Thursday, May 10, 2012

An Honest Way To Copy from Others


Bloggers can copy other Internet sources easily. Chrome (the browser from Google) makes that easy with a tool called Blog This!

I discovered Chrome's Blog This! and started using it some time ago. There is an orange icon with a B inside, to the right of my URL window, left of the Chrome wrench icon (tools).

When I am on an interesting article, I only need to click the B and have the page linked on my blog. There are three indications that this is from another source.

  • First, the source is in the headline. 
  • Second, the exact URL source is at the top of the page. 
  • Third, the selection ends with "via Blog This" to show that it was copied.
When quoting a source, I do my best to show exactly what I am quoting and where it is from. Sometimes I use a blue font to make the distinctions clearer.

Many pages have disappeared from the Net after being copied here. I keep them, knowing the Ichabod-effect leads to kilcreasing (the erasure of previous posts and comments).

I like to feature good comments from readers and from bloggers. Variety makes a blog more interesting.

I wondered why McCain's blog seems so sterile and boring. The answer is similar to the politician's speech. When he reads another's words, they are not his thoughts but another's. Reagan began with some ideas, had speech-writers, and then made the final effort his own with corrections and additions.



APA requires a citation and quotation marks when using the words of another. Longer quotations are marked with an indentation of the entire text. The issue is honesty, not the exact format.

Many years ago my wife and I tracked down a "Luther quote" by speaking to the author of the book where this first appeared (as far as we could tell). He did not know where it came from, he said, and there was no citation. Later, someone discovered it was a statement in a novel about Luther, as if Luther said it.

When I began assembling quotations to use in my writing, in Megatron, the legendary database, I included a complete citation with each entry. One quotation seemed wrong to Brett Meyer, so I went back to the printed source (Lenker) and discovered that it was correct but odd without an explanation about the context.

Two Encouraging Comments:
From 29A and Pope Paul the Plagiarist



Two people greatly encouraged me today. One urged me to continue writing on justification by faith. Many people are participating in studying the issue, and I enjoy doing my little part. Unlike the UOJ Hive, I am only too happy to represent the other side of the issue. That has clarified the issue for many people.

I enjoy writing about justification by faith, because that was Luther's Biblical theme. Justification by faith is the Gospel. UOJ is Pietistic, rationalistic nonsense.

Another message of encouragement came from a rant posted by the Tim Glende crowd. It sounded like Paul McCain again, but they all sound alike. The Glende blog is the Groundhog Day of cowardly, badly spelled invective, endlessly repeating itself.

Eighth Commandment
One of McCain's pals cited the Eighth Commandment against me because I called SP Harrison's campaign manager a plagiarist and Romanist. When I pointed out the way McCain appeared to write articles he was only copying, the LCMS pastor said, "That's his MO."

I know about the modus operandi of plagiarists. I deal with them from time to time. That does not make stealing the original words of another person legal or ethical. At a university, plagiarism can be the sole cause for expulsion, whether done by a faculty member or a student. But a supposed editor at a church publishing house? - that is a lot of money to pay for copy and paste.

For sale on eBay.
The digital age has made copying much easier and faster.


McCain's St. Mark Plagiarism
In one recent case, the citation came at the end, marked only as a link to "Source." In APA, that means the article was based on the insights of that source, but using the writer's own words.

Instead, McCain's post was verbatim from The Catholic Encyclopedia. I had no idea at the beginning of the article that he did not write a word of it. Secondly, I did not know it was verbatim from The Catholic Encyclopedia until I opened up a second window and compared paragraph after paragraph. And yet, McCain linked it on LaughQuest as an article from HIS blog to read.

Five or more words in a row, from another source, should be clearly marked as quotations from that source.

Bugenhagen Plagiarism
I suspected that more of this was going on, so I did a tiny bit of checking and found another McCain post, on Bugenhagen,  copied directly from a Lutheran blog (Northwoods Lutherans) - no citation at all. But Paul wanted LaughQuest readers to study HIS momentous words, so he linked his post on LQ.

Chrysostom Plagiarism
I did another quick check tonight and found McCain's Chrysostom post extremely well developed, with tons of extra research information at the end. The Chrysostom opening is stolen from here (Concordia and Koinonia), and not attributed. The rest of the article is from The Catholic Encyclopedia, which is named at the beginning. However, it is not clear that the rest of the post is verbatim from the Roman Catholic source.

Take Your Own Medicine, Pope Paul
McCain just congratulated Rolf Preus for apologizing. The time has come for McCain to repent and apologize for defrauding his readers and sources. He is stealing the work of another to pose as a scholar with a vast knowledge of many subjects.

Even Ski and Glende know how to copy and paste. Their spelling and editing is almost as bad as McCain's. No wonder he feels at home on their blog.



bruce-church (http://bruce-church.myopenid.com/) has left a new comment on your post "Two Encouraging Comments: From 29A and Pope Paul t...":

So Rolf Preus apologized over his past statements about the non-orthodoxy of the LCMS? Also, I just looked at Cyberbrethern for the last week, and didn't see any comments on Rolf's apology. Did McCain make the comments on LaughQuest? Thanks for filling me in:

http://cyberbrethren.com/ 


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Pastor Rolf David Preus (Rolf)
Senior Member
Username: Rolf

Post Number: 7058
Registered: 5-2001

Posted on Thursday, May 10, 2012 - 1:04 pm:   Edit Post Delete Post Print Post


In March of 2005, shortly after Reverend David Mahsman and Mr. Leonard Pranschke lost the positions they held in the Missouri Synod, I posted here on Luther Quest an unkind and unbrotherly attack on these men, gloating over their misfortune, and saying I was “overjoyed” that they lost their positions. Dredging up in my mind the synodical conflicts of the past where these brothers and my dear father were at odds, I thought that I was somehow honoring my father by attacking these men. I was wrong. I was not honoring my father at all. I was dishonoring myself.

Our love of orthodoxy and the pure doctrine of God’s word is love for the truth that God, for the sake of Christ’s holy and vicarious obedience and suffering, forgives us all our sins and sets us at peace with him. The faith that receives this forgiveness and peace is the faith that issues into a love for the brethren and a desire to live at peace with all men, especially our fellow Christians. When a minister of the Word writes mean and hurtful things that militate against the gospel of reconciliation he does positive harm to the cause of the gospel. For that I am sincerely sorry.

I apologize to Rev. Mahsman and to Mr. Pranschke. What I wrote was mean-spirited. I am sorry I wrote it and I retract it. I never should have written it.


Pastor Rolf David Preus
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Paul T. McCain (Ptmccain)
Advanced Member
Username: Ptmccain

Post Number: 851
Registered: 4-2009

Posted on Thursday, May 10, 2012 - 3:07 pm:   Edit Post Delete Post Print Post


Now that's an apology. Thank you, Rev. Preus.

We, fellow sinner/saints, rejoice with you that the blood of Jesus, His son, cleanses us from all sin.

Thanks be to God.

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bruce-church (http://bruce-church.myopenid.com/) has left a new comment on your post "Two Encouraging Comments: From 29A and Pope Paul t...":

Rev. David Mahsman and Mr. Leonard Pranschke were longtime Bohlmann acolytes. Mahsman was editor of The Lutheran Witness and Reporter and Pranschke held various positions in the Purple Palace and headed up the law firm that the LCMS Inc. retained:

Jesus First leader Jon J. Coyne wrote about Rolf in 2005:

http://www.jesusfirst.net/2005May01.htm

Snippet: I will also share one statement by Rev. Rolf Preus, a former LCMS pastor and brother to Christian Preus (current member of the BOD), Rev. Daniel Preus (former LCMS 1st VP) and Rev. Klemet Preus (writer for Consensus). Pastor Rolf Preus writes on a public website the following:

“There is life outside of Missouri! But as a former member of "our" Synod I must say that I am overjoyed at the fact that Pranschke and Mahsman have both been fired. The wheels of justice grind very slowly. But they grind very fine . . .”

Later Rev. Preus continues his statement with these words:

“Back in 1989 (during the days when the LCMS had an adjudication system) Ralph Bohlmann engineered the firing of my father as president of CTS (Concordia Theological Seminary) in Ft. Wayne through his lackeys on the BOR (Board of Regents) at CTS by means of a fraudulent "honorable" retirement. During my father's efforts to regain his office through the adjudication system of the synod, Mahsman regularly distorted the facts of the case by means of selective reporting that deliberately left out crucial information. He, Pranschke, and many other members of the permanent bureaucracy at the Purple Palace regularly carried water for Ralph Bohlmann in Bohlmann's vendetta against CTS, Robert Preus and anyone else in the confessional movement who might threaten Bohlmann's hegemony over the LCMS. Mahsmann pretended objectivity in print while spreading rumors about how the BOR "honorably" retired Robert Preus to spare him embarrassment.”

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bruce-church (http://bruce-church.myopenid.com/) has left a new comment on your post "Two Encouraging Comments: From 29A and Pope Paul t...":

The Rolf Preus situation might explain the recent remarks in the DP's sermon at the Ft. Wayne Call Service, namely, about how it is "twisted" for one pastor to take another brother to task via blogs in the name of correcting that brother. See comments here:

http://ichabodthegloryhasdeparted.blogspot.com/2012/05/stern-warnings-from-concordia-ft-wayne.html

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bruce-church (http://bruce-church.myopenid.com/) has left a new comment on your post "Two Encouraging Comments: From 29A and Pope Paul t...":

Apology from Pr. Rolf Preus

http://www.lutherquest.org/cgi-bin/discus40/show.cgi?tpc=13&post=264820#POST264820

Ultra-Orthodox Jews Shun Their Own for Reporting Child Sexual Abuse - NYTimes.com



Ultra-Orthodox Jews Shun Their Own for Reporting Child Sexual Abuse - NYTimes.com:


The first shock came when Mordechai Jungreis learned that his mentally disabled teenage son was being molested in a Jewish ritual bathhouse in Brooklyn. The second came after Mr. Jungreis complained, and the man accused of the abuse was arrested.
Rabbi Nuchem Rosenberg Telephone Line


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Old friends started walking stonily past him and his family on the streets of Williamsburg. Their landlord kicked them out of their apartment. Anonymous messages filled their answering machine, cursing Mr. Jungreis for turning in a fellow Jew. And, he said, the mother of a child in a wheelchair confronted Mr. Jungreis’s mother-in-law, saying the same man had molested her son, and she “did not report this crime, so why did your son-in-law have to?”

By cooperating with the police, and speaking out about his son’s abuse, Mr. Jungreis, 38, found himself at the painful forefront of an issue roiling his insular Hasidic community. There have been glimmers of change as a small number of ultra-Orthodox Jews, taking on longstanding religious and cultural norms, have begun to report child sexual abuse accusations against members of their own communities. But those who come forward often encounter intense intimidation from their neighbors and from rabbinical authorities, aimed at pressuring them to drop their cases.

Abuse victims and their families have been expelled from religious schools and synagogues, shunned by fellow ultra-Orthodox Jews and targeted for harassment intended to destroy their businesses. Some victims’ families have been offered money, ostensibly to help pay for therapy for the victims, but also to stop pursuing charges, victims and victims’ advocates said.

“Try living for one day with all the pain I am living with,” Mr. Jungreis, spent and distraught, said recently outside his new apartment on Williamsburg’s outskirts. “Did anybody in the Hasidic community in these two years, in Borough Park, in Flatbush, ever come up and look my son in the eye and tell him a good word? Did anybody take the courage to show him mercy in the street?”

A few blocks away, Pearl Engelman, a 64-year-old great-grandmother, said her community had failed her too. In 2008, her son, Joel, told rabbinical authorities that he had been repeatedly groped as a child by a school official at the United Talmudical Academy in Williamsburg. The school briefly removed the official but denied the accusation. And when Joel turned 23, too old to file charges under the state’s statute of limitations, they returned the man to teaching.

“There is no nice way of saying it,” Mrs. Engelman said. “Our community protects molesters. Other than that, we are wonderful.”

Keeping to Themselves

The New York City area is home to an estimated 250,000 ultra-Orthodox Jews — the largest such community outside of Israel, and one that is growing rapidly because of its high birthrate. The community is concentrated in Brooklyn, where many of the ultra-Orthodox are Hasidim, followers of a fervent spiritual movement that began in 18th-century Europe and applies Jewish law to every aspect of life.

Their communities, headed by dynastic leaders called rebbes, strive to preserve their centuries-old customs by resisting the contaminating influences of the outside world. While some ultra-Orthodox rabbis now argue that a child molester should be reported to the police, others strictly adhere to an ancient prohibition against mesirah, the turning in of a Jew to non-Jewish authorities, and consider publicly airing allegations against fellow Jews to be chillul Hashem, a desecration of God’s name.

There are more mundane factors, too. Some ultra-Orthodox Jews want to keep abuse allegations quiet to protect the reputation of the community, and the family of the accused. And rabbinical authorities, eager to maintain control, worry that inviting outside scrutiny could erode their power, said Samuel Heilman, a professor of Jewish studies at Queens College.

1 2 3 4 NEXT PAGE »
Friday: The Brooklyn district attorney is criticized for his handling of ultra-Orthodox Jewish child sex-abuse cases.


'via Blog this'

UOJ Fanatics Will Not Give Up Their False Doctrine


I asked the UOJ fanatics, again, "Why are there no UOJ hymns?"

Nevertheless, the UOJ fanatics will never give up.

The main reason is their philosophical framework. For instance, one rationalistic claim is - "I will only believe what can be reproduced in a laboratory, so there are no miracles."

Our son's godfather, with two doctorates in science from Yale, responded, "Of course they cannot be reproduced in a lab. That is the definition of a miracle." He thought the self-serving claim was funny.

Given that assumption, there are no miracles, no Incarnation, no atoning death of Christ, no resurrection.

The Synodical Conference (tm) assumption is philosophical, not Biblical. Their philosophy is the definition copied from the English translation of a Halle professor's book. The translator was a Calvinist superstar in America, and the Halle professor (Knapp) was the last of the Pietists at Halle. The subsequent professors were Rationalists who denied most or all of the Biblical truths.

When the Walther group went to school, training was rationalistic and the church was run by rationalists. The alternative was Pietism, so they associated with one abusive Pietistic leader, then with another one (Martin Stephan) who studied at Halle. The DNA of UOJ is easy to trace, from Knapp to Stephan to Walther.

A guru from India can order his disciples to do anything he pleases. There is a life-long bond with the guru that the disciples cannot break. Cell groups, which Walther and his friends joined, are quite similar. They create a morbid dependency in the disciples and a dictatorial attitude in the guru. Stephan benefited from the departure and death of the original cell group leader. They transferred their dependency to him and saw no wrong in all his manifestations of adultery and syphilis.

The deceptions of the Synodical Conference (tm) have continued this dependency. They cannot admit to the criminal behavior of Walther, but create an idol out of his life and works. Bishop Stephan's STD is not a divinity degree but a documented fact. That outbreak among the young women of Perryville and St. Louis allowed the disciples to break with the guru. Even then, the opposition was mixed. Supporters of Stephan were left behind so the Walther mob was 100% on the attack.

Walther took over. As one WELS wit recently wrote to me, "The bishop came over on the ship with the pope." Walther became the infallible pope of the Synodical Conference.

Therefore, the assumption is clear - "If Walther is wrong, then the Synodical Conference was built upon false doctrine and lies. Holy Mother Synod is infallible, so the founders must be infallible." Borrowing a line from the pope, they say--in effect--"The Holy Spirit would never allow Holy Father Walther to make a mistake."

That is why the deceiving leaders make people think of Walther as the solution to false doctrine, going so far as denying his signed, sworn obedience to bishop-for-life Stephan.

That explains why the story of the sudden confessions of two mistresses was cooked up by Walther and his very close friend - then repeated, in spite of evidence to the contrary. Today it would be the equivalence of claiming that America suddenly found out that Obama was Black, when his wife confessed the truth. Even the hagiogrpahers have to admit, "They knew all along. There was no violation of private confessions."

Attacking UOJ as false doctrine is undermining all the invented history of the Synodical Conference (tm). That also proves that the Synodical Conference (tm) elevates the claims of Pietists above the Scriptures and Confessions.

When cornered, the UOJ Enthusiasts cite Pietists like Rambach to support their arguments, and use the Synodical Conference errorists to prove UOJ is correct. The fact remains - many SC leaders used and promoted justification by faith materials that were true to the Bible and Confessions. Gausewitz is one irrefutable example, but he has been kicked under the bus and forgotten. One might as well argue that something is true because a Martian named Igg-E said so.



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Joel Lillo, Fox Valley, WELS has left a new comment on your post "UOJ Fanatics Will Not Give Up Their False Doctrine...":

"A Lamb goes uncomplaining forth, the guilt OF ALL MEN bearing; and laden with the SINS OF EARTH, none else the burden sharing!"

Sure sounds like UOJ to me!

***

GJ - Thank you for proving my point, Joel. The UOJ Enthusiasts merge the atoning death of Christ with justification by faith. They affirm and deny that they teach the absolution of the world, apart from the Word, the Means of Grace, or faith.

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Pastor emeritus Nathan Bickel has left a new comment on your post "UOJ Fanatics Will Not Give Up Their False Doctrine...":

Ichabod -

The reference (example) in this article to miracles (etc.) and the linkage of rationalistic thought with those who believe and teach UOJ - "Universal Objective Justification," reminded me of a portion of a past online topical message of mine:

"Miracles" - "Why some people have a difficult time accepting their reality:"

........One of the greatest of all miracles is Creation. [Genesis 1:1f-2] If a person cannot believe the first verse of Holy Scripture, he or she will always have problems believing in miracles and accepting their reality. If a person cannot believe in a one supreme eternal, all knowing and all powerful God, he or she will always be plagued with doubt about their existence and future. People often neglect to realize that Creator God is not confined by the natural laws that He, Himself, put in place. For instance, God not only created the law of gravity, but, He, Himself, is not confined by it. He has often, (as recorded in Scripture) worked His specific miracles outside the laws of nature -- being (of course) above nature.......

........So much for the ability of humans to deny and dismiss their Maker. Essentially, a soul in its unregenerate state, does not have the ability to believe, understand and appreciate and practice the Christian Faith, or give homage to the One Triune God, who dispenses faith, to whom He may..........

http://www.thechristianmessage.org/2012/01/miracles-why-some-people-have-difficult.html

Essentially, those who claim genuine faith, but cannot readily accept the miracles of Scripture, have no (objective) business calling themselves Christians, and even labeling themselves, Lutherans.

As to this article's Walther reference:

I could not help but think that synod Lutheran hierarchies need to put things right and disavow the historical revisionism of its Walther beginnings. Official synodical publications need to begin to accurately reflect the stark reality, rather than to continually sugar coat Walther. I doubt very much if rank-in-file Lutherans can explain who Stephan was, and the connection he and Walther had - plus all that transpired with the European migration of Lutherans to America.

Finally, I can't help but think of one of the major reasons that Pastor (missionary) Loehe, withdrew his active presence from American Lutheranism (apart from his Saginaw Valley - Michigan influence). Even back then, he could see no point in investing his energies and the Lord’s work, knowing that headstrong erring Christian Lutherans, were already headed in untoward (cockroach type) directions.

Nathan M. Bickel

www.thechristianmessage.org

ww.moralmatters.org

A Blogger Named 2138 - On Justification



As far as justification “already accomplished,” the Large Catechism, 3rd Article, says, 

“38] For neither you nor I could ever know anything of Christ, or believe on Him, and obtain Him for our Lord, unless it were offered to us and granted to our hearts by the Holy Ghost through the preaching of the Gospel. The work is done and accomplished; for Christ has acquired and gained the treasure for us by His suffering, death, resurrection, etc. But if the work remained concealed so that no one knew of it, then it would be in vain and lost. That this treasure, therefore, might not lie buried, but be appropriated and enjoyed, God has caused the Word to go forth and be proclaimed, in which He gives the Holy Ghost to bring this treasure home and appropriate it to us. 39] Therefore sanctifying is nothing else than bringing us to Christ to receive this good, to which we could not attain of ourselves.”

“54] We further believe that in this Christian Church we have forgiveness of sin, which is wrought through the holy Sacraments and Absolution, moreover, through all manner of consolatory promises of the entire Gospel. Therefore, whatever is to be preached concerning the Sacraments belongs here, and, in short, the whole Gospel and all the offices of Christianity, which also must be preached and taught without ceasing. For although the grace of God is secured through Christ, and sanctification is wrought by the Holy Ghost through the Word of God in the unity of the Christian Church, yet on account of our flesh which we bear about with us we are never without sin. 

55] Everything, therefore, in the Christian Church is ordered to the end that we shall daily obtain there nothing but the forgiveness of sin through the Word and signs, to comfort and encourage our consciences as long as we live here. Thus, although we have sins, the [grace of the] Holy Ghost does not allow them to injure us, because we are in the Christian Church, where there is nothing but [continuous, uninterrupted] forgiveness of sin, both in that God forgives us, and in that we forgive, bear with, and help each other. 
56] But outside of this Christian Church, where the Gospel is not, there is no forgiveness, as also there can be no holiness [sanctification]. Therefore all who seek and wish to merit holiness [sanctification], not through the Gospel and forgiveness of sin, but by their works, have expelled and severed themselves [from this Church].”

Christ paid for the sins of the world and won the treasure of forgiveness to be distributed through the Gospel to all who would believe. (Not sure I'd call that justification, though.) There is enough forgiveness to cover every single person, if all the world would believe! When a child is baptized, or someone hears the Gospel and comes to faith, a full measure of that beautiful treasure is distributed to that new believer. Faith is the difference-maker, but faith is not something the new believer “did.” It was all the Holy Spirit’s work, through the Gospel, where and when it pleases him.

Yet I don’t believe that, at any time in the above scenario, God looks/looked down on the unbelievers, without faith, and declared them “justified” or “forgiven.” To me, that extra “step” in Justification, apart from faith, cheapens the moment that someone is brought to faith though Word and Sacrament.

Keeping UOJ out of the picture (at least for me) makes the desperation of our original sinful state, and the working of faith in my heart by the Holy Spirit, all that more incredible. With UOJ, my pre-conversion state doesn’t seem to me quite so desperate, since I’m already “objectively justified,” which sounds pretty good to me, even if I never came to faith.

I don’t know. Just some rambling thoughts. Feel free to dig in.




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GJ - I have no idea who 2138 is.


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Pastor emeritus Nathan Bickel has left a new comment on your post "A Blogger Named 2138 - On Justification":

Ichabod - Thank you for the wonderfully presented article! Here, are my thoughts:

Luther states, of the Christian:

".....For although the grace of God is secured through Christ, and sanctification is wrought by the Holy Ghost through the Word of God in the unity of the Christian Church, yet on account of our flesh which we bear about with us we are never without sin......"

.......Thus, although we have sins, the [grace of the] Holy Ghost does not allow them to injure us, because we are in the Christian Church, where there is nothing but [continuous, uninterrupted] forgiveness of sin, both in that God forgives us, and in that we forgive, bear with, and help each other.......

Luther states, of the unbelieving non-Christian:

........But outside of this Christian Church, where the Gospel is not, there is no forgiveness, as also there can be no holiness [sanctification]. Therefore all who seek and wish to merit holiness [sanctification], not through the Gospel and forgiveness of sin, but by their works, have expelled and severed themselves [from this Church].”.....

Pastor Jackson -

I think that you summarized Luther's correct Scriptural understanding, with the one sentence you offered, following Luther's explanation:

"Christ paid for the sins of the world and won the treasure of forgiveness to be distributed through the Gospel to all who would believe." [Your words]

It is my firm understanding, that there is a "world of difference" to say that Christ "paid for the sins of the world" versus the erroneous teaching that he "absolved the world" through Christ's all atoning sacrifice. The major error of UOJ adherents, is, that they confuse this major distinction and (then) extend their (damning) error by attaching "imputation" into their sordid understanding and public teaching and preaching.

Finally, what would the Apostle Paul's ministry been like if he possessed this erroneous and damning UOJ mentality? Under inspiration of the Holy Spirit, he would not have penned the following:

2 Corinthians 5:15 - "......he [Christ] died for all, that they which live should not henceforth live unto themselves, but unto him which died for them, and rose again."

Back up 4 verses (for context) and note what is attributed to the Apostle Paul (again, under direct inspiration of the Holy Spirit). Note his evangelistic (ever urgent) fervor to preach the Gospel:

2 Corinthians 5:11 - ".....Knowing therefore the terror of the Lord, we persuade men;....."

A Christmas sermon without (going "full circle"), preaching sin and the full terror consequences of the law, vis-a-vis the damning (eternal) consequences of sin, is not a faithful preached representation of the Gospel. Yet, I recall sitting in a Lutheran church with a mixed crowd of church and non church members, having to hear this sermon, of which message, smacked UOJ and did not truly distinguish between believers, unbelievers; belief and unbelief. Such, I'm sad to say is usually the same case of attending Lutheran funerals, with mixed member and non member, (non-Christians), attending........

Nathan M. Bickel - pastor emeritus

www.thechristianmessage.org

www.moralmatters.org




Special Interests Run the Feds and the WELS

His Beatitude, Bishop Ski of The CORE Bar and Grill


norcal763 has left a new comment on your post "WELS Rustoleum - Warning! Graphic!":

The parallel between WELS and the Federal Government is fitting. Both institutions are 'led' by soft men who answer more readily to Special Interests than to the interests of their calling. I don't need to elaborate concerning the SI's to whom the government answers, but WELS leaders pay a lot of attention to Thrivent.

Both WELS and the Federal Government draw leaders who hail from educational backgrounds where affiliations with Secret Societies (complete with humiliating hazing rituals) are endemic. The implied threat of mutually assured destruction of reputation is very effective in assuring that inappropriate behavior continues without consequence.

Whole Lot of Scandals Going On:
Lutherans Are Not Alone in Skimming Funds

Jan Crouch is on the right.
Big hair and red-eye do not blend well.

Paul Crouch likes his urban cowboy suits.

Among the issues Apprising Ministries covers is the heretical Word Faith (WF) movement as it heads toward acceptance within the mainstream. Elephant Room 2 will likely continue to be the source of division within the contemporary evangelicalism this year because the main claim to fame for this conference was, in my opinion, the pass given to Word Faith mogul T.D. Jakes.
This was a door that should never have been opened because now ostensibly mainstream evangelicals like two-time ER veteran Steven Furtick openly says T.D. Jakes Is My Favorite Preacher In The World and Joel Osteen Is A Great Man Of God. Sadly, people like Joyce Meyer—another Furtick fav—and Joel Osteen are tip-of-the-spear with WF-lite man-centered self-esteem messages ala Robert Schueller  (sic).
In addition, such as these claim this human potential skubalon is given to them by direct revelation from God Himself. The twist added on by these WF spiritual snake oil salesmen is the so-called prosperity gospel. This is not guilt-by-asscoiation, it is guilt-by-endorsement, which moves the Trinity Broadcasting Network—upon which that WF trio endorsed by Steven Furtick regularly appear—closer to the heart of the Christian community.
Now we come to the latest issues in the oft-sordid happenings around TBN. Thanks to growing syncretism and things like ER2 this becomes much closer to your mainstream evangelical church than you may have known. It kind of begins in October of 2011 as Paul Crouch, Jr. Resigns from Family-Founded TBN. He rather suddenly:
announced his resignation from the Trinity Broadcasting Network, the well-known Christian television ministry his parents Paul and Jan Crouch founded 38 years ago. (source)
Then February of this year found TBN Embroiled in ‘Sordid’ Family Lawsuit when:
The granddaughter of Trinity Broadcasting Network founders Paul and Jan Crouch has accused some of the network’s directors of illegally distributing “charitable assets” worth more than $50 million for their personal use. Brittany B. Koper, the daughter of Paul Crouch Jr., was TBN’s chief financial officer until last September. She says she was wrongfully fired after she refused to cover up the alleged distribution scheme. (source)
According to a report in The Orange County Register it appears that Koper’s grandfather and uncle Matt Crouch immediately played the classic Word Faith “touch not the anointed of the Lord” card. OC Register staff writer Teri Sforza tells us that right as the news of alleged fraud was breaking:
On Thursday, Feb. 9 — the same day that our story ran online —  Paul Crouch and his son, Matt, were having a live chat on TBN’s “Behind the Scenes.” Paul was reminiscing about how TBN began back in 1973 — God spoke to him as he was driving on MacArthur Boulevard — and the conversation took a turn that Koper’s attorney finds somewhat menacing. “You know what’s funny Dad?” Matt said (at minute 8:38 on the video).
“There have been a few attempts in the TBN history to upset TBN, to stop TBN, to — there have been a few fools in the 38, 39 year history, coming up on 40 years, and you know what, any attempt at stopping TBN — they have no idea who they’re actually pushing into the corner. You and Mom get pushed in a corner, God help you. That’s a lesson I’ve learned from you, seriously.”
Paul Crouch responded: “God help anyone who would try to get in the way of TBN, which was God’s plan. … I have attended the funerals of at least two people who tried…. “Boy, anyone that’s ever tried to get in the way of this network – don’t. Don’t try it. Don’t try it, I’m telling you. You’re playing with fire. God says ‘I will build my church, and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it.’ And TBN, you know what, just plain old TBN as a great network entity is proof of the sovereignty of God and the power of God against hell and high water. This network stands as a monument to the faithfulness of God. He did it. Jan and I were just simple little kids — we didn’t even know what we were doing. It was God’s idea. He did it all.”
Crouch then appealed for donations. “Anyone have a need?” he asked. “Plant a seed. Get to the phone.” The comments were directed at no one in particular, but they resounded with Koper. (source)
I also noticed that particular episode has since vanished from the TBN archives. Today the Christian Post is reporting TBN Family Feud Heats Up as Network Fires Back Against Fraud Accusations:
The Trinity Broadcast Network (TBN) said Tuesday that a civil lawsuit filed against it by the founders’ granddaughter and the company’s former finance director is “meritless and contrived,” adding more arguments to what has become an epic scandal involving the largest Christian television network.
Brittany B. Koper, granddaughter of TBN founders Paul and Janice Crouch and their company’s former director of finance, has filed a civil lawsuit alleging that the network knew and kept quiet about broad financial inaccuracies benefiting its founders…
[T]he network claims the Kopers were fired for stealing $1.3 million to buy real estate and cars and make family loans, and only came back with their own allegations later, in retaliation. (source)
In closing this, for now, The New York Times brought out another angle of this spiritual “he said-she said” by focusing on the obvious opulence of TBN in Family feud reveals luxuries at largest Christian TV network:
For 39 years, the Trinity Broadcasting Network has urged viewers to give generously and reap the Lord’s bounty in return. The prosperity gospel preached by Paul and Janice Crouch, who built a single station into the world’s largest Christian television network, has worked out well for them.
Mr. and Mrs. Crouch have his-and-her mansions one street apart in a gated community here, provided by the network using viewer donations and tax-free earnings. But Mrs. Crouch, 74, rarely sleeps in the $5.6 million house with tennis court and pool. She mostly lives in a large company house near Orlando, Fla., where she runs a side business, the Holy Land Experience theme park.
Mr. Crouch, 78, has an adjacent home there too, but rarely visits. Its occupant is often a security guard who doubles as Mrs. Crouch’s chauffeur. The twin sets of luxury homes only hint at the high living enjoyed by the Crouches, inspirational television personalities whose multitudes of stations and satellite signals reach millions of worshipers across the globe.
Almost since they started in the 1970s, the couple have been criticized for secrecy about their use of donations, which totaled $93 million in 2010. (source)
Yet still Paul Crouch was on TBN saying, “Anyone have a need? Plant a seed [send us money]. Get to the phone.”
See also:

Wednesday, May 9, 2012

VirtueOnline - News - Exclusives - North Carolina Episcopalians on the Wrong Side of History

Episcopal women clergy support abortion on demand
and gay marriage.


VirtueOnline - News - Exclusives - North Carolina Episcopalians on the Wrong Side of History:


North Carolina Episcopalians on the Wrong Side of History

EDITORIAL

By David W. Virtue
www.virtueonline.org
May 9, 2012

Once again, three bishops of the Episcopal Church, this time in North Carolina, found themselves on the wrong side of history and theology. Episcopal clergy across the state had expressed their opposition to Amendment One also known as the "marriage amendment" that upholds marriage between a man and a woman. Yesterday voters passed the constitutional measure by a margin of more than 20 percentage points. It was Bill Clinton vs Billy Graham. Clinton lost.

Bishop Michael B. Curry, Diocese of North Carolina, Bishop Clifton Daniel, III, Diocese of East Carolina, and Bishop G. Porter Taylor, Diocese of Western North Carolina all co-authored a joint letter opposing the amendment.

The state's Episcopal Church leaders have been visible opponents to the measure as were California's Episcopal Church bishops during the Proposition 8 campaign that ended a brief window of same-sex marriages in that state.
These liberal bishops were theologically and morally outflanked from the state's two Roman Catholic dioceses, as well as prominent pastors from historically black churches who vocally supported the measure. (Blacks deeply resent their color being equated with sodomy). The Roman Catholic bishops of Charlotte and Raleigh also issued a mailer calling for support of traditional marriage. Even Billy Graham weighed in in support of Amendment One.


In states where same-sex marriage has appeared either on the ballot or in legislatures, Episcopal Church bishops have typically supported, alongside Unitarian Universalist and liberal Protestant officials, legalizing such unions. A rare exception was Rhode Island Episcopal bishop Geralyn Wolf who argued in 2011 against efforts to legalize same-sex marriage in that state.

Yesterday, voters in North Carolina voted overwhelmingly to uphold marriage as between one man and one woman as the only legal domestic partnership recognized by the state. They did not recognize civil unions either.

The arguments raised by Episcopal liberal bishops are typical of most arguments raised by liberals who believe they can change God's mind for Him.

"We oppose Amendment One because the love of God and the way of love that has been revealed in Jesus of Nazareth compels us to do so. We oppose Amendment One because every time we baptize someone in the Episcopal Church, the entire congregation vows to 'strive for justice and peace among all people, and respect the dignity of every human being.' We oppose Amendment One because it is unjust and it does not respect the dignity of every human being in the state of North Carolina. If passed, it will harm not only law-abiding gay and lesbian citizens but other men, women and innocent children in our state," reads one excerpt from the letter.

This is theologically flawed at many levels.

The love of God revealed in Jesus has never embraced sexual behavior of any kind outside of marriage between a man and a woman. Jesus affirmed this in the gospels: "Haven't you read," he replied, "that at the beginning ... God made them male and female" (Matthew 19-4 and Mark 10: 6).

What right do these Episcopal bishops have to believe they can reverse what Jesus personally spoke and affirmed? Do they really think that God's love can suddenly embrace what His Son firmly rejected? Of course Jesus didn't address homosexuality specifically He didn't need to. He also never addressed bisexuality, lesbitransgay, bestiality and a host of other sexual sins and aberrations. He openly affirmed the Genesis record and His Father's created order pronouncement. That was enough, no more needed to be said.

To use baptism to affirm homo-erotic behavior blasphemes the very nature of baptism. "Respecting the dignity of every human being" is not a license to respect the sexual behavior of a small group of men and women who scream that they have the same rights as heterosexuals and demand it be affirmed when sodomy is ontologically unacceptable, theologically without foundation, medically dangerous and fails the test to bring another human being into the world.

Furthermore, there is not a shred of evidence that law-abiding gay and lesbian citizens and other men, women and innocent children in the state will be harmed more or less than by heterosexual violence.

According to the North Carolina Department of Justice State Bureau of Investigation, the rate per 100,000 people of Crime Index offenses reported to law enforcement agencies throughout North Carolina decreased 5.6 percent during 2010 when compared to the figures reported in 2009. The rate of violent crime (which includes murder, rape, robbery, and aggravated assault) decreased 10.2 percent statewide. Individually, the murder rate decreased 7.3 percent, the rape rate decreased 14.3 percent, the robbery rate decreased 19.4 percent, and the aggravated assault rate decreased 5.3 percent. This includes all homosexual assaults.

Where is the foundation for the claims made by these Episcopal bishops that homosexuals will suddenly experience an uptick in domestic violence?

There were 27 LGBT people and HIV-affected people killed in 2010 in the United States, according to the latest numbers from the National Coalition of Anti-Violence Programs (NCAVP). The statistics did find that LGBT people of color and transgender women were subject to a disproportionate number of attacks - 70% of the 27 murders in 2010 were LGBT and HIV-affected people of color, while transgender women made up 44% of the murder victims.

By contrast, there were 13,636 murders in the US. Of those, 9,146 were caused by firearms.

In 2005, the most recent year for which mortality data are available, suicide was the second-leading cause of death among Americans 40 years of age or younger. Among Americans of all ages, more than half of all suicides are gun suicides. In 2005, an average of 46 Americans PER DAY committed suicide with a firearm, accounting for 53% of all completed suicides. Gun suicide during this period accounted for 40% more deaths than gun homicide.

If these Episcopal bishops feel so concerned about the rights of a handful of pansexualists where is their outrage about gun violence in America, the incredible suicide rate ripping apart our nation's youth and a culture that is taking them to hell faster than they can say The Creed?

It is hypocrisy and hubris of the highest order for these bishops and clergy to wear T-shirts proclaiming "Vote Against Amendment One" to appease a cultural aberration. Despite the belief that following the consecration of Gene Robinson in 2003, Episcopal churches have not rapidly filled with pansexualists.

Archbishops and bishops in the worldwide Anglican Communion have denounced same-sex marriage, including the Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams and Archbishop of York John Sentamu. Global South archbishops and bishops have vigorously denounced both homosexuality and same-sex marriage regarding it as a deep violation of the mind and will of God as it is revealed in Holy Scripture.

Yesterday, these NC bishops lost and their dioceses will continue to shrink. Siding with the world is not winning them new parishioners in their churches and souls for the Kingdom.




'via Blog this'

VirtueOnline - News - Exclusives - LONDON DIARY: Fellowship of Confessing Anglicans and Other Observations



VirtueOnline - News - Exclusives - LONDON DIARY: Fellowship of Confessing Anglicans and Other Observations:


"He who grows tired of London grows tired of life" opined Dr. Samuel Johnson. But that was in the 18th Century. Dr. Johnson would not recognize London in the 21st.

Walking through central London, about 20 minutes by fast train from my hotel in Wandsworth, (south London) one feels suddenly isolated and alone. Virtually nobody speaks English as a first language and often not at all. Almost everybody I saw or passed on footpaths or crossing London's celebrated bridges was a foot shorter, gesticulating and babbling in a foreign language, flashing iPods and cameras while pouring thousands of pounds into England's ancient tourist attractions, foremost among them being Westminster Abbey where tourists fill the coffers to keep the doors open and the ancient sarcophagi of kings and archbishops dutifully polished.


'via Blog this'

Condescending Wonka Offers an Opinion


WELS Rustoleum - Warning! Graphic!


A long-time WELS member wrote this about the following post:

http://ichabodthegloryhasdeparted.blogspot.com/2012/05/mentor-to-ski-glende-parlow-buske-and.html

First, let me say that the exposing of the goings on at North Pointe is a worthy topic as it relates to Appleton and WELS. It is absolutely amazing stuff. How WELS cannot do something about the Stanley followers now is incomprehesible. If they don't do anything about Appleton, then they must openly admit to the direction the synod is taking. Doing either will hurt the synod immeasurably. I believe they are now at the point where there is no recovery. WELS will never be Lutheran again.

---

Pastor emeritus Nathan Bickel has left a new comment on your post "WELS Rustoleum - Warning! Graphic!":

So WELS operates like our US (federal) government? Horrors! This should not be! But, then, again, I am not surprised to hear this. Double standards are always "tools" of convenience.

---

Brett Meyer has left a new comment on your post "WELS Rustoleum - Warning! Graphic!":

I think inviting Satanist Leonard Sweet to teach the clergy and laity how to "do church" was enough to kick every single Church and Change member to the curb.

Likewise with (W)ELS Change or Die conference hosted with the LCMS and ELCA.

For that matter same goes for (W)ELS financial support of Thrivent and their direct monetary support for Charles Gibbs Executive Director of the United Nations Global New World Order Religion called URI (United Religions Initiative)
http://www.interfaith-presidio.org/BAIC/baic11.htm
Scroll for MONEY & SOUL

Well, let's not forget the excommunication of the Kokomo families for defending One Justification by Faith Alone. Or the Krohn family for rejecting (W)ELS version of the false gospel of Universal Objective Justification.

Oh, Oh don't forget (W)ELS Pastor and Media personality Mark Jeske who is playing Synod Twister with (W)ELS, LCMS and ELCA.

The Kudzu That Swallowed WELS, Missouri, and the Rest.
Church Growth, Fuller, Willow Creek, Trinity Divinity, Mars Hill, Groeschel, Andy Stanley, Stetzer, Leonard Sweet, Driscoll

Kudzu vine was promoted by the federal government.
Now it is called the Vine That Swallowed the South.


People are reading the WELS Tendrils essay, about Church Growth WELS, so I linked it on the left and here.

Nothing was done about Church Growth, no matter how many times it was addressed, no matter how gentle the reproof.

The laity and pastors are supposed to rebuke false doctrine, not make little hints about it.

KJV 1 Timothy 5:20 Them that sin rebuke before all, that others also may fear.

KJV 2 Timothy 4:2 Preach the word; be instant in season, out of season; reprove, rebuke, exhort with all longsuffering and doctrine.

KJV Titus 1:13 This witness is true. Wherefore rebuke them sharply, that they may be sound in the faith;

KJV Titus 2:15 These things speak, and exhort, and rebuke with all authority. Let no man despise thee.

KJV Revelation 3:19 As many as I love, I rebuke and chasten: be zealous therefore, and repent.


Mentor to Ski, Glende, Parlow, Buske and Others -
Andy Stanley Promotes This.
WELS Sanctimony on the Issue

Andy Stanley, pastor of North Point Community Church – Atlanta, GA
(To view this graphic, go to the Christian sermon series, Part 5, 24 minute mark)


http://apprising.org/2012/05/08/problems-at-andy-stanleys-north-point-church/


Dr. Al Mohler, president of Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, recently wrote an article concerning the problematic trend of “megachurches” in evangelical Christianity, in which pastors attempt to oversee enormous churches with multiple sites, and members in the thousands, through the savvy use of technology and multi-media.

In his article entitled Is The Megachurch The New Liberalism?, Dr. Mohler specifically mentioned megachurch pastor Andy Stanley, pastor of North Point Community Church in Atlanta, GA and creator of the Catalyst conferences. Andy Stanley, according to Dr. Mohler’s article, recently gave a message in which he described a situation at North Point where a woman, her ex-husband and her ex-husband’s male lover were in a conflict.

The strangest part of this story is that the issue with which Stanley took exception was the fact that the ex-husband’s male lover was not yet divorced from his wife, and yet was serving in leadership at North Point. Presumably, the man’s adultery was the issue, but not, apparently, his unrepentantly homosexual lifestyle. From the article:

“(Andy) Stanley told the two men that they could not serve on the host team so long as the one man was still married. He later told of the former wife’s decision not to live in bitterness, and of her initiative to bring the whole new family structure to a Christmas service. This included the woman, her daughter, her former husband, his gay partner, and his daughter. Stanley celebrated this new ‘modern family’ as an expression of forgiveness.” (online source)

(Incidentally, this story of the wife, the ex-husband, the ex-husband’s male lover, etc., etc. was presented by Andy Stanley with graphics. This was no off-the-cuff account that just spontaneously occurred to Andy Stanley. The graphic below was obviously prepared well in advance of this sermon. I smell an agenda. Is open homosexuality going to be the Next Big Thing in Evangelicalism?)

Bishop Robinson left his wife for his new partner
and was enthroned as a bishop-for-life in the Episcopal Church USA - PB Schori's sect.
Robinson has two daughters.


For myself, I was thoroughly shocked and appalled when I read about this recent message by Andy Stanley. I know a number of people, solid Christians, who attend North Point, and speak highly of the teaching there. Andy Stanley is generally well-regarded here in Atlanta where he grew up and where his father (Charles Stanley) has also been a pastor for a number of years. So I would say that I am somewhat predisposed to be favorably inclined toward Stanley. And yet, by his teaching, it seems he is drifting down the path of ear-tickling liberalism that so many before him have done.

Not convinced? Then I offer Exhibit B for your consideration:

Andy Stanley’s North Point has a document that must be filled out and signed by adult volunteers seeking to minister to students if they wish to be considered for ministry. There is, however, some very curious language in this “covenant” document. The following is taken directly from the covenant:

Regarding Sexual Behavior

We teach that sex was created by God as an expression of intimacy between a man and woman within the context of marriage. Volunteers who embrace lifestyles or behaviors that conflict with this teaching will eventually find themselves having to pretend to be something they are not or believe something they don’t. In an effort to protect you from a potentially awkward situation, we ask the following:

If you are involved in a sexual relationship and are not married, we ask that you not volunteer in family ministry at this time.
If you are pursuing a same sex relationship, we ask that you not volunteer in family ministry at this time.
In the spirit of being a good role model, if you are single and living with a member of the opposite sex, we ask that you not volunteer at this time. We do not want to put you in the awkward position of having to explain your arrangement if members of your group visit your home.
If you are married and are currently involved in a sexual relationship outside of your marriage, we ask that you not volunteer at this time. (online source)
Our commentary: In the section of this covenant regarding sexual behavior, there is no call for repentance for those in willfully sinful sexual situations, no mention of church discipline, just a caution for those in sexual sin not to volunteer for ministry because of the “potentially awkward situation” it might create.

But what about protecting those same people from the potentially fiery situation they might face, if they don’t repent before a high and holy God? Is this what pastors are called to do……protect people from potentially awkward situations?

“But as for the cowardly, the faithless, the detestable, as for murderers, the sexually immoral, sorcerers, idolaters, and all liars, their portion will be in the lake that burns with fire and sulfur, which is the second death.” (Revelation 21:8)

Taking into account the troubling message recounted by Dr. Al Mohler in the first part of this article, as well as this North Point covenant statement for students to sign, my question is this: has Andy Stanley abdicated his right to serve as an church leader?

“An elder must be blameless, the husband of but one wife, a man whose children believe and are not open to the charge of being wild and disobedient. Since an overseer is entrusted with God’s work, he must be blameless—not overbearing, not quick-tempered, not given to drunkenness, not violent, not pursuing dishonest gain. Rather he must be hospitable, one who loves what is good, who is self-controlled, upright, holy and disciplined. He must hold firmly to the trustworthy message as it has been taught, so that he can encourage others by sound doctrine and refute those who oppose it.” (Titus 1:6-9, my emphasis)

“Therefore, I exhort the elders among you, as your fellow elder and witness of the sufferings of Christ, and a partaker also of the glory that is to be revealed, shepherd the flock of God among you, exercising oversight not under compulsion, but voluntarily, according to the will of God; and not for sordid gain, but with eagerness; nor yet as lording it over those allotted to your charge, but proving to be examples to the flock. And when the Chief Shepherd appears, you will receive the unfading crown of glory.” (1 Peter 5:1-4)

Our elders are called to guard and teach the flocks entrusted to them, and also to lead them by example. What we need today are sober-minded, Godly men who take seriously their charge before God to not only guard and teach their flocks, but to also exhort them to righteous living before a high and holy God to whom they will one day give an account.

We need leaders who, if need be, will discipline their members engaging in unrepentant sexual sin, not coddle them in their sinful passions and tickle their ears with man-centered language aimed at quelling the conscience. Where are such men? And more to the point of this article, does Andy Stanley still qualify for the role of elder/overseer?

Update: Andy Stanley recently released a response to Dr. Al Mohler’s article:

“We are requesting that everyone watch the entire series: Christian.* It concludes this Sunday. It’s 8 parts. That’s a lot of content to wade through. But I figure that’s better than a sound bite or an interview.” (online source)

My concern: how do you frame up that scenario with the woman, her ex-husband, the male lover (who is still married to HIS wife), etc., in a way that makes sense unless a clear call for repentance is given? It certainly wasn’t in the sermon that Dr. Mohler accounted. And if it was given, but in a later message, why wouldn’t you give the call for repentance in the same sermon where the scenario was presented?

*This entire 8-part series by Andy Stanley can be listened to in its entirety here.

Glende's response to the previous post was to denounce me,
not Andy Stanley's open marriage concept.
Ski's journal about Drive 08 with Andy Stanley recorded this spine-tingling event: The final Main Session with Andy Stanley was just phenomenal.  We began with awesome worship. 

---

http://www.albertmohler.com/2012/05/01/is-the-megachurch-the-new-liberalism/


The emergence of the megachurch as a model of metropolitan ministry is one of the defining marks of evangelical Christianity in the United States. Megachurches — huge congregations that attract thousands of worshipers — arrived on the scene in the 1970s and quickly became engines of ministry development and energy.

Over the last 40 years, the megachurch has made its presence known, often dominating the Christian landscape within the nation’s metropolitan regions. The megachurch came into dominance at the same time that massive shopping malls became the landmarks of suburban consumer life. Sociologists can easily trace the rise of megachurches within the context of America’s suburban explosion and the development of the technologies and transportation systems that made both the mall and the megachurch possible.

On the international scene, huge congregations can be found in many African nations and in nations such as Brazil, South Korea, and Australia. In London, where the megachurch can trace its roots back in the 19th century to massive urban congregations such as Charles Spurgeon’s Metropolitan Tabernacle, a few modern megachurches can be found. For the most part, however, the suburban evangelical megachurch is an American phenomenon.

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Theologically, most megachurches are conservative in orientation, at least in a general sense. In America, a large number of megachurches are associated with the charismatic movement and denominations such as the Assemblies of God. Many are independent, though often loosely associated with other churches. The largest number of megachurches within one denomination is found within the Southern Baptist Convention, the nation’s largest non-Catholic denomination.

The emergence of the megachurch was noted by sociologists and church researchers attempting to understand the massive shifts that were taking place in the last decades of the 20th century. Researchers such as Dean M. Kelley of the National Council of Churches traced the decline of the liberal denominations that once constituted the old Protestant “mainline.” This decline was contrasted with remarkable growth among more conservative denominations and churches — a pattern traced in Kelley’s 1973 landmark book, Why Conservative Churches Are Growing. Kelley argued that conservative churches were growing precisely because of their strict doctrine and moral teachings. The early megachurches were the leading edge of the growth among conservative churches, especially in metropolitan and suburban settings.

The megachurches were not without their critics. Theologian David Wells leveled a massive critique of the doctrinal minimalism, methodological pragmatism, and managerial culture of many megachurches. Os Guiness accused the megachurch movement of “flirting with modernity” to a degree that put the Christian identity of the massive congregations at risk.

On the other hand, there is evidence that the megachurches have also helped to anchor conservative Christianity within the social cauldron of the United States in recent decades. The evangelistic energies of most megachurches cannot be separated from a deep commitment to conversionist theology and conservative doctrinal affirmations. Within the Southern Baptist Convention, megachurches played an essential role in what became known as the Conservative Resurgence — the movement to return the Convention and its institutions to an affirmation of biblical inerrancy. The most intense years of this controversy (1979-1990) saw the Convention elect an unbroken stream of conservative megachurch pastors as SBC president. In the main, the megachurches provided the platform leadership for the movement, even as the churches themselves became symbols of denominational aspiration.

Sociologically, the megachurch model faces real challenges in the present and even greater challenges in the future. The vast suburban belts that fueled megachurch growth in the last few decades are no longer the population engines they once were. Furthermore, cultural changes, demographic realities, and technological innovations have led to the development of megachurch modifications such as churches with multiple locations and sermons by video transmission. From the beginning, the megachurches led in the embrace of new technologies, and these now include the full array of digital and social media.

What about theology? This question requires a look at the massive shifts in worldview now evident within American culture. Trends foreseen by researchers such as James Davison Hunter of the University of Virginia and others can now be seen in full flower. The larger culture has turned increasingly hostile to exclusivist truth claims such as the belief that faith in Christ is necessary for salvation. One megachurch pastor in Florida recently told me that the megachurches in his area were abandoning concern for biblical gender roles on a wholesale basis. As one pastor told him, you cannot grow a church and teach biblical  complementarianism. Even greater pressure is now exerted by the sexual revolution in general, and, more particularly, the question of homosexuality.

The homosexuality question was preceded by the challenge of divorce. By and large, the story of evangelical Christianity in the United States since the advent of legal no-fault divorce has been near total capitulation. This is certainly true of the megachurches, but it is unfair to single them out in this failure. The reality is that the “Old First Church” and smaller congregational models were fully complicit — and for the same basic reason. Holding to strict biblical teachings on divorce is extremely costly. For the megachurches, the threat was being called judgmental, and the perceived danger of failing to reach the burgeoning numbers of divorced persons inhabiting metropolitan areas. For smaller churches the issue was the same, though usually more intimate. Divorced persons were more likely to have family members and friends within the congregation who were reluctant to confront the issue openly. Church discipline disappeared and personal autonomy reigned triumphant.

Is the same pattern now threatening on the issue of homosexuality? No congregation will escape this question, but the megachurches are, once again, on the leading edge. The challenge is hauntingly similar to that posed by divorce. Some churches are openly considering how they can minister most faithfully, even as the public and private challenge of homosexuality and alternative sexual lifestyles has radically transformed the cultural landscape. Other churches, both large and small, are renegotiating their stance on the issue without drawing attention to the changes.

A shot now reverberating around the evangelical world was fired by Atlanta megachurch pastor Andy Stanley in recent days. Preaching at North Point Community Church, in a sermon series known as “Christian,” Stanley preached a message titled “When Gracie Met Truthy” on April 15, 2012. With reference to John 1:14, Stanley described the challenge of affirming grace and truth in full measure. He spoke of grace and truth as a tension, warning that “if you resolve it, you give up something important.”

The message was insightful and winsome, and Andy Stanley is a master communicator. Early in the message he spoke of homosexuals in attendance, mentioning that some had shared with him that they had come to North Point because they were tired of messages in gay-affirming churches that did nothing but affirm homosexuality.

Then, in the most intense part of his message, Stanley told the congregation an account meant to illustrate his message. He told of a couple with a young daughter who divorced when the wife discovered that the husband was in a sexual relationship with another man. The woman then insisted that her former husband and his gay partner move to another congregation. They did move, but to another North Point location, where they volunteered together as part of a “host team.” The woman later told Andy Stanley that her former husband and his partner were now involved as volunteers in the other congregational location.

The story took a strange turn when Stanley then explained that he had learned that the former husband’s gay partner was still married. Stanley then explained that the partner was actually committing adultery, and that the adultery was incompatible with his service on a host team. Stanley told the two men that they could not serve on the host team so long as the one man was still married. He later told of the former wife’s decision not to live in bitterness, and of her initiative to bring the whole new family structure to a Christmas service. This included the woman, her daughter, her former husband, his gay partner, and his daughter. Stanley celebrated this new “modern family” as an expression of forgiveness.

He concluded by telling of Christ’s death for sinners and told the congregation that Jesus does not condemn them, even if they cannot or do not leave their life of sin.

Declaring the death of Christ as atonement for sin is orthodox Christianity and this declaration is essential to the Gospel of Christ. The problem was that Stanley never mentioned faith or repentance — which are equally essential to the Gospel. There is indeed no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus, but this defines those who have acted in repentance toward God and faith in our Lord Jesus Christ (Acts 20:21). As for those who are not in Christ, they stand condemned already (John 3:18).

The most puzzling and shocking part of the message was the illustration and the account of the homosexual couple, however. The inescapable impression left by the account was that the sin of concern was adultery, but not homosexuality. Stanley clearly and repeatedly stressed the sin of adultery, but then left the reality of the homosexual relationship between the two men unaddressed as sin. To the contrary, he seemed to normalize their relationship. They would be allowed to serve on the host team if both were divorced. The moral status of their relationship seemed to be questioned only in terms of adultery, with no moral judgment on their homosexuality.

Was this intended as a salvo of sorts? The story was so well told and the message so well constructed that there can be little doubt of its meaning. Does this signal the normalization of homosexuality at North Point Community Church? This hardly seems possible, but it appeared to be the implication of the message. Given the volatility of this issue, ambiguity will be replaced by clarity one way or the other, and likely sooner than later.

We can only hope that Andy Stanley and the church will clarify and affirm the biblical declaration of the sinfulness of homosexual behavior, even as he preaches the forgiveness of sin in any form through the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ. His affirmation of grace and truth in full measure is exactly right, but grace and truth are not actually in tension. The only tension is our finite ability to act in full faithfulness. The knowledge of our sin is, in truth, a gift of grace. And grace is only grace because of the truth of what God has done for us in Christ.

And yet, even as we know this is true, we also know that the Christian church has often failed miserably in demonstrating grace to those who struggle with same-sex attractions and those who are involved in homosexual behaviors. We have treated them as a special class of sinners and we have assured ourselves of our moral superiority. The Gospel of Jesus Christ destroys that pretension and calls for us to reach out to all sinners with the message of the Gospel, declaring the forgiveness of sins in Christ and calling them to faith and repentance.

The Gospel is robbed of its power if any sinner or any sin is declared outside its saving power. But the Gospel is also robbed of its power if sin — any sin — is minimized to any degree.

What does Andy Stanley now believe about homosexuality and the church’s witness? We must pray that he will clarify the issues so graphically raised in his message, and that he will do so in a way that unambiguously affirms the Bible’s clear teachings — and that he will do so precisely because he loves sinners enough to tell them the truth — all the truth — about both our sin and God’s provision in Christ. Biblical faithfulness simply does not allow for the normalization of homosexuality. We desperately want all persons to feel welcome to hear the Gospel and, responding in faith and repentance, to join with us in mutual obedience to Christ. But we cannot allow anyone, ourselves included, to come to Christ — or to church — on our own terms.

The current cultural context creates barriers to the Gospel even as it offers temptations. One of those temptations is to use to use the argument that our message has to change in order to reach people. This was the impetus of theological liberalism’s origin. Liberals such as Harry Emerson Fosdick claimed that the Christian message would have to change or the church would lose all intellectual credibility in the modern world. Fosdick ended up denying the Gospel and transforming the message of the Cross into psychology. Norman Vincent Peale came along and made this transformation even more appealing to a mass audience. Fosdick and Peale have no shortage of modern heirs.

Theological liberalism did not set out to destroy Christianity, but to save it from itself. Is the same temptation now evident? The Great Commission, we must remind ourselves, is not a command merely to reach people, but to make disciples. And disciples are only made when the church teaches all that Christ has commanded, as the Great Commission makes clear.

The megachurches are once again on the leading edge of these questions, but they are not alone. The urgency to reach people with the Gospel can, if the church is not faithful and watchful, tempt us to subvert the Gospel by redefining its terms. We are not honest if we do not admit that the current cultural context raises the cost of declaring the Gospel on its own terms.

Given their size and influence, the megachurches have an outsize responsibility. I am a member and a teaching pastor in a megachurch, and I am thankful for its faithfulness. I know a host of faithful megachurch pastors who are prepared to pay whatever cost may come for the sake of the Gospel. I know that my own denomination was regained for biblical fidelity under the leadership of brave megachurch pastors who used their pulpits to defend the truth. We desperately need these churches as both theological anchors and missiological laboratories.

The times now demand our most careful and biblical thinking, and they demand our clearest conviction matched to a missiological drive to reach the world with the Gospel. We must embrace the truth with the humility of a sinner saved only by grace, but we must embrace it fully.

Once again, the megachurches are on the leading edge. We must pray that they will lead into faithfulness, and not into a new liberalism.