Saturday, April 24, 2021

Luther's Jubilate Sermon - Third Sunday after Easter



THIRD SUNDAY AFTER EASTER


TEXT,

1 PETER 2:11-20. “11 Beloved, I beseech you as sojourners and pilgrims, to abstain from fleshly lusts, which war against the soul; 12 having your behavior seemly among the Gentiles’, that, wherein they speak against you as evildoers, they may by your good works, which they behold, glorify God in the day of visitation. 13 Be subject to every ordinance of man for the Lord’s sake: whether to the king, as supreme; 14 or unto governors, as sent by him for vengeance on evildoers and for praise to them that do well. 15 For so is the will of God, that by well-doing ye should put to silence the ignorance of foolish men: 16 as free, and not using your freedom for a cloak of wickedness, but as bondservants of God. 17 Honor all men. Love the brotherhood. Fear God. Honor the king. 18 Servants, be in subjection to your masters with all fear; not only to the good and gentle, but also to the froward. 19 For this is acceptable, if for conscience toward God a man endureth grieves, suffering wrongfully. 20 For what glory is it, if, when ye sin, and are buffeted for it, ye shall take it patiently? but if, when ye do well, and suffer for it, ye shall take it patiently, this is acceptable with God.”

OUR CHRISTIAN DUTIES.

1. This epistle selection, too, is an admonition to good works, or the fruits of faith. It touches upon nearly every condition of life, teaching how each individual should live and conduct himself. But first, Peter admonishes Christians in general that in their intercourse with gentiles, or the unbelieving world, they give no real occasion for censure or reproach concerning their conduct. The admonition seems to hinge upon the fact that Christians, as the apostle reminds them in the first and second chapters, have been called to a lively, a never-dying, hope of an imperishable inheritance in heaven, and of eternal joy and salvation; that they are now redeemed, having obtained remission of sins through the precious blood of Christ; and again, that they are become a holy nation and royal priesthood, to show forth and magnify the grace of God, they who in time past were not God’s people and had not obtained grace. “But now,” Peter would say, “you have obtained grace through the divine calling of Christ, through the suffering of your Lord. Live, then, as a holy people of God and citizens of heaven.”

2. We have already heard that in the Christian life are two essential principles, two principles upon which Christian teachers may lay emphasis.

First, faith in the fact that through Christ’s blood we are released from sin and have forgiveness; second, being forgiven, our natures are to be changed and we are to walk in newness of life. In baptism, when we first believe, we obtain not only remission of sins whereby we are of grace made children of God, but also the power to purge out, to mortify, the remaining sins. Our transgressions are not forgiven, Paul says ( Romans 1:6), with the privilege of continuing in them, as the insolent rejecters of grace imagine. It is this way: Our sins being blotted out through the blood of Christ, we need not to make remuneration or render satisfaction for them; we are children of grace and enjoy forgiveness. Nevertheless, inherent sin is not entirely purged out, or mortified.

REMISSION AND MORTIFICATION DEFINED.

3. There is difference between remission of sins and mortification of them.

The distinction should be made clear for the sake of combating those who confound and pervert the two principles by their false doctrines. In regard to remission, the Pope and many others have taught that forgiveness of sins is obtained through the foolishness of men’s own self-elected works, the satisfactions of their own devising. This error has ever prevailed in the world. Cain was the first to make it, and it will continue to the end. And where this error is refuted, false teachers are found who, on the other hand, accept and boast of the doctrine of grace without enjoying its happy results. They proceed as if mere forgiveness were enough, and without further effect than averting punishment; as if it leaves us where we were before, not ameliorating in any wise our moral condition; and as if no more is to be known about Christ and the Gospel.

Therefore, they who claim to be Christians must learn that, having obtained forgiveness without merit on their part, they should henceforth give no place to sins, but rather resist their former evil lusts and avoid and flee from the fruits and works thereof. Such is the substance of this lesson.

4. But note from the apostle’s words how his view has changed since the time when, as a fisherman of Bethsaida, he went about with the Lord previous to the Lord’s death and resurrection. At that time Peter and the other apostles, in fact the entire Jewish nation, had no other conception of Christ’s kingdom — the kingdom of God — than as an earthly one wherein they should know only happiness, figuring as wealthy farmers, citizens, noblemen, counts and lords. The sum of the world’s goods should be theirs, and all the gentiles their vassals. They were to be thenceforth undisturbed by enemies, wars, famine or misfortune, and to enjoy the extremity of peace, leisure and happiness under their supreme King, the Messiah. Such were their hopes, even their expectations. With these pleasing fancies were their minds filled. And just so today are the Jews full and drunken with their visionary dreams.

THE NATURE OF CHRIST’S KINGDOM.

5. Observe here, however, Peter teaches that the lot of the sharer in Christ’s kingdom is quite the reverse of what he once imagined. “O beloved Christians,” he would say, “who are called and baptized into the royal and priestly kingdom of Christ, I have now to tell you things quite different from the ideas and dreams you and! used to entertain. We are, it is true, citizens, counts and lords in the kingdom where Christ reigns supreme over all earthly kings and lords, and where is only eternal riches, peace and happiness in every form; but the life of that kingdom is unlike that of earthly kings and dominions. You are not, be it known, lords and noblemen in a worldly sense; neither is Christ a king as the world regards kingliness, and the kingdom of the world is not in harmony with his. Know, then, you must regard yourselves strangers and pilgrims in the kingdom of the world. “Therefore, I admonish you that, having now become Christians brothers in the eternal heavenly kingdom — your manner of life should be such as becomes them who are no longer of a worldly kingdom. Regard this earthly life only as the traveler or pilgrim regards the country wherein he journeys, the inn where he procures a night’s lodging. He does not expect to remain in the city, to be mayor or even a citizen. He finds there his food, but his thoughts are cast beyond its gates, to the place where home is. So, Peter says, must you look upon your earthly course. You did not become Christians with the prospect of reigning here on earth, as the Jews fancy they shall reign and be established. The dwelling-place, the citizenship and the authority of Christians are to be found in another direction, not in this world. Therefore, think of yourselves as pilgrims on earth, directing your attention toward other possessions and another country, wherein you shall be lords forever, and where no discord nor misfortune such as you must endure in this earthly harbor shall ever enter.”

CHRISTIAN USE OF THIS LIFE.

6. But how is indifference to this life to be accomplished? Peter goes on to say: “Be subject to every ordinance of man... whether to the king…or unto governors”; again, “Servants, be in subjection to your masters…also to the froward.” How is it consistent with royal citizenship in a celestial country to be a pilgrim on earth? How can we live here with wives and children, houses and lands, and being citizens under a temporal government, and yet not be at home? There is a distinction here which, as before said, was at first difficult for the beloved apostles themselves to understand. But to Christians, especially those of today, it should be clear. Christ and the apostles do not, in this teaching, design the rejection of external government and human authority — what Peter here terms ordinances of men. No, they permit these to remain as they are; moreover, they enjoin us to submit to and make use of them.

7. This is the difference to be kept in mind: We are to conduct ourselves in our earthly stations and occupations as not regarding this life our true kingdom and best good. And we are not to think the life beyond holds nothing more nor better than what we possess here, as do the Jews and the Turks. Although they believe in the resurrection of the dead, they carnally imagine the future life will be like the present except for its perfect peace and happiness, its freedom from misfortune, persecution and all ills. It is the prerogative of the Pope and his holy epicures to believe nothing in any respect.

Every Christian, be he lord or servant, prince or subject, should conduct himself as befits his station, using in trust whatever God has given him — dominion and subjects, house and home, wife and children, money and property, meat and drink. He is to regard himself solely as a guest of earth, as one eating his morsel of bread or taking his lunch in an inn; he must conduct himself in this earthly harbor as a pious guest. Thus may he actually be a king reigning with fidelity, or a lord faithful to his office, and at the same time declare: “I count nothing on this life. I do not expect to remain here. This is but a strange country to me. True, I am seated in the uppermost place at table in this inn; but the occupant of the lowest seat has just as much as I, here or yonder. For we are alike guests. But he who assigned my duty, whose command I execute, gave me orders to conduct myself piously and honorably in this inn, as becomes a guest.”

8. So should Christians in all stations of life — lords and ladies, servants and maids — conduct themselves as guests of earth. Let them, in that capacity, eat and drink, make use of clothing and shoes, houses and lands, as long as God wills, yet be prepared to take up their journey when these things pass, and to move on out of life as the guest moves on out of the house or the city which is not his home. Let them conduct themselves as does the guest, with civility toward those with whom they come in contact, not infringing on the rights of any. For a visitor may not unrestrainedly follow his own pleasure and inclinations in the house of a stranger. The saying is: “If you would be a guest, you must behave civilly; otherwise you may promptly be shown the door or the dungeon.”

9. Christians should be aware of their citizenship in a better country, that they may rightly adapt themselves to this world. Let them not occupy the present life as if intending to remain in it; nor as do the monks, who flee responsibility, avoiding civil office and trying to run out of the world. For Peter says rather that we are not to escape our fellows and live each for himself, but to remain in our several conditions in life, united with other mortals as God has bound us, and serving one another. At the same time, we are to regard this life as a journey through a country where we have no citizenship — where we are not at home; to think of ourselves as travelers or pilgrims occupying for a night the same inn, eating and drinking there and then leaving the place.

10. Let not the occupants of the humbler stations — servants and subjects — grumble: “Why should I vex myself with unpleasant household tasks, with farm work or heavy labor? This life is not my home anyway, and I may as well have it better. Therefore, I will abandon my station and enjoy myself; the monks and priests have, in their stations, withdrawn themselves from the world and yet drunk deeply, satisfying fleshly lusts.” No, this is not the right way. If you are unwilling to put up with your lot, as the guest in a tavern and among strangers must do, you also may not eat and drink.

Similarly, they who are favored with loftier positions in life may not, upon this authority, abandon themselves to the idea of living in the sheer idleness and lustful pleasure their more favored station permits, as if they were to be here always. Let them reason thus: “This life, it is true, is transitory — a voyage, a pilgrimage, leading to our actual fatherland. But since it is God’s will that everyone should serve his fellows here in his respective station, in the office committed to him, we will do whatever is enjoined upon us. We will serve our subjects, our neighbors, our wives and children so long as we can, we would not relax our service even if we knew we had to depart this very hour and leave all earthly things. For, God be praised, had we to die now we would know where we belong, where our home is. While we are here, however, on the way, it is ours to fulfill the obligations of our earthly citizenship. Therefore, we will live with our fellows in obedience to the law of our abiding-place, even unto the hour wherein we must cross the threshold outward, that we may depart in honor, leaving no occasion for complaint.

11. Thus, mark you, should every Christian conduct himself here on earth, according to Peter. In the first place, he should know where is his real home, his fatherland. We learn this through faith in Christ, whereby we become children of God, heirs of eternal life, citizens of heaven.

Accordingly, we sing: “Now we pray thee, Holy Spirit, for true faith,” etc., when we depart home from this wretchedness. This sentiment accords beautifully with the text here where Peter calls us “sojourners and pilgrims” — wayfarers in earthly wretchedness, desiring home and casting our thoughts beyond the gates of our sojourning-place. Second, though we must suffer this wretched condition in a foreign land, we are under obligation to render every honor to the host and to respect the inn, making the best of whatever may befall us.

12. The prophet Jeremiah found it necessary to give admonition of this sort to his wretched Jewish countrymen in Babylon who longed unspeakably to be home again and almost despaired because of having so long to suffer misery among strangers when many of their brethren were at home. Other prophets had encouraged them with the promise of soon being returned.

Consequently many of them ceased to till the land and neglected to provide for a livelihood. To these Jeremiah writes (ch. 29:10): “Ye must have patience, for ye are not so soon to return — not till seventy years be accomplished.” Meanwhile, though in wretchedness and captivity, they were to do as he bids in verses 5-7: “Build ye houses, and dwell in them; and plant gardens, and eat the fruit of them. Take ye wives, and beget sons and daughters; and take wives for your sons, and give your daughters to husbands, that they may bear sons and daughters: and multiply ye there, and be not diminished. And seek the peace of the city whither I have caused you to be carried away captive, and pray unto Jehovah for it; for in the peace thereof shall ye have peace.”

That there in their misery they should build houses and make themselves citizens of Babylon, should marry and rear children — yes, give their children in marriage — as if they were to remain there permanently — this injunction of the prophet was altogether disagreeable and annoying to them. And still more offensive was the command to pray for the city and kingdom wherein they were captives. Much rather would they have prayed for liberation; for, influenced by the other prophets, they hoped to return home the following year.

13. Now, how was it with them? The godly, faithful ones had reason to hope and trust in release and a return to their own kingdom. Surely there was no pleasure, no joy, for them in their present miserable condition, as in Psalm 137 they testify and complain by the rivers of Babylon. There they cried and wept and had not an hour of enjoyment when they thought of home. The long seventy years their hearts continually stood at the gate ready to depart, so that they had no inclination whatever to build houses, to cultivate farms, to make gardens, to take wives and rear children.

Nevertheless, the prophet bids them meet all the requirements of citizens of that country; and more than that, to pray for their hosts in the same spirit in which they would pray for their neighbors and fellow-citizens, asking God for peace and prosperity upon the city.

CHRISTIANS SUBJECTS OF TWO KINGDOMS.

14. So, too, Christians are subjects of two kingdoms — they have experience of two kinds of life. Here on earth where the world has its home and its heavenly kingdom, we surely are not citizens. According to Paul ( Philippians 3:20), “our conversation” — our citizenship — “is with Christ in heaven”; that is, in yonder life, the life we await. As the Jews hoped to be released from Babylon, we hope to be released from this present life and to go where we shall be lordly citizens forever. But being obliged to continue in this wretched state — our Babylon — so long as God wills, we should do as the Jews were commanded to do — mingle with other mortals, eat and drink, make homes, till the soil, fill civil offices and show good will toward our fellows, even praying for them, until the hour arrives for us to depart unto our home.

15. He who is guided by these facts, who comprehends the distinction between the kingdom of heaven and the kingdom of the world, will know how to resist successfully all classes of fanatics. For these latter paint this life in a terrible aspect. They want to run out of the world entirely, and are unwilling to associate with anyone; or they proceed to disturb civil regulations and to overthrow all order; or again, as with the Pope, they interfere in secular rule, desiring temporal authority, wholly under the name and color of Christianity.

Having as Christians forgiveness of sins, and being now people of God, children of his kingdom, citizens no longer of Babylon but of heaven, let us know that during the period of our sojourn here among strangers, it is ours to live righteously, honorably and chastely, to further civil and domestic peace and to lend counsel and aid to benefit even the wicked and ungrateful, meanwhile constantly striving after our inheritance and keeping in mind the kingdom whither we are bound.

16. In short, a Christian must be one who, as Paul says ( 1 Corinthians 7:29-31), uses this world as not abusing it, who buys and possesses as though he possessed not, who has wife and children as though he had them not and who builds as though not building. How is it possible to reconcile these seeming inconsistencies? By making the Christian faith distinct from the faith of the Jews and Turks — yes, of the Papists even: by accepting the fact that the Christian’s attitude toward this earthly life is the attitude of the guest; that in such capacity is he to build, to buy, to have dealings and hold intercourse with his fellows, to join them in all temporal affairs — a guest who respects his host’s wishes, the laws of the realm and of the city and the customs of the inn, but at the same time the Christian refrains from attesting his satisfaction with this life as if he intended to remain here and hoped for nothing better. Thus will the Christian pass through every temporal event in the right way — having every possession as though not having it, using and yet not cleaving to it; not so occupied with the temporal as to lose the eternal, but leaving behind — for-getting — the former while striving after the latter as the goal set before him.

17. Therefore, they who presume to run out of the world by going into the desert or the wilderness; who, unwilling to occupy the inn but finding it indispensable nevertheless, must become their own hosts — these are great and unreasonable fools. Surely they must eat and drink and have clothing and shelter. With these things they cannot dispense, even if they can withdraw from all society. Nor is their action forsaking and fleeing the world, as they imagine it to be. Whatever your station and condition, whatever your occupation in life, of necessity you must be somewhere on earth while mortal life is yours. Nor has God separated you from men; he has placed you in society. Each individual is created and born for the sake of other individuals. But observe, wherever you are and whatever your station, you are, I say, to flee the world.

HOW TO ESCAPE THE WORLD.

18. But how are we to flee the world? Not by donning caps and creeping into a corner or going into the wilderness. You cannot so escape the devil and sin. Satan will as easily find you in the wilderness in a gray cap as he will in the market in a red coat. It is the heart which must flee, and that by keeping itself “unspotted from the world,” as James 1:27 says. In other words, you must not cling to temporal things, but be guided by the doctrine of faith in Christ, and await the eternal, heavenly inheritance; and in that faith and that hope are you to execute the trust and work committed to you here, declaring the while: “That which I do here is not the chief good, the thing of real value, for which I live; though such is the case with the world, the Jews, the Turks and the Papists. I hold this temporal life as a tavern, valuing it no more than the guest values the inn where he enjoys food and lodging, while heart and mind turn ever to his own home.”

What tolerance would there be for one foolish enough to declare: “I will not eat nor drink here. I will behave peculiarly, smashing windows and turning things upside down, for this is not my abiding-place”? For the very purpose of advancing himself on his journey, the traveler should make use of the inn, accepting whatever is offered.

19. Likewise should Christians use the world, constantly casting their thoughts beyond this life, notwithstanding they have here house and home, wife and children. These are for the present life only, yet the Christian owes them due consideration, the while he asserts: “Today we are here, tomorrow elsewhere. Now we avail ourselves of this inn, the next day of another. We do not expect to remain here.”

Relative to this subject, Peter in his beautiful Pentecostal sermon says concerning David, who nevertheless was a holy king, that he did not ascend into the heavens, but, having fulfilled the will of God, fell asleep.

Peter, so far from being willing to disparage David’s office and rule, to criticize him therein for wrong-doing, rather magnifies it in glowing terms.

David was a king, and cast not aside his crown; no, he retained his royal glory. He held his office as a God-intrusted one, in the execution whereof he served God. Similarly should the righteous ruler do — in fact, all men in their respective offices and stations. Let them remember they are not placed where they are to choose their own pleasure, but solely for the service of God. Such is their duty so long as they are here — transients, like the stranger at the inn with other guests, who conducts himself with respect to the needs and the pleasure of his fellows, doing as they do, and in case of danger and necessity uniting with them in the effort to help and protect.

20. King David did not regard his kingdom and his God-bestowed blessings as his real glory, but as his office, his opportunities for service in this earthly pilgrimage. In it all he remains a guest, expecting to leave this tarrying-place for a certain abode. Hence he says ( Psalm 39:12): “I am a stranger with thee, a sojourner, as all my fathers were.” How is that? Has a king of David’s glorious rank occasion to speak thus? Is he a guest who occupies a royal throne, who is lord of landed estate and of more than twelve hundred thousand people according to his own calculation? This is David’s meaning: In his kingdom he serves God as a transient here on earth, and set apart by God for that purpose; but at the same time as a citizen of God’s kingdom in another life, another existence, which he regards more glorious than earthly glory, and as affording something better than a temporal crown.

REASONS TO ABSTAIN FROM CARNAL LUST.

21. Such is Peter’s teaching. He admonishes Christians to Christ-like lives and works in view of the fact that they are called to great glory, having become through Christ a royal priesthood, a people of God and citizens of heaven. He would have them occupy this temporal world as guests, striving after another and eternal kingdom; that is, to abstain from all carnal lusts and maintain a blameless walk, a life of good works. The apostle assigns two reasons for such self-denial: First, that we may not, through carnal, lustful habits, lose the spiritual and eternal; second, that God’s name and the glory we have in Christ may not be slandered among our heathen adversaries, but rather, because of our good works, honored.

These are the chief reasons for doing good works. They ought most forcibly to urge us to the performance of our duties.

22. Peter admonishes, first, to “abstain from fleshly lusts, which war against the soul.” He implies that if we do not resist carnal inclinations, but rather follow them, we shall lose our priceless eternal inheritance. To be a stranger on earth, striving after another and better life, is inconsistent with living in fleshly lusts as if one’s sole intent was to remain in the world forever. If you would have the things of one life, Peter says, you must forsake the things of the other. If you forget your fatherland and lie drunken with this carnal life, as does the heathen world in living in unbelief and without hope of eternal life, you will never reach yonder existence; for so you reject it.

It is necessary to strive if we are to withstand the lusts of the flesh; for these, Peter says, war against the soul — against faith and the good conscience in man. If lust triumphs, our hold on the Spirit and on faith is lost. Now, if you would not be defeated, you must valiantly contend against carnal inclinations, being careful to overcome them and to maintain your spiritual, eternal good. In this instance, our own welfare demands the conquest.

23. In the second place, God’s honor calls for it. God’s honor here on earth is affected by our manner of life. We are to avoid giving occasion for our enemies to open their mouths in calumniation of God’s name and his Word. Rather must we magnify the name of God by our confession and general conduct, and thus win others, who shall with us confess and honor him. Christ commands ( Matthew 5:16): “Even so let your light shine before men; that they may see your good works, and glorify your Father who is in heaven.”

24. Peter proceeds to enumerate certain good works appropriate to Christians in all stations of life, particularly those Christians under authority, or in a state of servitude — men-servants and maid-servants. In the apostle’s day, Christians had to submit to heathen authority — to serve unbelieving masters. Peter admonishes Christians to glorify God by their conduct, patiently bearing the violence and injustice offered, and forbearing to return evil; as we heard in the epistle lesson for the preceding Sunday which follows today’s text. But to take up all the good works Peter enumerates here would require too much time at present.

Staying Outside the PLAN - By Encouraging Faith in Jesus Christ, The Son of God

Cousin David Preus also considered himself born to the purple. He promoted Holy Communion with the Calvinists the way Jack & Robert Preus promoted Objective Justification with the Calvinists. Notice the lopsided smile, often imitated by Mark and Avoid Jeske, PLAN. Sorry to say, I knew them all.

The Preus Crime Family joined the LCMS with a vengeance. Robert and Jack Preus, brothers and sons of the former Minnesota governor, switched from the Little Sect on the Prairie to Missouri after starting the LCMS/WELS-ELS fake schism. Robert was the first graduate of New Ulm's tiny seminary.

Now they all belong to the PLAN - Pan-Lutheran Association of Nonbelievers. The color green denotes the filthy lucre uniting them:

  1. Anti-Means of Grace
  2. Anti-Justification by Faith
  3. Anti-Efficacy of the Word
  4. Anti-King James Version (aka the Tyndale-Luther Bible).
  5. Thrivent sycophants.
One reader has stated that he wants to see those Lutherans organized who do not bow their knee to the PLAN or beg funds from Thrivent, the promiscuous father of the PLAN.

I helped organize independent little gatherings years ago, when Bishop Heiser (nee Jim Heiser LCMS) showed up to sheep-steal. Some good things happened in spite of his toxic presence. 

The advantage we have now is the ease of communication by video, blogs, the various social media, including YouTube. 

We need several generations ready and willing to learn more about Lutheran doctrine and the basics of the Bible. I am working on The Bible Book: The KJV Reborn for Those Who Love the KJV. Our new venture is videos, so various topics like the Bible can be presented via YouTube and UStream.

That is what I see helping to establish congregations in the future - laity and even some clergy willing to work without dysfunctional synod help and enslaving Thrivent funds. The true Church is not established by funds and organization but by teaching and preaching.





Friday, April 23, 2021

The Cardinal on the Chaste Tree



Norma A. Boeckler has several wonderful depictions of cardinals.


I have noticed birds waiting for their food on branches just strong enough to hold them. Our bushes in the backyard are not strong enough to hold many, and a squirrel or cat trying to climb up is bound to set off their motion detector alarms.

I was taking some cardboard out to the yellow recycle barrel when a male cardinal perched on the Chaste Tree, which is about 6 feet high. "Time for breakfast?"

I went inside and got one of the two birdfeeder storage containers. The cardinal sang at top volume as I scattered nuts and fruits on both barrels. He zoomed down, touched at the recycle, and grabbed some food for a dash upstairs. 

I rang the chimes to let the rest of the creatures know that their breakfast was served. I doubt their need for it, but perhaps squirrels raiding another feeding station appreciate the notice.

Ranger Bob says cardinals are a good sign when they nest in the yard. His mother was so familiar with them that she could add feed to the spot while they were eating, and she talked to them.

Starlings and their cousin grackles hang out together and descend as a group when food is served - if they are not feeding elsewhere. They drop down, cover both barrels, and search the ground. In a few minutes they are gone, but they are not like human at a clearance sale. They leave plenty for the others so each dependent family shares the bonus.

The wary crows eat too, and they look like monsters compared to the rest. 



Little Faith and Less Lutheran

Pan-Lutheran Association of Nonbelievers

"The Baccalaureate service for LSTC's 161st Commencement will be held via Zoom. The Rev. Dr. Kimberly Wagner has been chosen by the students to preach at this worship service."

EDUCATION

    B.S., Miami University of Ohio

    M.Div., Candler School of Theology, Emory University - Methodist

    Ph.D., Emory University - Methodist - But this is a grey area of theology.

***

GJ - For years, ELCA has considered non-Luther seminary faculty to be a positive reflection of their oneness with everyone. All religions contribute in various ways.

The woke litmus tests narrow the potential candidates too, because one must bring the agenda with the resume. Until recently the male faculty were known for their parish experience (often scant), their wives and children. That was standard in all ELCA news releases, including the proud note the bishop was part of Seminex. The ladies who are seminary presidents and professors there have no personal information available.

Theresa Latini had too much information. She taught at Calvinist schools and at Luther Seminary before coming to ELCA's United Lutheran Seminary (an ironic name), where she presented tons of information but not everything. She became the scapegoat for all the conflicts brewing but she was replaced by the famous insta-bishop from California (no real parish experience, plus a short time as bishop).

Thursday, April 22, 2021

Pan-Lutheran Association of Nonbelievers - PLAN - You May Be a Member

PLAN formed a long time ago, though photos of the leadership are difficult to find. This one includes, starting on the far left, Jack Preus LCMS, Someone, Robert Marshall LCA, and David Preus ALC.


I have grown weary of writing LCMS-WELS-ELCA-CLC-ELS-ETC, so I condensed it to Pan-Lutheran Association of Nonbelievers:
  • Their Chief Executive Officer is their Father Below.
  • Their post-graduate training academies are Fuller Seminary, Trinity Divinity School, and Willow Creek Community Church.
  • Their bank is Thrivent.
  • Their future is grim.


Pan-Lutheran can be found in many places on the Internet. Lutherans For Life began and continues as Pan-Lutheran. Supposedly WELS Lutherans For Life bugged out of the original LFL to avoid the stench of working with heretics, but they soon became Christian Resources or something like that, affording a bigger income base for the founder.

WELS was covert Pan-Lutheran for years, working with LCA/ALC while acting as if they were too good for anyone, even the ELS. A WELS pastor almost cried when I told him his Michigan District President sat on the Lutheran World Relief board with ELCA. Before that, Missions guy Norm Berg named his LCA buddies in missions, people I knew. When I wrote that WELS gave to the United Nations, various people demanded my proof, so I gave them page and year from the district brag book. The money went to UNICEF. Of course I had to prove it, because only a liar would say WELS threw money at the United Nations. Anyone who tells the truth about WELS is a liar. WELS response - "That's a lie! And Bivens never went to Fuller, even though he bragged about it!"

The son of the WELS homiletics professor said to the class that they had all kinds of options for training after ordination. He named Fuller, Trinity Divinity, and Willow Creek, as his father became increasingly alarmed. Finally, the homiletics professor said, "What about Mequon's classes?!" The fact that the Church Growth names came trippingly off the Balge tongue made me very suspicious. Every dysfunctional part of WELS was devoted to Fuller dogma, i.e. Jeske's Church and Change.

As I wrote before, three items cinch the accuracy of the name PLAN:

  1. The groups agree with ELCA on forgiveness and salvation without faith, Objective Justification. Long ago I had an LCA training tape that denounced Evangelicals for their utter lack of grace. Like WELS - I came to learn - they imagined faith was the opponent of grace.
  2. They treat Luther as the denomination's crazy uncle, though they are happy to make a few dollars from his name at anniversaries.
  3. They love every Bible (ESV, EHV, NIV, RSV, TEV, Jerome) except their own, the Tyndale-Luther Bible called the King James Version. Their favorite translations obscure or eliminate the Sacraments, drop major elements of the Bible, and accelerate doctrinal indifference.
  4. They love every confession of faith, except their own. No need for Calvinists to trash the Book of Concord - PLAN specializes in that art. Have an itch to venerate Mary night and day? - there is a place for you in LCMS-ELCA-ALPB. Is Eastern Orthodoxy the answer to all questions? - that is another tightrope to walk.
Has this all happened by accident? Not at all. 









Wednesday, April 21, 2021

LCMS-WELS Are Just as Woke and Cancel Culture as ELCA And
The Unitarian Universalist Association


The current leaders of LCMS-WELS-ELS-CLC would like people to think they are being saved from the Woke Cancel Culture of ELCA, Unitarians, and Luciferians.

But those Lutheran groups, all born of Pietism, were woke and embraced the cancel culture (aka Stink Eye and Shun, their sacraments) long ago.

The leaders were and are - Leftists. The people who took over hated Lutheran doctrine and did their best to replace it, by calling Lutherans heterodox and other names. Of course, the ELS and CLC started off bad so they could only go downhill - and did.

Let's look at it from a calm, factual perspective.

Where are the LCMS-WELS-WELS-CLC now? They work together under the same financial umbrella as ELCA. Some might say their trotters are in same feeding trough, but that would be insulting to pigs.

Litmus Tests
What Bibles do they use? 

Answer - Anything but the King James Version. The ones who do not like the NIV glory in their use of the equally bad ESV.

What do they think of Luther's Biblical doctrine and Luther himself?

Answer - They constantly teach against Luther's doctrine and openly despise Luther, so they are just like ELCA. They kick people out for teaching Justification by Faith, but protect and defend apostasy, OJ, adulterers, drunks, Romans 1 examples.

How are they doing as denominations?

Answer - They are losing their higher education, their seminaries, and their memberships. But their Thrivent pan-denominational enterprises are doing well.

Lenski's seminary is shriveled into almost nothing.


Lenski - Negative Texts and Positive Truths

Lenski was the most prolific and least photographed Lutherans of his era.


“All negative texts involve the corresponding positive truths, and all positive texts imply the corresponding negatives. When Paul wants us to glorify God with one mouth he opposes two or more mouths. The divine way is union, not unionism. Our Lutheran Church as such has always been opposed to unionism and has always held to true union. The other Protestant churches have advocated and practiced unionism with the fearful result that now they have been corrupted by modernism. Some Lutherans follow this evil example. They cease to be true to the unity expressed in our Lutheran Confessions, believe and confess contrary doctrines, and yet want us to treat them as true confessors. Usually they act as though it is almost impossible to define unionism.” 

 “Yet the definition lies on the surface in our text. True union is that ‘with one accord with one mouth we glorify the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ’ (v. 6). Therefore, unionism is the act that without one accord and without one mouth we pretend to glorify God. True union is ‘like mindedness in accord with Christ Jesus’ (v. 5). Therefore, unionism consists in being of different minds, some at least in discord with Christ Jesus, yet pretending they are one. In other words, unionism is fellowship practiced by those who do not believe and do not confess the same doctrine. Whoever believes and confesses the true doctrine of the Scriptures must not fellowship those who believe and confess contrary doctrines. The dangers involved in unionism are always great, as the history of the Church shows. 

From: Lenski. The Epistle Selections of the Ancient Church: An Exegetical Homiletical Treatment: A Series of Epistle Texts for the Entire Church Year. 1935/2021 LutheranLibrary.org

Tuesday, April 20, 2021

History of the Bible - Draft - The Bible Book:
The KJV Reborn for Those Who Love the Word of God

Gladys Parker, co-ed, Normal College, 1931. My mother's generation enjoyed a classical revival, which gave us sororities, fraternities, and names from Greece and Rome. My father's name was Homer, and we had an Uncle Horace. Virgil was common in those days, but now we think they are funny or rural.

The History of the Bible

Most of History Is Lost

            C. S. Lewis described our knowledge of history as if all the libraries in the world were destroyed, except one, and that was also burned up, except for one book, and that book had only one sentence left visible, and it could hardly be read. We read histories without assuming that the effort in each case is to condense facts and perspectives as much as can be known at that time. The first to uncover something new is often able to own that story when published, accepted, and promoted.

            Yale professor Paul L. Holmer discussed this in a lecture we attended. He said, “There is a new idea every 50 years, with everyone writing about that idea until something else comes up. However, the subordinate writers in-between are always stuck in producing about books. They are writing about that new or creative discovery.”[1] The temptation with ancient documents is to invent something worthy of universal publicity while controlling the information. Rewards are great for the person who discovers or uncovers something new and ancient. The temptation to commit fraud is great, because the supposed facts become established truths in spite of contrary evidence. A good example is the promotion of Roman Catholic dogma, with the claim, “We have always taught this” – Purgatory, the Assumption of Mary, the Immaculate Conception of Mary, the power of the scapular, the infallibility of the Pope, and the ability of the Pope to forgive all sins or retain all sins.

Old Testament

            The Old Testament is written in Hebrew and Aramaic. The sentences read from right to left, which seems impossible for the uninitiated, but the style is not difficult to learn. The Hebrew language is quite different from our Greek, Latin, and English, but learning it opens up the meaning to Biblical students, young and old. One professor described Hebrew as “easy to learn, easy to forget,” but easily remembered again. Greek is difficult to learn but also difficult to forget, because so many Greek words transliterate into English – lamp, sandal, photo, graph, phone, and hydro.

            The original Old Testament has not been trashed and cut up the way the New Testament has in the Hort-Aland era, doubtless because Old Testament copies remained within the Jewish community and particular care was given to each copy. The letters and words were counted to make sure the copy was the same as the original being reproduced.

            The Old Testament books accepted by the Jews, excluding the Apocrypha, are also accepted by Christians.

Alexander the Great’s Universal Language

            One man changed our world and gave his language and culture to generations following – Alexander the Great. When his father King Philip was murdered in 336 BC, Alexander took over the professional army of Macedonia, which was always kept in training, not called up part-time as other armies were. Alexander first united Greece and then sailed across the Mediterranean Sea to conquer Persia, a constant enemy and threat to the Greek cities.

            Alexander turned the largest empire in the world, Persia, into his empire, and exported his language and culture to the lands he conquered.[2] The Romans eventually took over that territory and more, but Greek remained the international language of culture and commerce, much like English is today. Baby Boomers were told they needed Latin to get into a good college, but the Roman Empire always saw Greek as the language of culture. From Greece they borrowed the gods, engineering, math, architecture, sculpture, architecture, poetry, drama, comedy, and republican government. Washington DC is a collection of Greek temples with Roman touches. Rome’s unique accomplishments are perhaps overstated, so there is a saying – “The Romans had the drains, but the Greeks had the brains.”[3]

The Septuagint and the Subsequent Loss of Greek

            One of the greatest achievements of Biblical versions came from the need of Jews to have the Old Testament studied a common language. The name Septuagint is often represented by the Roman numeral LXX for 70. No one knows exactly when it was translated or the exact dates. The translation probably began around 285 BC, so it was available not only to Jews but to those who knew Greek.

            The glory of Greece was far gone when the Son was born of the Virgin Mary. However, the language remained in all territories conquered by Alexander and ruled by his generals afterwards. Rome got into peace-making, often called occupation, when they were called in to settle the constant fighting in the Holy Land, around 60 BC. For a time, people teaching the Bible claimed the New Testament was written in Aramaic, that Jesus taught in Aramaic. No one has found this proposed Aramaic New Testament, a theory which ignores how useless a local idiom might be contrasted to the language used around the civilized world, Koine Greek, or common Greek. They did not use the same style of Greek as Homer did centuries earlier but the simplified Greek of conversation, letters, and commerce.

            Jesus was born in the pagan Roman Empire, seemingly at the peak of its size, power, and grandeur. But the decline had started and rushed to a conclusion a few centuries later, the Western Roman empire conquered by outsiders. However, the Eastern Roman Empire began with the Emperor Constantine Christianizing its lands, which lasted a total of 1100 years, 306AD - 1453. The Fall of Rome led to the fragments of the Western Roman Empire – Europe – adopting Latin Bibles while the Eastern Roman Empire - called Byzantium after its capital city - preserved Greek, Greek literature, and Greek culture with Christianity the main religious force.



[1] These words are paraphrased from memory, summer school at Yale Divinity, about 1980.

[2] His favorite item was a copy of Homer’s Iliad, which he kept in a special box near his bed.

[3] Ignore the San Francisco song. The original words of the poem are – “The glory that was Greece, the grandeur that was Rome.” Poe, 1845, Helen. Compare that to Tony Bennett singing, “The glory that was Rome is of another day.”


Monday, April 19, 2021

Lenski Outline and Statement

 


Another from Lenski:

"The Great Confessional Mark: "What think ye of Christ? whose son is he?" The true answer should rest on the objective fact that Christ is the Son of God. Our confession does no more than to voice this fact as our personal conviction. The utterance of the confession is, of course, subjective, and yet it is not the same as the contrary subjective confession of unbelief, as the latter loves to assume. It is no mere matter of personal opinion or preference whether I confess: "And in Jesus Christ, his only Son, our Lord," etc., or deny: "I believe that Jesus Christ was a mere man, most likely the son of Joseph." For as Jesus himself indicates in our text: there is the invincible evidence of Scripture.

One of the real reasons why the Verbal Inspiration of the Scriptures is being attacked with renewed vigor at the present time is the necessity for getting rid of the binding force of the evidence of Scripture on this as well as on other subjects. If the wall of Scripture stands without breach, all who refuse to confess as the Scriptures place the confessional words into our mouth, stand utterly condemned. We need not say even a word; the facts themselves speak in thunderous tones. For ever it remains true that the confessors of the Lord's deity and of all that his deity involves, have the sacred voices of the entire Holy Writ assenting to their confession in grand, unanimous chorus, before the very face of God; while all who make bold to deny have all of these voices of Holy Writ denying their denial with the same overwhelming unanimity, before the face of God. How can this chorus with its testimony for and against be hushed? Many are sure that it can be done when once Verbal Inspiration has been sufficiently invalidated and has been wholly discredited.

How Our Pets Train Us for the Games They Love



Our Lutheran Librarian, Alec Satin, sent me the link to this wonderful book, My Dogs in the Northland, by Egerton R. Young. He took on missionary work in the frozen north, had little in the way of income, and ended up famous for his stories. 

Alec's theory is that pets teach us the games they want to play, allowing us to think we trained them.

Young wrote fascinating descriptions of his special dogs. Jack was a character that could to the butcher shop and bring home the meat in a basket, after taking along the list and the money to pay for them. Another dog became the doctor for the other dogs and treated their wounds and sores. 

Young's wife had her own dogsled, which she used to visit the native Indians in that part of Canada. The cold, snow, ice, and blizzards - carefully described - would make anyone marvel at the sacrifice and endurance of people and animals in the far North.

As everyone knows, Sassy is all personality. She enjoys pranking me, and I see the delight in her eyes when she has turned the tables on me again. Ranger Bob is her enabler but she does well on her own.

She makes a game out of jumping up on her bed (which she lets us use). She can effortlessly flow up to her spot. But if I am around, she needs to stop and whimper and ask for help. She got to the point one night where she took 15 attempts to get up on the bed but never jumped. I was getting peeved, so I saw down instead and petted her face.

Sassy grinned, because that is what she wanted. In fact, she glowed and smiled with affection. When she thinks I am short-changing her, she gives me the arrogant German Shepherd look, which makes me laugh and makes her scowl even more. But this was her affectionate puppy look. I got up and took my place at the computer. She sat down on the rug again with her head resting on the bed - she wanted more. I got up and petted her face and whispered about her great qualities. She had the biggest grin - or was she laughing inside and trying not to show it? I sat down at the computer again, because she did not want to jump up. She sat down a third time, looked over at me, and smiled. Eventually she made the jump, but she had me trained to spot her trick and pet her face, and tug on her ears.

Now Sassy knows she can get loveys from not jumping up on the bed, but sitting down with her head on the bed - aimed at me, "Time for pets!"

Some other great animal books are The Dog Who Wouldn't Be by Farley Mowat (another Canadian. I memorized the book, reading it first in elementary school.





And - All Creatures Great and Small, James Herriot, English vet, plus many other stories.



===

Sunday, April 18, 2021

Good Shepherd Sunday, 2021. Misericordias Domini

 "He shall feed his flock like a shepherd: he shall gather the lambs with his arm, and carry them in his bosom, and shall gently lead those that are with young."
Isaiah 40:11. The Good Shepherd painting by Norma A. Boeckler


The Good Shepherd Sunday service is linked here.



Misericordias Domini – 
The Second Sunday after Easter, 2021


Pastor Gregory L. Jackson



The Confession of Sins
The Absolution
The Introit p. 16

The earth is full of the goodness of the Lord: by the word of the Lord were the heavens made. Psalm. Rejoice in the Lord, O ye righteous: for praise is comely for the upright.

The Gloria Patri
The Kyrie p. 17
The Gloria in Excelsis
The Salutation and Collect p. 19

God, who by the humiliation of Thy Son didst raise up the fallen world, grant unto Thy faithful ones perpetual gladness, and those whom Thou hast delivered from the danger of everlasting death do Thou make partakers of eternal joys; through the same Jesus Christ, Thy Son, our Lord, who liveth, etc.

The Epistle and Gradual  
    

Hallelujah! Hallelujah!
V. Then was the Lord Jesus known of the disciples: in the breaking of bread. Hallelujah!
V. I am the Good Shepherd: and know My sheep and am known of Mine. Hallelujah!

The Gospel              
Glory be to Thee, O Lord!
Praise be to Thee, O Christ!
The Nicene Creed p. 22

The Sermon Hymn #206      Jesus Christ, My Sure Defense - Winkworth translation
          

 The Good Shepherd


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 #50              Lord Dismiss Us    




Prayers and Announcements
  • Treatment and recovery - Christina Jackson, Pastor Jim Shrader, Mary Howell, Lori Howell.
  • Pray for our country as the major trials continue. And help all those suffering from economic difficulties.
  • Pastor Jordan Palangyos wrote, "I am not working with Bishop Jackson anymore."   He is not allowed to solicit anyone from this congregation or our Lutheran friends. He said he is almost self-supporting, so we wish him well.
  • The Bible Book: The KJV Reborn for Those Who Love the KJV  - excerpts posted in the Ichabod blog are opening eyes.

The Bible Book is moving along rapidly and should be in print in June, God willing.
            

Second Sunday After Easter

Lord God, heavenly Father, who of Thy fatherly goodness hast been mindful of us poor, miserable sinners, and hast given Thy beloved Son to be our shepherd, not only to nourish us by His word, but also to defend us from sin, death, and the devil: We beseech Thee, grant us Thy Holy Spirit, that, even as this Shepherd doth know us and succor us in every affliction, we also may know Him, and, trusting in Him, seek help and comfort in Him, from our hearts obey His voice, and obtain eternal salvation, through the same, Thy Son Jesus Christ, who liveth and reigneth with Thee and the Holy Ghost, one true God, world without end. Amen.

KJV 1 Peter 2:21 For even hereunto were ye called: because Christ also suffered for us, leaving us an example, that ye should follow his steps: 22 Who did no sin, neither was guile found in his mouth: 23 Who, when he was reviled, reviled not again; when he suffered, he threatened not; but committed himself to him that judgeth righteously: 24 Who his own self bare our sins in his own body on the tree, that we, being dead to sins, should live unto righteousness: by whose stripes ye were healed. 25 For ye were as sheep going astray; but are now returned unto the Shepherd and Bishop of your souls.

KJV John 10:11 I am the good shepherd: the good shepherd giveth his life for the sheep. 12 But he that is an hireling, and not the shepherd, whose own the sheep are not, seeth the wolf coming, and leaveth the sheep, and fleeth: and the wolf catcheth them, and scattereth the sheep. 13 The hireling fleeth, because he is an hireling, and careth not for the sheep. 14 I am the good shepherd, and know my sheep, and am known of mine. 15 As the Father knoweth me, even so know I the Father: and I lay down my life for the sheep. 16 And other sheep I have, which are not of this fold: them also I must bring, and they shall hear my voice; and there shall be one fold, and one shepherd.

Three of Luther’s sermons on this text:

The Good Shepherd


Background for the Sermon on John 10 - The Good Shepherd

One of the most prominent themes in the Bible is that of the shepherd and shepherding - about 500 references. This is another instance of the Son of God, the Creating Word, teaching from His own handiwork. Flocks of sheep were essential for providing so many products and were useful for the examples used. Sheep are completely reliant on their shepherds, because they have little self-defense. Besides that, their weaknesses do not make them humble. Instead, they will go ahead and do what they want or follow sheep ahead of them. They will crowd into a pen just because one sheep got pointed that way (as our family friend showed us). They continue to push and shove with nowhere to go.

In the Bible, Jesus is both the powerful and loving Shepherd and the innocent Lamb of God. This is where Madam Hulda, human reason - as Luther named it, becomes all confused. It is great sport for unbelievers to ask how the Savior can be the Lamb sacrificed and the Good Shepherd at the same time. But that is how God teaches us, from many different perspectives, so we can identify as the lost sheep of Luke 15 and see Jesus as the Good Shepherd leading his flock and thrashes robbers and false teachers.

KJV John 10:11 I am the good shepherd: the good shepherd giveth his life for the sheep.
εγω ειμι ο ποιμην ο καλος ο ποιμην ο καλος την ψυχην αυτου τιθησιν υπερ των προβατων

John's Gospel has this word order - I am the Shepherd the Good, the Shepherd the good lays down His life for the sheep.

The words used to describe Jesus mean - in effect - I am the Shepherd above all Shepherds. The repetition of those four words remind us of Psalms, especially Psalm 23, and Isaiah's description of the Messiah - "He shall feed his flock like a shepherd: he shall gather the lambs with his arm, and carry them in his bosom, and shall gently lead those that are with young." Isaiah 40:11.

Throughout John's Gospel (but not in his Gospel alone), Jesus uses I AM as the Name of God, with the special significance of I AM and the Burning Bush in Exodus 3. Moreover, the introductory ministry of John the Baptist pointed everyone to Isaiah 40 and the passages following. Some call Isaiah the "Fifth Gospel" because of all the predictions about the Messiah. With Isaiah 40 proclaiming a voice crying in the wilderness, prepare the way of the Lord, and John the Baptist fulfilling it, the region was charged with the thoughts
of John bringing on the Messianic Age they longed for.

But Jesus' statement, now so comforting, incited anger and confusion. Jesus clearly identified as the promised Messiah and was God Himself in the flesh. But the reaction of the opponents was "You are not the Messiah we wanted and expected."

This clash had to happen, because no one could grasp God in the flesh, though they saw His divinity in the miracles and the sermons. His true mission was not their mission. That struggle can even be seen in His carefully trained disciples. To prove themselves right, the opponents had make Jesus weak, a criminal, all predicted in Isaiah 53 and Psalm 22.

12 But he that is an hireling, and not the shepherd, whose own the sheep are not, seeth the wolf coming, and leaveth the sheep, and fleeth: and the wolf catcheth them, and scattereth the sheep.

The hired hand does not protect the sheep, so they run from the wolves and leave the sheep on their own. The wolves catch, kill, and scatter them.

21. He names three kinds of persons or three offices which have to do with the sheep: The true shepherd, which, as has been said, he is himself; the hireling, including all besides him who preach the Law and teach how we ought to live and do good, but do not point to Christ, like the scribes and Pharisees among the Jews of old; and finally the wolf, who wishes to be among the sheep and to rule over them but only works injury and ruin. The wolf is the devil, who also has his messengers and preachers. However, they have not the Word of God, neither the ten commandments nor the Gospel, but they mislead souls by false doctrine and heresies, which St. Paul, 1 Timothy 4:1-2, calls “doctrines of devils, speaking lies in hypocrisy.” Such are now the pope’s anti-christian doctrines, the Koran of the Turks, and doctrines of other sects. These three kinds of teachers have always been in the world from the beginning. We should keep the first, reform the second, and shun the third. None do this, however, except the true sheep, that is, the little flock which knows Christ.

Decades ago, an LCA district mocked the inerrancy of the Bible, saying that people who teach inerrancy "don't have the guts to rely on Jesus Christ." That was the strangest example of cause and effect. When the district president was in trouble with a radical group taking control of a parish (with the pastor's help), the same district president wanted to quote Luther about the wolves and Satan. Luther always taught the efficacy and inerrancy of the Scriptures. In fact, the Latin words for inerrancy and infallibility are in the Large Catechism, part of our Book of Concord.

The Good Shepherd is the standard because He died for our sins in our stead. No one can approach His excellence and His grace and mercy. Pastor is Latin for shepherd, so pastors are to protect and care for their flock, keeping wolves away. One part of this is providing spiritual food and drink, so the flock is filled with Scriptural knowledge and strengthened against the wiles of Satan. He may have 1,000 arts, but the Word - as Luther wrote - has 100,000 arts. 

13 The hireling fleeth, because he is an hireling, and careth not for the sheep.

In the early days of America, the pastors often stayed in the parish their entire lives. When denominations gained more control, they began moving men around, so the best way to have a larger congregation and more comforts was to get a better call. 

14 I am the good shepherd, and know my sheep, and am known of mine.

There is only one Good Shepherd because He alone is innocent of sin yet died as a criminal and blasphemer. Everything possibly wrong was done against Him, because He was sent to be the atoning sacrifice. Blood sacrifice stopped at the Temple when the Roman army came in and destroyed it. Another rebellion caused even more damage and the Jewish people were forbidden to enter the area. The priesthood could no longer do their jobs because Jesus was and is the priest and the sacrifice.

I never understood Melchizedek (King of Righteousness) very well until I saw the passage in Hebrews - again - and looked at Lenski. Abraham honored Melchizedek because that man represented the eternal priesthood of the Son. Centuries of blood sacrifice in the Temple and the Passover meals featuring the spotless lamb taught the people the meaning of Atonement. Jesus fulfilled it, and that is the heart of the Gospel.

Faith comes from hearing the Report of the Gospel (Isaiah 53, Romans 10). Faith is the access we have to the grace of God in Jesus Christ the Son of God. 

Isaiah 53 Who hath believed our report? and to whom is the arm of the Lord revealed?

Romans 10:16 But they have not all obeyed the gospel. For Esaias saith, Lord, who hath believed our report? 17 So then faith cometh by hearing, and hearing by the word of God.

One of my graduate students in Old Testament expressed her change of perspective well.

"Growing up in a strict denomination, I always felt a sense of guilt when I did things wrong.  I have to admit that the one thing I began to resent about the church is that we were "scared" into doing the right thing.  We were told of God's love, but guilt was always there.  Throughout this course, I have seen that God's love is what we experience even when we sin.  I have seen that there is no end to God's love, He is there for us and He will forgive us and give us another chance.  He is the God of another chance, not just a second chance.  All is takes is faith in God and he will transform us."

Those who rely on fear, or the Law, or their works will never provide comfort in the Gospel of Jesus Christ.

15 As the Father knoweth me, even so know I the Father: and I lay down my life for the sheep. 

Sometimes people present the loving and gracious Jesus but leave the imaginary picture of God the Father, angry and punishing. The picture in Roman Catholicism is a kindly and helpful Blessed Virgin Mother, but an angry Jesus as judge.

St. John's true picture is that Jesus is a perfect mirror of God's love, mercy, and forgiveness. The anger of Jesus is aimed at little-faith and even more at no-faith. 

John 16 - 8 And when He (the Holy Spirit) is come, he will reprove the world of sin, and of righteousness, and of judgment:

9 Of sin, because they believe not on me;

And how is this expressed by the Holy Spirit? - In the written and spoken Scriptures, in preaching and teaching. Flipping to the positive side, the Holy Spirit will teach faith in Jesus and oppose doubt and rejection. The foundational sin is lack of faith - not the carnal sins or covert sins but not believing in Jesus Christ.

16 And other sheep I have, which are not of this fold: them also I must bring, and they shall hear my voice; and there shall be one fold, and one shepherd.

This too was confounding, because Judaism was largely an ethnic religion and very limited by its language, worship, and customs. Christianity - and this was a struggle - went out to all races and types, using the universal language of Greek. The Old Testament was already in Greek and the New Testament was written only in Greek until expansion made translations necessary.

There is only True Church, and that consists in those who believe in Jesus alone as their Savior, to take away their sins and give them eternal life.