Showing posts with label Schmauk. Confessional Principle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Schmauk. Confessional Principle. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 14, 2024

Before and After - Presiding Bishop Liz Eaton - Mysterious Leave of Absence

Before - Liz was elected in 2013


After - Two photographs were published showing a singular lack of joy in her work.

The ironic caption reminds everyone - why silent about the leave of absence for up to six months?

Four months after Eaton's leave-of-absence began, the Lutheran Forum Ovaline Newsletter asked the question, what is going on? Given the Ovaltines' knowledge of all things ELCA, the author should have known. Officially, ELCA is being silent and the Ovaltines wonder why nothing is being explained. The ELCA Constitution allows for a leave-of-absence and a male pastor has filled her role. Why such a stretch, four months, six months!? That anticipated quite a serious situation. The announcement and temporary replacement came after the leave-of-absence started. That suggests a serious crisis, as the photos suggest.

ELCA released a video with Liz featured and added, "This was taped before the leave of absence began."

As I have suggest before, Eaton started a blaze that is now consuming ELCA. I recall her uppity remarks about the 2009 ELCA vote to go all out for all genders. As a local bishop in Ohio, she was publicly sarcastic about people cringing over that vote. Nothing much was going to happen. But it was more like the signs of a tsunami - quiet at first, no worries, the water is actually receding. But then - run, run, run!

They had the keen idea to recruit a new set of male pastors -




Heterosexual men were not going to rush to spend large amounts of money where they would not feel welcome among the feminine males and the masculine females. Seminary enrollments declined anyway and those institutions have caved in, moved to smaller headquarters, and even sold the property, as the Lutheran School of Theology.

There were a few women bishops at first, but now they dominate ELCA's bishop roster. The male bishops list their wives and children, but the female bishops are silent about their domestic relationships. I might have missed that detail. I hope someone fills me in. 






Guy Erwin became the first acknowledged homosexual ELCA bishop - also an Osage Indian. Just as quickly, he became the president of the United (but divided) Seminary in Philadelphia. The previous seminary president was a woman, which was heartening to many, but she had a serious hetero past, which defenestrated her. Megan was there when Guy was promoted to pastor to bishop in California. Megan is suing ELCA for forcing her to resign as bishop. She was stricken from the role of pastors and is now working at Glide Memorial "Church" - as anti-Christian as it can be, but that is ELCA's natural role now.

My conclusion is - the upheaval in California and Eaton's reaction combined to create an ongoing crisis among various political groups in ELCA. Yanking Rohrer from her position - and the pastoral role - made it that much easier to focus on Eaton. Nobody seems to be "Reconciling in Christ," their strange slogan, given what they promote.



"In 1867, Krauth and his schoolmate Rev. William Passavant founded the General Council of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America. The General Council had seven regional bodies which had withdrawn from the General Synod.

During Krauth's lifetime, the LTSP was at Franklin Square.[4] In 1889 it moved to Mount Airy.[4] In 1908 its new library there was dedicated as the Krauth Memorial Library in memory of Krauth.[4]"

Yes, Erwin is now the president of the Philadelphia/Gettysburg Seminary. 

I was interviewed for a job at the Philadelphia Seminary and happily dodged that bullet.


Schmauk was president of the Philadelphia Seminary and a superb author. Augustana College in Rock Island gave him an honorary degree. I refuse to accept Augustana's mail.


Saturday, December 28, 2019

Amazon Review - Schmauk's The Confessional Principle

 Order the print copy of Schmauk's Confessional Principle here.

 Order the print copy here.


Gregory Jackson, PhD 5.0 out of 5 stars
Schmauk Was the Last of the Confessional Theologians -

His Book Is Essential December 28, 2019

The spirit of the 20th century was to accept modernism and to blend all denominations together. Schmauk stood out as one whose general scholarship was astounding. He argued in this book against blending everything together for the sake of false unity. He is still being read today for that very reason.





The ebook version of Confessional Principle - free - is found here.

Friday, October 5, 2018

The Only True Perspective - The Word of God


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Comfort for Christians

Quotes, Hymns and Devotions to Strengthen Your Faith

The Essence of the Word of Christ

“The whole spirit of the Word of Christ, one chief work of the Holy Ghost, and the gravest responsibility and deepest joy of those who confess Christ, is to bear witness to the truth as it is in Christ Jesus.”

Theodore Schmauk - The Confessional Principle:
Lutheran Library Publishing Ministry.
A Great Book Full of Biblical Wisdom and Insights


Download the E-book


The Bible raises ten thousand questions. If you answer any one of them in your own way only, and without looking farther, and say, “This is what I believe,” you are setting up a personal creed of your own. If you simply content yourself with the assertion, “The Bible is my creed,” you are leaving unanswered many of the most important and vital questions of faith and life. And a Church’s answer, more than your own, must be ample to meet all questions. When you refuse to take a definite stand on vital issues in the Christian Faith, but say, “The Bible is my creed,” are you really confessing Christ, or are you taking the problems of religious life easy, and evading the unpleasant but important doctrines which the Spirit of God has brought to an issue in the development of the Faith and His Church in history? – Theodore Schmauk. The Confessional Principle

A Book in Five Independent Sections

This is Dr. Schmauk’s magnum opus on Christian Confessionalism, a treasure of approachable, Biblically Conservative scholarship. Each section can be read separately.

Historical introduction

Part 1: The Nature of the Christian Confessional Principle

1 – The Question of a Confessional Foundation: What is the Question?
2 – How Is The Question To Be Discussed?
3 – What Are Confessions? Definitions.
4 – Does The Church Need Confessions?
5 – Do Confessions Constrict, Or Do They Conserve?
6 – Should Confessions Condemn and exclude?
7 – What Gives The Confession Validity?
8 – Do Confessions Bind?

Part 2: The Historical Rise and Development in Christianity of the Confessional Principle

9 – The Rise of the Confessional Principle in the Church
10 – The Development of The Confessional Principle in The Church
11 – The Confessional Principle In The Augsburg Confession
12 – The History and Tendency of The Confessional Principle in The Church
13 – The Confessional Use of The Word “Symbol”

Part 3: The Lutheran Confessional Principle – Nature, Origin, and Historical Development

14 – The Lutheran Confession
15 – The Origin of the Augsburg Confession. Kolde’s Introduction
16 – Melanchthon’s Unsuccessful Attempts as a Diplomatist. Kolde’s Essay
17 – Kolde on the First Known Draft, or Oldest Redaction of the Augsburg Confession, and its Discovery
18 – The Oldest Redaction of The Augsburg Confession
19 – The Hand of God in the Formation of the Augsburg Confession, as shown by the Course of Events in 1529 and 1530, and in the Letters of Luther, and of Melanchthon
20 – The Augsburg Confession Remained Unaltered
21 – The Augsburg Confession: The Further History of its Editions and Manuscripts. Kolde’s Essay, With A Summary of the Argument as it Bears on the Confessional Question, by T. E. Schmauk
22 – Protestantism Under The Augsburg Confession To The Death of Luther
23 – Protestantism From The Death of Luther To The Death of Melanchthon and to the Disintegration of Lutheranism
24 – Melanchthon and The Melanchthonian Principle.
25 – The Need of A Concordia Realized, and its Origin Attempted
26 – The Formula of Concord: its Origin Based on Kolde’s Introduction and on the Formula in Hauck
27 – The Introduction of The Concordia, and The Augustana Preserved
28 – Is The Formula of Concord A Confession?
29 – The Answer of a Providential Origin to the Question - Is the Formula a Confession?
30 – The Answer To The Criticism Made On The Motives and Men, as Touching The Question, Is The Formula A Confession?
31 – The Answer of The Formula’s Outer Form to The Question, Is The Formula A Confession?
32 – The Answer of The Formula’s Subject Matter, Touching The Question, Is The Formula of Concord a Confession?
33 – The Person of Christ and The Formula of Concord
34 – Concordia Is The Church’s Great Confession of Christ.
35 – What The Formula of Concord Accomplished As A Confession of The Lutheran Church.
36 – The Book of Concord. The Facts of its Origin and Publication. Kolde’s Essay.

Part 4: A Partial Application of the Lutheran Confessional Principle to American Conditions in the Twentieth Century

37 – From the Book of Concord to the Present Day
38 – The Book of Concord and Historical Lutheranism In America.
39 – The Confessional Principle of The Book of Concord and American Protestantism
40 – The Confessional Principle of The Book of Concord and Christian Cooperation
41 – The Confessional Principle of The Book of Concord and The Brotherhood of The Christian Church

42 – The Confessional Principle of The Book of Concord and the Future of the Church In America.

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