Monday, June 17, 2013

The American Spectator : Can Liturgical Music Be Saved?
Not in the Synodical Conference


Gregory the Theologians says:
"Not in WELS, Missouri, the ELS, or the Micro-Minis."


The American Spectator : Can Liturgical Music Be Saved?:

Can Liturgical Music Be Saved?

Reassessing the quarrel between the power ballad and the hymn.
Remember the power ballad? It was a subgenre of rock music pioneered by Boston in 1976 and Styx a year later. From near-symphonic beginnings in “More Than a Feeling” and “Come Sail Away,” the power ballad elbowed its way to prominence in the early Eighties.
Tom Scholz of Boston and Dennis DeYoung of Styx welded songwriting craftsmanship to imaginative orchestration and “wall of sound” microphone placements, mixing electric and acoustic guitars in tunes that did more than build to crescendos. Artists like Bonnie Tyler and REO Speedwagon then parlayed their own examples of the form into successful recording careers.
Power ballad pioneers play now in places like state fairs. But when the power ballad fell out of fashion, it found a home among the “praise bands” of “Christian Rock.” Where power ballads go, praise bands follow. That unabashedly Christian lyrics can be heard on FM radio is a good thing, but that power ballads also enabled praise bands to displace so many church choirs ought to give us pause. Power ballads are not hymns. That is precisely the problem with singing them during church services, even — perhaps especially— services aimed at younger people.
Praise bands replaced many traditional choirs in part because church musicians were not always conscious of their own assumptions. They listened to car radios while driving to rehearsals. Like everyone else, they smiled at the playful grunge of “Spirit in the Sky” and the crypto-Christian bonhomie of “Get Together.” Hook-laden songs on the FM dial were more fun to play than old-timey hymns that required little or no instrumental accompaniment, and so garage bands at every conceivable talent level reasoned that only cranks would be critical of Sunday services enlivened by rock, jazz, and reggae rhythms.
Yet inattention and sloppy theology did not by themselves expand the reach of the power ballad into formal worship. When the folk revival of the Sixties brought “Kumbaya” out from the campfire circle and into the sanctuary, the mavens of mainstream culture noticed, mounting productions of Jesus Christ, Superstar andGodspell to critical acclaim. Christian influence was part of the musical mix of the time, even if only as a foil for other things. Eventually the coming of “arena rock” pushed folk musicians back into Greenwich Village and the coffee house circuit influenced by that iconic neighborhood. As folk music lost ground to rock groups playing for larger audiences, the praise band subculture saw an opening and sprinted for it with instruments in tow. Musicians who had previously played sweltering summer concerts under revival tents realized that they could play in church, which was a better place to gig than anything outdoors because it had air conditioning.
Praise bands took longer to find acceptance in Catholic parishes, but find it they did, when “Guitar Masses” became a chew toy in the perennial argument between traditionalists and progressives. The praise band influence might have been more decisive in the pews had it not been for a pair of distinctively Catholic attributes: First, the doctrine of the real presence of Jesus in the Eucharist emphasizes reverence in Catholic worship to a greater degree than is usually cultivated by Protestant assemblies. Second (and also by design), the Catholic Church is incapable of rapid change. Despite those constraints, praise band and power ballad influence made itself felt.
People who never used works like “immanence” and “transcendence” nevertheless realized that Jesus-among-us thinking had outpaced Jesus-beyond-us thinking, and composers smitten with concepts like “inculturation” and the “spirit of Vatican II” did what they could to shoehorn new music into the liturgy of the church, with decidedly mixed results. What Anthony Esolen once called “the necessary hypocrisy of small talk” was raised to the status of a liturgical act. Meanwhile, among Christians of all confessions, advances in technology spawned by arena rock also created cheap amplifiers that could fill a room with sound.
Architecture was part of the same populist impulse. By the time power ballads entered worship service, narrow naves were outdated. Instead, church designers experimented with forms borrowed from theater-in-the-round, turning what had been Gothic, Baroque, Neo-Classical and even Shaker-inspired construction into Sydney Opera House knockoffs or boxy-looking warehouses. With churches built more wide than high in apparent reparation for the triumphalism of the Middle Ages, it was easy to fit a drum kit and a Hammond organ up near the pulpit. Choirs that had led the congregation from the back moved forward also, but by then the instrumentalists had claimed all the good spots.
Rocking for Jesus was easier than reworking gems like “Holy God We Praise Thy Name.” In self-consciously “seeker friendly” congregations, bias against traditional hymnody was justified on the grounds of meeting potential churchgoers where they were emotionally. That rationale for praise band dominance meant that worship leaders were unwittingly abrogating to themselves an outreach that belonged to the Holy Spirit, but anyone who questioned the bias toward concertizing was more likely to win a sympathetic hearing among “high church” Christians than among people wary of all things liturgical. Even in denominations whose musical patrimony reached back centuries, praise band adherents defended the making of “joyful noise” and the recycling of secular style by noting that King David danced before the Lord. King David’s dance became an argument ender, despite the fact that treating it that way meant overlooking the differences between, for example, a Passover meal and what the Second Book of Samuel describes as an epic procession involving thousands of Israelites who were transporting the Ark of God to Jerusalem.
The developments sketched above emboldened pastors whose emphasis on “relevance” catapulted anything old into the memory bin. Yet the tussle between hymns and power ballads is not now as one-sided as it seemed a few years ago, when I first cobbled a few thoughts on the subject together. Praise bands and power ballads no longer have the last word, because choirs are starting to reclaim lost ground.
Among Catholics, Pope Benedict XVI was instrumental to this reversal of fortunes. As an accomplished pianist with a fondness for Mozart and the other greats of the Western canon, one of the things that Pope Benedict offered in his quietly formidable way was a theological and musical critique of modernity. Leaning perceptively on his 2000 book The Spirit of the Liturgy, Australian theologian Tracey Rowland has written about Pope Benedict’s impatience with “parish tea party liturgies” and “utility music.” Then-Cardinal Ratzinger also decried “the obscuring of the sacred by the operatic” and “the threat of invasion by the virtuoso mentality.” Liturgical music, in his judgment, should “arouse the voice of the cosmos and, by glorifying the creator, elicit the glory of the cosmos itself, making it also glorious, beautiful, habitable and beloved.” This exalted view of liturgical music sits well beyond the emotive range of most power ballads, and it is warmly recommended to the faithful because “Next to the saints, the art which the church has produced is the only real apologia for her history.”
Motivation for excellence has seldom been phrased so pithily. Following that example and the pope’s ringing July 2007 reaffirmation of the continuing validity of the Mass in Latin, Catholic writers are more willing to question the songs on Sunday morning playlists. Jeffrey Tucker wrote about the dangers of catering to musical fads. Marc Barnes regaled readers of his column with “Five Reasons to Kill Christian Music,” by which he meant not the work of Palestrina, but the power ballad dragooned into worship duty. The first reason that Barnes offered was all but unassailable in its logic: writing “Christian” songs has the regrettable effect of reducing Christianity to a modifying adjective. Barnes was also caustic enough to say that “If your music is bad, and you’re praying that God will do something great with it, stop praying and make better music.” On an academic note, the University of Saint Anselmo created a master’s-level course in liturgical music, complete with kind words for Gregorian chant, earlier this year.
It would be foolish to believe that tee shirts have yielded everywhere to choir robes, cruel to suggest that the praise band is going the way of the eight-track tape, and dangerous to forget that mediocre hymns can dilute faith every bit as effectively as Sunday morning trysts between a big voice and Fender Stratocaster. Concert-grade lighting and mixing boards are still part of the worship landscape in larger evangelical congregations. Yet smart pastors no longer shepherd their flocks in terms of equations like “memorable sermon + rocking band = full collection plate,” and for that we can all be thankful. The hymns will rise again, and great power ballads can still be heard when “Needtobreathe” comes to town, or older rockers play to a full house at the casino up the road.
Image: Creative Commons (Frescoes in the choir stalls of the Church of St. Mary the Virgin, Astley, Warwickshire, England)

'via Blog this'

Sunday, June 16, 2013

Why Can't More Men Be Fathers?

That is my Greek New Testament.
Martin's Greek lessons started a little later, after
we read the Gospel of John in Latin together.
Then we repeated the entire Gospel in Greek.
Forty years ago, we became parents. Martin was born at Yale-New Haven Hospital. Soon we were in Cleveland for my first parish call.

I cannot understand why so few men want to be fathers. They are far too willing to conceive children, but they abandon them one way or another. The pro-life issue in America is the lack of fathers, not the lack of DNA donors.

Nothing is more fun than having a child, except for having grandchildren. But things must happen in order. Parenting is like a game of chess. The opening moves really matter. That means bath-time, diaper changes, bedtime stories, discipline and lots of love.

There has always been a lot of talk about changing the world. Nothing is more influential than the home.

No one going into retirement will doubt that, because the next generation is already showing the influence of those children who grew up. I read stories to our children. Our son read stories to our children. I participated in lots of activities, and our son continues to do the same.

We did a lot of things together, and we still do. Martin once remarked, when we were doing rust repair on a car, "This is one of the few normal father-son things we have done." He was a lot of help in editing my books, and I got him started in Latin, Greek, and Hebrew. We double-teamed his mother into buying the Atari game computer as an educational tool, and we ended up being right. He has made a great living with computers and his daughter is now trouble-shooting them in the school system as a summer intern  - with good pay.

I am known at Walmart headquarters for attending every single Saturday Morning Meeting (monthy) since we moved here. That comes up when employees whine about starting a meeting at 7 AM. As a result, I know a lot about his work, and that gives me great insights for teaching graduate school in adult education (education technology).

I met Mike Duke and shook hands with him. He is the CEO of Walmart. Few of the 2 million plus associates have done that. I have also met a number of the Waltons - the Walmart heirs.

When I go to Walmart gatherings and meet his colleagues, they make a point of telling me how much they appreciate him and his work. The same thing is true of his work at his independent Lutheran congregation, where he has helped two pastors in various ways.      

Recently we went with his congregation to the Passion Play in Eureka Springs. Soon after we attended a wedding together in Little Rock. Movies are a blast, because we enjoy the granddaughters talking and laughing with each other, our grandson offering commentary.

Being a father is so satisfying. How many people absorb everything said? That is almost impossible, but children listen to everything the parents say, even it means debating and arguing over certain matters.

Most of the fun we had in those early days were low-cost adventures, due to a graduate student's budget. We did not rely on digital device lobotomies for car trips. We talked. We told stories. We made up song parodies. Sometimes I gave lessons to pass the time, like the liberal takeover of Princeton University. We discussed the order of events leading up to WWII as well.

Because we shared the same interests, we were always learning together. We went through rocks, dinosaurs, WWII, aircraft carriers, Star Wars, and various phases of computer science.

I recently had to buy some laundry spotter liquid for some shirts I stained. Chris and I recalled the TV commercial that she and Martin recited when doing the wash in Sturgis. Shout was the stain remover then. She would hold up something and ask, "What would you do with this one?" He would say with great energy, "I would Chout it out." He was a little over two. So, we went over that little video that still runs in our brains when thinking about stain remover.

Because we studied the Bible together and Lutheran doctrine, we have plenty of discussions about what is happening there. That reminds me of the time he told the Indiana LCA bishop, "My father gives the Michigan bishop a hard time." That was one of those gasping moments that could not be taken back, because it was true.

We were in hospitals and doctor's offices far more than most families, all together. We lost our two little girls, no matter what the experts tried to do. They never had an exact name for the disorder, but we had great times with them. And we learned how precious life is, because it opened the door into that world which many people avoid at all costs.

Erin Joy, left, Martin, and Bethany Joan Marie.



The Third Sunday after Trinity. Luke 15:1-10.
Parables of the Lost Sheep and Lost Coin


The Third Sunday after Trinity, 2013


Pastor Gregory L. Jackson

http://www.ustream.tv/channel/bethany-lutheran-worship

                       

The Hymn # 652     I Lay My Sins on Jesus              1.24
The Confession of Sins
The Absolution
The Introit p. 16
The Gloria Patri
The Kyrie p. 17
The Gloria in Excelsis
The Salutation and Collect p. 19
The Epistle and Gradual       
The Gospel              
Glory be to Thee, O Lord!
Praise be to Thee, O Christ!
The Nicene Creed             p. 22
The Sermon Hymn #436            The Lord’s My Shepherd                   1.33

You Are the Lost Sheep

The Communion Hymn # 190            Christ Is Arisen            1:52
The Preface p. 24
The Sanctus p. 26
The Lord's Prayer p. 27
The Words of Institution
The Agnus Dei p. 28
The Nunc Dimittis p. 29
The Benediction p. 31
The Hymn # 350     Jesus the Very Thought of Thee   1:53

KJV 1 Peter 5:6 Humble yourselves therefore under the mighty hand of God, that he may exalt you in due time: 7 Casting all your care upon him; for he careth for you. 8 Be sober, be vigilant; because your adversary the devil, as a roaring lion, walketh about, seeking whom he may devour: 9 Whom resist stedfast in the faith, knowing that the same afflictions are accomplished in your brethren that are in the world. 10 But the God of all grace, who hath called us unto his eternal glory by Christ Jesus, after that ye have suffered a while, make you perfect, stablish, strengthen, settle you. 11 To him be glory and dominion for ever and ever. Amen.

KJV Luke 15:1 Then drew near unto him all the publicans and sinners for to hear him. 2 And the Pharisees and scribes murmured, saying, This man receiveth sinners, and eateth with them. 3 And he spake this parable unto them, saying, 4 What man of you, having an hundred sheep, if he lose one of them, doth not leave the ninety and nine in the wilderness, and go after that which is lost, until he find it? 5 And when he hath found it, he layeth it on his shoulders, rejoicing. 6 And when he cometh home, he calleth together his friends and neighbours, saying unto them, Rejoice with me; for I have found my sheep which was lost. 7 I say unto you, that likewise joy shall be in heaven over one sinner that repenteth, more than over ninety and nine just persons, which need no repentance. 8 Either what woman having ten pieces of silver, if she lose one piece, doth not light a candle, and sweep the house, and seek diligently till she find it? 9 And when she hath found it, she calleth her friends and her neighbours together, saying, Rejoice with me; for I have found the piece which I had lost. 10 Likewise, I say unto you, there is joy in the presence of the angels of God over one sinner that repenteth.

Third Sunday After Trinity

Lord God, heavenly Father, we all like sheep have gone astray, having suffered ourselves to be led away from the right path by Satan and our own sinful flesh: We beseech Thee graciously to forgive us all our sins for the sake of Thy Son, Jesus Christ; and quicken our hearts by Thy Holy Spirit, that we may abide in Thy word, and in true repentance and a steadfast faith continue in Thy Church unto the end, and obtain eternal salvation, through our Lord Jesus Christ, Thy Son, who liveth and reigneth with Thee and the Holy Ghost, one true God, world without end Amen.




You Are the Lost Sheep

KJV Luke 15:1 Then drew near unto him all the publicans and sinners for to hear him. 2 And the Pharisees and scribes murmured, saying, This man receiveth sinners, and eateth with them.

This brief setting shows us how Jesus taught and why. And it is good to remember that these parables are introductions to the Parable of the Prodigal Son, the most elaborate of the three.

KJV Luke 15:11 And he said, A certain man had two sons:

These three parables deal with our unspiritual tendency to welcome those who are outwardly righteous while shunning those who do not belong for one reason or another.

The scribes and Pharisees faulted Jesus for not being like them. He received or welcomed sinners and ate with them, showing to everyone His gracious attitude toward them.

I used to shop at a Lutheran bookstore in Cleveland, long ago, where the two factions of the LCMS ran into each other. They belonged to the same synod and went to the same schools. An owner said to me, “They won’t even speak to each other. I see that all the time.”

This modern version extends to those who failed to shun those who should be shunned. Punishment is applied to those who do not participate and welcome sinners (those who question the synod or have a slightly wrong version of certain things).

There are very few who will admit to being friends of someone on the shun list. And they are frightened that someone will accuse them of that crime.

Jesus addressed this problem with the lesson for today.

3 And he spake this parable unto them, saying, 4 What man of you, having an hundred sheep, if he lose one of them, doth not leave the ninety and nine in the wilderness, and go after that which is lost, until he find it?

Jesus portrays His own attitude toward sinners by making he audience think about their own feelings in the role of shepherd. This not only unites all the Biblical passages about sheep and shepherds, but also emphasizes Jesus as the Good Shepherd.

The first group are those who are in a good and secure position. The Shepherd does not abandon them to the wolves but leaves them in the care of others. Thus the faithful members of the Kingdom of God are fed and watered through the Means of Grace, through worship and spiritual fellowship. In hundreds of ways, believers are guarded and protected by the Word.

The Savior is so anxious for anyone who strays that He looks for and finds the one who has wandered away. When we see one of those lost ones in our own lives, we are not so keen about this approach. However, Jesus is the example of seeking and finding.

Probably each one of us has had the experience of wandering lost. Those who value Lutheran orthodoxy today have had many bad experiences. At our college, Chris and I could look back at recent history and see faithful people at work, honoring the Word of God. I worked in the college library and saw those histories and examples of faculty and students at Augustana College, where my mother also went and received her degree. No one said, “But we changed all that and took the opposite position, pushing out all the conservatives.”

The Augustana Synod segment of the LCA merger did not change rapidly. Only the indications were there. The LCMS battles that developed showed that they were just as mixed up. That meant 95% of the Lutherans were in a state of free-fall in the 1960s and 1970s. All the movement has been downward, among the Lutheran synods, since that time.

When we visited a Pentecostal church for a wedding, we saw all the characteristics that the “conservative” Lutherans are aping, including a big coffee bar just outside the worship area, where they had a stage rather than an altar and chancel area. I lost track of the giant movie screens – at least six in the worship area.

No one even admits that this has happened to the Lutherans. The wolves took over and now scatter and slaughter the flocks. They butcher anyone who dares to oppose them. Thus there will be many sent wandering.

But God has provided for all, since the Word gathers and unites people in receiving His grace. This parable is acted out in our time as well. The Shepherd goes into the wilderness to find the lost.

13. Such should be your bearing toward sinners; inwardly the heart in service, outwardly the tongue in earnest. God requires this of us; and this is what Christ, our Captain, has manifested in himself, as Paul says to the Philippians 2:4-9: “Not looking each of you to his own things, but each of you also to the things of others. Have this mind in you, which was also in Christ Jesus; who, existing in the form of God, counted not the being on an equality with God a thing to be grasped, but emptied himself, taking the form of a servant, being made in likeness of men; and being found in fashion as a man, he humbled himself, becoming obedient unto death, yea, the death of the cross.”

14. Christ was filled with all righteousness, and might justly have condemned us all as sinners. But he did not do so. What did he do, then?

He gave himself to be our Servant. His righteousness has served for our sins, his fullness for our feebleness, his life for our death. This we find illustrated, for our example, in the Gospel before us, where he bears himself with such friendliness toward sinners that the Pharisees murmur.

5 And when he hath found it, he layeth it on his shoulders, rejoicing.

The Good Shepherd rejoices in finding the sheep and taking on the burden of bringing it back home. When we have been guided down the wrong paths, and fed with bad food and poisoned water, it seems as if God does not care what happens to His work on earth.

Yet these experiences help us realize how great it is to have the real comfort of the Gospel, to make us say, “I cannot wait to read the Galatians commentary of Luther again.”

Apart from those times of trial and pain, we would not have the hunger for God’s Word and the awe we experience in realizing that He is speaking to us directly in His Word.

And it gives us a portrait of us as the lost sheep. We are not dragged home. We are not led home. We are carried on the shoulders of the rejoicing Savior.



43. Thus too, if our confidence is to begin, and we become strengthened and comforted, we must well learn the voice of our Shepherd, and let all other voices go, who only lead us astray, and chase and drive us hither and thither. We must hear and grasp only that article which presents Christ to us in the most friendly and comforting manner possible. So that we can say with all confidence: My Lord ,Jesus Christ is truly the only Shepherd, and I, alas, the lost sheep, which has strayed into the wilderness, and I am anxious and fearful, and would gladly be good, and have a gracious God and peace of conscience, but here I am told that He is as anxious for me as I am for him. I am anxious and in pain about how I shall come to him to secure help, But he is in anxiety and worry and desires nothing else than to bring me again to himself.

Once our little Sheltie decided to run away after being groomed outside. I brought out Sassy and said, “Find Precious.” Sassy bolted in the right direction and found Precious, a fractious little dog, and made it clear – you are found, give up without a struggle. Even when a pet has been naughty or thoughtless, we have tender feelings when we find the animal. I doubt whether feral Shelties exist, since their main skills are affection and yipping at every strange sound.

22. It is thus that you come to God. You are already the sheep placed upon his shoulders. You have found the Shepherd. You are the piece of silver in the hand. You are the one over whom is joy in heaven in the presence of all the angels. We are not to worry, if we do not experience or feel this at once. Sin will daily decrease, and its sting will drive you to seek God. You must struggle against this feeling by faith, and say: “Oh, God! I know thou hast said this, and I lean upon thy Word. I am the sheep and the piece of silver; thou the shepherd and the woman.”

6 And when he cometh home, he calleth together his friends and neighbours, saying unto them, Rejoice with me; for I have found my sheep which was lost. 7 I say unto you, that likewise joy shall be in heaven over one sinner that repenteth, more than over ninety and nine just persons, which need no repentance.

The Pharisees mourn over the situation – He eats with sinners, but the believers rejoice in a lost sheep being brought home, carried on the shoulders of the Savior.
                
---

8 Either what woman having ten pieces of silver, if she lose one piece, doth not light a candle, and sweep the house, and seek diligently till she find it?

The abundant grace of God is shown in this second parable of three, so we understand better how God seeks out individuals for His Kingdom.

There are many famous stories of lost objects. They often end, “I searched everywhere and never found it.” My uncle lost a unique plant that could have started a family fortune – no one was allowed to talk about it. One professor found a rare coin but lost it on the trip back home. The losing and the searching are always painfully recalled.

I had a panic loss like that once. They were tickets to Disneyland, and I needed to find them that morning before leaving. And I did clean and go through things and search all over. When I was completely exhausted from worry and looking, I sat down defeated, only to see the tickets sitting on the footstool, within sight of my desk. There was great rejoicing.

This helps us see – we are valuable to God. He moves heaven and earth, literally, to keep us within the fold, to claim us if we are unbelievers.

The works-saints and the holier-than-thou types do not see or feel this, but the open sinners do. They do not have the skills to deny carnal sin. The Gospel teaches them that God rejoices in finding them (or us) and shares that joy with others.

The law condemns but the Gospel gives peace, love, comfort and contentment.

9 And when she hath found it, she calleth her friends and her neighbours together, saying, Rejoice with me; for I have found the piece which I had lost. 10 Likewise, I say unto you, there is joy in the presence of the angels of God over one sinner that repenteth.

We have all joined in finding that contact lens or book or other object. Even if we do not find it, we share in the happiness of it being found.

65. And now consider, how could he preach still more friendly and comfortingly, or what more should he do to make.: the heart joyful, and awaken a strong confidence in him? Since we see such a Shepherd, we miserable sinners are painted forth by him, who so unwillingly loses his sheep and so anxiously seeks it, and when he has found it carries it with all joy, and spreads forth such joy that all the angels and saints in heaven, yea, and all creatures rejoice and smile over us so friendly, that even the sun must shine much more lovely. For as it is natural that when a man is sorrowful, the sun and everything looks dark to him; and again when the heart is happy, then man appears twice as joyful, and everything looks to him lighter and brighter.

66. Now he who can firmly believe this, shall also receive true consolation and joy in and through Christ the Lord, because he has here the certain promise, that if he cleave thus unto Christ, and permit himself to be carried on his shoulders, that he is a dear guest in the kingdom of heaven, and will be received with great joy.

67. But we have altogether a different feeling in the sorrow and melancholy of the conscience, when the heart cannot think otherwise than that every angel stands behind us with a drawn sword, so that we can have no good cheer either from God or angels, that even some cannot behold any creature with joy, and fear the friendly sun itself, yea, every leaf that stirs.

All which arises from tormenting and consuming themselves with their own thoughts, from which they would gladly disentangle themselves, and labor so much and feel so good that they need not fear; but by this “,-hey only make the evil worse.

68. But if you desire to possess true comfort and joy in your soul, then only learn to impress this lovely picture and word of this Gospel in your heart, that you may seek it where it is to be found, namely, in Christ, and nowhere else. For in this man you will find all things, if you only remain under his protection and lie still upon his shoulders. But whatever joy may be sought outside of him, never enters the heart, even if you took to your aid all creatures, and had in one place the joy and pleasure of the whole world.





         Third Sunday after Trinity Quotations
                                            
"If the question is put, 'Why did God ordain so many means of grace when one suffices to confer upon the sinner His grace and forgiveness?' we quote the reply of Luther who writes (Smalcald Articles, IV:  'The Gospel not merely in one way gives us counsel and aid against sin, for God is superabundantly rich in His grace.  First through the spoken Word, by which the forgiveness of sins is preached in the whole world, which is the peculiar office of the Gospel. Secondly through Baptism.  Thirdly through the holy Sacrament of the Altar. Fourthly through the power of the keys and also through the mutual conversation and consolation of brethren, Matthew 18:20.'"        
          John Theodore Mueller, Christian Dogmatics, A Handbook of Doctrinal Theology, 1934, p. 447. SA, IV, Concordia Triglotta, p. 491. Matthew 18:20.        

"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."
          The Large Catechism, The Creed, Article III, #54, Concordia Triglotta, St. Louis:  Concordia Publishing House, 1921, p. 693. Tappert, p. 417.          

"The second argument is that 'God desires all men to be saved' (1 Timothy 2:4), and He gave His Son for us men and created man for eternal life. Likewise:  All things exist for man, and he himself exists for God that he may enjoy Him, etc.  These points and others like them can be refuted as easily as the first one.  For these verses must always be understood as pertaining to the elect only, as the apostle says in 2 Timothy 2:10 'everything for the sake of the elect.'  For in an absolute sense Christ did not die for all, because He says: 'This is My blood which is poured out for you' and 'for many'‑‑He does not say:  for all‑‑'for the forgiveness of sins.' (Mark 14:24; Matthew 26:28)
          Martin Luther, Luther's Works, 25  p. 375.  

"No more splendid work exists than receiving and hearing the Word of God." 
          What Luther Says, An Anthology, 3 vols., ed., Ewald Plass, St. Louis:  Concordia Publishing House, 1959, I,  p. 302. Luke 10:38.  




Saturday, June 15, 2013

That Slovenly UOJ Essay from Michigan District WELS



First of all, the endless Keller UOJ essay suffered from far too many format tricks, especially the use of bold, reminding me of those websites that sell miracle cures or warn of the pending apocalypse if I do not invest in property in New Zealand.

Second, Keller showed no grasp of Biblical theology or basic Lutheran doctrine. For instance, he constantly merged the atonement of Christ with justification by faith while trying to claim this hybrid of liberal Protestantism was identical to Lutheran orthodoxy. For 51 pages he dragged us through his constant discoveries of allies for his argument, sounding as excited and uninformed as Larry Olson finding a new Church Growth Principle.

Third, he is another bad example of the WELS cult educational system. Although Keller can spell, he has no sense of critical thinking and cannot develop a coherent thesis.

This line of thinking was prominent at Halle University, center of Pietism,
where Walther's syphilitic mentor and bishop, Martin Stephan, studied.


A key strategy in a good argument is the ability to treat the other side fairly, to avoid such logical fallacies as special pleading (only one side of the case) and the straw man (setting up a false picture of the opposite viw and heroically knocking it down).

Keller seems to be debating Pastor Paul Rydecki, whose justification by faith essay is equally long but a model of research, clarity, and fairness. But he did not mention DP Jon Buchholz extending the Left Foot of Fellowship to Pastor Rydecki while telling the congregation that they would all continue to study the issue.

Why discuss the facts about this incident, that has so many riled up? A cult pretends it never happened, just the way Wayne Mueller pretends there is no Church Growth Movement in WELS.

Keller may be thinking of my publications, too, but he never mentions any or quotes any. This tactic is used among the UOJ troops to pretend they are the sole guardians of Lutheran orthodoxy, which we might forget if they did not mention it so often.

Keller only argued UOJ and revealed his thin research--if it can be called research--by making his case with the SynCons while ignoring anything contrary to his absurd claims. He cited Robert Preus but ignored that blasphemous quote that began the essay, the Edward Preus pratfall that gives away the essence of UOJ. I have posted it below.

Paul McCain loves this essay, too.
World absolution unites all the apostates.

Keller also ignored Preus' last book and the many quotations against UOJ in that book - Justification and Rome. In fact, Preus quoted the very men who have been falsely used to promote UOJ, and showed how their thought was not remotely connected with the fundamental error of :Pietism - universal forgiveness and salvation.

The vast majority of quotations are from the SynCons, who got it from Walther and Pietism. The rest reveal a misunderstanding of atonement and justification by faith. Keller merges the two and cannot even see this when he quotes a perfectly good passage about atonement and justification.

The Bible only uses justification in the sense of justification by faith. There is no forgiveness and no salvation without faith.

Is this an important book?
The Book of Concord recommends it for studying
justification by faith.


Luther made the same point hundreds of times.

Lenski, who is also abused by Keller (even though WELS hates Lenski), also said that justification in the Bible is always connected with faith.

WELS pastors always put down Lenski as "not good on justification," so why did Keller decide to use the ALC professor as his expert?

As I told several people today, WELS is scared that people will begin reading and comparing, connecting the decades of abuse with the lack of the Gospel in the denomination.

If Keller wanted to avoid embarrassment, he made a mistake in quoting Wayne Mueller, one of the architects of the Church Growth surrender in WELS. One does not simply quote Wayne and claim that the sect is confessional!



Or Deutschlander. He was a good German professor, but he should retract assertions like this one:


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rlschultz has left a new comment on your post "That Slovenly UOJ Essay from Michigan District WEL...":

When I tried to start reading the Keller essay, I got an immediate case of cognitive dissonance. The same thing happened to me when a used car salesman started pressuring me to close the deal after I expressed my doubts to do so. I thought that the structure of the essay seemed rather jumpy. It looks like the UOJ proponents are making an alleged academic attempt to support their position. It is a key point to expose the fact that cults typically avoid that which makes them uncomfortable. By the time that they are ready to face it, they are still unprepared. The character attacks against those who repudiate UOJ have already happened. The next step for the UOJ proponents has been the the feeble argument.


Mark Driscoll’s Sex Manual ‘Real Marriage’ Scandalizes Evangelicals - The Daily Beast

Mark Driscoll (r) and J. I. Packer seem to have little in common.



[GJ - You may not want to read this review, which I found by accident in looking for the Bethel Bible series in Madison, Wisconsin. Tim Glende, Ski, and Bishop Katie studied under the great Mark Driscoll, below. If you read the whole review, you will understand Glende and Ski better. "Birds of a feather flock together."]

Mark Driscoll’s Sex Manual ‘Real Marriage’ Scandalizes Evangelicals - The Daily Beast:

The reaction to the rest of the book has varied widely according to the views of the critic. Evans, who often challenges the traditional evangelical view of gender roles, took the Driscolls to task for manhandling scripture passage to fit their message. “Grace’s chapter on submission will make egalitarians cringe,” Evans wrote. She describes how the chapter twists the Old Testament story of Esther, a young Israelite woman who was forced to marry the king of Persia, into a modern moral lesson about wives submitting to their husbands. The Driscolls “fail massively” to understand the story of Esther, Evans argues, and crassly treat the racy Song of Solomon as a “sex manual.”

Emergents do more damage than
old fashioned liberal apostates.
Their sheep's clothing is thicker,
Matthew 7:15ff.


'via Blog this'



Ski and Glende hugged in brolove
when feasting near the Mark Driscoll conference.
The worship bulletin at St. Peter in Freedom
made it look like a WELS pastoral conference.

WELS Church Lady Responds to Michigan WELS UOJ



WELS church lady has left a new comment on your post "Pastor Brian R. Keller BELIEVE IT OR NOT: You Are ...":

Horse manure! This is slap in the face. EVERYONE should read Pastor Rydecki's papers.

In Christ,
Rebecca

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Saturday, February 16, 2013

Pastor Paul Rydecki Resources - Books and Links to Posts.
Justification by Faith versus Universal Objective Justification


Pastor Paul Rydecki still serves Emmanual Lutheran Church in Los Cruces, a congregation
which left WELS over the sect's embrace of UOJ and its persecution of justification by faith.

http://ichabodthegloryhasdeparted.blogspot.com/2013/02/pastor-paul-rydecki-resources-books-and.html


Aegidius Hunnius, Polycarp Leyser, Salomon Gesner (Kindle…

Rydecki keeps providing new translations on the topic of justification by faith, so I decided to link them in one spot. The current books or translations are at the top and links below.

Paul Rydecki books via the Amazon.com link


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Paul Rydecki books via Repristination Press


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New! -  A Clear Explanation of the Controversy among the Wittenberg Theologians


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The Judaizing Calvin - by Hunnius


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Theses Opposed To Huberianism


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Schwabach Articles on Justification by Faith




Links about Justification by Faith 
and Justification without Faith (UOJ)


Luther's Galatians endorsed by reader

Luther's Galatians on Gnesio Lutherans

Roman Catholic adjunct Jack Kilcrease as Humpty Dumpty

Calov, quoted by Robert Preus, repudiated the UOJ position of WELS

Kilcrease, the McCain tutor, equivocates.

Buchholz is anti-Luther

Pastor Bickel on Tossing Rydecki Under the Bus

Church and Changer Jeff Gunn and His Mequon Class of Shrinkers

Paul McCain and Jon Buchholz - Bedfellows of Apostasy

Abraham Is the Common Theme in Justification - Justification by Faith

Pastor Rydecki's Account of His Suspension - October 9th

Intrepid Account October 6th - Pastor Rydecki Suspended

LutherQuest (sic) Opposes Justification by Faith

Warming Up the Tar and Feathers on LutherQuest (sic)

Pastor Bickel Answers Jon Buchholz

Kokomo Statements - WELS UOJ - JP Meyer

Jack Kilcrease Showing Signs of Stress

Dr. Lito Cruz and Brett Meyer Dispatch the UOJ Stormtroopers on Extra Nos