Thursday, November 26, 2020

Phil Hale Reviewed by Dr. Eric Rachut

Rachut Review is linked here on Amazon



Customer Review

Reviewed in the United States on November 25, 2020
My first reaction, upon hearing of Objective Justification (or Universal Objective Justification, UOJ) was that it was unscriptural; a Lutheran pastor and true believer in it, however, advised me to read this book. Sadly, I had neglected that admonition - the duty of every scholar is to read both sides.

The great majority of Lutherans, including, I am confident, those in the church bodies which espouse UOJ - these being members of the old Synodical Conference and its derivatives (Missouri Synod, Wisconsin Synod, etc) - would draw a blank if asked their opinion on this. Two graduates of the Missouri Synod seminary in Fort Wayne, Indiana, have told me that students there are informed that UOJ is simply the Atonement and not to make anything of it. (As this book points out, UOJ, if taken seriously, is indeed far more than the Atonement). I also have the suspicion that the Missouri Synod, at least, understands that a frank airing of the topic might result in a walk-out of significant numbers of their faithful.

A short synopsis: after Luther's death in 1546, several contentious questions faced Lutheran theologians. These were ironed out in a collection of writings termed the Book of Concord (1580); both the simplest topics and the most complex were addressed, the former in Luther's catechisms and in the key definition of Lutheranism, the Augsburg Confession. However, in 1592 a Swiss German, Samuel Huber, was appointed to the faculty of the University of Wittenberg, the center of academic Lutheranism at the time; he was originally Calvinist, but had rebelled against the Reformed doctrine of double predestination (some persons are predestined by God to be damned, some to be saved) - or against Calvin's Limited Atonement, as this books states, or both. His rebellion led him to become Lutheran, but still with a rationalistic mindset; he went beyond the Scriptural doctrine that Christ's Crucifixion and Resurrection paid the penalty of man's sin (the Atonement) and made the unscriptural claim that God the Father now rules all men, everywhere, innocent of ever having been guilty of sin in the first place (UOJ). Men are then saved if they as individuals have faith (subjective justification - what we non-UOJ'ers simply term Justification). This new doctrine led to Huber's expulsion from the faculty (1594) and then his banishment (1595). Aegidus Hunnius, acknowledged by all as an orthodox Lutheran father, wrote against Huber's ideas (Theses Against Huberianism - in print, although not listed in the book now reviewed). That should have been the end of it, but Huber's way of thinking rumbled along in Saxony, particularly among pietists (those more interested in holy living than doctrine) and re-emerged in the mid-1800's in the writings of CFW Walther, a man revered as the founder of the Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod, and later in the four-volume Christian Dogmatics, by Franz Pieper of the same body. Lutheran theologians in predecessor bodies of today's Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA) - at a time when that strand of American Lutheranism really was orthodox - vigorously contested Huberianism. But this rather odd item of theology has persisted as fundamental in the Missouri and Wisconsin synods and their smaller offshoots. It crops up periodically in other faiths - but only periodically.

I would urge readers interested in the topic to investigate BOTH sides - this book, touted as the best pro-UOJ, and, for the opposition, the Youtube expositions from the little church body, ELDoNA (either a short four part series by Rev Joshua Sullivan in "Ask the Pastor" or the nine-part in-depth presentation from several ELDoNA pastors), and the online and print writings of Rev Gregory L Jackson (PhD, Notre Dame). Hunnius's Theses Against Huberianism are available from Amazon - see if this short orthodox tome does not attack the UOJ this modern book promotes. In regard to Aspects of Forgiveness, it should be pointed out: the subtitle (The Basis for Justification and its Modern Denial) is incorrect - the opponents deny not justification, but Universal Objective Justification; persons in both camps are addressing the issue with the best intentions - not "hand[ling] the Word of God deceitfully" (the statement of an endorsing clergyman on the back cover) and UOJ's opponents are not "satanic, " "foolish," or "irrational," terms this book uses. At the risk of committing the fallacy of poisoning the well myself, let me say that this rather repetitious work repeatedly uses Non Sequiturs, False Analogies, False Dichotomies and arguments ad hominem. UOJ is read into biblical and confessional writings where no disinterested reader could see it. The multitude of bible references which do not dovetail with UOT are ignored; the five or six which could be of use - especially if you do not know the original Greek - are emphasized. (This is the first time I have seen, in a scholarly work, the recommendation [p 8] to disregard the context of a bible verse - Romans 4:25 - possibly because the preceding verse states that Rom 4:25 pertains to the justification of believers and not universally. Read the whole passage, Rom 4: 16-25). The writer acknowledges that UOJ is not a topic in the Book of Concord, but believes that this is either because 1) it was so basic that everyone just knew it (Luther's Small Catechism is in the Book of Concord and deals with just those basics - no UOJ) or 2). the confessional writings DID deal with it, but you have to be able to read the subtleties here and there. Overall the methodology here is similar to the way Earl Warren, Chief Justice of the Supreme Court in the Eisenhower era, decided cases: he made up his mind according to Masonic principles beforehand and then sent out his law clerics in search of precedent.

So read both sides and make up your own mind. This is within the grasp of the laity - if you can tolerate "tangled mess[es]" (phrase in the book). Be aware the author is no doubt correct in his claim (p 44) that "those who are unscriptural on justification have lost any right to bear the name 'Lutheran'." However, this description may actually best fit the by my estimate 5% of Lutherans in the world who are UOJ'ers.



Buckle Up and Enjoy a Safe But Bumpy Ride

People are buying deep freezers and stocking up, but the threat will be short-lived.


Citizen Free Press - for links to many independent news stories and tweets

I use many news sources not connected to the Big Six echo chamber. All mainstream news and media outlets are owned by a total of six corporations. For a summary of them, I click on the Drudge Report, deliriously funny and wrong at every level.

Remember how I was talking some of you off the ledge a few days ago? I won't name names.

A good example is Biden being given an office and $7 million for his transition. But didja know that it is illegal to accept federal money in a fraudulent election? Yes, as of 2018.

This Election was not an overwhelming victory for cheaters but a tar baby for those crooks. They should study WELS' new fave program - Unstuck - they are certainly stuck. Combatants set traps for enemies who cannot resist the temptation. General Patton said such traps are for idiots.



1. When you are weak, appear strong. (Clinton-Gore locked out G. W. Bush from the transition offices while Gore ran to the state and Supreme Court for 37 days.)

2. When you are strong, appear weak. (Trump "conceded" by giving Biden money and an office for Slow Joe's transition.)

3. When your enemy is destroying himself, do not interfere. (Sun Tzu was a little more graphic - Wait by the river for your enemies' bodies to float by.) Fox News destroyed itself Election night, aiding independent media to gain hordes of new followers. Morning Joe (whose intern/lover's body was found in his office) outranked Fox News soon after. 

Some Homework To Look Up

Dominion and Smartmatic.

Sidney Powell. She has a website sidneypowell.com

Trump's 2018 Executive Order (the tar baby).

The Kraken is a US weapons system for automatic defense, and also a mythical beast that can destroy everything. Powell said, "Release the Kraken!"

RFID (radio frequency identification)  is used on special ink to verify ballots under certain conditions. No glow? no go. Thousands upon thousands are fake.


The corruption and ELCA fellowship of the "conservative" Lutheran leaders is akin to the RINOs betraying their country and Constitution to feather their own stinking nests.


You still don't get the joke? Their solemn words are stand-up comedy.

Why People Vote on Those Little Issues Looming Large Later


The Supreme Court late Wednesday night granted requests from the Roman Catholic Diocese of Brooklyn and two Orthodox Jewish synagogues to block enforcement of a New York executive order restricting attendance at houses of worship. Both the diocese and the synagogues claimed that the executive order violated the right to the free exercise of religion guaranteed by the First Amendment, particularly when secular businesses in the area are allowed to remain open. Wednesday’s orders by a closely divided Supreme Court, which had turned down two similar requests over the summer by churches in California and Nevada, represented a clear rightward shift on the court since Justice Amy Coney Barrett replaced Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, who died in September.

 

Five conservative justices – Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh and Barrett – sided with the religious groups and blocked the attendance limits. Chief Justice John Roberts, along with Justices Stephen Breyer, Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan, dissented.

 

Continue reading at SCOTUS Blog…

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GJ - I was yelling at the TV screen on several occasions recently. Some California clown ministers pretended to run a strip club so they could have church. Fuller grads? Probably.

The First Amendment in the Constitution - the very first in the Bill of Rights ratified in 1791:

Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.


News and commentary here - Citizen Free Press