Sunday, July 6, 2008

Are the Episcopalians Different from the Lutherans?



Pope John the Malefactor, enjoying himself after extending
the Left Foot of Fellowship to ELS pastors and congregations.


Rowan Williams Post-Colonial Paternalism is Underlying Cause of Anglican Communion Angst

News Analysis

By David W. Virtue
www.virtueonline.org
7/3/2008

The ink was barely dry on the Declaration coming out of GAFCON in Jerusalem, when the Archbishop of Canterbury wrote a letter to the Anglican world telling us, in no uncertain words, exactly what he thought. It was revelatory.

Rowan Williams declared that certain things were not in dispute like the uniqueness of Jesus Christ, the imperative of evangelism and the common life of the Communion. All very commendable. But then, he went on a tear, blasting orthodox primates for "lacking legitimacy, authority and integrity", accusing them of breaking the "bonds of affection" and much more.

First, he talked about the "risks entailed" in moving forward. Then he blasted the idea of a "Primates Council" because of its self selection and saying it will not pass "the test of legitimacy." He then said "mutual recognition of ministries" would be strained because of "geographical and cultural divides."

Archbishop Williams doesn't get it. First of all, the current 38 primates are now so divided they can't even take Holy Communion together! It is already in schism. "Legitimacy" rests on who is preaching what to whom. Evangelicals now say that there are two religions operating in the Anglican Communion that are at odds with one another. One is rooted in Biblical faith while the other is a secular gloss over religious language. Does Williams not understand that tens of thousands of Episcopalians and dozens of churches are fleeing The Episcopal Church because Mrs. Katharine Jefferts Schori preaches "another Gospel" (Gal. 1:8)? They want nothing more to do with her or her church.

Does he not also realize the litigation against orthodox parishes is precisely about theology, morals and doctrine and that the so-called "bonds of affection" are thinner than a spider's web, incapable of holding anything together? He got that message in New Orleans, when he listened to all the voices in the HOB. Williams came away saying that TEC had met the demands of the Windsor Report! It was a lie. They had not. Even Durham Bishop N. T. Wright was honest enough to say so.

What about "geographical and cultural divides"?. The truth is they don't exist for orthodox folk. Over 1,000 gathered in Jerusalem from 38 countries united by a single non-pluriform, truly inclusive understanding of the gospel, making geography and culture totally and utterly irrelevant. There was no "black theology" or "white Western theology". There was only Biblical theology that everybody there understood. It did not require either an explanation or an apology!

Williams writes, "Two questions arise at once about what has been proposed. By what authority are Primates deemed acceptable, or unacceptable members of any new primatial council? And how is effective discipline to be maintained in a situation of overlapping and competing jurisdictions?"

The answer is simple. The new primatial council will be made up of men who have a clear fix on what the gospel is, who Jesus is, what morals are, recognize the authority of Scripture and can articulate and preach it. Discipline (presently non-existent) will be maintained by those who have a clear understanding of what truth is. If Dr. Williams can't figure it out, all he needs to do is read "The Way, the Truth and the Life" where it is spelled out for him in grim detail. There is no ambiguity, no misunderstandings. Clarity is 100%.

Writes Williams, "How is a bishop or primate in another continent able to discriminate effectively between a genuine crisis of pastoral relationship and theological integrity, and a situation where there are underlying non-theological motivations at work? We have seen instances of intervention in dioceses whose leadership is unquestionably orthodox simply because of local difficulties of a personal and administrative nature. We have also seen instances of clergy disciplined for scandalous behaviour in one jurisdiction accepted in another, apparently without due process. Some other Christian churches have unhappy experience of this problem and it needs to be addressed honestly."

The answer is, again, very simple. Homosexuals are not being persecuted in the Episcopal Church. Those faithful to Scripture are. If there is a failure to discipline, it is because liberal and revisionist bishops hate orthodox clergy, want to get rid of them and will do everything to excoriate them by not letting ordinands or clergy into their dioceses and by not renewing their licenses. The "honest addressing" is just not taking place. It is all about exploitation, litigation and property ownership.

The liberals and revisionists have no gospel to proclaim. They will not save the world with MDGs. It's a secular fiction pumped up by TEC pomp and purple. There is no appeal to Scripture to "discriminate" anything. Bishop Walter Righter took a walk for ordaining an avowed homosexual to the priesthood, Spong has never been disciplined for his heresies, and Bennison goes down for covering up his brother's sexual abuse of a minor but not for his theological heresies.

Writes Williams, "If they are not working effectively, the challenge is to renew them rather than to improvise solutions that may seem to be effective for some in the short term but will continue to create more problems than they solve." This is a fiction. How can the politburo police itself, especially when at least one of the Instruments of Unity - the Anglican Communion Office -- is in thrall and in hoc to The Episcopal Church and has most of its budget paid for by TEC!

The Episcopal Church has no intention of conceding anything - from its acceptance of totally unbiblical views of sexuality, to a truncated gospel, to property grabbing etc. Williams thinks he can change all this in 20 days at Lambeth! This is a total fiction. When he sides with US Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori, he, by definition, colludes with her and those who proclaim a different gospel than that proclaimed by the Evangelical Anglicans in Jerusalem.

"This challenge is one of the most significant focuses for the forthcoming Lambeth Conference. One of its major stated aims is to restore and deepen confidence in our Anglican identity. And this task will require all who care as deeply as the authors of the statement say they do about the future of Anglicanism to play their part."

The truth is nothing will change because two very deeply held understandings of what true religion is, are in play. Mrs. Schori's notion of saving the world for God through Millennium Development Goals is irreconcilable with an evangelical, worldview, which says we are sinners in need of salvation, and that social reform flows from personal encounter not from a UN mandate. Does Williams think for a moment that a couple of days of prayer (retreat) in Canterbury Cathedral will bring a Holy Spirit outpouring and that liberals will suddenly get enlightenment and repent? That's the stuff of novels.

Williams says that the answer lies in "renewing the existing structures of the Communion." Now that has been tried for the past 10 years ever since Lambeth 1998. It has gone absolutely nowhere. TEC pan-sexualists and revisionist bishops have raised the middle finger against Resolution 1:10, repeatedly, over the last decade and have only entrenched their power in the church. "We're not going backwards" said Bishop Jon Bruno.

Over time, the orthodox have become more and more marginalized, their gospel laughed at, and sodomy proclaimed, with some being inhibited, sued or prosecuted. Why has Dr. Williams never spoken up about the marginalization of faithful orthodox Anglicans in North America, but is quick to condemn allegations of homophobia in Nigeria (which were false)? He says nothing about the millions of dollars being spent in litigation by Mrs. Jefferts Schori and her legal schnauzer, David Booth Beers, as they snatch properties away from faithful Anglicans for a future generation of non-existent Episcopalians.

Why is Williams dead silent about all that is going on in TEC? Why has he invited those who consecrated Gene Robinson to Lambeth, some of whom have "partners", according to Mrs. Jefferts Schori. Why are orthodox bishops like Robinson Cavalcanti, Martyn Minns, Bill Atwood, and John Guernsey (to name but a few) denied entrance into Lambeth? Because the litmus test is institutional loyalty. not the gospel! Let Williams explain this to the masses.

The structure cannot be renewed because there are two different gospels in play. Is the politburo capable of transforming itself when its ideology brooks no opposition? If Alexander Solzhenitsyn believed it couldn't be done in the Gulag Archipelago, why does Rowan Williams believe it can be done in the Communion? Does he think that the Anglican Communion Office, formerly the Anglican Consultative Council (ACC), will miraculously reform itself when its budget is paid mostly by the revisionist Episcopal Church? Canon Geoffrey Cameron (ACC) recently criticized the US church, which donates generously to the African and Asian evangelical provinces of the Global South, for placing "implicit obligations" on the recipients of their largesse! That's choice. He failed to mention that 60% of his budget also comes from TEC!

Said Williams, "The language of 'colonialism' has been freely used of existing patterns. But emerging from the legacy of colonialism must mean a new co-operation of equals, not a simple reversal of power. If those who speak for GAFCON are willing to share in a genuine renewal of all our patterns of reflection and decision-making in the Communion, they are welcome, especially in the shaping of an effective Covenant for our future together." That's precious.

Do Williams and the whole liberal left (US. and Canada) think, for a moment, that they want or plan ever to share power with the Africans whom they despise and vilify as theological troglodytes, barely out of the jungle and share decision-making? Why did no liberal elitist (or Williams) challenge PA Bishop Charles Bennison's remarks when he likened the growth of the church in Africa to the growth of the Nazi Party, or John Spong's remarks about African Evangelicals at the last Lambeth conference? This is the height of hubris. Frank Griswold said that the Global South will one day catch up to the West and then they will understand all about homosexuality.

No they won't. Look at the way Canadian Primate Fed Hiltz treated Archbishop Greg Venables, recently. Where was the "conversation" when Venables came a calling? There was none. Hiltz went public with his condemnation of Venables. He never had the decency to pick up the phone and talk to him privately about the matters of concern to Canadian evangelicals. Mrs. Schori did the same in the US.

Dr. Williams talks about a "new co-operation of equals".

If it weren't such a big lie, this would be laughable. If Mrs. Schori wants to talk about cooperation of equals, she should begin in her own church and start meaningful "cooperation" talks with Pittsburgh Bishop Robert Duncan, instead of threatening to toss him out of the church before he has done anything to deserve it. Then consider what Mrs. Schori said about the GAFCON gathering.

She said, "Much of the Anglican world must be lamenting the latest emission from GAFCON. Anglicanism has always been broader than some find comfortable." EMISSION! Three dictionaries I consulted said that could mean only one thing. It means to "expel air," "to fart" or, in the vernacular, "blow it out your ass". So where is all the vaunted talk of renewal or "cooperation of equals" that Williams talks about? What she really said was: you Africans function at the level of animals!

Why hasn't Williams reprimanded her for using that word? He won't because he is an elitist who genuinely believes that Western minds are better and superior to African minds, and because Mrs. Schori, a theological light- weight compensates for her inadequacies with a big check book. Shaping a covenant is also a fiction.

The present draft covenant has been roundly criticized by NZ theologian Dr. Jenny Plane Te Paa (she called it patriarchal) and by TEC liberals. It is going absolutely nowhere in the Communion and it will go nowhere because nobody can find common ground to build it on. Furthermore, we already have the 39 Articles, The Articles of Religion and the Lambeth Quadrilateral to draw on...who needs a covenant that appeals to no one and nothing and for which agreement will never be found?

Here is the real truth. The fulcrum of Anglicanism has moved from the West to the Global South. The Rt. Rev. Bill Frey, former Bishop of Colorado, spoke prophetically at Trinity School for Ministry over 10 years ago when he said the gravitational center of Anglicanism had moved to Africa. And the deeper truth is this, the Africans have had it with the paternalism and post-colonial attitude of Rowan Williams and the Church of England House of Bishops (including the evangelicals) who think that the vast majority of the world's Anglicans owe them their allegiance.

They don't. The Global South doesn't need Canterbury to get to Jesus. To make the point clear, the Nigerian Province changed its canons and constitution to reflect this new reality. The Africans have been deeply hurt and wounded by Western liberals. Williams and the so-called Instruments of Unity have looked down on them, treated them paternalistically, and regarded them as backward and so much more. Now they have risen up and started a spiritual and theological revolution. They will not be stopped, turned aside or deterred.

GAFCON is the beginning. They have gotten on a new train. If the train stops to pick up new passengers on the way, that is Williams' and Schori's loss. If Rowan Williams wants to get on the train, he is going to have to do so on their terms, not his. The days of follow the (Canterbury) leader is over. They know the gospel., Williams' version, whatever it is, and nobody seems to know what that is, is incomprehensible. If there is schism, it began when The Episcopal Church went wildly astray long before Gene Robinson's consecration. That was the last defining act. The TEC HOB has no stomach to put Jack Spong on trial because they know they would never win.

A case in point. Bennison was found guilty of covering up his brother's sexual abuse of a minor. He should have been put on trial for heresy. He once said, "Jesus was a sinner who forgave himself." That in itself is heretical enough. But if he had been brought up, he would have walked, just as he walked on misusing hundreds of thousands of dollars of diocesan funds. So they finally got him on 30-year old sexual stuff.

Wrote Fr. Greg Brewer, Worship leader at GAFCON, "When the majority of the Communion has the distinct impression of being ignored in favor of a tiny but rich and rebellious white minority, then it is only a matter of time before the credibility and the integrity of that leadership is called into question.

This is especially true when that leadership acts in ways that are in conflict with the historic theological underpinnings of Anglicanism. No wonder the statement expresses the desire to be a part of a structure that is "more representative of the demographic distribution of global Anglicanism today" and is "stronger as an instrument of effective mission, ministry and social involvement. " It may be considered extreme to "not accept that Anglican identity is determined necessarily through recognition by the Archbishop of Canterbury". What are these global south leaders to do when it is a fact that there has been a "manifest failure of the Communion Instruments to exercise discipline in the face of overt heterodoxy"? Is there an alternative method of calling these Communion Instruments to account for failing "to guard the unity of the Communion and uphold the clear teaching of the Gospel?"

Concluded Williams, "I believe that it is wrong to assume we are now so far apart that all those outside the GAFCON network are simply proclaiming another gospel. This is not the case; it is not the experience of millions of faithful and biblically focused Anglicans in every province. What is true is that, on all sides of our controversies, slogans, misrepresentations and caricatures abound. And they need to be challenged in the name of the respect and patience we owe to each other in Jesus Christ."

This is unadulterated garbage. The Anglican Communion is going in two different directions. We are already too far apart. For over a decade, at one primatial gathering after another, there has been nothing but verbal sleights of hands and compromises. No more. It is over.

The evangelicals in the Global South have spoken. Those "millions" Williams talks about are evangelicals, not Affirming Catholics or liberals. Williams cites the Apostle in I Cor.11.33: "wait for one another". I would say the same to those in whose name this statement has been issued. Perhaps Williams should consider some of the Scriptures that talk about not having fellowship with heretics.

"Patience" is just another delay tactic that allows the Episcopal Church to go on litigating, tearing orthodox priests out of their parishes, denying them a place at the Episcopal table and blaming "schism" on the Global South. Nothing will ever change now. It can't. Talk of patience is like the much talked about "listening" that we have been asked to do for 10 years. Listening is designed to wear the orthodox down till they agree with Louie Crew. The truth is two different gospels are at loggerheads in the Communion.

The Most Rev. Yong Ping Chung, the Archbishop of Southeast Asia (ret.) stood up and prophetically called on Evangelical leaders to speak up and not to remain silent. He cited the famous incident in the Book of Esther where Queen Esther had remained silent in the face of her peoples' suffering. Mordecai's response was plain, "For if you remain silent at this time, relief and deliverance for the Jews will arise from another place."

"Don't be anonymous," cried Archbishop Yong Ping Chung, "Speak up on behalf of the truth even if it costs you."

Williams says that im patience, at all costs, to "clear the Lord's field of the weeds that may appear among the shoots of true life" (Matt.13.29) will put at risk our clarity and effectiveness in communicating just those evangelical and catholic truths which the GAFCON statement presents.

Well, Dr. Williams, those "shoots of true life" are in Nigeria (among other provinces), which has grown from 18 million to 25 million. What "new shoots" are there in the dying Church of England, which is coming apart over women bishops and sodomy? Will the illegal gay marriage at St. Bartholomew's ever be prosecuted? Not a chance. Is it any wonder that the greatest living Anglican theologian Dr. J. I. Packer called for Williams to resign.

The tired old appeal to work together on the structures of the Communion, and to keep waiting forever for the Covenant is dead on arrival. Williams has forgotten that there are some equally clever primates elsewhere in the world, who have been denied a primates' meeting. Primates have been offered a Lambeth where they all sit around in focus "Indaba" groups while Bishops Jon Bruno and John Chane et al are laughing, knowing that back home there is no change in direction for their church. Bishops Schofield, Iker, Ackerman and Duncan are history. Everyone knows it.

GAFCON has stiffened spines for the first time in 500 years and strengthened sagging sinews. Forward in Faith has at last become the Church Militant, and will take action. Church of England Evangelicals will, in time, shuck off their liberal bosses (bishops). If Rowan Williams fails to deliver at Lambeth, the floodwaters will break open over the Church of England, indeed the whole Anglican Communion.Great will be the spiritual and ecclesiastical toll. It is Williams' kairos moment. It is his communion to lose.

***

GJ - Meanwhile, the Wisconsin Synod attacks the Means of Grace while pretending to study that central doctrine of the Lutheran Church. Pope John the Malefactor (pictured above) also teaches another Gospel, Galatians 1:8.

Episcopalians Study at UCC Seminary



Bishop Spong is the apostate who made some waves by channeling Bishop James Pike, attacking the basic tenets of the Christian faith.


Bruce Church has left a new comment on your post "Lefty Piscy Sems Losing Students, Funds, Faculty":

The Episcopal Church's Missouri Diocese uses UCC's Eden Seminary as their seminary:

http://www.diocesemo.org/whoweare/episcopalschoolforministry/edenseminary.htm

Eden seminary in St. Louis only has ~142 M.Div students, and even though it a UCC seminary, it has students from 19 other denominations, including, I kid you not, Universal Unitarians!

http://www.eden.edu/PartnersInMinistry/Ecumenical.aspx

Eden is one of seven seminaries of the United Church of Christ (UCC)....

• American Baptist
• African Methodist Episcopal
• Missionary Baptist
• General Baptist
• Christian Methodist Episcopal
• Disciples of Christ
• Evangelical Lutheran Church of America
• Episcopal
• Interdenominational
• Metropolitan Community Church
• National Baptist
• Non-Denominational
• Presbyterian Church (USA)
• Pentecostal
• Roman Catholic
• United Church of Christ
• United Methodist Church
• Universal Unitarian
• Other (denominations not represented by the Association of Theological Schools (ATS)

***

GJ - The United Church of Christ is the shrunken remnant of a bunch of mergers, each one fueling even more apostasy. As I mentioned in the study of Enthusiasm today (Bethany Lutheran Worship), rationalism is a form of Enthusiasm that leads to Unitarianism in a generation or two.

I fail to see a doctrinal difference between the Unitarian Universalist Association and the United Church of Christ. The distinctions are historical rather than doctrinal.

Mother Angelica had it right when she said that liberals do nothing for the Church. They do not produce church vocations, missions, institutions, or anything else. They are parasites. When Notre Dame embraced the new theology, their seminary shriveled down to a dozen or so men.

Mainline seminaries merge time after time, flailing around, trying to survive by splicing weak schools together. The Baptist seminary with bragging rights for the Social Gospel Movement merged six ways from Sunday and remains D.O.A.

Colgate-Rochester-Crozer-Bexley Hall: a four-way merger. Now they have 100 students and 7 full-time faculty. But, Leonard Sweet graduated from one of those schools, so they must be good.

I Need Some Feedback - Sunday Service



Sometimes the abyss stares back - and gives a Bronx cheer.


I put the new computer to work today. It has 4 gigs of RAM and quad-core, so it has plenty of power for the broadcast. I also checked over the settings for Flash to help the video and audio.

You can post here or send an email to my qwest.net account.

Let me know how the saved files work out, in DSL, cable, and 56k phone. I hope a phone line can read the files, but maybe not.

Thank you.

Vatican Secretly Meeting with Anglican Bishops



Pope Benedict XVI, often called B-16.


The Vatican's highest office is meeting secretly with Anglican bishops. Of course, it is not so secret if the news is posted all over the Web. The bishops leaked the news to an English paper. The names are not being divulged, but people will figure that out soon enough.

The event implies that the Roman Catholic Church will take in a group of Episcopalians, including their bishops. The meeting could be a way to frighten the Archdruid of Canterbury into being a little more conservative, but matters have gone beyond the tipping point already.

Long ago, Gaylin Schmeling's professor, Anglican Charles Caldwell expressed his hope for reunion with Rome. That is buried in the bosom of most high church Anglicans. I will have to dig up my funny quote on the topic. Rome is increasingly successful in seducing Protestants into this reunion. The Protestants are equally adept at driving away their own ministers and members.

The Seventh Sunday after Trinity




The Seventh Sunday after Trinity

Pastor Gregory L. Jackson

Bethany Lutheran Worship, 8 AM Phoenix Time

The Hymn #44 by Koren – Guds Menighed syng
The Confession of Sins
The Absolution
The Introit p. 16
The Gloria Patri
The Kyrie p. 17
The Gloria in Excelsis
The Salutation and Collect p. 19
The Epistle and Gradual Romans 6:19-23
The Gospel Mark 8:1-9
Glory be to Thee, O Lord!
Praise be to Thee, O Christ!
The Nicene Creed p. 22
The Sermon Hymn # 305 1,6-9 Frank Schmucke dich
God Will Provide

The Hymn #36 by Rinckart – Nun danket alle Gott
The Preface p. 24
The Sanctus p. 26
The Lord's Prayer p. 27
The Words of Institution
The Agnus Dei p. 28
The Nunc Dimittis p. 29
The Benediction p. 31
The Hymn # 316 by Rist - Nun lob, mein seel


Romans 6: 19 I speak after the manner of men because of the infirmity of your flesh: for as ye have yielded your members servants to uncleanness and to iniquity unto iniquity; even so now yield your members servants to righteousness unto holiness. 20 For when ye were the servants of sin, ye were free from righteousness. 21 What fruit had ye then in those things whereof ye are now ashamed? for the end of those things is death. 22 But now being made free from sin, and become servants to God, ye have your fruit unto holiness, and the end everlasting life. 23 For the wages of sin is death; but the gift of God is eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord.

Mark 8 1 In those days the multitude being very great, and having nothing to eat, Jesus called his disciples unto him, and saith unto them, 2 I have compassion on the multitude, because they have now been with me three days, and have nothing to eat: 3 And if I send them away fasting to their own houses, they will faint by the way: for divers of them came from far. 4 And his disciples answered him, From whence can a man satisfy these men with bread here in the wilderness? 5 And he asked them, How many loaves have ye? And they said, Seven. 6 And he commanded the people to sit down on the ground: and he took the seven loaves, and gave thanks, and brake, and gave to his disciples to set before them; and they did set them before the people. 7 And they had a few small fishes: and he blessed, and commanded to set them also before them. 8 So they did eat, and were filled: and they took up of the broken meat that was left seven baskets. 9 And they that had eaten were about four thousand: and he sent them away.

SEVENTH SUNDAY AFTER TRINITY
Lord God, heavenly Father, who in the wilderness didst by Thy Son abundantly feed four thousand men besides women and children with seven loaves and a few small fishes: We beseech Thee, graciously abide among us with Thy blessing, and keep us from covetousness and the cares of this life, that we may seek first Thy kingdom and Thy righteousness, and in all things needful for body and soul, experience Thine ever-present help; through Thy Son, our Lord Jesus Christ, who liveth and reigneth with Thee and the Holy Ghost, one true God, world without end. Amen.

God Will Provide

This Gospel lesson reminds us that the Bible records two miracles of feeding the multitudes, not only the Feeding of the Five Thousand, but also the Feeding of the Four Thousand. In this miracle selected for this Sunday, the Gospel emphasizes how Jesus cares for our bodily needs. From this one brief story we can see how kind and loving our Savior is. We crave the assurance given by this miracle. It awakens faith in our hearts and satisfies our faith in Him.

The setting for this miracle is very simple. A vast multitude followed Jesus for three days, listening to Him teach. That alone gives us a glimpse of how compelling people found our Savior to be. Thousands of people hung on His words, knowing that He spoke with the authority of God. They had plenty of work to do, so giving up their daily tasks was a sacrifice they were willing to make. Perhaps they took along some food, as people often do when planning a big event. But no one took along enough food for three days. Most importantly, a multitude would never say, “Now we are hungry. Let’s ask God to feed all of us miraculously.”

Before anyone thought to ask for food, Jesus was already concerned about their needs. He brought up their inability to reach home. “They will faint along the way.” Those of us who live in the desert know how difficult it is to get work done in the burning heat. A Chicago native said, “The first thing I learned was not to mow the lawn at 2 in the afternoon.” Fainting in the heat is easy to imagine when someone daydreams about his next glass of ice water during a meeting. Or when a cup of 100-degree water left in the car is swallowed eagerly.

When people hike in the desert they often neglect to bring enough food. They don’t think of the calories they need to keep from weakness and fainting. This miracle is especially vivid for those who have lived in the desert.

Jesus brought up the problem, already knowing the solution He would provide. But His disciples said, “How can anyone feed all these people in the wilderness?” Thus we can see how different the Scriptures are from human records. An official church history would have the disciples say, “Yes, Lord, you can do anything. You are the Word of Creation. You are the true Son of God.” But the Bible records them as doubting whether the people could be fed at all. Therefore, the disciples serve men expressing our doubts in the same kinds of situation.

When I suggest that pastors do the right thing, the ministers reply, “Yes, but who will feed me?” Whenever I have seen a congregation attempt to carry out a minor project, the anxieties set in. How can we do this? People won’t support it. The bank won’t give us the money. Someone will be upset and quit. General George S. Patton called this taking counsel of your fears. If we listen to our fears, our fears will advise us not to trust in God.

This miracle comforts us by showing us how Jesus cared for the material needs of the people before they even thought of asking Him. In the same way He still cares for our material needs, before and even without us asking. Yes, He is generous and loving toward unbelievers as well. Unfortunately, they do not realize it.

KJV Matthew 5:45 That ye may be the children of your Father which is in heaven: for he maketh his sun to rise on the evil and on the good, and sendeth rain on the just and on the unjust.

Fear is the opposite of faith, as Luther often observed. Being anxious about our daily needs is the same as not trusting in God to provide for us. Whenever we listen to stories about Jesus during His earthly ministry, we need to remember that His human nature gave Him a special compassion about our needs. He knew what it meant to be thirsty (John 4) and to be hungry (The Temptation of Jesus). He was mocked, scorned, and physically attacked. His human nature remains united with His divine nature, so He understands our needs completely.

As I mentioned before, Jesus knew the needs of this multitude and planned for their needs before they could ask, beyond His own disciples’ comprehension of His power. When you worry about your income, physical health, and other material needs, think about this miracle. Jesus has already seen your need and has planned an answer for your needs before you thought to ask.

Then why should we pray for our daily bread? The catechism reminds us that we pray for what God provides so that we will be thankful for these blessings and number them as coming from God rather than ourselves. Then, when we consider what matters most, we praise God for giving us what we need so generously and for denying us what we do not need in His wisdom.

Few parents with any wisdom will say that we should give children what they want, when they want it, all the time. Parents will even allow children to face certain hardships in order to prepare them for adult life and responsibility. If children learn to face frustration by having tantrums, they never progress beyond having fits to get their way as adults. When Bjorn Borg had a tantrum on the tennis court, his parents made him lock up his tennis racket for a year. He was famous for never shouting insults at refs during games, even when his trained eye saw a miss or a foul differently. He was so polite that the TV commentators were shocked that he looked a few seconds at a ref who made a bad call. That was in the days when some overgrown brats screamed at refs, hit tennis balls at them, and used obscenities.

So we should not look at God’s discipline as hatred but rather as love toward us. This miracle comforts us by showing us first that our material needs are provided by God before we even ask. Then we can understand more completely how God also takes care of our spiritual needs, which are not so obvious and can be easy to overlook. If someone does not eat for three days, he can only think of food. If he skips worship for months, he may say, “I am fine. In fact, I am doing better than ever. I still believe and I have saved time by not getting involved in all those little matters.”

We are poor judges of spiritual matters on our own. If we were so wise, we could worship once a year. But all of human history tells us that we quickly forget our Creator, that we take for granted what our Savior Jesus has done for us, that we receive spiritual wisdom from the Holy Spirit and then thank ourselves for being so intelligent. Here is one small example. The world observes a 7 day week. Why? Most people exposed to evolution no longer believe in the Six Day Creation. Why not have a 5 day week or a 10 day week? Why would the entire world follow this pattern set up by Genesis? Could it be that we have a world-wide acknowledgement of the Creation and yet a vast forgetting of that Creation?

Rip Rehwinkel has an interesting observation in his book “The Flood.” It relates to what I said above. He pointed out the existence of a death holiday across the world. Every culture has a holiday where people seem to remember and defy a time of universal death. These holidays feature skeletons and they all fall at the same time, the end of October. Rehwinkel wondered if this was a remembrance of The Flood. And yet today, we can celebrate Halloween, but we cannot talk about The Flood seriously, or people start discussing how hard it is to build an ark as large as a battleship and then fill it with animals. Difficult yes. Impossible? We have monumental construction from ancient times that we cannot reproduce today with our best and most powerful tools. The pyramids of Egypt are so mysterious that people still debate how they were made. If all of them were gone, no one would believe than ancient man built such enormous structures with such perfection. (Some fell down, but so did some of the cathedrals built in Europe many centuries later.)

So whenever we see God placing a cross upon us, we have to say, “My Old Adam does not like this one little bit, but I must need this experience in some way to serve God’s purpose.” God told Noah to build the ark in the midst of a jeering population. No one listened to his sermons about the impending disaster.

KJV Hebrews 11:7 By faith Noah, being warned of God of things not seen as yet, moved with fear, prepared an ark to the saving of his house; by the which he condemned the world, and became heir of the righteousness which is by faith.

The entire building of the ark was grievous to Noah and his family, building a battleship sized ship on dry land. He was a failure in saving others, but Noah’s ark became an important lesson in teaching us about the effectiveness of baptism.

KJV 1 Peter 3:20 Which sometime were disobedient, when once the longsuffering of God waited in the days of Noah, while the ark was a preparing, wherein few, that is, eight souls were saved by water 21 The like figure whereunto even baptism doth also now save us (not the putting away of the filth of the flesh, but the answer of a good conscience toward God,) by the resurrection of Jesus Christ:

Noah built the ark in faith, not for a few months or years, but for 120 years.

KJV Matthew 24:36 But of that day and hour knoweth no man, no, not the angels of heaven, but my Father only. 37 But as the days of Noe were, so shall also the coming of the Son of man be. 38 For as in the days that were before the flood they were eating and drinking, marrying and giving in marriage, until the day that Noe entered into the ark, 39 And knew not until the flood came, and took them all away; so shall also the coming of the Son of man be.

So we can see in the miracle of the Feeding and in Noah’s ark, God’s plan to take care of the material needs of people in advance. Then we know how completely God has planned for our spiritual needs as well. It is a good feeling when someone looks to our needs in advance. When someone has shown us dozens of examples of kindness, we are inclined to listen to that person when he offers us advice. We are inclined to trust a person who has anticipated our needs and provided for them. Children will often clamor for something, anxious that their demands will not be met, sounding like robins in the nest, all cheeping at once with their mouths wide open. Then they learn that mother and father have already provided for them and they settle down to enjoy what they longed for, whether it is food or a special event.

When I get food ready in the kitchen, Precious (the Sheltie) comes to the kitchen door and supervises, to make sure food comes her way as well. She stands there watching until I take it to my desk in the bedroom. As Luther observed, a dog always expects the best from its owner. It can here no a hundred times and look expectantly for that favor. Luther said we should always expect the best from God – in the same way. Chytraeus wrote that it was a sin to question God’s goodness.

Jesus is our answer for the most important aspect of our lives – the forgiveness of our sins. Just as He provided an abundance of food, and far more than enough (7 man-sized baskets of leftovers), so also He gives us a superabundance of forgiveness through His atoning death on the cross. He rose from the dead (Romans 4:25) to show us that He alone is the One who conquers sin, death, and the devil.

This is where many people become confused, so we cannot think about it too much. How does one become forgiven of his sins? Almost everyone agrees that Jesus died on the cross for the sins of the world. He redeemed the world, paying for all sins. Forgiveness was accomplished through His atoning death and resurrection. However, this forgiveness is distributed to every single person through the preaching of the Gospel and the sacraments of Holy Baptism and Holy Communion.

Once again, (just as we see with the Feeding of the Four Thousand) before we even knew we were sinners, God provided for the forgiveness of our sins, our salvation and eternal life. Whenever the Gospel is proclaimed and taught, people believe in Christ as their Savior and receive the forgiveness of their sins. Whenever and wherever the Gospel of Christ is believed, death is overcome by eternal life through our Savior.

Many things will happen in the next decades to tempt people away from the Word of God. Satan tempts believers and not unbelievers. The believers will be few at the end of time, as Jesus taught us. “When the Son of Man returns, will He find faith?” Because the time of Satan is short and the believers are few, the rage of the devil will be all the greater against God’s Kingdom. When things become more chaotic and tribulation increases, we must remember that our trust is not in men or institutions but in the Gospel of forgiveness. In the wilderness to come, we will be fed by the Word.

“So they did eat and they were filled.” They were filled to such an extent that the entire multitude, as many as 12,000 people (if we assume 4,000 men, their wives and children) ate as much as they could but were unable to consume another 7 baskets of fragments. They were famished and faint from hunger but God provided an avalanche of food, just as He freely offers us an avalanche of blessings with complete and total forgiveness of sin.
Quotations

"In reconciling the world unto Himself by Christ's substitutionary satisfaction, God asked no one's advice concerning His singular method of reconciliation. In like manner, without asking any man's advice, He ordained the means by which He gives men the infallible assurance of His gracious will toward them; in other words, He both confers on men the remission of sins merited by Christ and works faith in the proffered remission or, where faith already exists, strengthens it. The Church has appropriately called these divine ordinances the means of grace, media gratiae, instrumenta gratiae; Formula of Concord: 'Instrumenta sive media Spiritus Sancti' (Triglotta, p. 903, Solid Declaration, II, 58). They are the Word of the Gospel, Baptism, and the Lord's Supper, as will be shown more fully on the following pages."
Francis Pieper, Christian Dogmatics, 3 vols., St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1953, III, p. 103.

"As distinguished from the Gospel, Sacraments are acts, we apply water in Baptism, and we eat and drink in the Lord's Supper. They are sacred acts, and must, as such, be distinguished from ordinary washing, eating and drinking...A Sacrament which offers God's blessings cannot be instituted by man or the Church, but by God alone." Edward W. A. Koehler, A Short Explanation of Dr. Martin Luther's Small Catechism, Fort Wayne: Concordia Theological Seminary Press, 1946, p. 254.

"Since God has connected His most gracious promise of forgiveness with Baptism and the Lord's Supper, these also are true and efficacious means of grace, namely, by virtue of the divine promises that are attached to them."
John Theodore Mueller, Christian Dogmatics, A Handbook of Doctrinal Theology, St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1934, p. 444.

"Both Baptism and the Lord's Supper qualify as Means of Grace because of the simple fact that they are visible forms of the essential Gospel message announcing the forgiveness of sins."
Martin W. Lutz, "God the HS Acts Through the Lord's Supper," God The Holy Spirit Acts, ed., Eugene P. Kaulfield, Milwaukee: Northwestern Publishing House, 1972, p. 117.

"Today's Gospel paints to us the Lord in a way that we may fully know how we should esteem Him, namely, that He is merciful, meek and loving; that He gladly helps everybody and freely associates and deals with all people. And such a picture as this, faith really craves."
Sermons of Martin Luther, 8 vols., ed. John Nicholas Lenker, Grand Rapids: Baker Book House 1983, IV, p. 203.

"Therefore the Scriptures present to us a double picture; one is that of fear or the overpowering picture of the severe wrath of God, before which no one can stand; but must despair unless he has faith. In contrast with this the picture of grace is presented to us in order that faith may behold it and obtain for itself an agreeable and comforting refuge in God with the hope that man cannot expect so much from God, that there is not still much more to be had from Him."
Sermons of Martin Luther, 8 vols., ed. John Nicholas Lenker, Grand Rapids: Baker Book House 1983, IV, p. 203.

"Today's Gospel treats of the temporal and bodily blessings, teaches us the faith of the child, and it is a picture for the weak, in that they should look to God for everything good, and that they might thus later learn to trust God and depend on Him for spiritual blessings. For if we are instructed in the Gospel, how Christ feeds our stomachs, we can then conclude that He will also feed and clothe our souls. For if I cannot trust a person to sustain my body, much less can I trust him to sustain my soul forever."
Sermons of Martin Luther, , IV, p. 204.

"Therefore Christ asked His disciples that everyone might learn to know by experience what reason is, and acknowledge how reason and faith in no way agree. Here we learn to blindfold reason, when we begin to believe, and then give reason a permanent furlough."
Sermons of Martin Luther, IV, p. 205.

"O God, I am Thy creature and Thy handiwork and Thou hast from the beginning created me. I will depend entirely on You who cares more for me, how I shall be sustained, then I do myself; Thou wilt indeed nourish me, feed, clothe and help me, where and when You know best."
Sermons of Martin Luther, IV, p. 206.

"But when one inquires of reason for counsel it soon says: It is not possible. Yes, you must wait a long time until roasted ducks fly into your mouth, for reason sees nothing, grasps nothing, and nothing is present. Just so the apostles do also here who thought: Yes, who will provide food for so many, no one is able to do that; but had they seen a great pile of money and in addition tables laden with bread and meat, they would soon have discovered good counsel and been able to give good consolation; that would have gone to their thinking very reasonably."
Sermons of Martin Luther, 8 vols., ed. John Nicholas Lenker, Grand Rapids: Baker Book House 1983, IV, p. 206.

"Therefore, beloved friends, let us once make a beginning to believe; for unbelief is the cause of all sin and vice, which now have taken the upper hand in all stations of life. How does it come to pass that everywhere there are so many foolish women and rogues, so many rank imposters, thieves, robbers, userers, murderers and sellers of indulgences? It all comes from unbelief."
Sermons of Martin Luther, IV, p. 208.

"Just so it is also at present: Where true pastors and preachers are so poorly supoorted that no one donates anything to them, and moreover what they have is snatched out of their mouths by a shameless and unthankful world, by princes, noblemen, townsmen and famers, so that they with their poor wives and children must suffer need, and when they die leave behind them pitiable, rejected widows and orphans. By this very many good-hearted and very clever people are more and more discouraged from becoming pastors and preachers."
Sermons of Martin Luther, IV, p. 214.

"How does it happen that although all of us are certainly Christians, or at least want to be such, we do not take this attitude of unconcern and neither comfort ourselves with abundance and surplus nor are frightened by want and by worrying about it? For if we faithfully and devotedly cling to God's Word, there shall be no want. Christ takes care of us, and from this it must follow that we shall have something to eat."
What Luther Says, An Anthology, 3 vols., ed., Ewald Plass, St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1959, I, p. 436. Mark 8:1-9

Friday, July 4, 2008




The Unanimous Declaration
of the Thirteen United States of America


When, in the course of human events, it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bonds which have connected them with another, and to assume among the powers of the earth, the separate and equal station to which the laws of nature and of nature's God entitle them, a decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the separation.

We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. That to secure these rights, governments are instituted among men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed. That whenever any form of government becomes destructive to these ends, it is the right of the people to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their safety and happiness. Prudence, indeed, will dictate that governments long established should not be changed for light and transient causes; and accordingly all experience hath shown that mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed. But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such government, and to provide new guards for their future security.

***

GJ - I want to offer my thanks to all our military, past and present, who have given us the freedom and prosperity we enjoy today. They and their families have sacrificed a great deal to serve the country they love.

We often think of the soldier's sacrifice, but their spouses and children, parents, brothers, and sisters also pay a price. They miss their loved ones serving abroad in many different countries. We get to have more family time, but they feel the separation more acutely, on Independence Day and all other holidays.

Lefty Piscy Sems Losing Students, Funds, Faculty



Bow! Bow! To the Rainbow PB Elect!


Faculty at Seabury-Western Theological Seminary to lose jobs

Officials at Evanston Episcopal school insist it is not closing

By Manya A. Brachear | Chicago Tribune reporter

April 25, 2008


Seabury-Western Theological Seminary, one of 11 schools in the U.S. dedicated to preparing Episcopal priests, told tenured faculty on Thursday that their jobs would end next year.

Officials at the Evanston seminary insist the school is not closing, but that it is redefining its approach for preparing men and women for priesthood. Earlier this year, the school stopped accepting new candidates and advised first-year students that they should enroll in other seminaries if they wish to earn their degrees from an Episcopal institution.

For more than a century, seminarians have traditionally enrolled in a three-year residential program to earn a master's of divinity degree that prepares them for the priesthood. Seminary officials said the school would explore the possibility of offering the degree in other formats such as distance learning or short-term residential stints.

"We want to bring the traditional excellence and depth of residential theological education to the new challenges and realities of the 21st Century," said Rev. Gary Hall, dean and president of Seabury-Western. "People can't afford to come here. We need to figure out how to bring it to them."

Of the nation's 11 accredited Episcopal seminaries, three have taken steps to downsize. In recent months Episcopal Divinity School in Cambridge, Mass., sold some of its campus to Lesley University in Boston. And Bexley Hall Seminary closed its campus in Rochester, N.Y. to consolidate its program in Columbus, Ohio in partnership with Trinity Lutheran Seminary.

Seabury-Western is the only school to stop admitting students.

Experts say its fate highlights the challenges facing many shrinking mainline Protestant denominations. Some also suggest that it's a symptom of the theological polarization within the church since the 2003 approval of New Hampshire Bishop V. Gene Robinson—the church's first openly gay bishop.

On Thursday, the seminary's board of trustees declared an imminent financial crisis, a required step in order to end the employment of tenured faculty. The seminary's budget is projected to run a $500,000 shortfall for the current fiscal year. Annual expenditures are projected to run $2.9 million. Seabury-Western also carries a $3.5 million debt.

---

Lane Hensley shares his thoughts

I’m writing as an alum of Seabury as well as a Trustee. Those of us who are trustees are hearing good, honest, and difficult questions about Seabury’s major announcements and about its future. Chief among those questions has been, “Why should anyone give money to Seabury now, if Seabury is getting out of the residential M.Div. business? Does the Seabury I know even exist anymore?”

Yes we do, and I want to offer my own thoughts to explain why I think it’s imperative that everyone continue to give to Seabury. It’s this simple: Seabury still has 20 M.Div. and 35 D.Min. students enrolled, students who bring valuable gifts and hopes for ministry that everyone preceding them did. They deserve the same high-quality educational formation for ministry that Seabury has been giving and continues to give, and the church deserves to have them equipped as leaders for Christ. We need to make that happen.

Thursday, July 3, 2008

Another Paul Kuske Boy Gone Bad:
POPLUTHERAN, Columbus, Ohio



Prince of Peace was built by WELS with loads of mission subsidies.


Now the congregation's website brags about its LCMS membership.


Pastor Marc Schroeder should not be confused with SP Mark Schroeder. No relation.

No, this Schroeder is the son of the DMLC professor, Morton Schroeder, nicknamed Salty Schroeder. Mark's lovely second wife is the daughter of a former WELS missionary to Japan.

District VP Paul Kuske embraced the Church Growth methods of Mark Schroeder, Floyd Luther Stolzenburg, Roger Zehms, and that missionary to the unwashed barbarians in the Ukraine - Roger Kovaciny. Wally Oelhaven thought the doctrine of Columbus congregations was not corrupt enough yet, so he excitedly brought in Schumann, who apostatized to Thrivent.

POPLUTHERAN is Kuske's greatest achievement, after Pilgrim Community Church. All that WELS mission money went down the drain when they lost POPLUTHERAN. District Pope John Seifert extended the Left Foot of Fellowship to Mark Schroeder, who had once undermined Barb Seifert's teaching novitiate. POPLUTHERAN followed Mark out of WELS and into the perfumed bosom of Missouri. The perfidy! We all know that the Wisconsin Synod's mission is to save people from the Missouri Synod.

Not all is lost. WELS kicked the congregation out for sticking with Schroeder, but they kept the money. Check out the Sausage Factory's website. George Skestos is still funding the smokey-links as they are processed, each one identical as they roll out, prepared to do battle against Missouri. The Salem Foundation, funded by Skestos, provides a subsidy for them. How many LCMS members are named and honored at the WLS website?

Just one.

"In a typical school year a strong majority of our student body (about 90%) receives financial assistance from school funds. In addition to this, students are eligible to apply for grants from the Salem Lutheran Foundation."

Cross Talk about CrossWalk




We have answered your question on WELS Topical Q&A but decided not to post it to the system for others to view it. This may be on account of the topic being too private and sensitive, or perhaps this questioned (sic) has already been asked. Your question and our response follows.

You asked:

I see in the current Call listing that someone is called to serve the Crosswalk Ministries. What is that? Is Crosswalk Ministries affiliated with the Willow Creek Association?

This is our reply:



Crosswalk Ministries is a mission outreach venture of WELS congregations in the Phoenix, AZ, area. The congregation has grown to over 350 in a few years. Most of their new members are transfers from other WELS congregations in the area. WELS Home Missions has provided counsel for the start-up and may have provided some seed money.

Crosswalk, a new mission start, is petitioning the Arizona-California District of the WELS for regular congregational membership. It is in no way affiliated with Willow Creek or any other non-WELS entity. They have recently teamed up with Wisconsin Lutheran Child and Family Services of Milwaukee to start another outreach effort in the Phoenix area that will be focused on Christian counseling.




Thanks for asking your question and let us know if you have any more questions.

Sincerely,
WELS Topical Q&A Staff


***

GJ - WELS members - looking for a good place to hide? Try CrossWalk. No one will know you are a Lutheran.

Tuesday, July 1, 2008

Zach at Harvard Div,Where Laughter Is Serious and Well Funded





Meet Zach

Zach Warren, MDiv '07, was drawn to Harvard Divinity School because of its juggling club. Once here, his talent for juggling and unicycling led him to the children's circus that would become the focus of his research and ministry training.

During his first year at HDS, Zach learned about the Mobile Mini Circus for Children (MMCC) in Afghanistan. When the circus invited him to teach juggling and unicycling, he created a summer field education placement through the Office of Ministry Studies: "It was the most magical experience I've had." The MMCC uses entertainment to provide education and support to over 300 children, helping to feed their spirit and sustain moments of joy. "For me, one of the primary reasons that religion, circus, and forms of artistic expression are important is because they help people move beyond survival mode."

Zach's passion for the circus has been woven into his time at HDS. He wrote his MDiv senior paper on the circus as a theological expression of Christian faith. "I looked at what it is about wonder and fascination that the circus tradition holds and which the Christian tradition celebrates, at where they overlap and compete for the same mythic space, and why it is that American churches over the past few decades in particular have taken on more strategies for entertainment that are circus-like, such as drumming, magic and dance." Themes of the circus pervade his research on Christianity: "The circus is about celebration, and Christianity is a strategy for celebration. Jesus' death and rebirth is a joyful trick, in a simple sense, the way peek-a-boo was pleasurable to us when we were children. Circus and Christianity tell mythic stories about death and rebirth, disappearing acts, impossible possibilities, the tightrope walker who tempts fate and survives, the lion tamer, the woman sawed in half and restored."

While completing his MDiv, Zach also made use of the resources at Harvard Medical School as a research fellow. "I wanted to find a way to measure children's resilience through laughter and smiles." He is working to find a quick tool to assess Afghan children most at risk for problems such as post-traumatic stress disorder or depression.

Zach was awarded the prestigious Frederick Sheldon Fellowship to return to Afghanistan and complete three research projects. First, he will create a cross-cultural laughter databank for research, examining "laughter acoustics." Second, he will collect jokes, particularly from religious leaders—continuing research he began several years ago, which has been funded by The New Yorker, National Public Radio, and HDS's Office of Ministry Studies. Finally, he will examine the way laughter affects stress responses across cultures.

Monday, June 30, 2008

Conservative Episcopalians Fight for Doctrine, Property Rights, and Win



Bow! Bow! To the Rainbow PB Elect!


Mikado:
In a fatherly kind of way
I govern each tribe and sect,
All cheerfully own my sway —
Katisha (Katy Jefferts-Schori):
Except his Rainbow PB Elect!
As tough as a bone,
With a will of her own,
Is his Rainbow PB Elect!
Bow! Bow! To the Rainbow PB Elect!


Orthodox Score Three Significant Goals this week

News Analysis

By David W. Virtue
www.virtueonline.org
6/29/2008

It was a week that orthodox Episcopalians and Anglicans in the U.S and around the world might justly feel proud and not just a little vindicated.

The first major event was the guilty charges found against the revisionist Bishop of Pennsylvania, Charles E. Bennison. An ecclesiastical court declared that he knowingly did nothing while his brother John Bennison, also a cleric, engaged in sexual relations with a minor. A court found him guilty 9 - 0. A second charge that he covered up his brother's sexual misbehavior also got a guilty verdict of 6 - 3, garnering the necessary two-thirds necessary vote for a guilty verdict.

He will appeal, of course. Bennison is a narcissist and sociopath so he sees he has done nothing wrong. A number of Episcopal bishops I spoke with here in Jerusalem say Bennison is toast. He will never get his See back again. He will fight the conviction, but he will not win. He walked away from charges that he mismanaged the diocese. In September, he faces civil charges, brought against him by Fr. David L. Moyer, that he committed fraud. He will be cross-examined by one of Philadelphia's most astute lawyers. It is being said that what Bennison experienced in the ecclesiastical court is just a taste of what he can expect at his civil trial.

The second major event, for which orthodox Anglicans in the US are rejoicing, is that a court decision in Fairfax, Virginia saw 11 faithful orthodox Anglican congregations, which broke with the U.S. Episcopal Church, win a second court decision. The latest ruling by a Virginia judge is part of the larger upheaval over orthodoxy in the global Anglican community.

These congregations broke with the Episcopal Church over the authority of Scripture and the consecration of Gene Robinson, the openly homoerotic Bishop of New Hampshire.

On Friday, Judge Randy Bellows of the Fairfax County Circuit Court ruled that the Virginia law under which the congregations want to keep the property is constitutional.

"We have maintained all along that our churches' own trustees hold title for the benefit of these congregations. It's also gratifying to see the judge recognize that the statute means what it says -- it's 'conclusive' of ownership," said Jim Oakes, vice chairman of the Anglican District of Virginia, to which the traditionalist churches now belong.

The Episcopal Diocese of Virginia and its Bishop, Peter Lee promptly labeled the decision "regrettable" and said it still believes the law violates the U.S. Constitution's guarantee of church-state separation. They will, of course, continue to pursue every legal option available to them. They will need to raise several more millions of dollars to do so. They have already mortgaged a number of properties in the diocese to meet current legal bills, but sources tell VOL that, unless the national church steps in with a blank check book, Lee is on the hook for more fire sales to pay the fees. Two parishes, Falls Church and Truro, are said to be worth at least $25 million.

The third and most significant goal attained this week occurred here in Jerusalem where some 1200 pilgrims gathered to reaffirm the historic Christian Faith in the land of its birth.

Today, this fellowship of Confessing Anglicans has affirmed by acclamation a Declaration that they will uphold the faith, maintain the sanctity of marriage, use the classic Book of Common Prayer and form a Primates' Council to "oversee the transition process." In effect, they told the Archbishop of Canterbury that they don't need to go through him to get to Jesus and that the Anglican Communion is his to lose, if he does not discipline theologically and morally errant provinces like the U.S. Episcopal Church. For the future, they will no longer look to him for leadership of the Anglican Communion.

This is the worst-case scenario a leader of 56 million Anglicans could possibly face on the eve of the decennial gathering of bishops in Canterbury. To be told that he no longer speaks for 70% of the Anglican Communion is a personal humiliation that is hard to imagine.

This week is one that orthodox Anglicans around the world can rejoice in. They have been beaten down (but not out) and now they are on their way up. There is light at the end of the tunnel. A new day has dawned in the Anglican Communion, and as one Archbishop noted, "we have seen the good hand of God work mightily."

***

GJ - Circuit Pope John Seifert suggested that I bring charges against District Pope Robert Mueller, but Seifert did a 180 and backed Mueller. The facts were not much different Bennison's major scandal, covering up for his brother. Did those rock-ribbed Welsian Lutherans do anything? First they re-elected Mueller and later elected Seifert for the same position. That is why the carpets are so lumpy at the Love Shack - so much has been swept under them.

Note well that Episcopalian bishops have defied Her Heinous Jefferts-Schori, gone to court, and won. This moment is the tipping point so many have dreaded, so many have anticipated.

So far the collective wisdom of the ELS, LCMS, and WELS leadership has failed to noticed that all three brands are nothing but shills for Fuller Seminary and Willow Creek.

Meanwhile, Paul McCain (MDiv) has remarked with nostalgia that the early church leaders had courage. If only he had been there to suffer with them. But when he was living high at the Purple Palace, he and Al Barry did nothing to stem the apostasy rampant in the LCMS. DP Benke got a "Naughty! Naughty!" and St. John's in Ellisville spun out of control as a Willow Creek Association congregation.

Willow Creek? Did that make St. John's a union church? The LCMS acted at once. The Willow Creek Association no longer published their partners.

Wally Schulz was a member of St. John's in Ellisville, mildly complaining about the place, the whole "We have an exciting Sunday for you" approach to worship. He must have fought against the congregation's waywardness. Right? No, he went to another congregation.

The get-along go-along Lutherans find themselves waving goodbye to their pastors who join Rome and Eastern Orthodoxy.

---

MLS Veteran has left a new comment on your post "Conservative Episcopalians Fight for Doctrine, Pro...":

Are those actual vestments, or did you do some spiffy photoshop or something?

Does the individual clergy-person get to design their own uniform or something?

It looks like something an 8 year old would consider "sophisticated and princess like"...

***

GJ - Sure, I have time to PhotoShop Episcopalian primates. The Rainbow PB Elect has a closet full of robes like that. I know from my collection of photos.

Sunday, June 29, 2008

Sixth Sunday after Trinity



Spring in Arizona, by Norma Boeckler



The Sixth Sunday after Trinity

Bethany Lutheran Worship, 8 AM Phoenix Time

The Hymn # 369 trans. Loy - Wenn wir in hochsten The Invocation p. 15
The Confession of Sins
The Absolution
The Introit p. 16
The Gloria Patri
The Kyrie p. 17
The Gloria in Excelsis
The Salutation and Collect p. 19
The Epistle and Gradual Romans 6:3-11
The Gospel Matthew 5:20-26
Glory be to Thee, O Lord!
Praise be to Thee, O Christ!
The Nicene Creed p. 22
The Sermon Hymn # 370 – tune: Magdalen The Sermon
Righteousness from God or from Ourselves

The Hymn # 314 by H. E. Jacobs – tune: Herr Jesus Christ dich The Preface p. 24
The Sanctus p. 26
The Lord's Prayer p. 27
The Words of Institution
The Agnus Dei p. 28
The Nunc Dimittis p. 29
The Benediction p. 31
The Hymn # 45 tune: Liebster Jesus

Hymn notes – Loy was one of the great leaders of the old ALC, serving a church in Delaware, Ohio, just north of Columbus, Ohio. The old ALC seminary had a great faculty and led the Midwest in orthodoxy. Lenski taught there, but is now forgotten or scorned. Trinity Seminary is ELCA now and so is Loy’s congregation in Delaware. Henry Eyster Jacobs was one of the great leaders in the Muhlenberg tradition (LCA). He helped restore Reformation Lutheran doctrine to the Pennsylvania Lutherans.

SIXTH SUNDAY AFTER TRINITY
Lord God, heavenly Father, we confess that we are poor, wretched sinners, and that there is no good in us, our hearts, flesh and blood being so corrupted by sin, that we never in this life can be without sinful lust and concupiscence; therefore we beseech Thee, dear Father, forgive us these sins, and let Thy Holy Spirit so cleanse our hearts that we may desire and love Thy word, abide by it, and thus by Thy grace be forever saved; through our Lord Jesus Christ, Thy Son, who liveth and reigneth with Thee and the Holy Ghost, one true God, world without end. Amen.

Romans 6:3 Know ye not, that so many of us as were baptized into Jesus Christ were baptized into his death? 4 Therefore we are buried with him by baptism into death: that like as Christ was raised up from the dead by the glory of the Father, even so we also should walk in newness of life. 5 For if we have been planted together in the likeness of his death, we shall be also in the likeness of his resurrection: 6 Knowing this, that our old man is crucified with him, that the body of sin might be destroyed, that henceforth we should not serve sin. 7 For he that is dead is freed from sin. 8 Now if we be dead with Christ, we believe that we shall also live with him: 9 Knowing that Christ being raised from the dead dieth no more; death hath no more dominion over him. 10 For in that he died, he died unto sin once: but in that he liveth, he liveth unto God. 11 Likewise reckon ye also yourselves to be dead indeed unto sin, but alive unto God through Jesus Christ our Lord.

Matthew 5:20 For I say unto you, That except your righteousness shall exceed the righteousness of the scribes and Pharisees, ye shall in no case enter into the kingdom of heaven. 21 Ye have heard that it was said of them of old time, Thou shalt not kill; and whosoever shall kill shall be in danger of the judgment: 22 But I say unto you, That whosoever is angry with his brother without a cause shall be in danger of the judgment: and whosoever shall say to his brother, Raca, shall be in danger of the council: but whosoever shall say, Thou fool, shall be in danger of hell fire. 23 Therefore if thou bring thy gift to the altar, and there rememberest that thy brother hath ought against thee; 24 Leave there thy gift before the altar, and go thy way; first be reconciled to thy brother, and then come and offer thy gift. 25 Agree with thine adversary quickly, whiles thou art in the way with him; lest at any time the adversary deliver thee to the judge, and the judge deliver thee to the officer, and thou be cast into prison. 26 Verily I say unto thee, Thou shalt by no means come out thence, till thou hast paid the uttermost farthing.

Righteousness from God or from Ourselves

Unless your righteousness exceeds that of the scribes and Pharisees…

At first glance that looks like a criticism of the scribes and Pharisees, as if they were immoral, lax, hedonistic, stingy, bad examples. The opposite is true. They held to a rigid observance of the Law.

Luther has an extensive discussion of Law and Gospel in his commentary on Galatians. That book was one of his finest, and he held it as one of his best, along with the Small Catechism.

First let me discuss the observance of the Law. As Luther knew from his own effort to please God with the Law, one can be outwardly observant while inwardly raging against the Law. This counts for nothing, for our thoughts condemn us as much as our actions. That is often missed in congregations today, where the appearance of piety is mistaken for faith in the Gospel. The piety on display is really to impress others. If those glittering vices (Augustine) are overlooked, people point them out. “My father founded this church” or “I serve on seven committees” or “I was a charter member of this church.”

Someone can be kept from outwardly sinner by physical restraint and threats. That does not remove sin. Luther said, “You can tie a pig ever so tightly to a tree, but you cannot keep him from squealing.”

The Roman party tried to make Luther into a hedonist, but he was making the point that the system of righteousness through the Law was destructive to Roman Catholic souls, as he knew. No peace can come with righteousness through the Law, because nothing is ever enough. Either the person is tormented by the Law and hates God, as Luther did, or he is hardened by his self-righteousness, as Paul was. The Apostle was so observant as a Pharisees that he actively sought out Christians and arrested them. So God chose this hardened instrument to be His instrument of grace. No one knew the Law better, so Paul became the best Gospel preacher during a time when the Law-mongers wanted to drown out the Gospel.

Strangely, I had the misfortune of hearing the Willow Creek Community Church preacher give a sermon on this text. He began the same way, but what he offered was man’s observance of the Law as the solution. The Law does show us our sin, but the Law cannot cure the problem. My wife had a cardiac test this week, but another test is not going to make her heart better. If tests (the Law) cured her, she would be Superwoman by now.

One example from Willow Creek was a sports star who vacuumed the rugs there. They wanted to prove their “servant model” and make people feel guilty about not volunteering. If a Chicago Bears football star took the money he made per hour in sports, he could buy new carpets instead of sweeping them. I suppose that would have been a lesson in piety too. The minister also told people how men had to accept women’s leadership in the church before they were allowed to join. And yet, in an age where men flee from spiritual leadership and need to be encouraged to lead, LCMS and WELS gurus tell their pastors to take classes at Willow Creek to learn how to do things right.

The trouble with the Law is that we feel pretty comfortable with it. My college students, even graduate students, ask me, “What do you want?” I remind them - that is a child question, not an adult question. “I want 1000 words” (Law) will yield 1000 words – minimal fulfillment of the Law. The Law moves us to do the minimum. The Gospel is entirely different.

Just to show how deeply some are involved in the Law – one Lutheran at a conservative congregation became very angry when I said the Law did bear any fruits. I was quoting Walther in a congregation where Walther supposedly walked 6 feet off the ground. The statement enraged the man because he did not accept the dominance of the Gospel and trusted in the Law. The Scriptures warn us constantly that Moses is not our Savior and the Law is a terrible form of salvation. If we make God the God of Law alone, the burden is intolerable.

The Gospel cures the problem of sin. That is why pastors are called stewards of the mysteries of God. A mystery is something revealed by the Holy Spirit and known only through revelation. That is, everyone can and should know there is a Creator. Almost everyone in America believes in God in some fashion. However, the Trinity is not the final result of man’s research, common sense, or logic. Neither is the Incarnation, the Atonement, the Resurrection, or justification by faith.

We can see how these are mysteries because man’s wisdom wants to reduce them to something else. Man reduces the Two Natures of Christ to one nature, either divine alone or human alone (depending on the era). Man constantly works against justification by faith. The greatest intellectual edifice ever fashioned is justification by works – a product of Medieval Christianity. Thousands of books are devoted to maintaining a transparent attack against the message of the entire Bible – that man receives the righteousness of Christ through faith. That faith is the result of proclaiming the Gospel. Only God can produce that faith in man. Only God can supply the righteousness received through faith.

Pietism rules over Protestant America, and other forms of Pietism dominate Romanism and Eastern Orthodoxy. They have the same formula – performing works to earn God’s salvation.

That is the reason for the religious leaders hatred of Jesus. They could not condemn Him for being gracious, kind to the poor, full of miracles for the needy. They loathed Him because He said, “Your righteousness does not come from within you but from the outside, from Me alone. Believe in Me and you will be forgiven, saved, and taken into the bosom of Abraham.”

We are not saved by the virtue of faith, as Chemnitz teaches below:

"We must note the foundations. For we are justified by faith, not because it is so firm, robust, and perfect a virtue, but because of the object on which it lays hold, namely Christ, who is the Mediator in the promise of grace. Therefore when faith does not err in its object, but lays hold on that true object, although with a weak faith, or at least tries and wants to lay hold on Christ, then there is true faith, and it justifies. The reason for this is demonstrated in those lovely statements in Philippians 3:12: 'I apprehend, or rather I am apprehended by Christ' and Galatians 4:9: 'You have known God, or rather have been known by God.' Scripture shows a beautiful example of this in Mark 9:24: 'I believe; help my unbelief.'"
Martin Chemnitz, Loci Theologici, 2 vols., II, p. 503. Philippians 3:12; Galatians 4:9; Mark 9:24.

We are saved by the object of our faith. Faith apprehends and grasps the Gospel Promises, which never deceive.

Christ is the healing balm for our sin. The Law shows where our flaws exist, where the wounds of our human nature lie. The Gospel of forgiveness heals these wounds. We need constant healing because we wound ourselves and wound others as well.

The Gospel from Christ is also the power to defeat sin. The Law shows us sin but has no power over sin, just as an x-ray reveals a broken bone without healing it. The Gospel is the energy of God’s Holy Spirit to guide us and strengthen against sin.

The Law says, “I told you that you could never overcome this problem.”

The Gospel proclaims forgiveness when we fail and return in godly contrition, even when we fail and fail again. Each step along the way shows us the folly of our Old Adam and the loving grace of our Savior.

People are not driven away by Christianity but by the Law religion they hear or choose to hear. That is why so many have made hay from this Law obsession. The Law-mongers condemn with the Law and sell a varnished version of the Law as the cure. You have problems? You don’t believe hard enough! (More condemnation) You are poor? Give God all your money and He will give you seven times as much back. (Paying God for forgiveness, not to mention making a nice investment with a great return.)

The Gospel promises forgiveness and the cross. We would rather pass on the cross business, but the cross must remain. The unbelieving world hates the righteousness of Christ, so they must persecute the Word wherever it prospers and threatens to take root. Christ and the apostles were not spared, so why should we be?

I will never forget this wonderful lesson from a talented woman. She had an MBA and stayed at home to raise her children. She was a perfectionist and loved hymn 370, which we sang today. It was her favorite hymn. She said, “I am a perfectionist. That’s why I know I am not perfect. That is also why I need the Gospel. I know Christ is my righteousness.”

My Hope Is Built On Nothing Less
One morning it came into my mind as I went to labour, to write an hymn on the ‘Gracious Experience of a Christian.’ As I went up Holborn I had the chorus,
‘On Christ the solid Rock I stand,
All other ground is sinking sand.’
In the day I had four first verses complete, and wrote them off. On the Sabbath following I met brother King as I came out of Lisle Street Meeting…who informed me that his wife was very ill, and asked me to call and see her. I had an early tea, and called afterwards. He said that it was his usual custom to sing a hymn, read a portion, and engage in prayer, before he went to meeting. He looked for his hymn-book but could find it nowhere. I said, ‘I have some verses in my pocket; if he liked, we would sing them.’ We did, and his wife enjoyed them so much, that after service he asked me, as a favour, to leave a copy of them for his wife. I went home, and by the fireside composed the last two verses, wrote the whole off, and took them to sister King…As these verses so met the dying woman’s case, my attention to them was the more arrested, and I had a thousand printed for distribution. I sent one to the Spiritual Magazine, without my initials, which appeared some time after this. Brother Rees, of Crown Street, Soho, brought out an edition of hymns [1836], and this hymn was in it. David Denham introduced it [1837] with Rees’ name, and others after…Your inserting this brief outline may in future shield me from the charge of stealth, and be a vindication of truthfulness in my connection with the Church of God.
Edward Mote
Letter to the Gospel Herald

My hope is built on nothing less
Than Jesus’ blood and righteousness.
I dare not trust the sweetest frame,
But wholly trust in Jesus’ Name.
Refrain
On Christ the solid Rock I stand,
All other ground is sinking sand;
All other ground is sinking sand.
When darkness seems to hide His face,
I rest on His unchanging grace.
In every high and stormy gale,
My anchor holds within the veil.
Refrain
His oath, His covenant, His blood,
Support me in the whelming flood.
When all around my soul gives way,
He then is all my Hope and Stay.
Refrain
When He shall come with trumpet sound,
Oh may I then in Him be found.
Dressed in His righteousness alone,
Faultless to stand before the throne.
Refrain







JUSTIFYING FAITH

"But when we are speaking of the subject itself, it is certain that the doctrine of gracious reconciliation, of the remission of sins, of righteousness, salvation, and eternal life through faith for the sake of the Mediator is one and the same in the Old and in the New Testament. This is a useful rule which we must retain at all costs: The doctrine, wherever we read it, in either the Old or New Testament, which deals with the gracious reconciliation and the remission of sins through faith for the sake of God's mercy in Christ, is the Gospel."
Martin Chemnitz, Loci Theologici, St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1989, II, p. 459.

"Therefore God, 'who is rich in mercy' [Ephesians 2:4], has had mercy upon us and has set forth a propitiation through faith in the blood of Christ, and those who flee as suppliants to this throne of grace He absolves from the comprehensive sentence of condemnation, and by the imputation of the righteousness of His Son, which they grasp in faith, He pronounces them righteous, receives them into grace, and adjudges them to be heirs of eternal life. This is certainly the judicial meaning of the word 'justification,' in almost the same way that a guilty man who has been sentenced before the bar of justice is acquitted."
Chemnitz, Loci Theologici, 1989, II, p. 482.

"Yet these exercises of faith always presuppose, as their foundation, that God is reconciled by faith, and to this they are always led back, so that faith may be certain and the promise sure in regard to these other objects. This explanation is confirmed by the brilliant statement of Paul in 2 Corinthians 1:20: 'All the promises of God in Christ are yea and amen, to the glory of God through us,' that is, the promises concerning other objects of faith have only then been ratified for us when by faith in Christ we are reconciled with God. The promises have been made valid on the condition that they must give glory to God through us."
Chemnitz, Loci Theologici, 1989, II, p. 495.

"Therefore this apprehension or acceptance or application of the promise of grace is the formal cause or principle of justifying faith, according to the language of Scripture."
Chemnitz, Loci Theologici, 2 vols., II, p. 502.

"We must note the foundations. For we are justified by faith, not because it is so firm, robust, and perfect a virtue, but because of the object on which it lays hold, namely Christ, who is the Mediator in the promise of grace. Therefore when faith does not err in its object, but lays hold on that true object, although with a weak faith, or at least tries and wants to lay hold on Christ, then there is true faith, and it justifies. The reason for this is demonstrated in those lovely statements in Philippians 3:12: 'I apprehend, or rather I am apprehended by Christ' and Galatians 4:9: 'You have known God, or rather have been known by God.' Scripture shows a beautiful example of this in Mark 9:24: 'I believe; help my unbelief.'"
Martin Chemnitz, Loci Theologici, 2 vols., II, p. 503. Philippians 3:12; Galatians 4:9; Mark 9:24.

"For we are not justified because of our faith (propter fidem), in the sense of faith being a virtue or good work on our part. Thus we pray, as did the man in Mark 9:24: 'I believe, Lord; help my unbelief'; and with the apostles: 'Lord, increase our faith,' Luke 17:5."
Martin Chemnitz, Loci Theologici, 2 vols., II, p. 506. Mark 9:24; Luke 17:5.

"But because not doubt but faith justifies, and not he who doubts but he who believes has eternal life, therefore faith teaches the free promise, which relies on the mercy of God for the sake of the sacrifice of the Son, the Mediator, and not on our works, as Paul says in Romans 4:16: 'Therefore it is of faith, that the promise might be sure according to grace.'"
Martin Chemnitz, Loci Theologici, 2 vols., II, p. 507. Romans 4:16

"Thus when we say that we are justified by faith, we are saying nothing else than that for the sake of the Son of God we receive remission of sins and are accounted as righteous. And because it is necessary that this benefit be taken hold of, this is said to be done 'by faith,' that is, by trust in the mercy promised us for the sake of Christ. Thus we must also understand the correlative expression, 'We are righteous by faith,' that is, through the mercy of God for the sake of His Son we are righteous or accepted."
Melanchthon, Loci Communes, “The Word Faith.” Cited in Martin Chemnitz, Loci Theologici, II, p. p. 489.

Saturday, June 28, 2008

Look for the Union Label


Norm Teigen

"The gathering was at the the Swedish church. It was very well received by all who were in attendance. The presiding minister was Jerry Lanes, the pastor of Scandian Grove.

I wish that I had been able to attend. I am happy to report that the Norselanders, both Swedish and Norwegian, both ELCA and ELS, joined together in singing praises to God on the occasion of their anniversary."

***

GJ - I could never sing with an ELCA congregation. When I was at a Concordia, Ft. Wayne worship service, George Orvick and W. Peterson were singing with the Missouri Synod. They said to me afterwards, "Don't tell. We couldn't help singing."

The Wisconsin Synod works with ELCA and Missouri on a wide variety of religious projects, including joint worship and evangelism efforts. Clucketh not thy tongue at the Little Sect on the Prairie.

The conservative Episcopalians are doing the opposite, showing their disgust toward their leadership, which happens to work hoof-and-claw with ELCA.

One Small Step for a Woman,
One Giant Leap for Apostasy



Presiding Bishop and Bishop