ICHABOD, THE GLORY HAS DEPARTED - explores the Age of Apostasy, predicted in 2 Thessalonians 2:3, to attack Objective Faithless Justification, Church Growth Clowns, and their ringmasters. The antidote to these poisons is trusting the efficacious Word in the Means of Grace. John 16:8. Isaiah 55:8ff. Romans 10. Most readers are WELS, LCMS, ELS, or ELCA. This blog also covers the Roman Catholic Church, Eastern Orthodoxy, and the Left-wing, National Council of Churches denominations.
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Wednesday, May 22, 2013
Leading People Down the Path of Works-Righteousness
What do people normally think about when they hears these words - "to convict him of sin"?
Most people associate that phrase with contrition, with forgiveness to follow.
What is that sin? The first thought, the predominant thought is carnal sin - drunkenness, being a Prodigal Son and losing all the money on slow horses and fast women, drug abuse, embezzling the college chapel fund and lying about it, etc.
The predominant remedy is to make amends, to remove the sin by "changing your ways." Is that not what everyone says repentance (metanoia) means? No wonder people feel excluded from the Kingdom of God, because they are not strong enough to change their ways and cleanse themselves.
All this summarizes the essences of Pietism and Roman Catholic devotion, all centered around human works.
Justification by Faith
Jesus knows more about this subject than most - He defines sin as - not having complete faith in Him. "To convict someone of sin" means to reprove that person for faith in himself and for having no faith in the Savior.
That does not condemn a weak faith or a weak person. We all suffer from a weak faith at times, battered by circumstances, our emotions, and the insidious message of an unbelieving world. If we are at all honest, we are all weak, not always in the same way or the same degree, but we are all weak and frail, fallible and therefore mortal.
The true meaning of faith is to put aside all trust in human remedies, wisdom, and books, and rely only in the grace of Christ that comes to us in the invisible Word of preaching and teaching, the visible Word of the Sacraments.
Metanoia does not mean "change your ways," as if Jesus were a life-coach living out of a used van parked down by the river. The classical Greek roots mean afterthought or regret. Parsons often rely on pop Kittel rather than context, the Scriptures interpreting the Scriptures.
To convict the world of sin is the chief work of the Holy Spirit in the Word. "The Holy Spirit will convict the world of sin, because they do not believe in Me."
Repent of that sin. That does not mean do penance, as Luther was quick to teach. Lutherans quote him but forget the rest of it.
The sin is lack of faith, so joining a cell group is not a cure. Testifying is not a remedy. I have encountered various Evangelical who treat testifying as a work - one even saying that God would not allow spiritual growth if she were not testifying.
The SynCons have engaged in error and spiritual abuse by not showing their members and pastors the grace of Christ in the Means of Grace. LCMS pastors joke that a Missouri sermon is 99% condemnation followed by, "But Christ has died for your sins. Amen."
The Moravian Pietists (Zinzendorf's pet group) began with the Gospel and ended with the Law. Paul Calvin Kelm endorsed that in print, and we all know he never published an original heresy in his life. Think long and hard about WELS PC sermons. Are they not the same?
1. The entire world has been forgiven of its sins and saved. Halleluia. Only WELS has preserved this Gospel in all its purity. Praised be our name - WELS.
2. You miserable curs have not:
a. Given enough.
b. Witnessed enough.
c. Joined a cell group.
d. Volunteered enough.
e. Shown enough friendliness to fool visitors into thinking we are a loving sect.
f. Shown enough delight in being forgiven of all your sins before your were born.
g. So stay after for the WELS connection, so you can learn how to repair the damage to Holy Mother Synod.
An ELS sermon is simply - thank God we are not WELS. Amen.
The SynCon pastors are not told to be faithful to the Word of God and Confessions. Their leaders are hardly in a position to suggest that radical step. The pastors are commanded to obey Holy Mother Synod and protect Ecclesia Immaculata with lies, half-truths, slanders, and evasions.
Shunning is the SynCon sacrament. Everyone feels better after a good shun. Let's say someone told the truth about an illegal and immoral situation. The official answer is not to address the scandal with the Word of God, but to shun the person who blabbed to the press or police. Those few who refuse to shun are also shunned. Once all the shunning shunners are lined up, the truth-teller is frozen out. Everyone feels good again after a profound and complete shun.
Lutherans need to study faith.
I have been trying to show Lutherans where they can find resources on faith.
The SynCons go crazy-nuts-angry over this little blog because they cannot give up their works religion. Even more, they are terrified of what will happen when more people wake up to their greedy scams.
Pastors cannot fix their synods. The corruption is too in-bred and established. All they can do is study the Word, proclaim it faithfully, and visit with the Gospel.
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Justification by Faith
Emergent Church Principles Are Leading Protestants in the Same Direction.
For Example, See Fox Valley Mentor Andy Stanley
bruce-church (https://bruce-church.myopenid.com/) has left a new comment on your post "Who Do You Think You Are...Copying?":
Jim and Tammy Faye Bakker's son celebrates communion in Minneapolis with rainbow bread in honor of same-sex marriage approved in that state:
http://juicyecumenism.com/2013/05/15/jay-bakkers-rainbow-bread-communion/
Jay Bakker, son of the televangelists Jim and Tammy Faye Bakker, marked the occasion by offering “rainbow bread” for “communion” at the inaugural service of Revolution Church Minnesota on Sunday, May 12th.
http://juicyecumenism.com/2013/05/15/jay-bakkers-rainbow-bread-communion/
This week Minnesota became the twelfth state in the United States to redefine marriage. Jay Bakker, son of the televangelists Jim and Tammy Faye Bakker, marked the occasion by offering “rainbow bread” for “communion” at the inaugural service of Revolution Church Minnesota on Sunday, May 12th. Bakker explained all were welcome to participate in the meal regardless of religious belief or lack thereof, and that “today we do this in remembrance of what Christ did and what folks who followed in Christ’s footsteps did, but also in the celebration of what’s happened here in the House and with what our hopes are to happen tomorrow in the Senate.”
Bakker co-founded Revolution Church in 1994 in Phoenix, Arizona, and has moved the church to various cities since then. Most recently he pastored Revolution NYC until he relocated to Minneapolis in March 2013. Explaining the “rainbow bread” to those gathered at Bryant Lake Bowl, he said “Hell yeah I’m gettin’ political. This is to celebrate our LGBTQ [Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Queer] brothers and sisters … [and remember] those who maybe didn’t make it this far.”
The Church, Bakker claimed, is “the final frontier of equality in this issue … we still haven’t seen the full importance of these civil rights in the faith that I love and care about so much.” Bakker, who has been critical of the politicization of Christianity urged attendees, “If you have a chance tomorrow go out to the capitol and call your [senators] … let them know that you believe in equality. If you don’t believe in equality stay at home. Sleep in, go to work, just don’t talk to anybody.”
Bakker, popular Minnesota based emergent writer Tony Jones, and others held a vigil at the state’s capitol Monday, May 13th for the senate’s vote to legalize same-sex marriage in their state.
Complementing the rainbow bread, Bakker spoke on grace and inclusion, focusing on St. Paul, who “gets grace the most,” as he was a ruthless persecutor of Christians before his conversion. “The Bible is full of unperfect [sic] people” and it was “murderers and traitors … literally starting a faith, being part of a faith and that’s what I would call the good news,” Bakker said. He added that Martin Luther King, Jr. and Ghandi also “Really got the idea of what inclusion was meant to be, what loving your enemy was meant to be, what loving your neighbor.”
“The idea of Christ was to come into that midst and find the one who’s doing the hurting and turn him into an ally turn him into someone who’s loved and what you see here is … a love of inclusion,” Bakker claimed. But most Christians don’t get this, he said, asserting: “We’re always looking for the one person grace doesn’t cover. You know I think that’s what Christianity has become … we’re looking for the loopholes in grace.” Not even St. Paul meets Bakker’s inclusivity standards, as he declared “Paul said some stuff that’s pretty crazy … there would be times if I knew Paul the apostle … [I would say] ‘Listen, I’m going to have to call bullshit on this … remember your message.’”
“Inclusion in the Church” is so important to Bakker that he has “a hard time dealing with ideas of hell … when I see a God that reaches out to people in the midst of murder and in the midst of betrayal and says ‘I want you. I want to use you. You are loved and you are cared for.’”
“It’s so strange that we’ve seen our faith become perverted by people who want to say this isn’t for you and … you’re not good enough for it,” he said. Instead, Bakker suggested Christians should “[B]e patient with one another and … learn to live within our brokenness and allow other people to be broken even if it’s not broken in the way we necessarily like it. Cause there’s a lot of really cool ways to be broken and then there’s a lot of uncool ways to be broken, but we’re called to love.”
“What MLK did got him killed. What Ghandi did got him killed. What Jesus did got him killed. And I think they all died for similar reasons.” Jesus probably did not die to save us, according to Bakker, but rather, “What if Jesus was killed for the same reason Ghandi and King were killed? Because they were trouble makers who showed too much love and too much inclusion?”
There are “great moral wonderful people … outside the Church who do much more good work than the Church itself,” Bakker claimed. “Morality” has nothing to do with good works, according to the pastor, “but it’s the idea of recognizing what our brokenness is and allowing that brokenness to be transformed in order to help other people transform and accept their own brokenness.”
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Andy Stanley,
Emergent Church,
Fox Valley WELS
Luther's Sermon for Pentecost Wednesday. John 6:44-51.
On Faith and Coming to Christ
Luther's Sermon for Pentecost Wednesday. John 6:44-51. ON FAITH AND COMING TO CHRIST, AND THE TRUE BREAD OF HEAVEN.
This sermon is not found in the edition of the Church Postil edited by Creuziger, and in some of Rodt’s editions it is found in the festival part of the Church Postil of 1528.
German text: Erlangen Edition, 12:397; Walch Edition, 11:1533; St. Louis Walch, 11:1137.
Text: John 6:44-51: No man can come to me, except the Father that sent me draw him: and I will raise him up in the last day. It is written in the prophets, And they shall all be taught of God. Every one that hath heard from the Father, and hath learned, cometh unto me. Not that any man hath seen the Father, save he that is from God, he hath seen the Father. Verily, verily, I say unto you, He that believeth hath eternal life. Your fathers ate the manna in the wilderness. and they died. This is the bread which cometh down out of heaven, that a man may eat thereof, and not die. I am the living bread which came down out of heaven: if any man eat of this bread, he shall live forever: yea and the bread which I give is my flesh, for the life of the world.
CONTENTS:
ON FAITH AND COMING TO CHRIST, AND THE TRUE BREAD OF HEAVEN.
I. ON FAITH AND COMING TO CHRIST.
1. This faith and coming only saves 1-2.
2. Where this faith and coming are not, condemnation follows 2-3.
3. This faith and coming are wrought not by our own power, but by the power of God 3-4ff.
* The great power of God’s Word 4.
4. The nature and character of this faith and coming 5-6ff.
* Of the knowledge of God and Christ 7-8.
5. The means by which this faith and coming is effected 8-10.
6. The glorious fruit of this faith and coming lift.
II. OF THE BREAD FROM HEAVEN.
1. What we are to understand by this bread from heaven
2. The glorious power and working of this heavenly bread 12-13.
3. An objection raised by this bread from heaven and its answer 14. 4 . In what way one should partake of this bread 12-15.
5. Whether this bread from heaven refers to the Lord’s Supper
6. How the great grace and lovingkindness of Jesus is illustrated by this bread from heaven
7. Whoever partakes of this heavenly bread has fulfilled the will of God
8. That the whole New Testament treats of this heavenly bread
9. By what can we tell if one is or is not a partaker of this heavenly bread 20-21.
SUMMARY OF THIS GOSPEL:
1. No one will know Christ unless the Father draw him, that is, unless the Father teaches him inwardly in his heart. Therefore Christ says to Peter in Matthew 16:17: “Flesh and blood hath not revealed it unto thee, but my Father who is in heaven.”
2. Christ is the tree of life, of which Adam was forbidden to eat, Christ is the wisdom of God that is better than rubies; and all the things that may be desired are not to be compared to it, as Solomon says in Proverbs 8:11.
3. The old bread from heaven, that is, the righteousness of the Law does not justify; but Christ makes alive forever when one believes on him.
I. ON FAITH, AND COMING TO CHRIST.
1. This Gospel text teaches exclusively of the Christian faith, and awakens that faith in us; just as John, throughout his whole Gospel, simply instructs us how to trust in Christ the Lord. This faith alone, when based upon the sure promises of God, must save us; as our text clearly explains. And in the light of it all, they must become fools who have taught us other ways to become godly. All that human ingenuity can devise, be it as holy and as luminous as it may, must tumble to the ground if man be saved in God’s way — in a way different from that which man himself plans. Man may forever do as he will, he can never enter heaven unless God takes the first step with his Word, which offers him divine grace and enlightens his heart so as to get upon the right way.
2. This right way, however, is the Lord Jesus Christ. Whoever desires to seek another way, as the great multitudes venture to do by means of their own works, has already missed the right way; for Paul says to the Galatians: “If righteousness is through the Law,” that is, through the works of the Law, “then Christ died for naught.” Galatians 2:21. Therefore I say man must fall upon this Gospel and be broken to pieces and in deep consciousness lie prostrate, like a man that is powerless, unable to move hand or foot. He must only lie motionless and cry: Almighty God, merciful Father, now help me! I cannot help myself. Christ, my Lord, do help now, for with only my own effort all is lost! Thus, in the light of this cornerstone, which is Christ, everyone becomes as nothing; as Christ says of himself in Luke 20:17-18, when he asks the Pharisees and scribes: “What then is this that is written. The stone which the builders rejected, the same was made the head of the corner? Every one that falleth on that stone shall be broken to pieces; but on whomsoever it shall fall, it will scatter him as dust.” <19B822>Psalm 118:22. Therefore, we must either fall upon this stone, Christ, in all our inability and helplessness, rejecting our own merits, and be broken to pieces, or he will forever crush us by his severe sentence and judgment. It is better that we fall upon him than that he should fall upon us. For this reason the Lord says in this Gospel: “No man can come to me, except the Father that sent me draw him: and I will raise him up in the last day.”
3. He must surely perish whom the Father does not draw. Thus it is decreed, that whoever does not come to this Son must be condemned forever. The Son is given to us only to the end that he may save us; besides him, nothing saves us, either in heaven or on earth. If he does not help us, then nothing will. On this Peter says in the Acts of the Apostles ( Acts 4:11-12): “He is the stone which was set at naught of you the builders, which was made the head of the corner. And in none other is there salvation; neither is there any other name under heaven, that is given among men, wherein we must be saved.” Where, in the light of this, are our theologians and professors who taught us that we become pious through our many good works? Here the great master Aristotle is put to shame, who proclaimed that reason strives for the best and always follows after the good. Christ says to this: No; if the Father comes not first and draws men, they must forever perish.
4. Here all men must confess their incapacity and inability to do the good.
Should one imagine he is able to do anything good of his own strength, he does no less than make Christ the Lord a liar; he would rudely and defiantly come to the Father and in all rashness ascend to heaven.
Therefore, where the pure and plain Word of God goes, it breaks into pieces everything that is exalted of man, it makes valleys of all their mountains, and all their hills it makes low, as the prophet Isaiah (40:4) says. Every heart that hears this Word must lose faith in itself, else it will not be able to come to Christ. God’s works do nothing but destroy and make alive, condemn and minister salvation. Hannah, the mother of Samuel, sings of the Lord: “Jehovah killeth, and maketh alive; he bringeth down to the grave and bringeth up.” 1 Samuel 2:6.
5. Hence, a person who is thus smitten in his heart, by God, to confess that he is one who, on account of his sins, must be condemned, is like the righteous man whom with the first words of this Gospel God wounds, and because of that wound fixes upon him the band or cord of his divine grace, by which he draws him, so that he must seek help and counsel for his soul.
Before he could not obtain any help or counsel from God, nor did he ever desire it; but now he finds the first comfort and promise of God, which Luke 11:10 records thus: “For every one that asketh receiveth; and he that seeketh findeth; and to him that knocketh it shall be opened.” From such promises will he ever continue to gain courage as long as he lives, and will ever win greater and greater confidence in God. Just as soon as he hears that grace is the work of God alone, he will desire it of God as from the hand of his gracious Father, who wishes to draw him. Now, if he is drawn by God to Christ, he will certainly experience what the Lord here says: “He will raise him up in the last day.” For he has laid hold upon the Word of God and trusts God. In this he has a sure sign that he is one whom God has drawn, as John says in his First Epistle ( 1 John 5:10): “He that believeth on the Son of God hath the witness in him.”
6. Hence, it must necessarily follow that he is taught of God, and that he knows now in truth that the meaning of God is nothing more than Helper, Comforter, Savior, as we say of those who rescue us from danger: Thou wast today my God. From this it is now clear that God will be to us nothing less than a Savior, a helper, and a giver of all blessedness, who neither demands nor desires anything from us. He only gives, he only offers to us; as he says to Israel in Psalm 81:10: “I am Jehovah thy God, who brought thee up out of the land of Egypt: open thy mouth wide, and I will fill it.” Who would not be kindly disposed to such a God, who approaches us so lovingly and graciously, and offers us his favor and blessings if we only acknowledge him as God and are willing to be taught of him? They cannot escape the severe, eternal judgment of God who ignore such grace, as the Epistle to the Hebrews ( Hebrews 10:28-29) says: “A man that hath set at naught Moses’ law dieth without compassion: of how much sorer punishment, think ye, shall he be judged worthy, who hath trodden under foot the Son of God, and hath counted the blood of the covenant wherewith he was sanctified an unholy thing.”
7. Oh, how diligent and earnest St. Paul is in all his Epistles that we may always grasp the knowledge of God aright! How often he expresses the wish for growth in the knowledge of God! As if he would say: If you only knew and understood what God is, then you would be already saved, then you would gain love for him and do only those things well pleasing to him.
Thus he says to the Colossians ( Colossians 1:9-12): “For this cause we also, since the day we heard it, do not cease to pray and make request for you, that ye may be filled with the knowledge of his will in all spiritual wisdom and understanding, to walk worthily of the Lord unto all pleasing, bearing fruit in every good work, and increasing in knowledge of God; strengthened with all power, according to the might of his glory, unto all patience and longsuffering with joy; giving thanks unto the Father, who made us meet to be partakers of the inheritance of the saints in light.” And in <19B934>Psalm 119:34 David says: “Give me understanding, and I shall keep thy Law; yea, I shall observe it with my whole heart.”
8. Thus you learn from the first utterance in today’s Gospel that this knowledge must come from God the Father; he must lay the first stone of the foundation in us, else we will never do anything. But this is accomplished in the following way: God sends us preachers, whom he has taught, to preach to us his will. First he instructs us that our entire lives and characters, however beautiful and holy they may be, are before him as nothing, yea, are as abomination, and displeasing; this is called a preaching of the Law. Then he offers us grace; that is, he tells us that he will not utterly condemn and reject us, but will receive us in his beloved Son, and not merely receive us, but make us heirs of his kingdom, lords over all that is in heaven and upon earth. This is called preaching grace or preaching the Gospel. But God is the origin of all; he first awakens preachers and constrains them to preach. This is the meaning of St. Paul’s words when he says to the Romans: “So belief cometh of hearing, and hearing by the Word of Christ.” Romans 10:17. This truth the words of the Lord in today’s Gospel also declares, when Christ says: “It is written in the prophets, And they shall all be taught of God.
Every one that hath heard from the Father, and hath learned, cometh unto me. Not that any man hath seen the Father, save he that is from God, he hath seen the Father.”
9. Now, under the first preaching, the preaching of the Law, namely, that we with all our works are condemned, man is restless and fearful before God, and knows not what to do with his life and deeds. He suffers from an accusing and timid conscience, and. if relief from some source were not to come quickly he would have to despair forever. Therefore, we must not long delay with the other preaching; we must preach the Gospel to him and lead him to Christ as the one whom the Father has given to us to be our mediator, that we should be saved solely through him, out of pure grace and mercy, without any works or merit on our part. The heart rejoices at this word and runs to such grace as a thirsty deer to the water. This longing David keenly experiences when he says in Psalm 42:1-2: “As the hart panteth after the water brooks, so panteth my soul after thee, O God, my soul thirsteth for God, for the living God.”
10. Now, when one comes to Christ, that is, to his Gospel, he hears the personal voice of Christ the Lord, which confirms the knowledge God taught him, namely, that God is nothing but a very gracious Savior, who wants to be gracious and merciful to all who call upon him. Therefore, the Lord adds: “Verily verily, I say unto you, He that believeth hath eternal life. I am the bread of life. Your fathers ate the manna in the wilderness, and they died. This is the bread that cometh down out of heaven, that a man may eat thereof, and not die. I am the living bread that came down out of heaven: if any man eat of this bread, he shall live forever: yea and the bread which I will give is my flesh, for the life of the world.”
11. In these words the soul finds a well prepared table, at which it satisfies all hunger; for it knows for a certainty that he who speaks these words cannot lie. Therefore the soul falls upon the Word, clings to it, trusts in it, and also builds its dwelling-place in the strength of this well-prepared table.
This is the feast for which the heavenly Father slayed his oxen and fatlings and invited us all to it.
II. THE BREAD OF HEAVEN.
12. The living bread, of which the Lord here speaks, is Christ himself, of whom we partake. If in our hearts we lay hold of only a morsel of this bread, we shall have forever enough and can never be separated from God.
The partaking of this bread is nothing but faith in Christ our Lord, that he is, as Paul says in 1 Corinthians 1:30, “made unto us wisdom from God, and righteousness and sanctification, and redemption.” He who eats of this food lives forever. Therefore, the Lord says, immediately following this Gospel lesson, where the Jews strove among themselves about this discourse of his: “Verily, verily, I say unto you, Except ye eat the flesh of the Son of man and drink his blood, ye have not life in yourselves. He that eateth my flesh and drinketh my blood hath eternal life; and I will raise him up at the last day.”
13. The bread from heaven the fathers ate in the wilderness, as Christ says here, was powerless to keep them from dying; but this bread makes immortal. If we believe on Christ, death cannot harm us; yea, it is no longer death. The Lord utters the same truth in another passage when he says to the Jews: “Verily, verily, I say unto you, If a man keep my Word, he shall never see death.” John 8:51. Here he speaks definitely of the Word of faith, and of the Gospel.
14. But one may say, as did the Jews, who took offense at these words of the Lord: The saints, nevertheless, died, and Abraham and the prophets likewise died. We reply to this: The death of Christians is only a sleep, as the Scriptures everywhere call it. A Christian neither tastes nor sees death; that is, he is never conscious of any death; for this Savior, Christ Jesus, in whom he believes, has destroyed death so that he no longer needs to taste it and pay its penalty. Death is to the Christians only a transition of life, yea, a door to life: as Christ says in John 5:24: “Verily, verily, I say unto you, He that heareth my Word, and believeth him that sent me, hath eternal life, and cometh not into judgment, but hath passed out of death into life.”
15. Therefore, a Christian life is a life of bliss and joy. Christ’s yoke is easy and sweet; the reason it seems to us galling and heavy is that the Father has not yet drawn us, and so we have no pleasure in it, neither does this Gospel lesson minister comfort to us. If we, however, rightly appropriated the words of Christ, they would be of much greater comfort to us. By faith we partake of this bread that has come down from heaven, Christ the Lord, when we believe on him as our Savior and Redeemer.
16. In this light I now remind you that these words are not to be misconstrued and made to refer to the Sacrament of the Altar; whoever so interprets them does violence to this Gospel text. There is not a letter in it that refers to the Lord’s Supper. Why should Christ here have in mind that Sacrament when it was not yet instituted? The whole chapter from which this Gospel is taken speaks of nothing but the spiritual food, namely, faith.
When the people followed the Lord merely hoping again to eat and drink, as the Lord himself charges them with doing, he took the figure from the temporal food they sought, and speaks throughout the entire chapter of a spiritual food. He says: “The words that I have spoken unto you are spirit, and are life.” Thereby he shows that he feeds them with the object of inducing them to believe on him, and that as they partook of the temporal food, so should they also partake of the spiritual. On this subject we will say more at some other time.
17. Now let us here notice that the Lord approaches us so lovingly and graciously, and offers us himself — his blood and flesh — in such gentle words that it should in all reason move the heart to believe on him; to believe that this bread, his flesh and blood, born of the Virgin Mary, was given because he had to pay the penalty of death and suffer in our stead the torments of hell, and, besides, to suffer the guilt of sins he never committed, as if they were his own. This he did willingly and received us as brethren and sisters. If we believe this we do the will of the heavenly Father, which is nothing else than that we believe on the Son. Christ says, just before our text: “This is the will of my Father, that every one that beholdeth the Son, and believeth on him, should have eternal life; and I will raise him up at the last day.” John 6:40.
18. It is now evident that whoever has faith in this bread of heaven — in Christ, in this flesh and blood, of which he here ,speaks that it is given to him and that it is his — he also accepts it as his own, and has already done the will of God and eaten of this heavenly manna; as Augustine says: What do you prepare for your mouth? Only believe, and you have already eaten.
19. The whole New Testament treats of this spiritual supper, and especially does John here. The Sacrament of the Altar is a testament and confirmation of this true supper, with which we should strengthen our faith and be assured that this body and this blood, which we receive in the Sacrament, has rescued us from sin and death, the devil, hell and all misery.
Concerning this I have spoken and written more on other occasions.
20. What is the proof by which one may know that this heavenly bread is his and that he is invited to such a spiritual supper? He needs only to look at his own heart. If he finds it so disposed that it is softened and cheered by God’s promises and is firm in the conviction that it may appropriate this bread of life, then he may be assured that he is one of the invited; for as one believes, even so is it done unto him. From that moment on, he loves his neighbor and helps him as his brother; he rescues him, gives to him, loans to him and does nothing for him but that which he would desire his neighbor to do for himself. All this is attributable to the fact that Christ’s kindness to him has leavened his heart with sweetness and love, so that he has pleasure and joy in serving his neighbor; yea, he is even in misery if he has no one to whom to show kindness. Besides all this, he is gently and humbly disposed toward everybody; he does not highly esteem the transient pomps of the world; he accepts everyone as he is, speaks evil of no one, interprets all things for the best where he sees things are not going right. When his neighbors are lacking in faith, in love, in life, then he prays for them, and he is heartily sorry when anyone gives offense to God or to his neighbor. To sum up all, with him the root and sap are good, for he is grafted into a rich and fruitful vine. in Christ; therefore, such fruits must come forth.
21. But if one has not faith and is not taught of God — if he never eats of this bread from heaven — he surely never brings forth these fruits. For where such fruits are not produced, there is certainly no true faith. St.Peter teaches us in 2 Peter 1:10 that we should make our calling unto salvation sure by good works; there he is really speaking of the works of love, of serving one’s neighbor and treating him as one’s own flesh and blood. This is sufficient on this Gospel. Let us pray for God’s grace.
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John 6:44-51.,
Luther's Sermons
Everyone Suddenly Discovers Presiding Bishop Schori.
Diversity, not Jesus, saves says Presiding Bishop | Anglican Ink
Diversity, not Jesus, saves says Presiding Bishop | Anglican Ink:
She concluded her sermon by stating that we are not justified by our faith but by our respect for diversity.
“Looking for the reflection of God’s glory all around us means changing our lenses, or letting the scales on our eyes fall away. That kind of change isn’t easy for anyone, but it’s the only road to the kingdom of God.”
'via Blog this'
This photo reminds me of a famous essay by John Knox. |
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GJ - Ichabod readers have been reading about Presiding Bishop Katie Schori, The Episcopal Church, for many years. Suddenly everyone on Facebook is linking the article above. That satisfies the "isn't this shocking?" response of many people. The article will fuel a few newsletter articles and may get mentioned in some sermons, although many clergy will avoid offending the feminists.
The real solution is a steady diet of information about apostasy, not just some smelling salts waved beneath the nostrils.
Those who want to follow the Episcopalians should start with Virtue Online and be steady readers of that website.
Here is his description of the same sermon -
The odd couple - ELCA bishop Hanson and Episcopal bishop Schori have much in common. |
http://www.virtueonline.org/portal/modules/news/article.php?storyid=17583#.UZyXDKIiqqg
Episcopal Presiding Bishop Denounces Apostle Paul in Sermon in Curacao
Jefferts Schori lauds demonic possessed slave girl, says Paul failed to see her gift of "spiritual awareness"
News Analysis
By David W. Virtue DD
www.virtueonline.org
May 21, 2013
In what one blogger described as "the worst sermon ever", the Presiding Bishop of The Episcopal Church told listeners, in a sermon she delivered in Curacao, that the Apostle Paul betrayed his understanding of the faith he had been given and was guilty of bigotry in handling a case of demonic possession found in a slave girl.
The account in Acts 16 reads thus: "Now it happened, as we went to prayer, that a certain slave girl possessed with a spirit of divination met us, who brought her masters much profit by fortune-telling. This girl followed Paul and us, and cried out, saying, 'These men are the servants of the Most High God, who proclaim to us the way of salvation.' And this she did for many days.
"But Paul, greatly annoyed, turned and said to the spirit, 'I command you in the name of Jesus Christ to come out of her.' And he came out that very hour. But when her masters saw that their hope of profit was gone, they seized Paul and Silas and dragged them into the marketplace to the authorities." Acts 16:16-19 (KJV)
Mrs. Jefferts Schori interprets the story of Paul and the slave girl by accusing the apostle of spiritual blindness and bigotry. She off handedly includes the issue of same sex relationships that the great apostle doesn't even hint at.
Jefferts Schori opined, "We live with the continuing tension between holier impulses that encourage us to see the image of God in all human beings and the reality that some of us choose not to see that glimpse of the divine, and instead use other people as means to an end. We're seeing something similar right now in the changing attitudes and laws about same-sex relationships, as many people come to recognize that different is not the same thing as wrong. For many people, it can be difficult to see God at work in the world around us, particularly if God is doing something unexpected.
"There are some remarkable examples of that kind of blindness in the readings we heard this morning, and slavery is wrapped up in a lot of it. Paul is annoyed at the slave girl who keeps pursuing him, telling the world that he and his companions are slaves of God. She is quite right. She's telling the same truth Paul and others claim for themselves.
"But Paul is annoyed, perhaps for being put in his place, and he responds by depriving her of her gift of spiritual awareness. Paul can't abide something he won't see as beautiful or holy, so he tries to destroy it. It gets him thrown in prison. That's pretty much where he's put himself by his own refusal to recognize that she, too, shares in God's nature, just as much as he does - maybe more so. The amazing thing is that during that long night in jail he remembers that he might find God there - so he and his cellmates spend the night praying and singing hymns."
VOL: The Presiding Bishop totally emasculates the text, making it mean what she wants it to mean; not what it implies or even says.
First of all, the text says nothing about same sex relationships. Nothing. The Presiding Bishop gratuitously throws that in just to let her listeners know where she stands and why The Episcopal Church is drinking the Kool-Aid on this subject. This is a complete abuse of the text and violates every hermeneutical principle known in theology.
Secondly, the apostle waged spiritual warfare against the slave girl. While he recognized that what she said was true; the source of her authority came from Satan, not from Jesus. Paul, unhesitatingly commands, "in the name of Jesus" that the "spirit of divination" come out of her. This happened. Paul let the possessed girl follow him around for several days before he cast out the spirit. Paul's ministry was being compromised and her cries were in fact counter-productive because he knew she was possessed by something evil, not something good. Paul heals the girl, freeing her from possession. In actual fact, it is not Paul doing the healing, but Jesus Christ whom Paul rightly invokes.
The Presiding Bishop will have none of that. She says, "Paul is annoyed perhaps for being put in his place". Say what. She is making the assumption that somehow it is Paul who is spiritually blind, culture-bound, and bigoted in not seeing "the gift of spiritual awareness" in her. She paints Paul as an intolerant, confused misogynist who needs to be put in his place from a latter day post Christian revisionist like Jefferts Schori. "Paul can't abide something he won't see as beautiful or holy, so he tries to destroy it," she said. She then makes the colossal statement that "She (the demon-possessed girl), too, shares in God's nature, just as much as he does - maybe more so." She says that Paul responds "by depriving her of her gift of spiritual awareness."
This is sheer spiritual lunacy and a totally invalid interpretation of this Scripture. In fact, she turns Scripture totally on its head abusing the text and context to fit the Procrustean bed of her own "doctrines" of inclusion and diversity.
One orthodox theologian wrote, "Paul is on his missionary journey reaching out to Jews and God-fearers, when he is accosted by a slave girl who had a spirit by which she predicted the future (literally, 'a spirit, Python';). She is twice bound, spiritually and economically, for her masters are making quite a profit by exploiting her occult powers. Yet what engages Paul with her is her spiritual opposition to his mission. Day after day she follows Paul and his team, shouting (literally, 'crying out repeatedly'), 'These men are servants of the Most High God, who are telling you the way to be saved (literally, 'a way of salvation').
"This announcement both helps and hinders the mission. To Jewish ears, it rings of truth, using terminology ("Most High God," el-selyon) that they considered the Gentile way of referring to the one true God (Gen 14:18-20; Num 24:16; Dan 3:26; 4:32; 5:18, 21). But to polytheistic pagans, who were henotheists as opposed to monotheists, there were many "highest gods"; the title had been attached to Zeus, Isis (the mother-goddess of the kingdom of Lydia in Asia), and Baal. A pagan hearer would understand the term to refer to whatever deity he or she considered supreme (Trebilco 1989:60; contrast Levinskaya 1993:125-28). And "a way of salvation"? For the pagan, it was release from the powers governing the fate of humankind and the material world (Longenecker 1981:462). So though initially this declaration may seem to be a help to Paul as it attracts crowds and provides a good starting point for discussing the gospel with pagans, it has to be corrected each time and thus soon it becomes an annoyance (compare Acts 4:2). That a demon-possessed girl is the source of this true but potentially ambiguous statement is another difficulty (compare Lk 4:34, 41; 8:28). Such Satanic tactics have not changed in two thousand years. To counter them, the message of salvation must always be proclaimed in clarity and fullness, with its divine source unambiguously credited."
Paul's exorcism occurred via direct confrontation. He turned around and said to the spirit (authoritative command), "In the name of Jesus Christ I command you to come out of her." The results are immediate: at that moment the spirit left (literally, "came out," compare the command).
What the text also concludes is that the extension of God's kingdom can only be achieved through a liberation of those under Satan's authority (26:18). What must I do to be saved? Experience the liberating power of the Lord Jesus Christ, who not only opens but also cleanses hearts (15:9). We see parallels in Jesus's own ministry in the casting out of demons. Jesus brings release to the captives (Lk. 4:18). Jefferts Schori in fact denies that very aspect of truth that advances the gospel. It is she, not Paul, who is living in spiritual darkness. Her endorsement of the slave girl puts her closer in spirit to her than to Paul.
Paul's authority and ours is christocentric and derived. Jefferts Schori authority comes from General Convention and whatever crazy resolution is passed that the Episcopal Church wants or needs to embrace to fit a small coterie of pansexualists.
One must ask of Jefferts Schori: "Does God's nature really include demon possession?" The amazing thing is that during that long night in jail, Paul remembers that he might find God there - so he and his cellmates spend the night praying and singing hymns."
The implication of Jefferts Schori's question is that Paul may have forgotten to take his amnesia meds or that somehow he had forgotten God in the first place. One blogger cynically observed that the P.B. had identified the earliest recorded case of Transient global amnesia.
Jefferts Schori goes on to cite from the lectionary Revelation 22:12-14,16-17,20-21 where she falsely interprets the Scripture to say, "That the reading from Revelation pushes us in the same direction, outward and away from our own self-righteousness, inviting us to look harder for God's gift and presence all around us. Jesus says he's looking for everybody, anyone who's looking for good news, anybody who is thirsty. There are no obstacles or barriers - just come. God is at work everywhere, even if we can't or won't see it immediately." The PB did omit Verse 15 (left out by the lectionary editors) which reads, thusly, "Outside are the dogs, those who practice magic arts, the sexually immoral, the murderers, the idolaters and everyone who loves and practices falsehood."
St. John is clearly in sync with the Apostle Paul in identifying evil and demon possession while the PB twists it to make the text mean what she wants it to mean, in fact reversing it. Perhaps she was ashamed by the words "the sexually immoral" which would apply to a goodly number of bishops and clergy.
Later in her sermon, the P.B. reveals her deepest need to push the church's pansexual agenda in just the gentlest way when she says, "Looking for the reflection of God's glory all around us means changing our lenses, or letting the scales on our eyes fall away. That kind of change isn't easy for anyone, but it's the only road to the kingdom of God." Her hope, of course, is that we would see Gene and Mary and Louie and Ernest as the true sons of God that the rest of us need to catch up with and ultimately worship and adore.
END
Like all bishops of today, Katie gets even with those who question her. |
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