Saturday, February 11, 2012

Those Glory Days of Lutheran Orthodoxy at The Fort,
Concordia Seminary, Ft. Wayne.
Born Forgiven. Church Growth. Romanism.



Paul McCain on Steadfast Enthusiasts
He has a need to be regarded as some sort of expert on all things Lutheran. Suffice it to say, Mr. Jackson never understood Robert Preus, for he never, at any point, in spite of the many academic credentials he loves to mention, received a thorough orthodox and confessional Lutheran education.

***

Paul McCain, who is not a pastor, should not be so windy when he is off his medication. The more he writes, the more he exposes his ignorance. I am happy to provide some fact-checking, although I cannot take all evening.

I was often at Concordia, Ft. Wayne, when he, Jay Webber, and Jim Heiser were students. I took two classes there, attended some lectures besides, and went to conferences when I could.

Let me turn back the time machine for the Lutheran Orthodoxy of "The Fort." Here is a quotation from Robert Preus, which Jack Cascione and others have reproduced to show how orthodox UOJ the president of the seminary was (1981):

All this is put beautifully by an old Lutheran theologian of our church, "We are redeemed from the guilt of sin; the wrath of God is appeased; all creation is again under the bright rays of mercy, as in the beginning; yea, in Christ we were justified before we were even born. For do not the Scriptures say: ‘God was in Christ reconciling the world unto Himself, not imputing their trespasses unto them?'’ This is not the justification which we receive by faith...That is the great absolution which took place in the resurrection of Christ. It was the Father, for our sake, who condemned His dear Son as the greatest of all sinners causing Him to suffer the greatest punishment of the transgressors, even so did He publicly absolve Him from the sins of the world when He raised Him up from the dead." (Edward Preuss, "The Justification of a Sinner Before God," pp. 14-15) [GJ - Edward Preuss turned Roman Catholic, so he was not exactly an old Lutheran theologian!] Source - Reclaiming Knapp.

I attended a Kadai class. He was a mainline liberal who adored Karl Barth the Red.

I met Waldo Werning, the most fanatic of many Church Growth professors at Ft. Wayne. Kincaid Smith said his entire DMin at Ft. Wayne was Church Growth. For that reason Kincaid really resented my book Liberalism: Its Cause and Cure. Smith said so in the ELS journal of record, The Lutheran Sentimental.

Later I met Gene Bunkowske, another CG professor at Ft. Wayne. He started the missiology program at Ft. Wayne - more CG.

I recall one Ft. Wayne professor who became a Roman Catholic later. I think he was Klemet Preus' first father-in-law.

"The Fort" is famous for turning out graduates who join the priesthood or the Eastern Orthodox soon after. That was supposed the reason why Robert Preus wrote his last book, to stop the leakage to Rome, a flow encouraged by David Scaer and Bill Weinrich.

McCain did not attend graduate school, so he may be pardoned for his lack of knowledge about matters beyond the Bachelor of Divinity degree, his highest achievement. That is the real designation, changed only to suit the posturing of the clergy. The three professional degrees are bachelor's degrees (law, medicine, divinity), so an MD earns an MA when he becomes a specialist. A DMin is a drive-by STM, and no one wants an STD from any school, even though the truth about Stephan is not that well known.

My dogmatics professor, Otto Heick, was a favorite author for the Synodical Conference, and he often published in the Concordia Monthly. Ulrich Leupold was a world-famous musicologist. Nils Dahl, Paul Holmer, and Sydney Ahlstrom--all at Yale--are required or recommended reading. I attended Bainton lectures, who was so loved for his Here I Stand that one seminary made him an honorary Lutheran. I could drop a few more names, but that is enough for now. In fact, my real education in the Confessions came in Columbus, Ohio, when the WELS clergy showed their abhorrence for the Confessions and the Sixth Commandment.

I noticed McCain's slobbering reference to taking courses from Bob Preus on Steadfast Enthusiasts. It moved me to tears...of laughter. I was sitting in McCain's Purple Palace office when he bragged about pulling the rug out from under Preus. That arrogance and scorn came after two years of parish experience as Barry's duplicitous campaign manager. Shortly after that boast he was giving an award to Mrs. Preus, honoring the same man he bragged about sandbagging.

---

LPC has left a new comment on your post "Those Glory Days of Lutheran Orthodoxy at The Fort...":

>I noticed McCain's slobbering reference to taking courses from Bob Preus on Steadfast Enthusiasts. It moved me to tears...of laughter.

I am crying now too, tears flowing down my cheeks, but my mouth just keeps on laughing.


LPC

***

GJ - The UOJ Enthusiasts cannot stop blabbering about their one and only dogma, but they want to silence anyone who questions them. A discussion board (Steadfast Enthusiasts, LaughQuest) is for them to post dozens of remarks about how wise, loving, patient, and orthodox they are. The only thing missing is, "Thank God we are not like other men, like those Ichabodians." Oh, they say that too.

Best of all, the UOJ hive is just as spiteful with each other and they are with their opponents. Every so often they start biting and devouring each other on LQ. Everyone on the ALPB Forum laughs about it.

Mark Jeske, Furtive Head of Church and Change:
Can Anyone Accuse Him of Lutheran Doctrine?

The WELS Church and Change dogs have
a message for you.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/All_your_base_are_belong_to_us


David Becker has left a new comment on your post "New Change or Die! Gathering for 2012. Working wit...":

Last week, I sent Christian News an article titled “WELS Divided on Mark Jeske” and several other analytical articles on Pastor Jeske. None of them were printed in the February 6 CN, but that may have been because I encouraged Pastor/Editor Otten to forward the material to Pastor Jeske/Time of Grace Ministries for a response (if they had any) and therefore they may still be in a future edition of CN. If they are never printed in CN, I might possibly forward them to you. I am also considering writing an article titled “Paul McCain Denounces Gregory Jackson as ‘False Teacher,’ ‘Cult Leader.’” CN could print a picture of you with the caption “Cult Leader.” That would be laugh out loud funny. I think that I write some laugh out loud funny stuff too—the style of humor is just a bit different from yours.



---

David Becker has left a new comment on your post "This Is How Harrison, Schroeder, and Pope John Loo...":

Below is one of the articles that I submitted to Christian News on Pastor Mark Jeske/Time of Grace Ministries (which has not been published in CN, at least not as of February 6, maybe still forthcoming):

"Time of Grace" Statement of Faith Is Deficient

The rapidly growing Time of Grace ministry founded by Pastor Mark Jeske and others, and hosted by Mark Jeske, rarely mentions the word “Lutheran” on its web site, except in reference to the St. Marcus Lutheran Church that Jeske is pastor of. That is not NECESSARILY wrong; “Lutheran” per se isn’t in the Bible either. Nevertheless, Time of Grace is affiliated with the Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod by virtue of Jeske’s status as a WELS pastor and with the Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod via status as a Recognized Service Organization, even though this is downplayed or not even disclosed on the Time of Grace web site, for some reason.

However, this is the “Time of Grace” statement of faith in its entirety (no reference is made to any other creeds or confessions) at http://www.timeofgrace.org/statementoffaith.php.

“We believe in the triune God: Father, Son and Holy Spirit. We believe that God has revealed himself through his word, the Holy Bible, and that the Bible is divinely inspired and without error. We believe that all human beings are terminally sinful and that only through the innocent life and death of Jesus Christ can anyone be saved. We believe we are here on this earth to spread the good news of Jesus Christ to as many people as possible.”

Is it just me, or is this not an astonishingly weak Statement of Faith? It does affirm the Trinity and Biblical inerrancy. But it says little specifically about the person of Jesus Christ – does not refer to Him as true God and true man, or to His second coming. It doesn’t even specifically say Jesus rose from the dead! (This is not to say that Jeske doesn’t believe these doctrines, but why not say it in the Statement of Faith?)

Time of Grace doesn’t say anything whatsoever about Baptism or the Lord’s Supper either. Some today make the false claim that Walter Maier Sr. of the “Lutheran Hour” of the 1930s and 1940s was weak on Baptism and the Lord’s Supper. Maier has an entire chapter on Communion in his best-selling “For Better Not For Worse.” Yet the LCMS-WELS ministry Time of Grace says nothing on Baptism and the Lord’s Supper and receives little criticism from the same people who are critical of Maier.

Both the WELS and LCMS pride themselves about being extremely concerned about theology and doctrine. It is almost unbelievable that Time of Grace’s very minimalistic Statement of Faith is acceptable to either LCMS or WELS. Somebody needs to do something about this.

***

GJ - David, I am sure Missouri and WELS will discuss this at their next joint meeting with ELCA leaders.

The DP who protects Jeske will not do anything, and SP Schroeder claims to be helpless. Actually, Mark Schroeder is too busy trying to keep his shrinking flock from posting on Ichabod or playing the organ at the Mother Church of WELS.

David, feel free to send articles to Ichabod. I enjoy featuring many voices on a wide variety of subjects.

To be laughing out loud funny, just compare the claims of the Olde Synodical Conference to reality.

Mark Jeske's cat.

D.A.: No criminal probe in Bevilacqua’s death - Philly.com.
WELS Take Note.



D.A.: No criminal probe in Bevilacqua’s death - Philly.com:

"Montgomery County District Attorney Risa Vetri Ferman asked the county coroner to examine the body of Cardinal Anthony J. Bevilacqua last week because the timing of the 88-year-old prelate's death struck her as "peculiar," she said Friday.

Ferman acknowledged that she enlisted county Coroner Walter I. Hofman because the cardinal died one day after a Philadelphia judge said Bevilacqua could be called to testify at the child sex-abuse and endangerment trial of three current and former priests."

'via Blog this'

Many Ways To Do Missionary Work:
Free PDFs Allow Easy World-Wide Reading

Martin Chemnitz was the senior editor of the Book of Concord.
Another editor was P. Leyser, who rebuked  Samuel Huber
for his early UOJ heresy.
Leyser also wrote the biography of Chemnitz.


This post has all the free PDF links.

This link is where to order printed copies of the books.

I was providing a link for Moliners to read the reunion book when another webmaster said Word documents were not useful because of the many versions. I used Office 2010 (which I got legally for $10) and she had Office 2003. PDFs are the best because they are all-purpose. Lulu creates them, so all I had to do was put them in the same place and make them easy to download. I used Dropbox's public folder for that, which makes it easy for people all over the world and also provides an additional backup for years of work. Contact me if you want Dropbox, which is the great piece of software since Civ IV.

I noticed on Steadfast Enthusiasts that they cannot argue ideas. When they are not using personal attacks, their favorite method, and acting hysterical over being challenged, they show no knowledge of the subject matter. They repeat their talking points and call it a day.

The set of links on the publications page allows them to study Lutheran doctrine for free and to compare their Steadfast and LaughQuest Enthusiasm with the actual teaching of the Lutheran Reformation.

A Facebook event last night prompted me to put together all the links. One FB friend copied one of my favorite quotations from Chemnitz, about Holy Communion. Several of us got into a discussion about using Luther, Chemnitz, Gerhard, and other greats in the bulletin and newsletter. Lutherans have raged against me for doing that, both in WELS, in the CLC (sic), and now. I said I could provide sources for them, and they were interested.

A PDF is not so good for copying quotations, but I have several alternatives. One is to give someone a hand-crafted file, a service I have provided for 20 years, such as the times I gave essay writers 200 quotations at a time for their papers. Another is to provide a Word file of the entire book.

As I mentioned before, my main interest is to get people past the Lutheran-Talmud--the layer upon layer of recent synodical commentary--and have them read Luther, the Book of Concord, and the great theologians of that era. Chemnitz is also a great guide to the Patristic theologians, often neglected by the Waltherian navel-gazers - and far superior to the Kidnapper's eructations.


The links are useful for people all over the world. Nothing is quite so painful as buying a book from America and having it shipped overseas. The costs are jacked up by currency exchange and VAT tax charges.

A look at the map on the Martin Chemnitz Press and Bethany blogs will show that people all over the world use those blogs all the time. Both blogs have the same set of links to the books now. Those people can download all the books and save them on their computers. I know missionaries are looking at ways to communicate the Gospel and study while covering vast distances. The links are an easy, free service to use.

I would love to see a similar list of publications (free, of course) from such MDiv experts as Paul McCain, Tim Glende, Jay Webber, and the anonymouse tribe - those rodents who scurry around the Net leaving their precious little nameless droppings. Then we could compare concepts.

Kent Hunter, DMin Fuller, has been the guiding light
for "conservative" Lutherans for decades.
UOJ and Church Growth go together like Universalism and Unitarianism.
Ask David Valleskey, WELS Church Growth guru.