and sharp rocks.

WILKEN: Do you see a connection the early 70s ordination of women [the Philadelphia 11 on July 29, 2974] to the priesthood of The Episcopal Church and the early 2000's ordination of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgendered persons to the priesthood?

JEFFERTS SCHORI: Yes, and I would certainly take it farther back. I think it is deeply connected with the ordinations of the first African-Americans [Absalom Jones in 1804] to this tradition and the first Native Americans [Enmegahbowh of the Ottawa Tribe in 1867] in this tradition and the first Asians [Wong Kong-chai in 1863] in this tradition. The challenge particularly in the United States, a part of our context has been expanding the understanding of what a normative human being is. And it is not just a "white man". It includes people of other ethnic origins, includes people of the other gender, it includes people of other sexual orientations. One of the significant changes in our prayer book of the late 1970s was our admission of children to [Holy] Communion before they were confirmed. You use to have to wait until you were a teenager and had been confirmed before you could come to Communion. We said: "No, children as soon as they are baptized are full members of this community." I don't know what the next iteration of that journey will look like. But I think there will be one. 

VOL: Dumbing down the Prayer Book and lowering entry requirements will not build churches, and comparing a person's skin color with same sex attractions angers a lot of Black people who don't like the comparison.

WILKEN: What do you see the central message of Scripture is, Bishop?

JEFFERTS SCHORI: Love God and love your neighbor.

VOL: One wonders if that applies to Archbishops Bob Duncan, Rowan Williams or Nicholas Okoh. Talk is cheap.

WILKEN: I think that the central message is: of man's sin ...his fallen condition - alienation from God, thereby loss of the image of God, thereby... And it's complete restoration in the Incarnation ... the perfect life -- sinless life ... death and resurrection ... the atoning sacrifice of Jesus Christ. And I think that is the central thread of Scripture. Am I wrong? 

JEFFERTS SCHORI: I think that is a piece of it. But clearly God is at work communities and contexts beyond the Christian one. If you see that as the primary thrust of the Jewish Scripture I think that is a misreading. Certainly the Jews are understood as "Chosen People" in our Biblical texts. God is clearly at work in all of creation and part of our task as Christians is to discern and affirm at where we find God at work beyond our comfortable places. 

VOL: In other words Christianity is not exclusively the way to the Father there are other pathways - Muslim, Buddhist and Hindu. The Presiding Bishop is on record saying she would never seek to convert a Muslim to Christ as their pathway to God is just as valid as her pathway, which, presumably, is still Christian. She also publicly denied the need for personal salvation.

WILKEN: The passage that I guess I go to repeatedly in taking that position is to Jesus, Himself, where He says: "I am the Way, the Truth, and the Life, and no one comes to the Father except through Me." [John 14:6] Jesus is claiming to be the ONLY revelation of God; the ONLY revelation of the sacred in His Incarnation; and most certainly, the ONLY way to the True God. What are your thoughts there? 

JEFFERTS SCHORI: He also says in another place [John 10:16] that He has flocks, that He is called to care for flocks - sheep that aren't already in a particular fold, and that He has words of truth for them as well.

WILKEN: So what do you think He is referring to there, specifically?

JEFFERTS SCHORI: I think He is referring to people beyond our comfort zone. 

WILKEN: Beyond Christianity? 

JEFFERTS SCHORI: Could be...

WILKEN: Well, do you think it is beyond Christianity? 

JEFFERTS SCHORI: I think the work of Jesus has changed reality for all human beings whether they acknowledge themselves Christians or not. 

VOL: Scripture says, Whosoever believeth on him shall not be ashamed and no one can say Jesus is Lord, except by the Holy Spirit. (1 Cor. 12:3). So if she cannot say unequivocally that "Jesus is Lord", can she be called a Christian? Again St. Paul: "That if thou shalt confess with thy mouth the Lord Jesus, and shalt believe in thine heart that God hath raised him from the dead, thou shalt be saved. For with the heart man believeth unto righteousness; and with the mouth confession is made unto salvation." 

Jesus did not die on a cross "to change reality for all human beings," He came to change hearts and lives through his death and resurrection.

END

Issues, Etc. is Christ-centered, Cross-focused Talk Show Radio program of Lutheran Public Radio a ministry of the Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod


WELS has not borrowed this graphic...yet.

Christian News Buries Follow Up on Joel Hochmuth on Page 17,
Decries RC Homosexual on Page One

Joel Hochmuth gave WELS unprecedented visibility in the media,
all over the United States, with print and Net stories posted in many regions.
TMJ is not a dental station, but The Milwaukee Journal.


The January 2, 2012 issue of Christian News featured "U. S. Catholic Homosexuals, Lesbians, and Bisexuals May Be Christian, " on page 1. Another page 1 story involved Our Lady of Guadalupe. I thought I was getting The Wanderer, from conservative Roman Catholics. Christian News is supposed to deal with Lutherans, especially the "conservative" Lutherans of the Olde Synodical Conference.

But a follow-up to the biggest Lutheran scandal of the decade was buried even deeper than first notice. David Becker forwarded the Ichabod post on CN burying the story on page 7. The follow-up was posted on page 17. The next one will be on page 34.

Mrs. Ichabod said, "There is no page 34 in Christian News."

That is what I meant. The officials want this to be a non-story while they cluck their tongues about ELCA and the Church of Rome.

There are two journalistic tools for getting rid of the news. One is to spike the story, giving it no coverage at all. That can lead to pressure to give it space or time in the news. A sublter technique is to bury the story so far back in the periodical that few see it or pay much attention to it. If they do read it, the story seems insignificant because of its placement.


Puerto Rico?

Happy Birthday, Spener -
You Won, For Now


Walther was a Pietist, almost starving himself to death with penitential suffering, when he wrote to Pastor Martin Stephan. According to official biographers, and Walther himself, Stephan gave him the insights into justification merged with atonement that became the core of his teaching. UOJ came to the Missouri Synod via Stephan at Halle University, Walther converted by Stephan.

The Saxon migration was a Pietistic enterprise, and the pastors were all Pietists in an age of rationalism.

Like the other ethnic groups that came to America, the Missouri Synod was led by Pietistic unionists who began to face their problems with the Book of Concord. Walther was not the Lutheran orthodox warrior who battled against the false teachers of his age. He was another Pietist who amalgamated his original education and life with a certain amount of Lutheran doctrine and practice. As one book says, the cell groups went away gradually. Pietism did not.

We all know that the cell groups came back with a shout of triumph. Halleluia. ELCA promoted them. Fuller knew they were the solution. Missouri, WELS, and ELS leaders met at Fuller Seminary to plot the final stages of Lutherdom's doom. They won without much of a fight. Cell groups are accepted as righteous medicine for all that ails.

Cell groups have promoted such evils in the Lutheran Church as:
  • Pentecostalism
  • Unionism
  • Doctrinal indifference
  • Women teaching men
  • Women's ordination
  • Despising the Means of Grace
  • Rationalism
  • Denigration of the divine call
  • Lutheran papalism
  • Entertainment Seeker Services
  • Friendship evangelism
  • Subjectivism - experience and emotions judging the Scriptures and Confess.
Important topics to study in relationship to Pietism are:

Spener's development of the cell group, borrowed from Labadie.
Halle established as the main center of Pietism, to teach Pietism.
Halle's rapid transformation to a center for rationalism.
Francke's exponential expansion of Pietism at Halle University.
Zinzendorf and Wesley.
Zinzendorf, Herrnhut, and Stephan.
Halle University, Knapp, Tholuck, Schleiermacher.
Famous Halle alumni - Muhlenberg, Stephan, Hoenecke.
How Pietism turns into secular activism (ELCA).
Pietism and the Church Shrinker Movement.
From Shrinker to "Emergent Church."