Friday, January 24, 2025

Failing Lutheran School of Theology in Chicago

 


Argentina: from Assembly youth preacher to feminist theologian

In this Voices from the Communion, Rev Dr Mercedes García Bachmann shares some milestones on her journey to becoming one of Latin America’s foremost feminist theologians.

Rev. Dr Mercedes García Bachmann was among the first women to be ordained in the United Evangelical Lutheran Church

(LWI) - Mercedes García Bachmann was in her last year of high school when she first felt a call to become a pastor in the United Evangelical Lutheran Church (IELU) of Argentina and Uruguay. “It was crazy,” she recalls, “because there were no female pastors around then and, in a largely Catholic environment, it felt very strange, but it was God’s call.”

In 1986, she made history by becoming one of the first two women to be ordained in her church, five years after its Assembly voted in favor of accepting women in ordained ministry. In the four decades since then, she has gone on to become an internationally renowned theologian specializing in feminist hermeneutics, gender construction and ideological critique in biblical narratives. She currently serves as director of her church’s Institute for Contextual Pastoral Care, a program providing theological preparation for lay people in ministry.

She has also been closely involved with the Lutheran World Federation (LWF) since the 1980s and was chosen to preach at the Eighth Assembly in Curitiba, Brazil, which she attended as a youth delegate. Most recently, she was a guest speaker at a three-day Gender Justice Consultation in Geneva marking the 10th anniversary of the LWF’s Gender Justice Policy.

Tell us about your background growing up as a Lutheran in Argentina?

My father was originally a Catholic, but not a church-going person. My mother belonged to the Evangelical Church of the River Plate and they got married in that church. But then we moved to another town which only had a joint IELU and Danish Lutheran church, so we joined IELU there. As children, we started going to church when we were preparing for confirmation, so I was around 15 years old when I really started getting involved.

IELU is a small church established by missionaries from the United States but after the Second World War, it grew to include many more immigrants from Spain, Italy and other European countries. It has congregations mainly in the north of Argentina and in the capital, Buenos Aires, where I now live.

You were among the first women to be ordained in that church, weren’t you?

Yes, I was in my last year of school when I first felt the call to ministry, but I thought it was crazy because there were no female pastors around then. It felt strange in such a very Catholic environment, but it was God’s call and so, that is what exactly happened. The change in legislation was approved by the Assembly in 1981 and the first two of us were ordained in 1986, my colleague in May and me in December of that year.

What challenges did you face at that time?

In the church it was not so hard as women pastors had been accepted and voted by the Assembly. Although now, with more feminist tools at my disposal, I can see issues that I did not see at the time. It has always been more difficult for women to get good jobs than for men, but it has never been a theological issue since theologians, clergy and laity approved the decision to ordain women. In society, it was and still is rare to see a female pastor, but most people don’t know anything about theology.

Why did you decide to specialize in feminist theology?

It came naturally to me and it was easy because God opened up ways for me. I have never had to fight, like many women pastors, as my church opened up to women's ordination in my first year of studies at the Instituto Superior Evangélico de Estudios Teológicos in Buenos Aires. I did my PhD at the Lutheran School of Theology at Chicago with a thesis on women workers in Deuteronomistic history. Basically, I think it is a matter of justice, in the same way that there are other issues related to race or class and I think it is important to help everyone find their place in the church.

How easy is that in Argentina today?

It is very difficult. There is a lot of backlash and a lot of violence against women. We have femicides on a daily basis. The situation is getting worse and I think it will continue to do so, with our economic problems and the president making disparaging comments about women, there is a growing toleration for violence.

Where can you draw hope in this context?

I think it is more like the Prophet Jeremiah, you know, who felt the fire burning in his bones and could not stop shouting or preaching the Word of God. We have to be stubborn and keep on resisting or countering what is happening. I draw hope when we achieve some little progress, but it is certainly not easy at the present time.

You have been closely connected to the work of the LWF for many years, haven’t you?

Yes, after my ordination I was chosen as a youth delegate to serve with the Commission on Studies but then at the Curitiba Assembly I was elected to the Council for the period from 1990 to 1997. Before that Assembly in Brazil, I got a telegram from the General Secretary [Gunner] Stålsett asking me to preach at the closing worship. I was only in my 20s and at first I thought it was a joke played by one of my friends, but then I realized it was true! It was quite scary speaking in front of so many people, but I asked for some advice and I enjoyed the experience.

I attended the Ninth Assembly in Hong Kong and in 2010, at the time of the Stuttgart Assembly, I was living in Germany to practice my German, so I was able to serve as a volunteer to help with translations. I was also asked to give a Bible study at the Assembly in Windhoek, but at the airport they would not accept my visa, so at the last minute I was not able to go. But I was part of the hermeneutics process that drew up the publication called ‘In the Beginning was the Word: the Bible in the life of the Lutheran Communion’.

How important is it for you and your work to be a part of the communion of churches?

I think it is important to be a part of the global family and I feel privileged to have studied and experienced so much of the life of the LWF. I am a member of the board of trustees of the Institute for Ecumenical Studies in Strasbourg and I have tried to put my experiences to the service of people in my country and my region, but also the wider church too.

LWF/P. Hitchen

Former VP and Former Candidate Kamala Harris Obtains New Title

 

KAMALA HARRIS
Speech Coach and
White House Sommelier

Lutheran Library Publishing Ministry - Alec Satin - Lutheran Librarian

 



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The Denominations Are Gone

The man-made earthworm - breaks down easily, costs a bundle.

 The most ignored item in the garden is free.
 


Luther's sermon on the Third Sunday after the Epiphany is quite detailed and powerful, doubtless because the Church of Rome had completely abandoned the message of the text - the energy of the Word.

I was going to write "the efficacy of the Word" for those who nod their heads in solemn response. The phrases in English are parallel to the Greek text, which is so important - now that seminary students no longer translate or use the original wording. 

So let's use "the energy of the Word" because energy is Greek for "working in." A gardener will say at the hardware store, "Is this fertilizer effective?" That depends on whether the magical stinky formula comes from a chemical company - or  - from earthy Creation itself (earthworms, moles, decaying wood, leaves).

Remember "The Word never without the Spirit, the Spirit never without the Word"?That was taught in Hoenecke's dogmatics book, which remained German only until around the late 1980s. WELS liked Pieper's exotic blend of Justification without Faith, a clever ruse.

The denominations - especially the soi-disant Lutherans - are dead in the water and sinking because they have no concept of energy in the Word of God. So they waste everyone's money with store-bought schemes from famous clergy of momentary fame.

"I was glad when they said unto me, Let us become unstuck." That is a certain sign of spiritual blindness, where a salesman sells a sales product, on people who have tried everything else. That describes most of the Lutherans today (to be precise) and the mainline denominations. 

  1. They meet together at Fuller Seminary and other houses of ill-repute. 
  2. They deny Schuller three times (as Rick Warren did). 
  3. They sob into Willow Creek and its food court.




What marketing! the lop-sided smile of contradiction.


Daily Luther Sermon Quote - "Moreover, he proves his strong faith by a comparison and says: I am a man and can do what I wish with mine own by a word; should not you be able to do what you wish by a word, because I am sure, and you also prove, that health and sickness, death and life are subject to you as my servants are to me?"

 



Third Sunday after Epiphany. Matthew 8:1-13. Christ heals the Centurion’s Servant, or Two Examples of Faith and Love. The Faith and Baptism of Children


III. THE DISCUSSION OF THE DOCTRINE OF PERSONAL FAITH AND THE FAITH OF OTHERS; ALSO, OF FAITH AND THE BAPTISM OF CHILDREN. “Lord, I am not worthy.”

18. Herein is the great faith of this heathen, that he knows salvation does not depend upon the bodily presence of Christ, for this does not avail, but upon the Word and faith. But the apostles did not yet know this, neither perhaps did his mother, but they clung to his bodily presence and were not willing to let it go, John 16:6. They did not cling to his Word alone. But this heathen is so fully satisfied with his Word, that he does not even desire his presence nor does he deem himself worthy of it. Moreover, he proves his strong faith by a comparison and says: I am a man and can do what I wish with mine own by a word; should not you be able to do what you wish by a word, because I am sure, and you also prove, that health and sickness, death and life are subject to you as my servants are to me?

Therefore also his servant was healed in that hour by the power of his faith.

19. Now since the occasion is offered and this Gospel requires it, we must say a little about alien faith and its power. For many are interested in this subject, especially on account of the little children, who are baptized and are saved not by their own, but by the faith of others; just as this servant was healed not by his own faith, but by the faith of his master. We have never yet treated of this matter; therefore we must treat of it now in order to anticipate, as much as in us lies, future danger and error.

20. First we must let the foundation stand firm and sure, that nobody will be saved by the faith or righteousness of another, but only by his own; and on the other hand nobody will be condemned for the unbelief or sins of another, but for his own unbelief; as the Gospel says clearly and distinctly in Mark 16:16: “He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved; but he that disbelieveth shall be condemned.” And Romans 1:17: “The righteous shall live by faith.” And John 3:16-18: “Whosoever believeth on him should not perish, but have eternal life. He that believeth on him is not judged: he that believeth not hath been judged already.” These are clear, public words, that every one must believe for himself, and nobody can help himself by the faith of others., without his own faith. From these passages we dare not depart and we must not deny them, let them strike where they may, and we ought rather let the world perish than change this divine truth. And if any plausible argument is made against it, that you are not able to refute, you must confess that you do not understand the matter and commit it to God, rather than admit anything contrary to these clear statements. Whatever may become of the heathen, Jews, Turks, little children and everything that exists, these words must be right and true.

21. Now the question is, what becomes of the young children, seeing that they have not yet reason and are not able to believe for themselves, because it is written in Romans 10:17: “Belief cometh of hearing, and hearing by the word of Christ.” Little children neither hear nor understand the Word of God, and therefore they can have no faith of their own.

22. The sophists in the universities and the sects of the pope have invented the following answer to the question: Little children are baptized without their own faith, and on the faith of the Church, which the sponsors confess at the baptism; thereupon the infant receives in baptism the forgiveness of sins by the power and virtue of the baptism, and faith of its own is infused with grace, so that it becomes a new born child through the water and the Holy Spirit.

23. But if you ask them for the proof of this answer and where this is found in the Scriptures, it is found up the dark chimney, or they will point to their doctor’s hat and say: We are the highly learned doctors and we say so; therefore it is true, and you must not inquire any farther. For almost all their doctrine has no other foundation than their own dreams and imaginations. And when they prepare themselves most carefully, they drag in some quotation from St. Augustine or another holy father. But this is not enough in the things that concern the salvation of souls; for they themselves are, and all the holy fathers were, men. Who will be surety and guarantee that they speak the truth? Who will rely upon it and die by it?

For they say so without Scripture and the Word of God. Saints hither, and saints thither; if my soul is at stake, either to be lost or to be saved eternally, I cannot depend upon all the angels and saints put together, much less upon one or two saints, where they show us no Word of God.

24. From this falsehood they have gone farther and have even come to the point, where they have taught and still teach, that the sacraments have such power, that even if you have no faith and receive the sacrament (provided you have no intention to sin), you shall still receive the grace and the forgiveness of sins without faith. This they have inferred from the former opinion, that little children receive grace in this way without faith, solely by the virtue and power of the sacrament, as they dream. Therefore they also ascribe the same thing to adults and to all men, and utter such things from their own mind, and thereby they have in a masterly way eradicated and made void and unnecessary the Christian faith, and have set up human works alone by virtue of the power of the sacraments. On this subject I have said enough in what I wrote concerning the articles of the bull of Leo.

25. The holy ancient fathers have spoken somewhat better, although not clearly enough. They say nothing about this imaginary power of the sacraments, but they teach that little children are baptized in the faith of the Christian church. But since they do not explain thoroughly, how this Christian faith benefits the children, whether they thereby receive a faith of their own, or are baptized only upon the Christian faith, without faith of their own: the sophists rush in and interpret the language of the holy fathers to the effect, that children are baptized without faith of their own and receive grace solely by reason of the faith of the church. For they are enemies of faith; if only they can exalt works, faith must allow them to do so. They do not think for a moment, whether the holy fathers erred or they themselves understood the fathers aright.

26. Beware of this poison and error, even if it were the expressed opinion of all the fathers and councils; for it will not stand; it has no Scripture for its foundation, but only the imaginations and dreams of men. Moreover it is directly and manifestly opposed to the chief texts already mentioned, where Christ says: “He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved.” The conclusion from this is in short, baptism avails for nobody and is to be administered to nobody, unless he believes for himself; and without faith nobody is to be baptized, as St. Augustine himself says: Non sacramentum justficat, sed fides sacramenti (Not the sacrament justifies, but the faith of the sacrament).

27. Besides these there are others, like the brethren called Waldensians.

They teach that every one must believe for himself, and receive baptism or the Lord’s supper with his own faith; otherwise neither baptism nor the Lord’s supper is of any benefit to him. So far they speak and teach correctly. But it is a mockery of holy baptism, when they go on and baptize little children, although they teach that they have no faith of their own.

They thus sin against the second commandment, in that they consciously and deliberately take the name and Word of God in vain. Nor does the excuse help them which they plead, that children are baptized upon their future faith, when they come to the age of reason. For the faith must be present before or at least in the baptism; otherwise the child will not be delivered from the devil and sins.

28. Therefore if their opinion were correct, all that is done with the child in baptism is necessarily falsehood and mockery. For the baptizer asks whether the child believes, and the answer for the child is: Yes. And he asks whether it desires to be baptized, and the answer for the child is again:

Yes, Now nobody is baptized for the child, but it is baptized itself.

Therefore it must also believe itself, or the sponsors must speak a falsehood, when for it they say: I believe. Furthermore, the baptizer declares that it is born anew, has forgiveness of sins, is freed from the devil, and as a sign of this he puts on it a white garment, and deals with it in every way as with a new, holy child of God: all of which would necessarily be untrue, if the child had not its own faith. Indeed, it would be better never to baptize a child, than to trifle and juggle with God’s Word and sacrament, as if he were an idol or a fool.

29. Nor is it of any use that they make a threefold distinction in the kingdom of God: first, it is the Christian church; secondly, eternal life; thirdly, the Gospel; and then say children are baptized for the kingdom of heaven in the third and first sense. That is, they are baptized, not to be saved thereby and to receive forgiveness of sins; but they are received into the church and brought to the Gospel. All this amounts to nothing and is only an invention of their imagination. For it is not entering the kingdom of heaven, if I get among Christians and hear the Gospel. The heathen can also do that without baptism. This is not entering the kingdom of heaven, however, you may talk of the first, second and third sense of the kingdom of heaven. But being in the kingdom of heaven means to be a living member of the church, and not only to hear, but also to believe the Gospel.

Otherwise a man would be in the kingdom of heaven, just as if I threw a stick or stone among Christians, or as the devil is among them. All this is worth nothing.

30. It also follows from this, that the Christian church has two kinds of baptism, and that children have not the same baptism as adults.

Nevertheless St. Paul says there is only “one baptism, one Lord, one faith.” Ephesians 4:5: For if the baptism of children does not effect and bestow, what the baptism of adults effects and bestows, it is not the same baptism: it is indeed no baptism at all, but a sport and mockery of baptism, inasmuch as there is no baptism but that which saves. If one knows or believes that it does not save, he ought not to administer it. But if it is administered, it is not Christian baptism; for one does not believe, that it effects what baptism is to effect. Therefore it is another and foreign baptism. For this reason it were almost necessary, that the Waldensian brethren should have themselves baptized again, as they baptize our people again; because they not only receive baptism without faith, but even contrary to faith, and in mockery and dishonor of God administer another, foreign, unchristian baptism.

31. If now we cannot give a better answer to this question and prove that the little children themselves believe and have their own faith, my sincere counsel and judgment is, that we abstain altogether and the sooner the better, and never baptize a child, so that we may not mock and blaspheme the adorable majesty of God by such trifling and juggling with nothing in it.

Therefore we here conclude and declare that in baptism the children themselves believe and have their own faith, which God effects in them through the sponsors, when in the faith of the Christian church they intercede for them and bring them to baptism. And this is what we call the power of alien faith: not that anybody can be saved by it, but that through it as an intercession and aid he can obtain from God himself his own faith, by which he is saved. It may be compared to my natural life and death. If I am to live, I myself must be born, and nobody can be born for me to enable me to live; but mother and midwife can by their life aid me in birth and enable me to live. In the same way I myself must suffer death, if I am to die; but one can help to bring about my death, if he frightens me, or falls upon me, or chokes, crushes or suffocates me. In like manner, nobody can go to hell for me; but he can seduce me by false doctrine and life, so that I go thither by my own error, into which his error has led me. So nobody can go to heaven for me: but he can assist me, can preach, teach, govern, pray and obtain faith from God, through which I can go to heaven. This centurion was not healed of the palsy of his servant; but yet he brought it about that his servant was restored to health.

32. So here we also say, that children are not baptized in the faith of the sponsors or of the church; but the faith of sponsors and of the church prays and gains faith for them, in which they are baptized and believe for themselves. For this we have strong and firm Scripture proof, Matthew 19:13-15; Mark 10:13-16; Luke 18:15-16. When some brought little children to the Lord Jesus that he should touch them, and the disciples forbade them, he rebuked the disciples, and embraced the children, and laid his hands upon them and blessed them, and said: “To such belongeth the kingdom of God” etc. These passages nobody will take from us, nor refute with good proof. For here is written: Christ will permit no one to forbid that little children should be brought to him; nay, he bid them to be brought to him, and blesses them and gives to them the kingdom of heaven. Let us give due heed to this Scripture.

33. This is undoubtedly written of natural children. The interpretation of Christ’s words, as if he had meant only spiritual children, who are small in humility, will not stand. For they were small children as to their bodies, which Luke calls infants. His blessing is placed upon these, and of these he says that the kingdom of heaven is theirs. Will we say they were without faith of their own? Then the passages quoted above are untrue: “He that disbelieveth shall be condemned.” Then Christ also speaks falsely or feigns, when he says the kingdom of heaven is theirs, and is not really speaking of the true kingdom of heaven. Interpret these words of Christ as you please, we have it that children are to be brought to Christ and not to be forbidden to be brought: and when they are brought to Christ, he here compels us to believe that he blesses them and gives to them the kingdom of heaven, as he does with these children. And it is in no way proper for us to act and believe otherwise as long as the words stand: “Suffer the little children to come unto me, and forbid them not.” Not less is it proper for us to believe that when they are brought to him he embraces them, blesses them, and bestows upon them heaven, as long as the text stands that he blessed the children which were brought to him and gave heaven to them. Who can ignore this text? Who will be so bold as not to suffer little children to come to baptism, or not to believe that Christ blesses them when they come ?

34. He is just as present in baptism now as he was then: this we Christians know for certain. Therefore we dare not forbid baptism to children. Nor dare we doubt that he blesses all who come thither, as he did those children. So then there is nothing left here but the piety and faith of those who brought the little children to him. By bringing them, they effect and aid that the little children are blessed and obtain the kingdom of heaven; which cannot be the case unless they themselves have their own faith, as has been said. So we also say here, that children are brought to baptism by the faith and work of others; but when they get there and the pastor or baptizer deals with them in Christ’s stead, he blesses them and grants to them the faith and the kingdom of heaven: for the word and deed of the pastor are the word and work of Christ himself.

Thursday, January 23, 2025

WELS Has Another Scandal - This Time from Thiensville

 

The Sprinter was brought over from Northwestern Prep to Martin Luther College, so the upperclassmen could continue having the newbies sodomize the statue. Even better, the homecoming frolics featured blatant plagiarism of Fire Island sodomites dancing and mouthing the words of "Party in the USA." PS - They all got calls.





The story is in the paper, and Facebook is spreading the story through WELS. Let not your hearts be shocked. When a WELS pastor and council members engaged in cross-dressing at a picnic, they had children putting makeup on the men to go with their dresses. They posed promiscuously and posted the photos on the congregational website, which they made available for everyone for quite some time.

There is a lot more to be said, from sodomizing their favorite statue to protecting their dearest friends. Missouri has plenty of examples too, but they gave up all male schools where degradation was "that's the way we are." 




Testing Zoom Etc with Music

 



https://us06web.zoom.us/j/83101867176?pwd=PbjdwZswmskspHknaIXyGm2W7EDfha.1

Daily Luther Sermon Quote - Epiphany 3 - "This is what we have often said: we ought to believe without doubting and without limiting the divine goodness; but we ought to pray with the limitation, that it may be his honor, his kingdom and will, in order that we may not limit his will to time, place, measure or name, but leave all that freely to him. For this reason the prayer of the leper pleased the Lord so well and was soon heard."

 



Third Sunday after Epiphany. Matthew 8:1-13. Christ heals the Centurion’s Servant, or Two Examples of Faith and Love. The Faith and Baptism of Children


II. THE EXPLANATION OF TWO THOUGHTS IN THIS GOSPEL.

11. When the leper here limits his prayer and says: “Lord, if thou wilt, thou canst make me clean.” it is not to be understood as if he doubted the goodness and grace of Christ. For such a faith would be of no value, even if he believed that Christ was almighty, and was able to do and know all things. For that is living faith, which does not doubt that God is also good to us and is graciously willing to do what we ask. But it is to be understood in this way: faith does not doubt the good will God has toward a person, by which he wishes him every good; but it is not known to us, whether what faith asks and presents, is good and useful for us; God alone knows this,. Therefore faith prays in a way that it submits all to the gracious will of God, whether it is for his honor and our good, and yet it does not doubt that God will grant it, or, if it cannot be granted, that his divine will withholds it in great grace, because he sees it is better not to bestow it. But in all this faith nevertheless remains certain and sure of God’s gracious, will, whether he gives or withholds, as St. Paul also says in Romans 8:26, we know not how to pray as we ought, and as the Lord’s Prayer bids us to prefer his will and to pray for it.

12. This is what we have often said: we ought to believe without doubting and without limiting the divine goodness; but we ought to pray with the limitation, that it may be his honor, his kingdom and will, in order that we may not limit his will to time, place, measure or name, but leave all that freely to him. For this reason the prayer of the leper pleased the Lord so well and was soon heard. For where we submit to his will, and seek what is acceptable to him, he cannot refrain from doing in return what is acceptable to us. Faith inclines his favor to us, and submissive prayer inclines him to grant us what we pray for. As to the sending of the leper to the priests, why it was done and what it signified, enough has been said in the Postil of the ten lepers.

13. However, the saying of Christ: “I have not found so great faith, no, not in Israel,” has been discussed with solicitude, lest it should imply that Christ did not speak truly or that the Mother of God and the apostles were inferior to this centurion. Although I might say here that Christ is speaking of the people of Israel, among whom he had preached and to whom he had come, and that therefore his mother and disciples were excluded, because they traveled with him and came with him to the people of Israel in his preaching, nevertheless I will abide by the words of the Lord and take them as they stand; and for the following reasons. First, it is contrary to no article of belief that this faith of the centurion was without a parallel among the apostles or in the Mother of God. But whenever no article of faith openly contradicts the words of Christ, they are to be taken literally, and are not to be adapted and bent by our interpretation, neither for the sake of any saint, or angel, nor of God himself. For his Word is the truth itself above all saints and angels.

14. Secondly, such interpretation and adaptation spring from a carnal mind and intention, namely to estimate the saints of God not according to God’s grace, but according to their person, worth and greatness; which is contrary to God, who estimates quite differently, according to his gifts alone. For he never granted to John the Baptist to perform miracles, John 10:41, as many inferior saints did. In short, he frequently does through inferior saints what he does not do through great saints. He concealed himself from his mother, when he was twelve years old, and suffered her to be in ignorance and error, Luke 2:43. On Easter Sunday he showed himself to Mary Magdalene, before he showed himself to his mother and the apostles, John 20:14. He spoke to the Samaritan woman, John 4:7, and to the woman taken in adultery, more kindly than he ever spoke to his own mother. John 8:10. And when Peter fell and denied him, the murderer on the cross stood firm in his faith.

15. By these and similar wonders he shows that he will not have his Spirit in his saints limited by us, and that we are not to judge according to the person. He wills to bestow his gifts freely, according to his pleasure and not according to our opinion, as St. Paul says in 1 Corinthians 12:11.

Indeed even of himself he says in John 14:12: “He that believeth on me, the works that I do shall he do also; and greater works than these shall he do.” The purpose of all this is to prevent men from being presumptuous toward others and from elevating one saint above another and creating divisions. All are to be equal in the grace of God, however unequal they are in his gifts. It is his will to do through St. Stephen what he does not do through St. Peter, and through St. Peter what he does not do through his mother; so that it may be he alone who does all in all without distinction of person according to his will.

16. In this sense also is it to be understood that at the time of his preaching he found not such faith either in his mother or in the apostles, whether or not he found then or afterward greater faith in his mother and the apostles, or in many others. For it may easily be possible that at the time of his conception and birth he granted great faith to his mother, and afterwards never or seldom like great faith. At times he may have permitted it to decline, as he did when for three days she had lost him, Luke 2:48. He deals thus with all his saints; and if he did not, the saints would doubtless fall into presumption and make idols of themselves or we would make idols of them, and look more upon their worthiness and persons than upon God’s grace.

17. Now learn from this how foolish and void of understanding we are in regard to God’s works and wonders, when we despise the plain Christian man and think that only the “men with pointed mitres” and the learned know and understand God’s truth; whereas Christ here exalts this heathen with his faith above all his disciples. This is because we hold to persons and dignities, and not to God’s Word and grace. Therefore with persons and dignities we also plunge into every error, and then say, the Christian church and the councils have declared so; they cannot err, because they have the Holy Spirit. Meanwhile Christ is with those despised ones and gives dignitaries and councils over to the devil. Therefore note well, how Christ exalts this heathen. He surpasses Annas, Caiaphas and all the priests, scholars and saints, all of whom ought by right to be the pupils of this heathen, not to say that they ought never to be above him in their opinions and judgments. God sometimes grants to a great saint no faith and to a small saint great faith, in order that one may always esteem another better than himself. Romans 12:10.

Episcopal Bishop Marianne Budde

 


Virtue Online is an excellent source for following the radical left Episcopal Church. David Virtue has published his online periodical for decades, so he has had experience with Bishop Budde, whose galling exploits have almost equaled Archbishop Schori's harmful buffoonery.

 WASHINGTON, D.C. — The debate over whether women should be allowed as pastors has been settled once and for all, thanks to the heroic efforts of the National Cathedral's lady Bishop Mariann Budde. (Babylon Bee)



The latest pie-in-the-face is Budde's attack against President Trump, a level of raw stupidity that most clergy would avoid. The canons of polite discourse are far better than the tired, blistering rants of feminist hags. She might have done a bit better, copying the ELCA female bishops who chanted about letting the Female Holy Spirit burst out of the closet.

Because I’m telling you what, the Spirit is up to something …

Bishops: Amen. Yes, she is.

Briner: … if we would just let her out.

Bishops: Let her out. Get out of her way.

Briner: Open the doors and let her out.

Bishops: She’s out! She is loose!

Thus some of the ELCA bishops got into the media and helped drive the nails deeper into their own synods and seminaries.  The trends started 50 years ago, inching normal men away from the seminaries, at Yale Divinity and Notre Dame. One woman failed to finish her written doctoral exam on time. When the female secretary of the theology department could not accept the exam, the female candidate went nuts and berated everyone back to Adam for being unfair to her.



Bishops: Let her out. Get out of her way.

Briner: Open the doors and let her out.