Showing posts with label Wauwatosa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wauwatosa. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 5, 2013

Mr. Wauwatosa, Brett Meyer, and Paul Rydecki Comment on Luther


Three Volumes of Wauwatosa!


One of those blog-for-about-a-week blogs and then quit. <<<---Mequon graduates. That is an embedded link for the Wauwatose Gospel of Universal Salvation. Click on it.






Peter Prange, Mr. Wauwatosa said...
How are the words of the Apostle Paul in 1 Timothy 4:9,10 to be understood? "This is a trustworthy saying that deserves full acceptance (and for this we labor and strive), that we have put our hope in the living God, who is the Savior of all men, and especially of those who believe."

It seems to me that St Paul is making a distinction here between believers and unbelievers, but that it would be proper to say on the basis of this passage that, objectively speaking, Jesus is the Savior of unbelievers, that the Father's wrath over against all sin has been appeased by the perfect, once for all, sacrifice of Jesus. Jesus is "especially" the Savior of those who believe, because they will actually benefit from his saving work. But, objectively speaking, Jesus is also the Savior of those who do not believe, right?

Also, isn't the basis of an unbeliever's ultimate judgment the fact that he stubbornly refused to believe something that was objectively true? (Mt 23:37) If something is not really true until I believe it, how can I be condemned for not believing it? I can't be held accountable - can I? - because it wasn't true/real, since I never believed it. (I hope that makes sense).

Help me understand what I'm missing.
Rev. Paul A. Rydecki said...
Pete, those are good questions.

First, the question about 1 Tim. 4:9. “…the Savior of all men, especially of those who believe.” Melanchthon and Chemnitz (in their respective Loci) both conclude that God is the Savior of all men in the sense of divine Preservation, that is, with respect to the earthly gifts He gives to all men such as sunshine, rain, harvests, etc., while He is the spiritual Savior of believers in Christ.

Gerhard cites several other Fathers who share this understanding, such as Ambrose and Jerome. He cites Theophylact who explains this verse as a parallel to 1 Tim. 2:4, “God wants all men to be saved.” Gerhard’s personal understanding is that “God is the Savior of all on account of the universal acquisition of salvation obtained through Christ, and because of the universal mercy of God who seriously desires the salvation of all; but He is especially the Savior of believers on account of both the acquisition and the application of salvation.”

I am happy with any of these interpretations, though I favor Gerhard. I am more than willing to speak of Christ having obtained or acquired salvation for all, just as I am willing to say that Christ obtained or acquired righteousness for all, or that Christ has acquired eternal life for all. But not all have been made alive, not all have been declared righteous, and not all have been saved, because that includes the application of the benefit.
But I am equally persuaded by Luther’s interpretation of John 1, which would apply just as well to this passage:

He says “it enlightens all people who come into this world”; this is without a doubt said of all human beings who are born. St. Augustine says one must interpret the passage to mean that no man is enlightened except by this light, in the same way that one customarily says of a teacher in a city, where there is no other teacher, that this teacher teaches everyone in the city, i.e., there is no teacher in this city except this one. He alone has all the pupils. Saying this does not mean that he is teaching all the people in the city, but merely that there is only one teacher in the city and that nobody is taught by another person.

Thus here, too, the evangelist did not intend that John or any other human being or any creature should be the light, but that there is only one light which illumines all men and that not a single human being could come upon the earth who could be illumined by anybody else. I do not know how to disagree with this interpretation; for in the same manner also St. Paul writes in Romans 5[:18]: “As through one man’s sin condemnation has come over all men, so through one man’s righteousness justification has come over all men.” Yet not all men are justified through Christ, nevertheless he is the man through whom all justification comes. It is the same here. Even if not all men are illumined, yet this is the light from which alone all illumination comes. (AE:52:71)


Continued…
Rev. Paul A. Rydecki said...
…Continued

When you say “the Father's wrath over against all sin has been appeased by the perfect, once for all, sacrifice of Jesus,” that is true wherever Christ is. But where Christ is not, there the Father’s wrath abides (John 3:36). Or as Luther says, To the extent that Christ rules by His grace in the hearts of the faithful, there is no sin or death or curse. But where Christ is not known, there these things remain. (AE:26:282), or This does not mean that there is no sin in us, as the sophists have taught when they said that we must go on doing good until we are no longer conscious of any sin; but sin is always present, and the godly feel it. But it is ignored and hidden in the sight of God, because Christ the Mediator stands between; because we take hold of Him by faith, all our sins are sins no longer. But where Christ and faith are not present, here there is no forgiveness of sins or hiding of sins. On the contrary, here there is the sheer imputation and condemnation of sins. (AE:26:133).

You asked, “isn't the basis of an unbeliever's ultimate judgment the fact that he stubbornly refused to believe something that was objectively true?”

Well, yes, but what is it he is supposed to believe? That all people, including he, have already been justified, or that Christ has already saved him? Not at all, but that “whoever believes and is baptized shall be saved.” He is to believe a promise. He is to believe in the objective reality that is Christ Jesus and the satisfaction He made for sin and the righteousness that He offers in the Word of the Gospel.

But no, the thing promised does not already have to have happened in order for someone to believe a promise. One does not have to believe he has already been justified in order to be justified. In the same way, Abraham believed God and it was credited to him for righteousness. He believed a promise. The promise is objective. Again, “whoever believes and is baptized will be saved,” (or any number of promises). God makes a promise of justification to all who believe (Rom. 3:22,26). In the same way, the Ten Lepers did not need to believe that they were already healed before they came to Jesus for healing. They came trusting in His Word, His power, and His will to heal them. Christ Himself was the object of their faith, and Jesus said to the one who returned, “Your faith has saved you.” 
Brett Meyer said...
Just wanted to add an observation regarding this statement, "If something is not really true until I believe it, how can I be condemned for not believing it? I can't be held accountable - can I? - because it wasn't true/real, since I never believed it. (I hope that makes sense)."

This is a dilemma caused by the doctrine of Objective Justification establishing a false object of faith. UOJ teaches that the object of faith, the only thing that can create faith, is that the individual has already been declared by the omnipotent God to be justified: forgiven all sin, guiltless, righteous and worthy of eternal life.

But the true object of the Holy Spirit's faith is Christ, and Him crucified for each individual's sins. The promise is that by believing in Christ the individual will die to sin, die to the Law, be raised again to live under God's grace being Spiritually minded, receive Christ's righteousness for the forgiveness of all sins and eternal salvation. But mark this - the object of the faith of Holy Scripture is Christ. It is not sins already forgiven.

John 11:25 Jesus said unto her, I am the resurrection, and the life: he that believeth in me, though he were dead, yet shall he live:

John 3:18 He that believeth on him is not condemned: but he that believeth not is condemned already, because he hath not believed in the name of the only begotten Son of God.

Mark 9:42 And whosoever shall offend one of these little ones that believe in me, it is better for him that a millstone were hanged about his neck, and he were cast into the sea.

John 1:12 But as many as received him, to them gave he power to become the sons of God, even to them that believe on his name:

John 6:29 Jesus answered and said unto them, This is the work of God, that ye believe on him whom he hath sent.

John 20:31 But these are written, that ye might believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God; and that believing ye might have life through his name.

Acts 16:31 And they said, Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ, and thou shalt be saved, and thy house.

Acts 19:4 Then said Paul, John verily baptized with the baptism of repentance, saying unto the people, that they should believe on him which should come after him, that is, on Christ Jesus.

Clearly these are but a few of the Word's of God which declare the object of faith is Christ and not the forgiveness of sins.

Understanding this critical part of Christ's Gospel eliminates any need for the terms Objective and Subjective. Especially in light of the fact that the work of the Holy Spirit graciously working Godly contrition over sin and faith in Christ alone for the forgiveness of sins and eternal life is equally as Objective as Christ's atonement for the world's sins in that it is all a work of God without any contribution from man. There has never been a need or reason for differentiating between Objective and Subjective when faithfully confessing God's Word.

I hope this helps clarify these critical issues.
Brett Meyer said...
Providing examples that the doctrine of Universal Objective Justification teaches a false object of faith which is contrary to the object of the Holy Spirit's faith. Compare these quotes to God's Word quoted above:

District President Jon Buchholz
“But the concept of an entirely Christocentric, completed forgiveness for all people that exists before faith and as the object of saving faith is found even in the writings of the ancient church fathers.” Page 11

Kurt Marquart being approvingly quoted by Pastor Jon Buchholz
“Absolution is prior to, and creates faith, not vice versa.” Page 32

Marquart
“On the one hand forgiveness is the result of faith, and thus comes after faith, and on the other hand it is the object of faith and therefore goes before faith.” Page 34

Buchholz
“It is very clear here that forgiveness, in the form of the absolution, exists before and independently of faith, and creates or gives birth to it. Forgiveness or absolution (that is, the Gospel itself) creates faith; faith merely receives or accepts forgiveness. Absolution can exist without faith (although its benefits of course go to waste unless faith receives them), but faith cannot exist without absolution.107” Page 35
http://azcadistrict.com/sites/default/files/papers/Buchholz_2012-10.pdf

Jon Buchholz
“The general justification accomplished in God’s great exchange at the cross provides the object for justifying faith which personally grasps the objective truth.” Page 6
http://www.wlsessays.net/files/BuchholzJustification1.pdf
Peter Prange said...
Thanks, Paul, for your kind attention to my question and comment.

Much as I appreciate what "the fathers" had to say about 1 Timothy 4:9,10, I'm more interested in what our Savior says through the inspired pen of the Apostle. I have a hard time understanding how most of the commentators you quoted could argue that Paul's words are analogous to Jesus' words in Matthew 5:45, that Jesus is the "Savior of all men" only with respect to their material well-being. There is absolutely nothing in those words or within the context of those words to suggest that the Apostle Paul was calling Jesus "the Savior of all men," only with respect to divine providence. Is that the message for which Paul and Timothy were "laboring and striving," that Jesus provides for your earthly needs, whether you believe in him or not? No, they were laboring and striving to proclaim the eternal salvation that is found in Christ Jesus alone, whether you believe it or not. They were called to proclaim, "Jesus is your only Savior" (whether you believe it or not, though I wouldn't suggest that you NOT believe it). I agree with you that Gerhard's understanding is the best of those of whom you quoted. The others, in my estimation, can be kindly disregarded.

As for John 3:36, I understand those words to be saying that the reason for the Father's wrath is NOT that Jesus' work of salvation for all people is somehow incomplete ("It is finished."), and I know that you yourself clearly assert that Jesus has made atonement for the sins of all people. The reason for the wrath described inJohn 3:36 is that an unbeliever "rejects the Son," who is, in fact, the Savior of all men. In other words, they will not be saved, even though, for all intents and purposes, salvation was theirs in Jesus. That reality highlights just how sad and stubborn unbelief is (and that God's eternal judgment is so many ways self-inflicted), as Jesus himself expresses in Matthew 23:37.

In the end, I think it's real important that we define our terms when controversy arises, otherwise we are very likely to talk past one another. It is also beneficial, I believe, to heed the advice of Prof. Joh. Ph. Koehler: "This must be observed above all in controversy. Fairness demands that we seek to understand our opponent, not as his words can or must be understood, but as he wants them to be understood. That provides first the right basis for the same understanding of the terms, without which an agreement is impossible from the outset" ("The Analogy of Faith," The Wauwatosa Theology, Vol. 1, p. 263).

I'm signing off, as I don't think I have much more to add to this discussion.
Rev. Paul A. Rydecki said...
I'm more interested in what our Savior says through the inspired pen of the Apostle.

Come on, Pete. Let's not pretend that Chemnitz and Melanchthon weren't interested in what their Savior had to say. We're not talking about reprobates here. Perhaps they were simply relying on the analogy of faith, which makes it clear that God has not already "saved" all men, since most men remain condemned in Satan's kingdom and will never be "saved" at all--which isn't God's fault, but it's still the reality.

The work of "salvation," as defined by Scripture, is "finished" when the Holy Spirit brings people into the kingdom of Christ. The Holy Spirit has a vital role in God's plan of salvation. Father, Son and Spirit.

Christ's completed work was the earning or meriting or acquiring of the gift of salvation. He was not finished "saving" people at Calvary. To say that salvation was "finished" at Calvary is, at best, imprecise. That's why the Scriptures rightly say that "Baptism now saves you."

You can't say that the wrath of John 3:36 is only for "rejecting" the Son. You can't reject something that has never been presented to you, and children when they are conceived and born, like all who have never even heard the Gospel, cannot be said to "reject" the Son about whom they have never heard. Nevertheless, the Scriptures say that they are born in sin and are children of wrath until they are converted. Surely you are not saying that people are born with a righteous status before God until they hear the Gospel and reject it?

The simpler answer is that they are born as sinners, condemned because they have no righteousness with which to be justified. Since they do not know Christ, they do not trust in Christ and so do not receive His righteousness, which comes only by faith. Therefore, they remain under wrath and were never justified in the first place.
Rev. Paul A. Rydecki said...
Brett, you highlighted a major sticking point in this whole discussion.

You quoted DP Buchholz as saying, "The general justification accomplished in God’s great exchange at the cross provides the object for justifying faith which personally grasps the objective truth."

First of all, history is finally revealing the truth that the Lutheran Church, from its very beginning absolutely rejected the notion of a "general justification." Hunnius has made than abundantly clear.

The second point has to do with "God's great exchange." There is a critical difference here between the two sides. The UOJ side teaches that God's great exchange was "finished" or completed 2,000 years ago.

But that is not what Luther taught about the "blessed exchange" (as he called it). More importantly, it is not what the Scriptures teach.

The Scriptures teach (2 Cor. 5:21) that God made Him who knew no sin to be sin for us, so that we might become the righteousness of God in Him.

UOJ proponents read (or at least treat) this verse as saying that "all people were in Christ when He died on the cross and all people became the righteousness of God at that moment." In other words, the sins of all were charged to Christ, and His righteousness, in turn, was imputed to all people.

(Buchholz tries to run away from the term "imputed" here because the imputation of Christ's righteousness is so clearly tied to faith alone. But one cannot have the justification of sinners apart from the imputation of righteousness.)

The Scriptures teach that the sins of all were charged to Christ and He suffered for them all on the cross. But the other part of the "exchange," where His righteousness is imputed to sinners, was not completed 2,000 years ago, but only takes place as the Holy Spirit brings people to faith in Christ. His righteousness is only credited or imputed to believers, although He suffered for the sins of all.

The dangerous teaching of UOJ creates a fictional "completed exchange" at the cross and makes it the object of faith, so that, unless you believe that you, together with all people, were justified before you were born, you have no saving faith. I know that sounds extreme, but I have heard it put just that way from some of the more vehement supporters of UOJ.
Peter Prange said...
Dear Paul:

I also know that you know how the Ohio and Iowa men armed themselves with so-called "Analogy of Faith" in the early 20th century in order to ignore what the clear Scriptures say about the doctrine of election. My only point is that we should have our discussion on the basis of what the inspired writer has to say. Just because Paul's words in 1 Timothy 4:9,10 don't square with your fixed formula/sytem (or someone else's, for that matter), you're not allowed to dismiss clear words of Scripture by means of the so-called "Analogy of Faith." VDMA.

Grace and peace,
Peter
Rev. Paul A. Rydecki said...
Peter, that's a red herring. If you really want to stick with what the inspired writer says in 1 Tim. 4:9-10, then you will leave it at "Savior of all men" and let it refer to who the living God is, rather than interpret it to mean "the One who has already objectively saved all men and declared them righteous in His sight." I daresay, such an interpretation comes neither from the inspired text nor from the analogy of faith, but from the Analogy of UOJ.
Anonymous said...
Peter said:

"In the end, I think it's real important that we define our terms when controversy arises."

I also think that's vitally important especially in this debate.

The Book of Concord defines Justification as taking place "by grace alone, through faith alone, through the Word alone" (Solid Declaration III:25 et al.).

Today we have a new definition - or new way of parsing the definition - of Justification that does not include faith or the Word (i.e. "Objective Justification"). Hasn't this new definition been what causes confusion and contributes to faulty ways of explaining how a person is saved (righteous saints in hell, etc.)?

What was inadequate with the "old way" of defining Justification that we needed to come up with a "new and improved version." If it's because there is confusion about the role of faith in a person's salvation, how about re-affirming the definition and role of faith - as the Book of Concord does adequately.

These theologians have a definition of Justification that seem to be at odds with each other. Who's right? Who's wrong? Can there be a compromise position?:

http://www.intrepidlutherans.com/2013/02/chemnitz-on-judicial-or-forensic.html

+ Pr. Jim Schulz

Thursday, October 25, 2012

Wauwatosa - Ambiguous Language about UOJ.
UOJ and Jon Buchholz Explained

August Pieper wrote Isaiah II,  got rid of Kohler.

He wrote Biblical Christology, a good summary.

Kohler was an architect and church historian,
a real brain, so WELS got rid of him.
He is the saint/martyr of the Protest'ants.

A Michigan reader asked:


Weren't Kohler, Schaller & A. Pieper responsible for the Wauwatosa Theology books?  I'm forgetting the early WELS details. 
Here is the last sentence from the first paragraph of your post:
  
If we find that the idea of reconciliation bears a close resemblance to those of propitiation and satisfaction, so that we slip from the one into the other almost without noticing it, we need not be disturbed; for we are not called upon to establish a regular logical sequence of these terms, but to accept each one at its full value without cavil.
The "without cavil" ending is good, but the flow of that sentence, one long 'if', suggests to me a reasoned extension allows the inclusion of justification though that might be outside of the broader context. 
Likewise, the last sentence in the second paragraph, when it includes the knowledge of justification with reconciliation in the giving of the Word, could be read as a hedge that would allow inclusion of justification in reconciliation, which would have happened at the crucifixion.
Thus the giving or establishing of this Word (of reconciliation) is a consequence of the reconciliation and therefore at the same time includes the knowledge of the justification of the sinner, which indeed is involved in the reconciliation, but is not identical with it. –
Maybe it is just his manner of presentation that I find suspicious.  Taking just his words, you are right; he is not selling UOJ.  But I can see that how he says it can be extended to become objective justification. 
Even Hoeneke can be read two ways.  Maybe it is just WELS writers have never been totally sure of what they wanted to say, or never careful enough to allow no misinterpretation.
Interesting quotations though.  Thanks. 

***

GJ - 


 … we submit to no man, be his name Luther or Walther, Chemnitz or Hoenecke, Gerhard or Stoeckhardt, so long as we have clear Scripture on our side. . . . We esteem the fathers highly, far higher than ourselves as far more learned and more devout than we are. Therefore, we want to use them, particularly Luther, as guides to Scripture, and to test their doctrines a hundred times before we reject them. But authorities equal to Scripture or opposed to Scripture they may never become for us, or we shall be practicing idolatry. . "

More from the same blog:

They saw that the conservative synods of the Lutheran church were falling victim to the same error that Luther denounced - putting the authority of the church fathers above that of Scripture. Pieper called this authority-theology.

"We renounce this authority-theology anew. It causes so much damage to the church. It is unfaithfulness to the Lord; slavery to men; it brings errors with it. But it also makes the mind narrow and the heart small. . . . Dogmatic training perhaps makes one orthodox, but it also easily makes one orthodoxist, intolerant, quarrelsome, hateful, and easily causes division in the church.
. .
Scripture is at once narrow and broad. The study of it makes the heart narrow to actual false doctrine and heresies, but broad toward various human expressions and presentations. It does not accuse of false doctrine unnecessarily; it teaches us to bear and suffer in love the mistakes of the weak. It keeps the unity of the spirit in the bond of peace. Therefore we want to entirely do away with this dogmatic authority-theology, and to sink ourselves ever deeper into Scripture and to promote it above all else. We know that in doing so we will best serve the church.”

- August Pieper (1913), Quoted by Mark Braun in The Wauwatosa Gospel (2002). p 25.

---

This blog died five years ago, but it is fun to read the self-glorification of WELS, which leaves me gasping for breath - it is so funny:


***

GJ - No single word describes the dogma and attitude of WELS better than Wauwatosa

Their attitude, as revealed above, was typically anti-Confessional. In renouncing authority-theology, Augie made himself the authority, who could judge the two norms of Scripture (ruling norm) and the Confessions (the norm ruled by the Scriptures).

One Pieper to rule them all, and in the darkness bind them. Trying to explain the split is so complicated that few understand all the events that led to the president of the seminary being ousted over a paper. Could that happen today in WELS? It just did.

From Augie to John Jeske (same family - Kevin Hastings a has a great joke, which I cannot repeat) to Mark Jeske - identical arrogance, foolishness, and ego. People like that do not care how many bodies they trample on, how many congregations they divide and destroy.

Jon Buchholz announced that UOJ was "settled doctrine for 150 years" in WELS, even though the opposite is true. Besides that, Jon made it clear that HE was the authority.

Ambiguity and philosophical dancing-around are two characteristics of anti-confessional writing. 

Why are the Wauwatosans difficult to read, the Concordists easy to read? The Wauwatosans are wrapped up in all their modern philosophical training, German literature angst, and self-admiration.

WELS has always wanted to define itself as distinctly different from Missouri, and the green eyes of jealousy are never missing from that comparison.

Walther was very much their type of theologian - only a bachelor's degree but full of himself, a poor exegete, an Antinomian Pietist. The trouble is, he got a big operation going by controlling it all himself, and WELS kept tearing itself up with conflicts and ugly behavior.

Ambiguity about UOJ versus justification by faith is easy to find in:
  • Hoenecke.
  • Lenski.
  • Schaller.
Two forces were at work:
  1. The influence of Pietism and Halle made UOJ acceptable, so we find Marquart and Webber still citing the Halle Pietist Rambach to "prove" Easter absolution.
  2. All American Lutherans were struggling with the Confessions to rectify the errors of the past. Thus they were either publishing Luther in English and German, printing the Book of Concord, and writing anew about the Reformation.
We do not have to defend any given theologian or writer, because there really are two authoritative sources - the Word and the Confessions.

The Intrepid Lutherans were good at stating that classic Lutheran concept, but the unspoken ruling authority there  is Holy Mother WELS, incarnate in Mark Schroeder. Thus real discussion is impossible, lest Holy Mother be offended. Holy Mother is easily and often offended - not by murder, file-swapping, clergy adultery, or false doctrine - but by Luther's doctrine.

Too bad Tim Glende kilcreased his blog, or I could promise another screaming post from him, echoes of Wauwatosa Pietism.

The following graphics explain the situation well.

The Church Shrinkers advocate open communion and no communion.

This describes Wauwatosa and WELS today.

Schmauk on Church Growth, Emergent Church, multi-culturalism.

 




This zipped all over Facebook after being posted.
Finally, one of my FB friends told me about its viral spread and said,
"Is that your graphic?"



Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Wauwatosa versus the Book of Concord

Here is a good link to Wauwatosa hagiography.




AC V has left a new comment on your post "Deutschlander - UOJ Is Missing from the Book of Co...":

LPC,

I appreciate your point. I wonder, however, how seriously the Wauwatosa Theologians appreciated this phrase (in bold) from the conclusion of the Augsburg Confession:

"Only those things have been recounted whereof we thought that it was necessary to speak, in order that it might be understood that in doctrine and ceremonies nothing has been received on our part against Scripture or the Church Catholic. For it is manifest that we have taken most diligent care that no new and ungodly doctrine should creep into our churches."

While being careful not to give them the same authority as Scripture, it seems to me the Fathers considered the beneficial traditions of the "Church Catholic" to be very important in maintaining the true faith.

There is a way of worship and ecclesiology that by long use has proved most beneficial in proclaiming and maintaining pure doctrine.

New ways of worship and ecclesiology that are far different from those of the "Church Catholic" usually are a reflection of "ungodly doctrine creeping into our churches."

The "ad fontes" of the Wauwatosa theologians ought to have included the "ceremonies" and "Church Catholic" of the AC Conclusion, not above or equal to the Scriptures, but as a testimony of the Spirit's working in the Church.

These two passages come to mind from St. Paul:

"All things are lawful,” but not all things are helpful. “All things are lawful,” but not all things build up" (I Cor. 10:23).

And:

"For there must be factions among you in order that those who are genuine among you may be recognized" (I Cor. 11:19).

***

GJ - I believe Dr. Cruz was addressing the entertainment aspects of Roman Catholic ceremonies. What gives sacrament-starved Protestants a buzz is often mocked among life-long Catholics. One priest shook my hand and asked, "Do you feel the thrill? I offered Mass this morning." Priests and laity are supposed to go around in a reverie after the Mass.

I see Lutheran clergy, sinuflecting toward Rome or Constantinople, aping high church without realizing they are part of the circus.

I say that with full appreciation for the traditional liturgy. I am even thinking of chanting the announcements.

The emphasis must be on the efficacy of the Word. Our worship does not have to be exactly the same, but all the synods were closer together in liturgical worship 50 years ago than they are today.

The common thread in ELCA, WELS, Missouri and the Little Sect is aping the Maggot (Emergent) Church Movement:
  1. Movie screens instead of hymnals.
  2. Hidden sacraments.
  3. Fat bellies hanging over faded bluejeans.
  4. Shirts best left for emergency spills and changing the oil.
  5. Wretched music.
  6. Few hymns left unbutchered by Spike Jones editing.
  7. No sermons.
  8. Messages plagiarized from Groeschel and other law salesmen.
  9. Forcing Pietistic cell groups on the innocent.
  10. Lawsuits and prison sentences, accompanied by synodical cover-ups.

Saturday, April 9, 2011

Wauwatosa Whoa's -
Rosetta Stone for UOJ in WELS?

I added this link to writings about Wauwatosa and the Protest'ant split.


I am looking at the Wauwatosa revolution as one reason for UOJ taking over WELS many decades later. The initial claims about Wauwatosa, relayed in a positive way, suggest an anti-confessional Pietism that hid behind an alleged interest in Scripture alone. Some of the statements reveal an arrogance that is often found in mainline apostate theologians (like Braaten) who create their own individual ecumenical theologies. They even say "my theology," as if they own their product and want people to admire it.

The Wauwatosa men came from the Walther-Pieper-Stoeckhardt boot camp at St. Louis. Strange dogma has a pedigree, so it is necessary to look at its paternity.

The core of Wauwatosa is its claim to be Scripture alone, at war with doctrinal formulations and confessions. The language cited below is a give-away: the spirit of ecumenical Pietism.

---

Catechesis has left a new comment on your post "Missouri Is Still Selling Their Old Catechism - No...":

WELS readers, learn what this means (from your own Wauwatosa Theologian):

"Surprisingly, in view the importance of doctrinal agreement was in the founding and maintenance of the Synodical Conference, Koehler recognized not only that 'there is not a single truly united external religious communion' in any congregation or synod,” but even that 'there has never really been an external unity of the church.' Yet for
all true believers— regardless of denominational label— 'the inner unity of the spirit in faith
continues.'” Mark Braun, in "The Wauwatosa Gospel" (2002), p 10, quoting Koehler from, “Gesetzlch Wesen unter uns,” 238; emphases in the original.


---


Catechesis has left a new comment on your post "Wauwatosa Damage":

Here are choice quotes from Mark Braun's "The Wauwatosa Gospel" re Pieper. First, p. 5:

"...his observations exhibit two well-attested personality traits attributed to him by friend
and foe alike: a flair for the dramatic and an inclination to exaggeration." This quote has a footnote:

"Pieper was purported to have told his seminary classes: 'Don’t think I became a pastor out of piety. I wanted to go to Hollywood.'"

Once a Prussian always a Prussian.

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Brett Meyer has left a new comment on your post "Wauwatosa Damage":

August Pieper, "Dogmatic training perhaps makes one orthodox, but it also easily makes one orthodoxist, intolerant, quarrelsome, hateful, and easily causes division in the church."

Just how tolerant should a Christian be of false doctrines?

To raise the love of men to be equal to or greater than Christ and His Word is wrong. The result: the glory of the (W)ELS will be it's toleration of false doctrine, false practice and the false teachers who promote it.

Granted I've talked to some in the (W)ELS and LCMS who are not intentionally teaching false doctrines, such as UOJ, but when the false doctrine is shown to them by Scripture and the Confessions they defend the false teachings and listen to and promote the human reason of their theologians at the expense of Christ's Word. The Lutheran Synods have made idols out of their clergy, theologians, Synod and synod administrators.

August Pieper as quoted by the (W)ELS in defense of UOJ:
(In) the third volume of the Quartalschrift his unforgettable article. The conclusion reads:
One cannot oppose any doctrine of God’s Word with impunity; this increases sin and guilt, damages consciences and blinds the heart. One error begets another, as in the election controversy the insistence on intuitu fidei soon brought with itself the synergistic doctrine of conversion. But whoever molests the doctrine of justification stabs the gospel in the heart and is on the way of losing entirely Christian doctrine and personal faith and of falling into the arms of heathenism, even if he ever so much emphasizes justification by faith.

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Brett Meyer has left a new comment on your post "Wauwatosa Whoa's - Rosetta Stone for UOJ?":

The Universalism of the Lutheran Synods:

A Final Word

Franz Pieper, along with Georg Stöckhardt, Herman A. Preus, Jacob Aall Ottesen, U.V. Koren, Adolph Hoenecke and others, recognized the greatness of the doctrine as taught by C.F.W. Walther. And it started with the Lutheran doctrine of Justification- Objective and Universal!

"That’s nice" says the world, "but of course you must believe first before you can be justified. You must remember the great Lutheran tenet, ‘justification by faith.’"

No, I believe what Dr. Pieper taught- there is a justification that exists before faith, before believing it, for all. That is called the universal/objective justification.

"Well, surely you would not discount faith in the order of salvation, would you?" says the world.

I would eliminate faith as a requirement that makes justification true. That would be making faith a work of mine. The Bible teaches that a man is justified by faith, without the deeds of the law. Thereby is the teaching of faith upheld for it teaches the object of saving faith, the vicarious satisfaction worked by Christ.

The picture of the Missouri Synod since the death of Franz Pieper leaves a true Lutheran weeping. For when one considers the glorious beauty of the Gospel as it truly is, as it was proclaimed by the fathers of the Missouri Synod (and the Synodical Conference members), it brings a petition to the lips of all who covet their soul’s salvation that the Lord would again grant teachers who would proclaim it as they did.

What remains to be said in this essay is what would be most important to Dr. Pieper. You, dear reader, must know also that though all men have deserved only eternal punishment and damnation as the result of sin, nevertheless, God has accepted the payment made by His own dear Son, Jesus Christ, in his perfect life, suffering and death. And the Father receipted the payment for all the world to know, for on Easter morning He raised His Son from the dead, declaring the whole world to be righteous in Christ. Now the entire world stands pardoned, acquitted of all guilt. This is the Gospel that was commanded to be preached. Now there is nothing we can do, only believe this, that you are already saved. C.F.W. Walther wrote in 1868: "…you often hear pastors preach, 'You are saved if you believe.' What they should be saying is, 'You are saved so that you might believe."

http://www.franzpieper.com/

Wauwatosa Damage



Catechesis has left a new comment on your post "Missouri Is Still Selling Their Old Catechism - No...":

The so-called Wauwatosa Theology, sounds innocent enough, but did it lead to (or reinforce) UOJ? Did it screw up WELS on the doctrine of the Office of the Holy Ministry? Did it turn WELS into a sect because it "rediscovered" the "Unit Concept" of church fellowship?:

"We renounce this authority-theology anew. It causes so much damage to the church. It is unfaithfulness to the Lord; slavery to men; it brings errors with it. But it also makes the mind narrow and the heart small. . . . Dogmatic training perhaps makes one orthodox, but it also easily makes one orthodoxist, intolerant, quarrelsome, hateful, and easily causes division in the church.
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Scripture is at once narrow and broad. The study of it makes the heart narrow to actual false doctrine and heresies, but broad toward various human expressions and presentations. It does not accuse of false doctrine unnecessarily; it teaches us to bear and suffer in love the mistakes of the weak. It keeps the unity of the spirit in the bond of peace. Therefore we want to entirely do away with this dogmatic authority-theology, and to sink ourselves ever deeper into Scripture and to promote it above all else. We know that in doing so we will best serve the church.”

- August Pieper (1913), Quoted by Mark Braun in The Wauwatosa Gospel (2002). p 25.
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August Pieper Hagiography

by Aaron Voss
August Pieper

August Otto Wilhelm Pieper was born on September 27, 1857, in Carwitz, Pomerania, as the second youngest son to August Berhnhard Pieper and his wife Bertha. The pedigree of this great Wisconsin synod pastor, professor, and theologian was not that of a pastor soldiering for the gospel, but rather that of a soldier in the Prussian army. His father followed a line of Piepers and served in the Prussian army. August’s father eventually reached the rank of corporal, but after a year in this position, he decided the private life better suited him. Pieper’s father was honorably discharged, and he transitioned from one leadership role to another. He became mayor of Carwitz and was highly respected as a peaceable man. He was by all accounts a good ruler, especially because he supported Frederick William III’s Prussian Union. His unionist support looked good on his résumé but could have been detrimental to the history of our beloved Synod.

But God is the God of history. Enter August’s mother, Bertha. While his father was consumed with mayoral duties, Bertha looked over the secular and sacred education of her children. Bertha was raised from the age of three by her uncle, a member of the confessional Pomeranian Separation. She held true to her confessional Lutheran faith throughout her life and imparted these teachings upon her children. Under the steady, loving guide of Bertha, August and his brothers became well-educated and their visible talents spoke well of both their mother and father.

Pieper’s father died in 1869, and a year later Bertha took the four younger sons, including August, over to America. The Pieper family settled in Watertown, Wisconsin, near the Rock River bridge because of the proximity to Northwestern College. The college provided the children with the ministerial education that Bertha so highly valued and gave Bertha employment as the college’s stewardess. Bertha still had a hand in the children’s education and wanted them to be trained for ministerial service. August was no exception.
August graduated from Northwestern in 1876 and enrolled the following school year at the Missouri Synod’s Concordia Seminary in St. Louis. This Missouri seminary was a perfect fit for August. August was an exceptionally gifted student, especially in foreign languages such as Latin, Greek, and Hebrew. There in St. Louis, Dr. C.F.W. Walther could further cultivate Pieper’s God-given gifts, and August could be closer to his older brother Franz who taught as a professor at the seminary. Franz also was a gifted student and three years after his graduation from St. Louis, he took a call to teach at Concordia Seminary so that he could be groomed as Walther’s hand-picked successor.

Pieper’s time at the seminary was not without its challenges, however. A self-described lover of baseball, August was a pitcher and enjoyed playing games with schoolmates. After one game in the sweltering heat and humidity of St. Louis, August and company had to resort to rain water to try and rehydrate themselves. But instead of replenishing electrolytes, August contracted a serious case of typhoid fever. He was bed-ridden for some time in a room at the seminary and was concerned that his deliriousness would make him unfit for the public ministry. But God eventually restored his sound health and sound mind. August proved he was fully recovered when his final examination for a Walther class was graded in the top two of his class. Walther further showed confidence in August’s skills as a student when he, at brother Franz’s suggestion, asked August to proofread the Latin, Greek, and Hebrew quotes in Walther’s Dogmatics. Pieper, with classic humor, later wrote in reminiscence that, “The Missourians therefore can pride themselves with the fact that they have Walther’s Dogmatics proofread by a Wisconsin Synod man!”
And August Pieper was a Wisconsin Synod man throughout his ministry. He graduated from Concordia in 1879 and took a Wisconsin Synod call to Immanuel Congregation in Kewaunee, Wisconsin, where he served until 1885. Walther had once asked Pieper if he would serve the Lord as a pastor in the Missouri Synod, but Pieper respectfully replied that he felt he was obligated to repay the Wisconsin Synod for the Christian upbringing he received after coming to America. From Kewaunee Pieper accepted a call to shepherd St. Paul’s Congregation in Menominee, Wisconsin. During 1890, however, Pieper again was afflicted with health troubles. He was forced to take some months off from the ministry and move to Texas so that the drier climate could restore his ailing throat back to health.

Shortly after returning from the South, Pieper accepted another call in 1891, this time to St. Marcus in Milwaukee. He served God’s people there for twelve years before he accepted his final call, to be a professor of isagogics and Old Testament exegesis at the Wisconsin Synod’s seminary in Wauwatosa, which later moved to Mequon. His forty-one years at the seminary saw him serve as president of the school from 1930-1937 and prepare nearly five hundred students for the pastoral ministry. August Pieper retired from the public ministry of the gospel in 1943 after sixty-four years of faithful service to his Lord and Savior.

Part of Professor Pieper’s ministry to his lay members, students, and fellow pastors was his writing. He wrote ten essays either for synod or district conventions. He helped found Theologische Quartalschrift in 1904 and over one hundred of his articles have filled its pages. In one article entitled “The Proper Separation of Law and Gospel” Pieper sets forth the basic principles for proper division, a topic about which he undoubtedly learned much when he studied under Walther. Pieper’s principal work of writing, however, is found in Isaiah II. This book focuses on the rich gospel message that is preached in the latter half of Isaiah, a topic that Pieper held so dear.

Professor August Pieper’s ministry was an extremely long one but marked with great consistency. Pieper was always on fire for the sweet message of free and full forgiveness found in the gospel. Above all Pieper looked first to understand salvation for his personal edification and so he could then clearly help others understand it. His theology was crystal clear, and his students, congregations, fellow pastors, and readers were always left with the impression of the gospel. He kept his enormous academic gifts captive to Christ and never let his reason get in the way of the pure Word. As strong as his intelligence was, so was his will. The professor was very self-controlled and always found a way to force himself to do numerous exhausting tasks. Pieper especially applied this will and discipline to stand up for what he was convinced was right, above all that Jesus Christ is the salvation for the entire world.

As intense and intelligent as Professor Pieper was, he was not distant from those around him. His students and colleagues spoke dearly of him, and it was clear that he had a good rapport with them. Before the very first period of every isagogics course, the professor would quietly peak only his head around the door into the filled classroom and then quickly pull it back. He would let suspense build for a minute or so, fully enter the room, and say at the front of the classroom, “That’s Isagogics: just a peak.” Pieper not only made his students laugh but also made them motivated for the ministry. He was famous for sometimes dropping the assigned topic for an entire period and create a Stimmung, an “atmosphere,” for the gospel ministry. His students would leave the hour more enthusiastic and motivated for gospel ministry. One former student summed it up: “Pips gave us the Geist.”

God blessed August Pieper’s personal life with his marriage in 1881 to Emma Koenig, with whom the Lord further blessed Pieper with five daughters, two sons, twenty-five grandchildren, and eighteen great-grandchildren. Professor Pieper’s wife Emma preceded him in death when she fell asleep in 1929 before God called him to his eternal home on December 23, 1946. The Wisconsin Synod owes her gracious God tremendous thanks for August Pieper’s extensive ministry. In him we have a model pastor and Christian who always inspired zeal for the gospel and its ministry. His reminder is as important now as it was during his life: “We can constantly grow in the work of the Lord, always become more.”

BIBLIOGRAPHY
Brenner, John. "In Memoriam." Quartalschrift: Theological Quarterly. 44.2 (April 1947): 81.
Lehninger, Max. "Gemeinden: Professor August Pieper." Evangelical-Lutherisches Gemeinde-Blatt. 83.2 (January 25, 1948): 8-9.
Pieper, August. "Reminiscences from Professor August Pieper." WELS Historical Institute Journal. 1.2 (Fall 1983): 48-56.
Westerhaus, Martin O. “The Wauwatosa Theology: The Men and Their Message.” The Wauwatosa Theology, Volume I. Ed. Curtis A. Jahn. Milwaukee, WI: Northwestern Publishing House, 1997. 13-98.
Soli Deo Gloria