Saturday, May 5, 2018

Luther's Sermon for Rogate - Prayer Sunday - The Fifth Sunday after Easter

Chartres Cathredral Rose Window


Luther's Sermon for Rogate  - Fifth Sunday after Easter

Second Sermon

KJV John 16:23 And in that day ye shall ask me nothing. Verily, verily, I say unto you, Whatsoever ye shall ask the Father in my name, he will give it you. 24 Hitherto have ye asked nothing in my name: ask, and ye shall receive, that your joy may be full. 25 These things have I spoken unto you in proverbs: but the time cometh, when I shall no more speak unto you in proverbs, but I shall shew you plainly of the Father. 26 At that day ye shall ask in my name: and I say not unto you, that I will pray the Father for you: 27 For the Father himself loveth you, because ye have loved me, and have believed that I came out from God. 28 I came forth from the Father, and am come into the world: again, I leave the world, and go to the Father. 29 His disciples said unto him, Lo, now speakest thou plainly, and speakest no proverb. 30 Now are we sure that thou knowest all things, and needest not that any man should ask thee: by this we believe that thou camest forth from God.





A SERMON ON PRAYER.

1. First we note that in order for a prayer to be really right and to be heard five things are required. The first is, that we have from God his promise or his permission to speak to him, and that we remember the same before we pray and remind God of it, thereby encouraging ourselves to pray in a calm and confident frame of mind. Had God not told us to pray, and pledged himself to hear us, none of his creatures could ever, with all their prayers, obtain so much as a grain of corn. From this, then, there follows that no one receives anything from God by virtue of his own merit or that of his prayer. His answer comes by virtue of the divine goodness alone, which precedes every prayer and desire, which moves us, through his gracious promise and call, to pray and to desire, in order that we may learn how much he cares for us, and how he is more ready to give than we are to receive. He would have us seek to become bold, to pray in a calm and confident spirit, since he offers all, and even more, than we are able to ask.

2. In the second place, it is necessary that we never doubt the pledge and promise of the true and faithful God. For even to this end did God pledge himself to hear, yea, commanded us to pray, in order that we may always have a sure and firm faith that we will be heard; as Jesus says in Matthew 21:22: “All things, whatsoever ye shall ask in prayer, believing, ye shall receive.” Christ says in Luke 11:9-13: “And I say unto you, Ask, and it shall be given you; seek, and ye shall find; knock, and it shall be opened unto you. For every one that asketh receiveth; and he that seeketh findeth; and to him that knocketh it shall be opened. And of which of you that is a father shall his son ask a loaf, and he give him a stone? or a fish, and he for a fish give him a serpent? Or if he shall ask an egg, will he give him a scorpion? If ye then, being evil, know how to give good gifts unto your children, how much more shall your heavenly Father give the Holy Spirit to them that ask him?” With this and like promises and commands we must consolingly exercise ourselves and pray in true confidence.

3. In the third place, if one prays doubting that God will hear him, and only offers his prayers as a venture, whether it be granted or not granted, he is guilty of two wicked deeds. The first is, that he, himself, makes his prayer unavailing and he labors in vain. For Jesus says: “Whoever will ask of God, let him ask in faith, nothing doubting: for he that doubteth is like the surge of the sea driven by the wind and tossed. For let not that man think that he shall receive anything of the Lord.” James 1:6-7. He means that the heart of such a man does not continue stable, therefore God can give it nothing; but faith keeps the heart calm and stable and makes it receptive for the divine gifts.

4. The other wicked deed is, that he regards his most true and faithful God as a liar and an unstable and doubtful being; as one who can not or will not keep his promise; and thus through his doubt he robs God of his honor and of his name of truth and faithfulness. In this, such a grievous sin is committed that by this sin a Christian becomes a heathen, denying and losing his own God, and thus he remains in his sin, and must be condemned forever, without comfort. Moreover, if he receives that for which he prays, it will be given, not for his salvation, but for his punishment in time and eternity and it is not for the sake of the prayers, but because of his wrath that God rewards the good words which were spoken in sin, unbelief and divine dishonor.

5. In the fourth place, some say: Yes, I would gladly trust that my prayer would be heard, if I were only worthy and prayed aright. My answer is: If you do not pray until you know and experience that you are fit, then you will never need to pray. As I have said before, our prayers must not be founded nor rest upon ourselves or their own merits, but upon the unshakable truth of the divine promise. Where they are founded upon anything else, they are false, and deceive us, even though the heart break in the midst of its great devotions and we weep drops of blood. The very reason we do pray is because of our unworthiness; and just through the fact that we believe we are unworthy and confidently venture upon God’s faithfulness to his Word do we become worthy to pray and to be heard. Be you as unworthy as you may, only look to it, and with all earnestness accept it as true, that a thousandfold more depends upon this, that you know God’s truth and not change his faithful promise into a lie by your doubting. Your worthiness does not help you, but your unworthiness is no barrier. Disbelief condemns you, and trust makes you worthy and sustains you.

6. Therefore, be on your guard all through life that you may never think yourself worthy or fit to pray or to receive; unless it be that you discover yourself to be a freebold character risking all upon the faithful and sure promises of your gracious God, who thus wishes to reveal to you his mercy and goodness. Just as he, out of pure grace, has promised you, being so unworthy, an unmerited and unasked hearing, so will he also hear you, an unworthy beggar, out of pure grace, to the praise of his truth and promise. This he does in order that you may thank, not your worthiness, but his truth, by which he fulfils his promise, and that you thank his mercy that gave the promise, that the saying in Psalm 25:8-10 may stand: “Good and upright is Jehovah: Therefore will he instruct sinners in the way. The meek will he guide in justice; and the meek will he teach his way.

All the paths of Jehovah are loving kindness and truth unto such as keep his covenant and his testimonies.” Loving-kindness or mercy in the promise; faithfulness and truth in the fulfilling or hearing of the promises.

And in another Psalm he says: “Mercy and truth are met together; righteousness and peace have kissed each other.” Psalm 85:10. That is, they come together in every work and gift we receive from God through prayer.



7. In the fifth place, one should so act in this confidence of prayer as not to limit God and specify the day or place, nor designate the way or measure of the prayer’s fulfillment; but leave all to his own will, wisdom and almighty power. Then confidently and cheerfully await the answer, not even wishing to know how and where, how soon, how long, and through whom. His divine wisdom will find far better ways and measures, time and place, than we can devise, even should we perform miracles. So, in the Old Testament, the children of Israel all trusted in God to deliver them while yet there was no possible way before their eyes, nor even in their thoughts; then the Red Sea parted and offered them a way through the waters, and suddenly drowned all their enemies. Exodus 14.

8. Thus Judith, the holy woman, did when she heard that the citizens of Bethulia wished to deliver the city to their enemies within five days if God, in the meantime, did not help. She reproved them and said, Now who are ye, that have tempted God? They are not designs by which one acquires grace; but they awaken more disgrace. Do you wish to set a time for God to show you mercy, and specify a day according to your own pleasure?

Judith 8:10-12. Then the Lord helped her in a wonderful manner, in that she cut off the head of the great Holofernes and dispersed the enemies.

9. In like manner, St. Paul says that God’s ability is thus proved, in that he does exceeding abundantly above and better than we ask or think. Ephesians 3:20. Therefore, we should know that we are too finite to be able to name, picture or designate the time, place, way, measure and other circumstances for that which we ask of God. Let us leave that entirely to him, and immovably and steadfastly believe that he will hear us.

A Reader Sent a WSJ Article on Social Activism in the Churches



Politics in the Pews: Anti-Trump
Activism Is Reviving Protestant
Churches—at a Cost
A push toward activism among liberal Christian
denominations is reshaping traditional worship and
splitting congregations
Ian Lovett May 4, 2018 10:51 a.m. ET
By Ian Lovett

Some people might think that social activism is limited to the Left-wing mainline denominations. That is the focus of this article. But the Church Growth Movement moved toward social activism, perhaps because its message of entertainment and success was too shallow, even for them.

The article tries to paint activism as reviving congregations, but that is definitely not true. The main example we all know is the experience of ELCA deliberately causing division its entire history and reaping the just rewards of its polarizing tactics. Mark Hanson was not enough. Liz Eaton had to replace him - a white man! - and really enforce the quotas.

One of my friends from school and our local Disciples of Christ congregation became an ELCA pastor. She took over a large congregation that was ripped apart by "the issue." I studied the church website and saw the evidence in the announcements. She resigned because she could not take the tension.

The buzz from one fad gets old, so they march onto a new battlefield. The WSJ article describes an Episcopal congregation removing the George Washington and Robert E. Lee plaques from their church because Washington owned slaves and Lee fought for the South. Thirty people left immediately.

Who knows what the next social justice fad may be.

Norma A. Boeckler

38% of ELCA Parishes Have 50 or fewer worship attendees.

 Why are they not rushing in to join us in ELCA?
Nadia Bolz-Weber might ask.


38% of ELCA Parishes Have 50 or Fewer Worship Attendees.


 Some WELS pastors think Nadia is the bomb.



 Guess which minister - from the  group above -spoke for Jeske's conference?


 WELS-LCMS-ELS already decided in favor of women's ordination.
This is ELCA Pastor Jodi Houge, who spoke for Jeske's Change or Die! poly-sect conference:
ELCA-WELS-ELS-LCMS.
As a board member of Thrivent, Jeske represents the cutting edge of apostasy in America. Thrivent's vast expenditures on various church growth programs and education can be compared to America's War on Poverty - not working.

When I identified Jeske's Church and Change board members, photos, and bios, they began disappearing from that page. The WELS leadership at The Love Shack was 100% Church and Change, so the Jeske agenda was and is the WELS agenda. And, to quote the paragraph above - not working.




Another Expression of Gratitude for Luther's Sermons - and for Alec Satin's Lutheran Library


Yet Another Lutheran Layman Wrote:

Dear Pastor Jackson: Congratulations on nearing the completion of your work on the reprinting of Lenker's edition of Luther's  Sermons.  I look forward to purchasing a complete set as well as the GEMS volume, since I no longer have the Baker set I had years ago, along with the Baker HOUSE POSTILS.


It is also important that the works of Krauth, Loy, Stellhorn, Richard, Wolf, Jacobs, Spaeth, Stump, Lenski and others are reprinted; I am aware that some have been.  I noticed that the dogmatics of Revere Weidner and Milton Valentine are back in print, so why not more of the others?

***

GJ - He also expressed great appreciation for all the works published by Alec Satin's Lutheran Library Publishing Ministry.

I set up a folder on my hard drive named Alec. I download the pdfs to that location and read books from there. I have a large monitor named Glau-co-ma, so Mrs. Ichabod and I can read at the same time.

I hear from laity all the time, very seldom from pastors. I get all kinds of spam email because I publish one email address at the top of the page. However, I consign all those offers of $10 million plus - often from the Third World - to the junk folder.


And from another reader

Thank you for posting "The Sayings of Charles P. Krauth".   I have printed it out and putting it in glassine cover with plastic spine for ready reference.    I still enjoy sending snail mail greeting cards and short personal notes.  Always looking for short, thoughtful gems to include, and Krauth's "sayings" will be a welcomed source of inspiration to use   (with attribution of course).

United Lutheran Seminary and Civil War Trust Announce Agreement to Protect Sell Historic Seminary Ridge

Presbyterian minister Theresa Latini identified as an ELCA Lutheran until they found out she sinned against the Lavender Mafia decades ago. An ELCA bishop volunteered to take over her job, and he promptly sold Gettysburg's property down the river - "to preserve it." When God hands you a gift and a heritage, you convert it to cash.

 We visited Gettysburg Seminary when we were in the area.

 Will they preserve the work of Henry Eyster Jacobs?
He graduated from Gettysburg, taught there,
and became a leader in the General Council.


United Lutheran Seminary and Civil War Trust Announce Agreement to Sell Historic Seminary Ridge:



"GETTYSBURG, Pa., May 4, 2018 /PRNewswire/ -- The United Lutheran Seminary today announced an agreement with the Civil War Trust to permanently preserve 18 acres of historic open space on Seminary Ridge in Gettysburg. The property, located on both sides of Seminary Ridge Road, has been a part of the Seminary since it moved to the site in 1832.

"This property is a gift from God and we are stewards of this gift. We have a deep love for the property and its unique historic and scenic character," ULS Acting President-Bishop James Dunlop said. "For generations, these qualities have inspired thousands of seminary students as well as visitors from across our nation and around the world."

Under the terms of the $3.5 million purchase agreement, the Trust will acquire an 11-acre portion of the United Lutheran Seminary property straddling Seminary Ridge Road and a conservation easement on 7 acres along Chambersburg Pike east of those two parcels.

"We feel, as stewards of this site for more than 180 years, that we have a sacred responsibility to see it is protected for future generations," Bishop Dunlop said. "We believe this land needs to be preserved for the next generations of seminarians, and others, to reflect upon, learn from, and appreciate.""



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