Showing posts with label ELDoNA Colloquium and Synod. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ELDoNA Colloquium and Synod. Show all posts

Sunday, July 14, 2013

Impressions from My Visit with ELDoNA at their 2013 Colloquium and Synod – PART V.5 (FINAL)

(Continued from PART V.4)
PART V.5 (FINAL)

This is the final installment of my Impressions from My Visit with ELDoNA at their 2013 Colloquium and Synod. It requires a bit of an auto-biographical preamble before getting to the two remaining reviews.


Born and raised in a Christian home, with what I would say was an essentially sound Christian training, including six years of Christian day-school, I finally graduated from a public high-school, and was released to the world (many readers may be interested to know, as I was happy to learn nearly twenty years after the fact, that my high-school principal was a WELS man. Principal John Wyatt. He left a couple years after I graduated to become either a Principal or Superintendent of another school, in the La Crosse, WI, area, I think. It may have been a private school, but I don't remember knowing for sure).

After graduation, my mother wanted me to go to a Lutheran Bible school before going to college, and to set my sights on becoming a paster. There are many missionaries and pastors on her side of the family, and she had worked for Lutheran Bible Institute (LBI) in Golden Valley, MN, before it had converted to a Junior College in the late 1960's. The only Lutheran Bible school left in the country when I graduated high-school (and today, I believe), was the Association Free Lutheran Bible School (AFLBS), in Medicine Lake, MN. I wanted to go, too. I knew that, before going into the world (“before being returned to the parish to assist in the ministry of the congregation,” as Augsburg Seminary Professors Sverdrup and Oftedahl put it in their congregation-centric theory of Christian Education – yes, there were lots of other Lutherans in America during the 19th Century, other than General Synod, Norwegian Synod, and various German Lutherans), two years of studying only the Bible would be an invaluable capstone to my secondary education experience. But I was also interested in science. And philosophy. And law. I thought about it, and gave serious consideration to my mother's advice and wishes. But decided to go to University, instead. I was not prepared.

Tuesday, July 9, 2013

Impressions from My Visit with ELDoNA at their 2013 Colloquium and Synod – PART V.4

(Continued from PART V.3, yesterday)

PART V.4

Rev. Michael Henson:
That God Would Probe the Mind of Man

This is, quite possibly, one of the most concise developments of the Lutheran teaching and preaching rubric of Law and Gospel I've ever heard. Written as a series of twelve simply stated theses, it begins with God's omniscient searching of Man's heart and mind, in which He finds sinfulness beyond man's capacity to measure. God, far from being blind to it, sees man's sin, and reveals man's sin to himself through His Law – revealing through it also His righteous anger, causing man to cry out either in rebellion against God or in anguish and a desire to be free from the effects of sin. This is the point where the Gospel has application: instead of a cry of hopeless complaint, the Gospel gives man a basis for crying out to this same God for mercy and deliverance from His wrath – which He freely and faithfully accomplishes through faith in His promises. The grateful Christian, receiving grace and mercy through faith, and thus free from God's wrath and no longer finding God's perfect Law to be a curse, still desires that God would probe his mind, would test and prove him. At peace with God, he is contented.

That is a summary of the twelve theses, each thesis being supported by Scripture, of course, and the whole being amplified by Luther's commentary on Psalm 90,vv7&8. It was a genuinely well-received paper, and I found it to be a marvelously fresh and concise presentation of Law and Gospel that emerged directly from the Scriptures – without being over-burdened with the use of elements from human psychology (“the sinner ought to feel this particular way about his sin, or else the Gospel has no application... then the Gospel will make him feel a different way,” etc...). Though nothing that Rev. Henson said was new to me, this was the first time I had heard all of these elements put together in this way. I found myself quite grateful for having been able to have received his presentation.


Rev. Paul Rydecki:
The Forensic Appeal to the Throne of Grace in the Theology of the Lutheran Age of Orthodoxy: A Reflection on the Atonement and Its Relationship to Justification

This paper more than met the high standards of scholarship and fidelity to the sources that readers of Intrepid Lutherans have come to expect from Rev. Rydecki, and which I was expecting from the papers of the Colloquium, and more than met the “post-Synodical-Conference” character of ELDoNA, for whom, as I stated above, neither Lutheran history nor the “Lutheran Age of Orthodoxy” began in 1848 – although, Rev. Rydecki (in his first footnote) redefines that latter term for the purposes of his paper: “For our purposes, the age of Lutheran orthodoxy will be defined as the period beginning with Martin Luther and ending with Johann Gerhard, c. AD 1515-1637” (typically, I think the “Lutheran Age of Orthodoxy” is defined as something like AD 1580-1730 – clearly as a reference to the growth and impact of Lutheran Scholasticism). In my opinion, this paper constitutes a vitally important and academically honest contribution to the current – and growing – debate over the proper and orthodox way to articulate the Lutheran Doctrine of Justification.

As the title of this paper – along with the first footnote – makes abundantly clear, it is concerned with establishing for the modern Lutheran an understanding of the Doctrine of Justification and its relationship to the Atonement, as they were taught during the first two generations of Lutheran theologians, based on what they stated directly concerning these doctrines, rather than how their statements “can be properly understood” according to various recent formulations of them. What this means is that neither the extended “Election Debates” of latter 19th Century America, nor the American Lutheran figures from that period, are in view – although the claims of some contemporary commentators regarding the doctrine of the Reformers, and of orthodox Lutherans in the immediate post-Reformation period, are addressed, since many such claims do not rely on the words of those early theologians as they spoke them, but instead pass those words through the prism of hardened positions taken by confessional Lutherans involved in the 19th Century “Election Debates,” and since such claims tend to frame the current and growing debate concerning the Doctrine of Justification.

Subsequent to delivering it at the ELDoNA Colloquium, Rev. Rydecki published his paper both on his own blog, Faith Alone Justifies, and on Intrepid Lutherans. The reader is invited to read the paper at either of these two sources; links to various sections of his paper will be included as it is reviewed, below.

Rev. Rydecki starts precisely where he ought, with the “Common Outline of Forensic Justification” that is articulated in the Formula of Concord (FC:SD:III:24-25) and cited by nearly every competent author who involves himself in this debate. The four components of that Outline are reiterated by Rev. Rydecki, as follows:
  1. “God's grace”
  2. “Christ's merit”
  3. “faith, through which the righteousness of Christ is imputed to the sinner, and”
  4. “the promise of the Gospel, since faith is only kindled in the heart by the Holy Spirit working through the Word.”
He then immediately identifies the genre of terminology to which the term “justification” belongs as juridical, and emphasizes that:
    “The role of each one of these components is described by all of the principal writers in the age of orthodoxy in ‘forensic,’ that is, ‘judicial’ or ‘courtroom’ terminology, as they unfold the Biblical concept of ‘justification’.”
That is, all of the components of the Common Outline, are treated by orthodox Lutheran writers, from Luther to Gerhard, as juridical, just as the term justification is itself juridical. Thus, while justification was recognized as a juridical term, it was not viewed as being comprised of both juridical and non-juridical components. ALL components were regarded as juridical – as occurring before a judge in a courtroom setting.

This “courtroom setting” is the centerpiece of an analogy used by the early orthodox writers of the Lutheran Confession to explain the Lutheran Doctrine of Justification. It is not the analogy of a “bank account” nor of a “water tower” – which are frequently repeated in contemporary times, even though they are totally contrary in nature to that of justification, which is, again, juridical in nature, not financialin nature, nor having the nature of public utilities. Rather, Rev. Rydecki emphasizes, the early orthodox Lutherans actually used a juridical analogy of a courtroom to explain justification according to its Common Outline – an analogy in which there are at least three distinct features:
  1. A real human being as a whole person – not a pre-incarnate person, not God's foreknowledge of a person, but a real live person
  2. A Righteous Judge who examines the merits of that person's works, Who, finding none, justly condemns that person
  3. Another Authority to which that real human being can appeal for Mercy and Pardon (much like a condemned prisoner in our day will appeal to the Office of the Presidency for official pardon, saying “Yes, I'm guilty. Yet I beg of you, please have mercy on me.”).
In support of the observation that orthodox Lutherans from Luther to Gerhard relied on this analogy, Rev. Rydecki marshals lengthy quotes from Luther, Melanchthon and Chemnitz, both from Confessional documents and from other writings, like commentaries on books of the Bible or doctrinal treatises, and also from Gerhard and Hunnius – who states, significantly:
    “In a human judgment, they are said ‘to be justified’ who are pronounced free from the guilt of the crimes of which they were accused... In the same way, understanding the word in the same forensic usage, they are said to be justified before God who, fleeing to the Throne of Grace2, are absolved from the guilt of sin and from damnation, and are reckoned as righteous by the imputation of the righteousness of Christ, which consists in His obedience” (Articulus de iustificatione hominis peccatoris gratuita)
Likewise states Chemnitz as he negates the false teaching of the Roman church in his Examination of the Council of Trent. In its Decree of the Sixth Session, Article II – entitled “Concerning the Term ‘Justification’,” the Roman Catholic Church rejected the Lutheran position of Justification by Faith Alone, instead requiring within its definition of the term “justify” a righteousness that is infused in man by faith, rather than imputed to him, and which thus serves as a basis on which God would adjudge him “righteous”. Chemnitz responds, saying in part:
    The meaning of the word ‘justify’... is judicial, namely, that the sinner, accused by the Law of God, convicted, and subjected to the sentence of eternal damnations, fleeing in faith to the throne of grace, is absolved for Christ's sake, reckoned and declared righteous, received into grace, and accepted to eternal life.” (Examination, Vol. 1, 474)
Here Chemnitz makes clear, the sinner BEFORE GOD already stands convicted and condemned on account of his sin – that is, God is not blind to his sin!. Because this is true, the convicted sinner flees in faith to where he will find Mercy: the Throne of Grace.

Lest one be tempted to regard this Analogy as having been understood by the early Lutherans as anything other than a single event, however, he should take note, first, of the lengthy quote offered by Rev. Rydecki from the Loci Theologici of Martin Chemnitz:
    Thus, the use of the legal term “justification” refutes the ideas of the Epicureans. For it shows that the justification of the sinner is not some insignificant or perfunctory thing, but that the whole human being stands before the judgment of God and is examined both with respect to his nature as well as his works, and this according to the norm of the divine law. But because after the entrance of sin a human being in this life does not have true and perfect conformity with the law of God, nothing is found in this examination, whether in the person’s nature or in his works, that he can use to justify himself before God; rather the Law pronounces the sentence of condemnation, written by the very finger of God Himself.

    ...Therefore, because God does not justify out of frivolity, unconcern, error, or iniquity, nor because He finds anything in man whereby he might be justified before God; and yet the just requirement of the Law must be fulfilled in those who are to be justified... therefore a foreign righteousness must intervene – the kind of righteousness which not only with payment of penalties but also with perfect obedience to the divine law made satisfaction in such a way that it could be a propitiation for the sins of the whole world.

    To this the terrified sinner, condemned by the voice of the Law, flees in true faith. This he desires, begs for, lays hold of; to this he submits himself; this he uses as his defense before the judgment seat of God and against the accusation of the Law. By regard for this and by its imputation he is justified, that is, he is absolved from the comprehensive sentence of condemnation and receives the promise of eternal life.
In this quote, we clearly see that, according to Chemnitz
  1. the sinner involved is a whole human being – not a pre-incarnate person, not the idea or foreknowledge of that person in God's mind from the moment of Christ's death or resurrection, long before that person came into existence, but a real, live whole person.
  2. the sinner – as a living breathing human being, not a pre-incarnate person, not the idea or foreknowledge of that person in God's mind – actually stands before the judgment seat of God (also referred to by Chemnitz as the Throne of Justice, in his Enchiridion, Q.146), in the nakedness of his own sins, to which the Righteous Judge does not turn a blind eye, but on account of which He justly convicts and condemns the wretched man
  3. the sinner – again, as a whole human being – terrified by this sentence which he justly deserves and cannot escape on his own, flees in faith to the Throne of Grace and appropriates to himself the promises freely extended to him there
  4. the sinner – again as a living breathing human being – pleads his case before the Throne of Justice with the promises of the Gospel as his defense against the accusations of the Law, and thus is granted absolution from the sentence he deserves, and is justified.
This is Justification according to the Common Analogy, explicated above by Chemnitz, and expressed in various similar ways by the likes of Luther, Melanchthon, Gerhard and Hunnius through the “Lutheran Age of Orthodoxy” (as it is defined by Rev. Rydecki in footnote one). There are no pre-incarnate humans involved at any stage of anyone's Justification; rather the whole, living human being is involved from start to finish. At no point does any aspect of this whole, living person's Justification occur without his presence in God's divine court.

The second point one should note, lest he be tempted to regard this Analogy as having been understood by the early Lutherans as anything other than a single event, is amplified by Rev. Rydecki as he notes several aspects from Chemnitz' lengthy recitation of the Analogy with respect to the Common Outline of Justification that the Analogy was intended to explain:
  1. ALL components of the Outline are necessary, not just some, and
  2. ALL components occur simultaneously.
Rev. Rydecki states:
    “[J]ustification occurs in the divine courtroom, not without the accused fleeing in faith to the Throne of Grace, not before the accused flees in faith to the Throne of Grace, but simultaneously with this ‘fleeing’ or this ‘forensic appeal.’” ...Chemnitz’ analogy illustrates that the concept of forensic justification, as described by the Lutheran Fathers, is not a piecemeal justification that already ‘happened’ for all sinners, whether or not they appeal to the foreign righteousness of Christ, and then later ‘happens’ again through the Word and faith. Instead, it is the culmination of the four ‘causes’ that comprise the article of justification, each of which is a sine qua non in forensic justification. There can be no forensic justification of the sinner without God’s grace, or without the merit of Christ, or without the sinner being clothed by faith in the foreign righteousness of Christ, or without the promise of the Gospel that kindles faith.
These observations can leave little doubt that the early orthodox Lutherans did NOT view the entirety of Justification as anything other than occurring in a single point in time.

But what of this “Throne of Grace”? What is it and where does it come from? Surely, all Lutherans understand the picture of the “Throne of Justice” – this is, of course, where the Righteous Judge sits. But what is the Throne of Grace in this old Lutheran analogy of Justification? It is the seat of mercy, or the “Mercy Seat,” Who is Jesus Christ Himself, who in mercy freely confers NOT the sinner's own “pre-incarnate Justification” (since all aspects of Justification occur simultaneously within the confines of the Divine courtroom-setting, in which the whole person is present for the duration), but the benefit of His own Atoning or Reconciling work. Rev. Rydecki states:
    “On account of the satisfaction Christ made to the divine law, there exists, objectively, a Throne of Grace to which all sinners are invited (in the Gospel) to flee, an alternate place of judgment opened up as a result of God’s grace and the obedience, suffering, death, and resurrection of Christ. It is ‘another tribunal,’ apart from the Law, where God is propitious, where absolution is pronounced, justification is declared, and eternal life is bestowed for the sake of Christ. The ‘atonement’ made by Christ has opened up this Throne of Grace, which is actually Christ Himself, the ‘atonement cover’ or ‘Mercy Seat,’ sprinkled with His own blood6, the ‘Atoner’ or ‘Reconciler.’”


So far is covered the Common Outline of Justification, articulated in the Confessions, and cited as the starting point by everyone who has involved themselves in the current and growing debate on the Doctrine of Justification, and a Common Analogy used by orthodox Lutherans from the time of Luther to that of Gerhard – exhausting fully six pages of text (though referring to additional supporting material in the Appendices). The Common Analogy used by these early Lutherans says a great deal about how they understood the Doctrine of Justification and its relationship to the Atonement – but it is still just an analogy, not the Doctrine of Justification proper. For this reason, it was not, nor should any mere analogy be, used as a binding Confession – such are used only to assist in explaining what a given Confession is. For this reason Rev. Rydecki continued for an additional eleven pages to voluminously adduce evidence from the Lutheran Confessions and the doctrinal treatises and Scripture commentaries of these early Lutherans in an attempt to show that the Common Analogy they used to explain the Doctrine of Justification was in perfect harmony with the Doctrine they Confessed and explicated, and was consistent with their explanation and use of Scripture concerning that Doctrine. This evidence was broken down according to the four components of the Common Outline, and the reader can take in that evidence directly at the following links:In closing this paper, Rev. Rydecki does highlight a Wittenberg theologian from the period between 1515-1637, who neither accepted the Common Analogy nor maintained the Common Outline. He was a Swiss theologian who distinguished himself in his attacks against the Calvinists in favor of Universal Atonement, and who wrote a book against them totaling 1185 theses, entitled, That Christ Jesus died for the sins of all men. Impressed, in 1592 the Wittenberg theologians invited him to join the faculty, thinking he would make a strong ally in their own fight against Calvinism in Germany. That Swiss theologian was Samuel Huber. Rev. Rydecki continues:
    “But within three years, the Wittenberg faculty noticed that Huber was straying from the ‘common (and Scriptural) outline’ of justification. He was teaching a justification that ‘happened’ for all men apart from the Word and apart from faith. It was a ‘general justification,’ a ‘universal justification’ that was supposedly pronounced at some time on all men. As they dug back into his book of 1185 theses, the Wittenberg theologians found that he had already been teaching this false doctrine there... It can easily be determined, both from Huber’s writings (especially his Tübingen Theses) and from Hunnius’ writings against him, that Huber was by no means a ‘Universalist’ in the modern sense of the word; he did not teach that all people go to heaven. Nor did Hunnius ever bring that accusation against him... What Huber did teach was that, although God had justified the whole world, people could reject this general justification and fall back under God’s condemnation. But he taught that baptismal regeneration was necessary for salvation. He also taught that justification by faith was necessary for a person to be eternally saved.

    Huber’s problem was not that he was a Universalist. It was that he strayed from proper Biblical exegesis of certain passages, including Romans 5:12-20... It was that he strayed from the common outline of forensic justification that requires the imputation, by faith, of Christ’s righteousness in order for any sinner to be justified. It was that he strayed from the confessional Lutheran teaching that ‘restricts justification to believers only, as prescribed by all prophetic and apostolic Scriptures’ (Hunnius, Theses Opposed to Huberianism, Thesis 20 Concerning Justification).”
Samuel Huber was dismissed from the Wittenberg faculty in 1595. That he was dismissed, and, in particular, the foundation on which that dismissal was justified, i.e., “denying that justification is restricted to believers,” is further evidence offered by Rev. Rydecki of what the early orthodox Lutherans both confessed, and also what they rejected.

Finally, filling out the forty pages Rev. Rydecki submitted to the Colloquium, he included four appendices to his paper, offering still further evidence from the direct statements of orthodox Lutherans from Luther to Gerhard concerning the Doctrine of Justification as to what they in fact believed, taught and confessed. As was stated at the head of this review, the title of this paper – along with the first footnote – makes abundantly clear, that it is concerned with establishing for the modern Lutheran an understanding of the Doctrine of Justification and its relationship to the Atonement, as these were taught during the first two generations of Lutheran theologians, based on what they stated directly concerning these doctrines, rather than how their statements “can be properly understood” according to various recent formulations.

In this reviewer's opinion, Rev. Rydecki did a thorough and convincing job of establishing such an understanding. It seems clear that, based on the volume of material he marshals from the early orthodox Lutherans, the number of different authors cited and their recognized stature as respected theologians, and the unity of these citations across the two generations from which they are drawn, it is therefore reasonable to conclude, based strictly on their own statements, that Lutherans from the time of Luther to Gerhard taught that
  1. Justification consists of the following four components: (1) the Grace of God; (2) the Merit of Christ; (3) Faith, through which the righteousness of Christ is imputed to the sinner; and, (4) the promise of the Gospel, since faith is only kindled in the heart by the Holy Spirit working through the Word.
  2. ALL components are necessary to Justification, not just some components
  3. ALL components are regarded as juridical – as occurring before a judge in a courtroom setting.
  4. ALL components occur simultaneously
  5. the sinner involved is a whole human being – not a pre-incarnate person, not the idea or foreknowledge of that person in God's mind
  6. the sinner involved is not “already Justified,” but is already condemned on account of his sin, and is in very real need of Mercy
  7. “they are said to be Justified BEFORE GOD who, fleeing to the Throne of Grace [in faith], are absolved from the guilt of sin and from damnation, and are reckoned as righteous by the imputation of the righteousness of Christ”
Others may dispute these obvious conclusions to be drawn from Rev. Rydecki's research regarding the teaching of the early orthodox Lutherans. Fine. But it is not enough now for them to merely disagree, especially if such disagreement serves as any basis for their continued and malicious public malignment of his character. Rev. Rydecki has, with this paper, quite clearly laid down the gauntlet. The onus is now on those who disagree that this was the teaching of the early orthodox Lutherans to adduce with equal volume and unity, from a similar number of orthodox Lutheran theologians, having similar stature, from the same era treated by Rev. Rydecki, direct statements indicating the contrary. Short of this, the onus is on them to simply be honest, and admit that, in disagreeing with these obvious conclusions, though they stand in agreement with one another, they nevertheless stand in disagreement with the teaching of the Lutheran Fathers regarding the central article of the Christian faith.

Click here to Continue to PART V.5

Monday, July 8, 2013

Impressions from My Visit with ELDoNA at their 2013 Colloquium and Synod – PART V.3

(Continued from PART V.2, yesterday)
PART V.3

ELDoNA and a Return to Balanced confessional Lutheran Scholarship
My comparison of WELS and LCMS scholarship cultures, in the previous post in this series, is meant to express my general impressions based on my observations, as I have been exposed to WELS and LCMS scholarship, not as a characterization of every single author, nor as an absolute or “objective” conclusion regarding their character. I know for a fact that there are many individuals in both WELS and LCMS who are very capable, well-balanced, orthodox scholars. Nor is it meant to say that it is necessary for every single author in the ministerium to be a “top scholar;” there are many simple parish pastors – good, faithful pastors – who, though perhaps called upon to deliver a paper, do so making no pretenses. But on the whole, based on my exposure to them, my subjective appraisal is as a I had expressed it, which, when compared to the traditional reputation of confessional Lutheranism – that of “having the most learning” (as I had indicated at the beginning of PART V) – seems to exhibit a general character not quite living up to our reputation or our confession.

What I observed while at the 2013 Colloquium and Synod of the Evangelical Lutheran Diocese of North America (ELDoNA) confirmed for me that many of what I consider to be the best characteristics of both LCMS and WELS cultures of scholarship are present within the Diocese, and for me, form my impression of its own culture of scholarship.
  1. They're small (and in my experience, from the standpoint of maintaining unity and fostering collegiality, smaller is better), but the individuals are unrelated to one another, and seem to be mostly unknown to one another outside of their “professional association” – so it is their status as fellow-confessors, as fellow-students of the Word and as fellow-workers in the Ministry, and their history together as fellow-collaborators, that seem to serve as the primary factors in their credibility with one another, rather than, say, family reputation, long personal or family history, or gossip.
  2. There is a statistically significant percentage of doctoral degree attainment among ELDoNA clergy, along with other, additional academic pursuit – so there is strong academic experience to drive and maintain the high standards they have set for themselves.
  3. While centered on the Holy Scriptures and the Lutheran Confessions, their academic investigation also includes areas of study which impact the Church and her teaching from outside these two norms – areas of study like philosophy, history or sociology. Such investigation, however, does not appear to be the product of a discontentedness with the strictures of a static text and a fixed theology, or motivated out of a desire to “discover” additional meaning and room for broader or alternate application, but to preserve pure doctrine and conserve catholic and evangelical practice.
  4. Their research displays an exceptional cultural awareness.
That last point may be surprising to some, but, quite honestly, I was expecting it, and was delighted to have had my expectations met. But that may not be an obvious expectation for many – after all, they are a post-Synodical-Conference church body known for confessing and practicing a Lutheran Confession that fastidiously conserves a fidelity to the past (a “past” where Lutheran history begins at least a few hundred years before 1848), and not only that, the publishing house that is associated with them is actually named “Repristination Press!” Most contemporary-minded folks would more than likely think that they are far from culturally aware, but that instead, they are just a bunch of repristinationalist luddites, stuck in a romanticized past!

A conclusion like this is not necessarily unfounded, if one is under the impression that the study of history has as its purpose merely the cataloging of stale trivia. But this is not its purpose, and the scholarship that I was exposed to during the Colloquium, and that I have taken in from their books, and papers on the internet, testify to the fact that they understand very well the purpose for studying history: to understand the present. Many folks forget this fact. The reality is, our “present” is merely a position on a continuum of events, which extend to the present from the past and lead to our next, future position. That is to say, if we want to understand the present, and have an idea of where the future leads, we must understand our position on the arc of history – must have some understanding of the forces that have brought us to the place and time that we occupy. And knowing position and arc, it is thus also possible to have some reasonable idea of our trajectory (this is, incidentally, a “Conservative” view of history – a topic that has come up frequently on this blog, including our recent post Confessional Lutheran Evangelism: Confessing Scripture's Message about Advent & Christmas). Such a perspective cannot help but be eminently more culturally aware and relevant than that which advocates of the Church Growth Movement boast as “Real, Relational and Relevant,” to the exclusion of anything historical: a narrow and shallow perspective which descends from a studious fixation on the microcosm of the present. Such perspectives say nothing about our true position, dismiss any “arc of history,” and can thus give no indication of where we might be going.

There were nine papers delivered at the Colloquium. I will conclude this series of posts, by briefly reviewing five of them.


Bishop James Heiser:
An Overview of the Distinction of Grades of Sin in the Book of Concord and the Early Lutheran Fathers

Grades of Sin... I've always wondered about this, since my Bible distinguishes between certain kinds of sins and others, and certain kinds of sinners and others. My Bible teaches me that God is not blind to sin, and that on account of their sin, He turns His gracious countenance from certain kinds of sinners, instead turning them over to the lusts of their own flesh. My Bible even has a special word for these types of sinners: My Bible identifies them as Reprobates (you’ll strain your eyes and waste your time looking for this perfectly good, and desperately needed, word in your NIV – they expunged it, along with a whole host of other important, though older, ecclesiastical terms). Reprobates are different from apostates, who are guilty of a positive denial of evangelical doctrine. Apostates are also known as, “those who are guilty of the sin against the Holy Spirit.” Reprobates, however, do not deny but know and profess the doctrine of Christ, yet act in utter disregard for it.
    18 For the wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men, who hold the truth in unrighteousness; 19 Because that which may be known of God is manifest in them; for God hath shewed it unto them. 20 For the invisible things of him from the creation of the world are clearly seen, being understood by the things that are made, even his eternal power and Godhead; so that they are without excuse: 21 Because that, when they knew God, they glorified him not as God, neither were thankful; but became vain in their imaginations, and their foolish heart was darkened. 22 Professing themselves to be wise, they became fools, 23 And changed the glory of the uncorruptible God into an image made like to corruptible man, and to birds, and fourfooted beasts, and creeping things. 24 Wherefore God also gave them up to uncleanness through the lusts of their own hearts, to dishonour their own bodies between themselves: 25 Who changed the truth of God into a lie, and worshipped and served the creature more than the Creator, who is blessed for ever. Amen. 26 For this cause God gave them up unto vile affections: for even their women did change the natural use into that which is against nature: 27 And likewise also the men, leaving the natural use of the woman, burned in their lust one toward another; men with men working that which is unseemly, and receiving in themselves that recompence of their error which was meet. 28 And even as they did not like to retain God in their knowledge, God gave them over to a reprobate mind, to do those things which are not convenient; 29 Being filled with all unrighteousness, fornication, wickedness, covetousness, maliciousness; full of envy, murder, debate, deceit, malignity; whisperers, 30 Backbiters, haters of God, despiteful, proud, boasters, inventors of evil things, disobedient to parents, 31 Without understanding, covenantbreakers, without natural affection, implacable, unmerciful: 32 Who knowing the judgment of God, that they which commit such things are worthy of death, not only do the same, but have pleasure in them that do them. Romans 1:18-32

    5 Examine yourselves, whether ye be in the faith; prove your own selves. Know ye not your own selves, how that Jesus Christ is in you, except ye be reprobates? 2 Cor. 13:5
As the bolded sections indicate, reprobates are those who “hold the truth in unrighteousness,” who are therefore “given up by God,” and who are thus outside salvation regardless of whatever truth they hold. Indeed, in the 2 Corinthians reference above, St. Paul even warns fellow-believers to examine themselves, not only as to what they believe, but also what they personally do: “Jesus Christ is in you, unless you are a reprobate sinner.”

Inquiring of Lutheran pastors over the years, I've received only dismissive and totally inadequate responses: “All sin separates mankind from God. God has atoned for all sin. All sin is forgiven through Jesus Christ. It is a pointless exercise to divide sin into grades. Focus on the forgiveness.”

Bishop Heiser, in his brief essay, however, makes clear that neither Chemnitz, nor Melanchthon, nor Luther, nor first-generation Wittenberg theologians, like Professor Leonard Hutter, thought that observing “grades of sin” in the teaching of Scripture, such as what I have just pointed out, was a pointless exercise. Indeed, they seem to have agreed with C.F.W. Walther, who Bishop Heiser quoted as saying:
    “We have already seen that a distinction must be made between mortal and venial sins. A person failing to make this distinction does not rightly divide Law and Gospel” (The Proper Distinction Between Law and Gospel, pg. 325.).
After reminding the Lutheran reader of the fundamental divisions of sin which are still commonly taught among confessional Lutherans – Original Sin and Actual Sin – Bishop Heiser then proceeds, with the help of Professor Leonard Hutter, to define Venial Sin and Mortal Sin as the two primary divisions of Actual Sin. Quoting Melanchthon, Chemnitz and the book of Romans, he writes regarding Venial Sin:
    In the case of venial sin, one is dealing with actual sins, where the sinner is not deliberately acting against conscience. ‘At this point if you fight against sin so that you do not give way against your conscience, you shall retain grace and the Holy Spirit’ (Melanchthon, Loci Communes, 127). In this context, Melanchthon directs his readers to St. Paul's words in Romans 7: ‘But I see another law in my members, warring against the law of my mind and bringing me into captivity to the law of sin which is in my members.’ In such a person, sin is not being willfully tolerated; rather, its unwelcome presence torments the Christian. As Chemnitz explained, ‘Therefore there is sin dwelling in us which tries to keep us in captivity... But if they fight against it and are in Christ Jesus, even though sin is still in their members, yet for them there is no condemnation’ (Chemnitz, Loci Theologici, 672).”
Likewise Hutter:
    “A venial sin, therefore, is a fall or action of the regenerate, which conflicts with the law of God, but does not cause the loss of grace, the Holy Ghost, and faith; for those who have been born again, in their spirit strive that they may not be led astray contrary to conscience, and they grieve over their corruption, and believe that for the sake of their Mediator, God regards them with favor, and gratuitously forgives them all their sins, through and on account of Christ” (Compend of Lutheran Theology, 70.).
Mortal Sin, on the other hand, Bishop Heiser distinguishes as follows:
    “The point at issue in the distinction between venial and mortal sins is that there are some sins which are so grievous that they can cause a person to lose their salvation. ...[T]he distinction between venial and mortal sins is found in the cooperation of the will in the commission of the sin.
He then proceeds to marshal Luther, Melanchthon and Chemnitz, via the Book of Concord, and Hutter from the generation immediately following that of the Confessors, to support this statement:
    Luther: “It is, accordingly, necessary to know and to teach that when holy men, still having and feeling original sin, also daily repenting of and striving with it, happen to fall into manifest sins, as David into adultery, murder, and blasphemy, that then faith and the Holy Ghost has departed from them. For the Holy Ghost does not permit sin to have dominion, to gain the upper hand so as to be accomplished, but represses and restrains it so that it must not do what it wishes. But if it does what it wishes, the Holy Ghost and faith are certainly not present” (S3:III:43-44).

    Melanchthon: “Nor, indeed, is this faith an idle knowledge, neither can it coexist with mortal sin, but it is a work of the Holy Ghost, whereby we are freed from death, and terrified minds are encouraged and quickened” (AP:IV:115).

    Chemnitz: “We believe, teach, and confess that, although the contrition that precedes, and the good works that follow, do not belong to the article of justification before God, yet one is not to imagine a faith of such a kind as can exist and abide with, and alongside of, a wicked intention to sin and to act against the conscience” (FC:EP:III:11

    Hutter (borrowing from Melanchthon's Loci):“In those who have not been born again, every sin is mortal, whether it be original or actual, internal or external. But in those who have been born again, a mortal sin is either a fundamental error, or an internal action, contrary to the law of God, committed against conscience, and depriving its subject of the grace of God, faith and the Holy ghost.” (Compend of Lutheran Theology, 69).
God is not blind to sin. This fact underlies the confession of the Lutheran Church in regard to Mortal and Venial sins, as adduced in Bishop Heiser's paper. The distinction is not just a pointless exercise, as the gravity of Mortal Sin in a Believer is one of eternal impact. Bishop Heiser concludes:
    “The most important thing for us to remember as Christians is that the door of repentance remains open for all who repent and believe in Jesus Christ as their Saviour. David's adultery and murder offer a striking example of mortal sin, but his restoration shows us that even those who fall away in mortal sin can be restored. As we are promised in 1 John 1: ‘If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just to forgive our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness’ (v.9)... The Christian can, however, by the grace of God avoid mortal sin. All sin needs to be repented of, and there is a particularly pressing need in the case of a lapse into mortal sin that we repent and believe again the promises of the Gospel.”


PERSONAL THOUGHTS: Up to this point, I had been under the uneasy suspicion that contemporary Lutheran preachers have divested their preaching of God's Law. After taking in this paper, I have become convinced that this is increasingly the case. “In such a person [a Christian, conscious of his dual nature and the war his old man wages against the new man], sin is not being willfully tolerated; rather, its unwelcome presence torments the Christian.” That is, because sin inheres in the fleshly nature, because sin is always with the Christian, he ought to be tormented by it and earnestly desire to be rid of it! Yet, evidence of such a conviction is almost entirely absent from Lutheran preaching these days, where many are loathe to mention the Law in a way that might even make people feel just a bit “uncomfortable.” One of the most egregious examples of this that I have personally witnessed, occurred in 2009, when a WELS Circuit Pastor preached a sermon in which he stated, sheepishly, “and we all commit sins,” and immediately fell over himself making sure no one was offended by that statement, “but that's okay, it's okay, shh shhh shhhhhh, don't worry, don't worry, we are all forgiven...” Yes. He actually shushed the congregation as if people were convicted mortally terrified by his statement that “we all commit sins.” That statement was the only Law in the sermon. I was infuriated not only with his condescension but the man's clear misunderstanding of real human sin and complete non-application of the Law. I remember it because this sermon was the straw that broke this camel's back, and left me completely disillusioned with the WELS ministerium. Up to that point, noticing the obvious encroachments of evangelical sectarianism into the preaching and practice of WELS congregations, I had been making note of it as an exception (though growing in frequency), rather than the rule. Not after this. As a result of hearing this man's wretched sermon (and there were many other things wrong with it, too), I have since regarded the opposite as true, and finally acknowledging the opposite as the rule, have discovered it increasingly difficult to find exceptions to it.

Absent a genuine torment over Venial Sin, and an earnest desire to repent and be rid of it, Christians fall into Mortal Sin – into the habit of sinning against what their better judgment tells them is wrong, and excusing such actions: “It's really okay – I am already forgiven. I'll just focus on the forgiveness and be happy.” This attitude strikes me as imbalanced, approaching an Antinomian regard for sin and grace, and threatening to lead people into excusing and becoming comfortable with a lifestyle of manifest habitual sin.

Click here to Continue to PART V.4

Sunday, July 7, 2013

Impressions from My Visit with ELDoNA at their 2013 Colloquium and Synod – PART V.2

(Continued from PART V.1, yesterday)

NOTE to the justifiably sensitive WELS reader: As a warning to you before you begin, I am very critical of recent WELS scholarship in what follows. Although I state near the end that many WELS pastors are possessed of academic acumen and ability, see through growing controversy and error that results from a culture of sloppy scholarship, and are imbued with a serious passion to so express themselves, I think it it is important to begin this post (a) as I summarize it in the next post, by stating that my comparison of WELS and LCMS scholarship cultures is meant to express my general impressions based on my observations, as I have been exposed to WELS and LCMS scholarship, not as a characterization of every single author, nor as an absolute or “objective” conclusion regarding their character. I know for a fact that there are many individuals in both WELS and LCMS who are very capable, well-balanced, orthodox scholars. But on the whole, based on my exposure to them, my subjective appraisal is as a I express, below. And, (b) requesting that my criticism be taken as it is intended, in the spirit of hoping for improvement, as Rev. Jonathan Schroeder indicated such had resulted in the past, in his 2009 WELS Convention Essay, Our Calling: Christian Vocation and the Ministry of the Gospel, in which he quotes Koehler in calling attention to this fact:
    “‘outside attacks...calling attention to the motley character of the Synod's clergy and their practice, gave emphasis to the project [of establishing a ministerial education program]’ [Koehler, The History of the Wisconsin Synod, pg.119 -DL]... Once we realized, the error of our mildly pietistic Lutheranism, and realized that confessional Lutheranism required a confessional stance and confessional pastors, the issue of schools became paramount.”



PART V.2

Culture of Scholarship: A Subjective Comparison between LCMS and WELS
In my experience since having been brought to Lutheranism by the clear testimony of the Scriptures, having had the distinct claims of Lutheranism validated for me with the help of Heinrich Schmid's Doctrinal Theology, and then having been catechized into confessional Lutheranism by a WELS pastor (see Part V.1 for details), I have observed that most confessional Lutherans at least aspire to the standard of honest Lutheran scholarship exhibited by Schmid. But there are cultural differences among today's confessional Lutherans in America. The two church bodies with whose scholarship I am most familiar are the Lutheran Church – Missouri Synod (LCMS) and the Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod (WELS). According to my observations, the LCMS, for better or worse, has always been a church body that values academic achievement, and has consistently given a place of honor to those of distinguished or demonstrated scholarship. This can't help but yield a distinction of influence among individuals, and those aspiring to greater influence seem eager to distinguish themselves in this way. But once a particular topic has been exhausted – by previous academics, let's say – how much else is there to say on the matter? This is a problem which leads to a discontentedness with the old, and a desire for innovation, for exploration of new and different ideas. Breaking new ground is always the best way to distinguish oneself, and to feel as if “progress” is being made. However, when the “old” is Scripture and the Confessions, what is “new” often becomes something other than Scripture and the Confessions. And this has been my general observation in relation to scholarship in the LCMS. Often, it focuses on the relation of philosophy, history and/or sociology to issues of doctrine and practice in the Church, which, while not necessarily being unhelpful in and of themselves, if they become the focus and primary interest of Lutheran scholarship, can lead to enthusiasm for and the adoption of ideas that are not entirely Scriptural or Confessional or Lutheran. This has been the pattern in LCMS over past decades, according to my observation of LCMS scholarship as I have been exposed to it. And we see that among a great number of academic endeavors, Scripture and the Confessions are far from view.

This fact becomes all the more stark when one compares these observations regarding the culture of scholarship in LCMS to those of WELS (of which I am much more familiar, and have much more to say). One distinguishing feature of the history and the culture of scholarship in WELS is the distrust for outside scholarship and the near unanimous disapproval of higher-education that is inculcated among its pastors and theologians. Quite literally, they pride themselves in this feature as evidence of Christian piety. Of course, this isn't all bad, since there is much to distrust and disapprove of in upper academia; so such distrust isn't an unhealthy attitude, per se, as it encourages one to be judicious, highly selective and cautiously analytical (or so one would think). Nevertheless, such distrust and disapproval has resulted in a dismissal of academic achievement as a notable basis for relative influence of one person or another. So there is no material payoff for academic pursuit, either. Which, again, isn't all bad – after all, one wouldn't want pastors and theologians actively pursuing academic achievement in order to compete with one another for influence. However, such a culture has led to a noticeable dearth of bona fide academics in WELS. Those who do pursue higher study do so mainly for personal interest, it seems – and there doesn't seem to be very many such individuals.

The primary cultural factor impacting WELS scholarship is its size. It's “small” – not so small that everyone knows nearly everyone else, but small enough that those families who've been WELS for more than one generation are quite likely related to nearly everyone else. I alluded to this in my first post in this series. Moreover, there are certain family lines that are more prominent and influential in WELS than others – and there is a strong current of filial devotion that flows through them all. Nowhere was this on more prominent display than during the 2009 Convention of the Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod, following the paper given by Rev. Jonathan Schroeder entitled Our Calling: Christian Vocation and the Ministry of the Gospel, in which he accurately characterized our Synod's first president, Rev. John Muelhauser, as heterodox – a Pietist and willing Unionist who “saw the Confessions as nothing but paper fences,” and who notoriously boasted, “because I am not strictly [Lutheran] or OldLutheran, I am in a position to offer every child of God and servant of Christ the hand of fellowship over the ecclesiastical fence. ” It was during the Q&A session following Rev. Schroeder's paper that a descendant of Muelhauser (our very own First Vice President, Rev. James Huebner), feeling compelled out of a very apparent sense of filial piety, solemnly approached the microphone, and, being granted the floor to make his statement, announced that Muelhauser was an ancestor of his, and for this reason proceeded to defend his character and make sure that everyone knew that, even following its shift to Confessional orthodoxy under Hoenecke and Bading, WELS still accepted Muelhauser and continued to give him a place of honor among them regardless of his aberrations. Defending the character of one's parents, siblings, children and even grandparents? Sure. But defending ancestors who lived 150 years ago? That just strikes me as a bit odd – and it struck me that way in 2009, as well. One could view the proceedings for himself (here), if only WELS would open up access to view those old convention videos.

As further evidence, one may have noticed the still dwindling number of subscribers on our What We Believe page. A product of a CoP witch-hunt? Maybe, but not so much that I've heard. Rather, “suggestions” and even threats from individuals of more or less prominent families is the story I hear more frequently. One young pastor, apparently drawing his family-name like a sword, is reported to have promised regarding our entire list of subscribers: They will all be dealt with! Just full of vinegar? Perhaps. But I'm not so sure.

So what does this have to do with the culture of WELS scholarship? Plenty.

First, the only real scholarship which is encouraged, to which our pastors seem to be appreciably exposed during their training, and for which they are trained almost exclusively, is the art of Biblical exegesis. Many a WELS pastor has boasted to me, “The only textbooks we have at seminary are our Greek and Hebrew Testaments.” This is a very good foundation, and vitally important. In fact, if one were forced to choose only one thing to study in preparation for the Ministry, that would be it. But the problem here is at least two-fold: (a) consistent with such training, many are convinced that there is no other valid area of scholarship for a pastor, or any other Christian, to explore; and (b) when a pastor does eventually try his hand at it (as reality forces him to), he is totally unfamiliar with the academic conventions and techniques that are involved, yielding amateurish, unconvincing and disappointing results. Most notably in this regard, he is not practiced in the scholarly art of critique, and falls into common errors.

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English 101 way back when I was a College Freshman, was a remedial course that all Freshmen were required to take (truth be told, the entire first year was “remedial,” and two years of English were required – only in the second year did we begin to focus on English literature). There was only one Unit in English 101; it lasted the entire quarter. The subject? Critique. It was a remedial course that was required because, in the experience of the English faculty, nobody entering college knew how to do it, nobody had been taught how to parse an author's prose and accept or reject his argument based on the merits of his argument itself. They either uncritically accepted his argument wholesale, or based their opinion of his argument upon their own personal bias! Not even the Catholic girl, who showed up for class the first day proudly wearing her Catholic High-school sweatshirt, had been exposed to the practice of scholarly critique – a fact for which she was endlessly ridiculed by the professor: “So much for Catholic education, eh? You're no better off than the public-school slugs in here” (Yeah, they didn't like Christians on campus back then, either – of course, he was a New Yorker... educated at Berkley in the 1960s... and we were all Freshmen from the upper Mid-west. None of us had a wisp of a chance debating this guy. Despite his dislike for Christians, and his unfair treatment of that Catholic girl, however, this was a superb course – the most interesting and useful course in English I had while in college).

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The art of critique is something that is learned through academic experience, and it is eminently useful not only in assessing the arguments of others, but in one's own argumentation, as well.

Second, generally, anything other than the Bible is a prime target for qualification – except for WELS ancestral authors. That includes the Lutheran Confessions, which, if they are quoted at all are most often either formulaically proof-texted or carefully explained so that the plain meaning of the words can be “properly understood” in a different way (i.e., “justification BEFORE GOD is regeneration...” [AP:XII:60; SD:III:19] couldn't possibly mean what it says). I have never seen a WELS author from a previous generation (outside Muelhauser) – who wasn't later kicked out of WELS – quoted in any way other than full and unreserved acceptance. Ever. The result of all this seems to be that the only material one has from which to draw conclusions with any helpful certainty is the Bible, and the repository of WELS scholarship. This is a problem for those who would be scholars because, (a) Lutheran orthodoxy is established – although there is much to be reviewed and to be reminded of, there is nothing particularly new to say about what the Scriptures teach, (b) there is an absence of honest and critical review of ancestral works (which are generally unreviewed outside of the WELS family), and (c) outside works are often subjected to unnecessary qualification and, thus also, unjustified criticism – in some cases, almost as if it is great sport. In other words, everything that the Bible teaches has already been articulated, anything that has been said by WELS authors is ipso facto orthodox – especially after Koehler finally figured out the “true teaching” on Church and Ministry – and nearly every other Lutheran source is either rejected or regarded as unreliable.

This state of affairs leads to two notable, though separate, issues in WELS scholarship: (1) bland regurgitation of Biblical teaching, and (2) envelope-pushing experimentation with historically orthodox positions on doctrine and practice. In the former case, regurgitation is the practice of repeating what everyone knows, what everyone knows that everyone knows, in a manner that unquestionably displays that the author knows that everyone knows that everyone knows what he is repeating, and agrees with everything he states, everyone he quotes and everything he is going to conclude. That's unoriginal, unimpassioned regurgitation, and it leads to horrifically sloppy scholarship. Why should such an author bother to meticulously develop an argument that leads to a conclusion that everyone already agrees with? Why indeed! Instead, casually stated or even implicit assumptions replace what ought to be fully supported axioms (“everyone knows the axioms anyway, knows that I know them, and assumes them right along with me... so why bother?”), massive leaps of logic replace what ought to be several successive, though perhaps minor, steps of reasoning (“everyone knows the development of the next point, there is no need to repeat it fully, or even alert the reader that I am skipping them”), and sources go unattributed (“everyone knows that I am quoting the catechism here, and everyone knows that I am using the sainted Professor Heutenschleutermacher's Third German Edition [revised] with annotations from our seminary dog-notes – I mean, how could they not know?”). I would even go so far as to suggest that the sloppy scholarship learned through the practice of uncritical regurgitation is responsible, at least in part, for the practice of plagiarism that has recently plagued us (“If plagiarism isn't wrong when everyone knows who you're quoting anyway, well then, plagiarism isn't necessarily wrong. And if it isn't necessarily wrong, then it is always okay, unless someone can prove that I am wrong to do so, case by case, whenever I do it.”) Even issues like spelling and sentence structure are not untouched by the careless boredom evident in these works of regurgitation.

In the latter case, experimentation begins when an author finds himself entirely discontented with orthodoxy and with orthodox expression found in the “pattern of sound words” and historic practice bequeathed to us by the Church catholic. This is the same problem identified above, among the malcontents in LCMS having a desire to distinguish themselves through academic achievement. What is old is boring. What is old is irrelevant. What is old is not the reality for contemporary Americans. What is old is no longer fitting. There becomes a palpable desire for something new, and the task of innovation under the umbrella of a closed orthodoxy becomes a tempting challenge for the motivated and the creative – it represents an opportunity to become a famous hero like Martin Luther, only without getting excommunicated. But how does one go about this? Enter the phrase, “It can be properly understood.” Far from the practice of addressing Biblical, Confessional and historically orthodox documents from a didactic standpoint, this is the practice of exploiting weaknesses in their phraseology for the purpose of “finding” (i.e., creating) additional meaning and/or alternate application. The result is the introduction of variance – of uncertainty with the old and thus the possibility of the new.

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The undergraduate program in Physics from which I graduated, though not strong in theoretical emphasis, was known nationally among graduate schools as a program that excelled in experimental design and lab technique. As a result, many graduate programs throughout the nation preferred our graduates to their own. The reason: experimentation is the practice of science, and graduate education in science is experimental research. As anyone who is trained in the rigours of the scientific method is aware, variance is a critical factor in drawing conclusions from the scientific method (which is a method of formal induction), and the prime challenge of experimental design is to devise a method that minimizes variance at all levels of investigation, rather than creatively introduce it. Error analysis, as it is called, keeps track of the uncertainty inherent, first at the level of data collection, as a product of the limitations of both the design of the experiment and the measurement tools utilized, and then at the level of aggregation, where statistical processes themselves introduce additional variance which is compounded with the uncertainty introduced at the data collection level; and error analysis continues through the various successive stages of the research as the variance resulting from further measurement and statistical aggregation is compounded and formulaically combined in various ways. Too often, especially in poorly designed and executed experiments, the final conclusion is rendered meaningless, as it is dwarfed by the magnitude of compounded error that results from the variance and uncertainty introduced at each step of the process.

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Perhaps it is thought that a clever introduction of uncertainty to Biblical, Confessional and historically orthodox positions for the purpose of creating freedom to derive additional meaning and/or alternate application can be justified, the first time it is applied, if it only results in minor deviation from the original meaning. Perhaps it is thought that it can be justified with each new iteration, as additional, though minor, uncertainty is introduced with each new creative restatement – as long as it can be properly understood, of course. Since the additional variance introduced with each new iteration is only minor, one may be tempted to conclude that no vast departure has been undertaken, especially if he has been fooled into thinking that the variance is isolated, and the resulting uncertainty limited, only to his “new way of saying the same thing.” But this would be a false security, blind to the very real impact of compounded error that iteratively introducing minor uncertainty eventually has – that of dwarfing a conclusion with the magnitude of uncertainty that surrounds it, and rendering it meaningless.

Among the malcontents engaging in experimentation in WELS, this method of introducing uncertainty under the academic rubric, “It can be properly understood”, seems to be most popular among advocates of the Church Growth Movement (CGM), who proudly pat themselves on the back for their orthodox creativity, but whose conclusions are wildly at variance with those of historical and confessional Lutheranism, to the point of being almost unrecognizable.

But there is another method employed by those wishing to practice experimentation on Biblical, Confessional and historically orthodox positions, that would cleverly introduce minor uncertainty to create an opening for additional meaning and/or alternate application: the historical-critical method. This method rejects a didactic approach to historical documents – like the Bible or the Confessions – holding up to question the direct positive statements they contain, and subjecting them to verification, qualification or rejection according to contemporary analyses of the historical contexts in which those statements were thought to have been penned. It is a method invented during the 19th Century as Enlightenment Christian malcontents found that a static Biblical text and a fixed orthodoxy left little room for the sort of innovation that would make Christianity palatable to the World around them – the task of the theologian being, for them, one of cultural leadership and innovation, rather than one of service and strict fidelity to the Word.

We most vividly see this method employed by egalitarians in the WELS, who, in addition to vaulting to the point of qualifying direct positive statements of Scripture the contemporary meaning they derive from reports of ancient Christian experiences, also clearly follow the assumptions of the historical-critical method, which allow them a basis in recent (liberal) Christian hermeneutical practice to consider anecdotal references in this way, as having such authority, to begin with. Such was detailed in our post, Post-Modernism, Pop-culture, Transcendence, and the Church Militant, as we adduced the arguments of WELS egalitarians connected with the sordid, decade-long “St. James Affair,” from the 1980s and 1990s.

We also see the historical-critical method employed against the Confessions, as well – as various perceived historical contexts, unarticulated in the Confessions themselves, nor (in some instances) by the Confessors or Concordists in their other writings, are superimposed over these documents in order that they would mean something other than what they directly say. Tactics employed in the current debate over the doctrine of Universal Objective Justification, for example, are illustrative of this, as it is claimed by some that the Book of Concord fully supports this doctrine, though not in so many words: it merely supports it implicitly. Such claims are based on the absence of any direct rejection of UOJ in the Confessions, and the undocumented historical claim that everyone knew this doctrine, fully confessed and embraced it personally (though failing to mention it in any of their other writings, much less articulate it), and that therefore, the reason it was entirely unarticulated in the Confessions is that no one during the Reformation contested it – it simply wasn't an issue. Such perceptions of history are used to color the meaning of the text in ways that force one to conclude something other than what the words directly say. One could adduce examples where this tactic is employed in positions taken with regard to Church and Ministry, and worship practice, as well.

The tragedy is that in seeking to be “Liberated from the Text,” in their ardent search for the freedom to hold alternative interpretations (though “equivalent,” it is insisted in many cases) and make alternative applications, by struggling to find (i.e., create) additional meaning from a static text, under the umbrella of a fixed orthodoxy, these discontented experimentalists maneuver themselves out from under the authority of Scripture and the Confessions. This is manifested as appeals to Scripture and the Confessions fail to bring about resolutions to competing truth-claims; the result is that human authority must be consulted to resolve them instead – authority from which there is no appeal since the only recognized authorities, the two Lutheran norms, were declared irrelevant by the very act of calling upon human arbitration to settle the matter. We see this with startling clarity in the case of the ELCA, whose errors have compounded over the decades to the point of depriving them of the inspiration, inerrancy and authority of the Scriptures, and forcing them instead under the tyranny of the carnal voting assembly. Our two part series, “Pursuing freedom from Scripture's clear teachings, by arguing for their ambiguity, results only in tyranny” addressed, and warned of, this tragedy directly.

Third, even if a given pastor has the acumen to write with significant academic integrity (and many do), sees through the errors that are compounding through the parroting of sloppy scholarship and the continued experimentation with sound doctrine (and many do see through it), and is imbued with a serious passion to so express himself (and many are), there is still the simplest, though probably most potent, problem of all: given the size and the inter-relatedness of the WELS, it is very difficult for a pastor to be taken seriously. In virtually any assembly of his clergy-peers that he may address, he faces a very certain likelihood that a majority of people there assembled either: (a) were his classmates in Day-school or High-school, or were his classmates in college, or at seminary; (b) know, or are related to, people who were his classmates; (c) were, or are related to, or personally know one of his former teachers or professors; (d) dated or are related to his wife, or dated or married one of the girls he dated while in school; (e) know, or are related to him personally. In other words, they know very well all about his youthful foolishness and hypocrisy, and offer him virtually no credibility as a result. Even Jesus, who, being perfectly righteous, was neither a fool nor a hypocrite, lamented when he was rejected in His hometown: A prophet is not without honour, but in his own country, and among his own kin, and in his own house (Mark 6:1-6; c.f. Matt. 13:54-58; Luke 4:16-30). Practically nowhere can a WELS pastor go where he is not among his own “household, kin, or countrymen.” A former WELS pastor of mine commented to me once on this very fact: “Very few men in WELS can get away with a scholarly demeanor. Only the geeks and utlra-straight-laced guys are able to do it and be taken seriously.” Another once told me, “If you want to make waves, you have to be protected by a support network.” Most often, it seems, only the guys who are protected, or who were genuinely pious young men in their youth, can successfully engage in genuine scholarship before their peers.

So what is the result? What I've come to call an “Aw-shucks scholarship.” That is, otherwise capable men reduced to a sloppy, “chummy” presentation of Biblical and Confessional orthodoxy, because that is the best, or perhaps the only, way that his peers will accept him and listen to what he has to say. If he offers anything more serious than this, they'll just laugh at him, as if to say, “Who does he think he is, anyway?”, and dismiss his effort.

Click here to Continue to PART V.3

Saturday, July 6, 2013

Impressions from My Visit with ELDoNA at their 2013 Colloquium and Synod – PART V.1

(Continued from PART IV)

This post begins the final “part” of my series on “Impressions from My Visit with ELDoNA at their 2013 Colloquium and Synod.” Intending, initially, to have this completed by June 21, the priorities of life again interposed, preventing me from completing Part V as I had intended. Nevertheless, working at it here and there as time allowed, I continued to make slow progress. I don't know how many may have been getting impatient, but I do know that our own Intrepid Lutheran editors have been asking me, “How much longer? How much longer!” To which I've replied, “Just a little bit longer...”. Yes... both I and they were thinking in terms of time, while I lost sight of page count. When my personal editor fell asleep while proof reading its 20+ pages... I knew it was too long for a single post. Hence, “This post begins the final ‘part’...” which is itself split into five manageable chunks, scheduled to post today through Wednesday. Reviews of several of the papers will begin with the section scheduled to post on Monday.



PART V.1

Christian Scholarship
Over the decades, I have taken in a great deal of Christian scholarship. Though I was raised an Evangelical, my parents were anything but ambivalent regarding the teachers and teaching to which they exposed themselves and their children, so much of it was of very high quality and quite edifying. I learned from my parents that, regarding the spiritual food we ingest, “you are what you eat”, that the only healthy food for the Christian is that which comes from the one and only pure source of such food, the Holy Scriptures – i.e., “by every word which proceeds from the mouth of God” – and that the only healthy way to receive it is expositionally from the text itself. I further learned from them that, just like earthly royalty are accompanied to dinner by taste testers, to make sure their food is not poisoned, so also do divine royalty – the children of God – require that the spiritual food they take in be tested, not after they have ingested it, but as it is being served to them, before they have ingested it. As a nobleman cannot merely trust his cook or his servers just because he knows them, or because the food they give him looks and tastes good, it is not enough for the Christian to merely trust a man who mounts a pulpit or a lectern just because he is a “good man,” or because he speaks in a way that pleases the ears. This means that the Christian's constant companion must be his own trusted Bible – especially as he walks into a church sanctuary or a lecture hall. With his own well-used, long-studied and trusted Bible open in front of him, he follows every word as it is read, and tests the speaker's handling of those words (Of course, a faulty Bible, like the NIV 2011 – one with deliberately imprecise terminology and a grammatical form bearing no resemblance to that of the original texts whatsoever, being rendered into English according to the dictates of contemporary worldly mores, particularly that of radical feminism and its call for the relaxation of sexual standards to achieve so-called sexual equality – is like hiring one's enemy to be his taste-tester; it is not to be trusted!).

These principles have served me well over the years. With decades of at least weekly, and many years of daily, testing Scriptural claims, this practice has become for me now almost second nature; and it was responsible for bringing me out of the doctrinal ambiguity characteristic of pop-church Evangelicalism, and into the meticulous doctrinal integrity, certainty and clarity of the Lutheran Confession.

While I was finally catechized into confessional Lutheranism by a WELS pastor, no Lutheran pastor brought me to Lutheranism. The Bible itself brought me to a point of being willing to accept the unique doctrinal claims of genuine Lutheranism. And the first book I bought as a serious investigation of those claims was the Second English Edition of Heinrich Schmid's Doctrinal Theology of the Evangelical Lutheran Church (1889) – the first English Edition which was published following Schmid's final (6th) German Edition, and which was enhanced with annotations from the personal copy used by C.P. Krauth and from the suggestions of English-speaking Lutheran seminary students and professors who had been using the First English Edition for over a decade. (Following the Second English Edition, the translators/editors – Hay and Jacobs – published a series of redacted editions. The Augsburg reprint of the 1960's is from the redacted Third English Edition.). I saw it on a shelf in the basement of a used bookstore, not knowing what a prize it really was. “Oh,” I thought to myself, “I didn't know there were Lutherans who were Evangelicals! – and look!, not only that, here is what appears to be a fully worked out system of theology! There's actually an Evangelical theology! And it's old, too ...so it's got to be good. Better than the worthless stuff Lutherans are producing today.” What I didn't know was that the 19th Century wasn't necessarily a good era for Lutheranism, either – particularly in Europe. So, with that kind of reasoning, I got very lucky finding this edition of Schmid (which is an historical work, reconstructing, in a single volume, Lutheran doctrinal theology from the Age of Lutheran Orthodoxy, ~1580-1730) – or, more accurately, the Lord was looking out for me. I had “devised my course,” but He was most certainly guiding my footsteps (Pr. 16:9, 20:24), chastising, teaching, correcting and protecting me along the way. As I've recounted on this blog before, reading through Schmid's Doctrinal Theology literally brought tears of joy to my eyes. After years of struggling to develop my own personal theology from my own diligent study of Scripture, I discovered that the Evangelical Lutherans had worked out a very rigorous theological system that descended directly from the very words of Scripture. It was passed neither through philosophical preconceptions in order to reach “reasonable conclusions,” nor was it subjected to “spiritual intuitions” in order to reach “true spiritual truth,” but concluded only what the text of Scriptures stated in direct positive terms. It was exceptionally well articulated, affirming many of the convictions I had already reached on my own from the Scriptures, and solving many of the problems I had been struggling with – original sin and the nature of man, traducianism, the essence and attributes of God, the union of the two natures in Christ, the nature of the Church and its relation to earthly institutions, etc. The comparative inklings I had developed on my own regarding the tough doctrines of Scripture had been fully worked out by Christians who had gone long before me, in many cases going all the way back to the Apostles. I wept because I knew that the burden of trying to understand and articulate the true teaching of the Scriptures all on my own had been lifted – it had always been known, and for the most part, well articulated. I just needed to hold on to it, and confess it. And then find Lutherans who actually believed their own doctrines.

Dr. Heinrich Schmid was my introduction to Lutheran scholarship, and after reading his Doctrinal Theology, I found myself enthusiastically admitting what Hay and Jacobs boasted in their Translators Preface as they quoted the eminent German Reformed theologian, Dr. Philip Schaff: “The Lutheran Church is a church of theologians, and has the most learning.” Schmid's Doctrinal Theology has, for me, held the standard of honest Lutheran scholarship ever since.

Click here to Continue to PART V.2

Thursday, June 20, 2013

Impressions from My Visit with ELDoNA at their 2013 Colloquium and Synod – PART IV

(Continued from PART III, yesterday.)

PART IV

Scrupulously Confessional Orthodoxy
The informational tri-fold pamphlet of the Evangelical Lutheran Diocese of North America (ELDoNA) begins with the following sentences:
    Should Lutherans apologize for the Reformation?
    A lot of modern “Lutherans” seem to think so. In America, many “Lutherans” appear to want to be something else, and so they adopt the worship services of the Baptists or Pentecostals and are disinterested in biblical theology. Others weaken the doctrine even further, claiming that they are now agreed with the Roman Church concerning the doctrine of Justification. Others abandon any pretense of standing on the foundation of God’s holy Word, teaching the lie of theological liberalism which only views the Bible as one more man-made book of human “wisdom.”

    In practice, the name “Lutheran” is reduced to a some sort of ‘brand preference’ or they think of the Church as simply one more ‘denomination’ among many [i.e. like Lutheranism as merely a “tribe” of believers -DL]. Many of the clergy seem to wish they were something else – and wish that the Church would be more like the Protestants or even Eastern Orthodoxy. Given such a surrender of Lutheran teaching and practice, such individuals seem bent on apologizing for the Lutheran Reformation. We reject all such compromises. We believe it is time to be:
    Lutheran – without apologies or excuses.

    The Pastors of the Evangelical Lutheran Diocese of North America (ELDoNA) reject any such surrender of Lutheran doctrine and practice. They believe that it is far past time for the Evangelical Lutheran Church to stand steadfast on the foundation of God’s Word, and to boldly confess that faithful exposition of Holy Scripture which is found in the Book of Concord (1580).

Such convictions were evident to me during the entire time I was present for the 2013 Colloquium and Synod of the ELDoNA, as both informal conversation and scholarship presented at the Colloquium were coloured throughout with references to the Lutherans Confessions, as the normed norm of Lutheran teaching.

It stood out to me. I rarely hear such normalizing references in other Lutheran settings; and have been under the growing suspicion that metastasizing crypto-quatenus sentiments are to blame. Indeed, while it is an easy thing to merely assent to the words, “I believe that the Unaltered Augsburg Confession [along with the other confessional documents contained in the Book of Concord of 1580] is a true exposition of the Word of God and a correct exhibition of the doctrine of the Evangelical Lutheran Church,” by comparison, it seems to be inordinately difficult, if not totally out of touch with modern theological and cultural influences, to do so while regarding such Confessional documents fully one's own convictions, rather than merely the Confessions of 16th Century disaffected Roman Catholics. That is to say, as long as one views the Lutheran Confessions as “their Confession” rather than “my own Confession,” then it is really pretty simple to mouth such words, and in an entirely empty gesture, “subscribe” to them as principally someone else's Confession, rather than fully as one's own. This is how Lutherans today can justify a scoffing rejection of emphatic Confessional statements. Take Article XXIV for instance: Falsely are our churches accused of abolishing the Mass; for the Mass is retained among us, and celebrated with the highest reverence (AC:XXIV:1ff) and We do not abolish the Mass, but religiously maintain and defend it (AP:XXIV:1ff). More and more frequently these days, one will hear such statements dismissed by confessional Lutherans as inconsequential historical trivia, with remarks, like, “Surely, you don't expect that such statements of preference, expressing the Reformers' general medieval sensibilities regarding their practices, have anything to do with Scripture teaching or constitute any aspect of our confession, do you? In making an unqualified subscription to the entire Book of Concord, are you seriously suggesting that we also subscribe to the mere preferences of the Confessors and Concordists?” That is to say, “Such was their Confession that they risked their lives and reputations defending before the Roman authorities. Not ours, and not us. We'll pick and choose which parts conform to our idea of 'Scripture teaching,' and dismiss the rest.” (Incidentally, those who despise the liturgy and dismiss the emphatic retention of the Mass in Article XXIV as an unfortunate wrangling over “externals,” would do well to read §78ff of the Defense of this Article, where Melanchthon clearly defends the Mass [or the Liturgy] from the Scriptures as almost synonymous with the Office of the Holy Ministry itself.)

Thus, quoting the Confessions can become rather cumbersome, if, with all the picking and choosing one must be aware of in doing so, he is also forced to lace his references with qualifiers, such as, “Well, that's mostly true, except for this one part – that was just their opinion.” So in many confessional Lutheran circles today, the “general preference” is to simply omit all references to the Confessions – just pass them up, don't mention them, simply go straight to the Scriptures and declare as orthodox and Lutheran whatever one derives from them. This leads to the Lutheran identity crisis most Lutheran laymen suffer from today. For several years, I had a lot of fun asking my fellow laymen the simple question: “What distinguishes you as a Lutheran?” I would always get the response, “Lutherans believe what the Bible says.” I would always reply, “Every Christian on the planet says that. So what is the 'Lutheran difference'?” I would almost always hear them answer, “Lutherans are right, they are all wrong...” – and I would correct this ridiculous statement with the following: “No, you are wrong. You are not Lutheran because you say you believe everything the Bible says – that is a necessary requirement to be a Christian. Nor are you Lutheran merely because you insist that Lutherans are correct and all other Christians are wrong. Nor are you a Lutheran because Lutheranism is the 'tribe' of Christianity you were born into. What makes you a Lutheran Christian is one thing: the Augsburg Confession. Who we are as Lutherans is, and only is, what we say we believe in our Confessions.” I had a lot of fun asking such questions... but eventually got tired of being accused of the heresy of “adding to the Scriptures.”

The unfortunate fact is, among most confessional Lutheran laymen today, the Book of Concord is a title for something they've never heard of, rather than something that ought to norm their thinking and speaking as Lutherans (although, LCMS seems to be taking official steps to treat this malady). My visit with the ELDoNA at their 2013 Colloquium and Synod has me convinced that they've recognized this lamentable affliction, indeed they've struggled against it for decades, suffered at the hands of those infected by it, and finally cut themselves off from it by forming a new church body – the Evangelical Lutheran Diocese of North America. This was evident not only in their speaking, but in their scholarship – and it is their scholarship which will be the subject of tomorrow's concluding post in this series on my Impressions from their 2013 Colloquium.

More to come, tomorrow...
Click here to Continue to PART V.1

Wednesday, June 19, 2013

Impressions from My Visit with ELDoNA at their 2013 Colloquium and Synod – PART III

(Continued from PART II, yesterday.)

PART III

Church and Ministry
Early on, we at Intrepid Lutherans had considered prominently placing the ELDoNA in the list on the right-hand column of our blog, under the category of “Links to Synodical Resources,” understanding that there had been some promising dialogue between WELS and the ELDoNA. So we inquired with the WELS Inter-Church Relations Committee. They said, in essence, “Absolutely not.” The context, as I recall (being informed indirectly), was their Doctrine of Church and Ministry.

So I asked when I was at the Colloquium. “Aren't you guys really just Lutheran Episcopalians? You have this 'Episcopal polity' after all... What about the laity and the congregation?” The answer was simple, and reassuring: “The only members of the ELDoNA are the pastors. This is different from WELS and LCMS where both pastors and congregations [as corporate entities] are members of Synod. Laymen are not members of Synod. Nor are they members of the Diocese. So there is no difference there. The difference is that the congregations, as corporate entities, are not members of the ELDoNA either. So the episcopate of the ELDoNA covers only the pastors, and does not extend to the congregations. It has no authority over the congregations. The congregations are independent, and only 'affiliated with the ELDoNA' through their pastor. Thus, congregational governance is not impacted by the Diocese.” Indeed, I was surprised to learn that local polity among congregations affiliated with the ELDoNA spans a spectrum between formal constitutional structures, with voters assemblies, etc., and much more informal “consensus models” of local governance. Whatever it is, the local political structure is up to the local congregation. In other words, the order of “Diocesan polity” does not impact the political order of the local congregation – thus, in the ELDoNA, the congregation is, in a very real sense, autonomous and free. In fact, according to one individual I spoke with at the Colloquium, the non-membership status of the local congregation with the Diocese, makes it easier for the congregation to order itself and to act on its convictions, should those convictions lead it to, say, disaffiliate with ELDoNA, or require it to pursue a course of church discipline against an erring or unrepentant pastor.

I also asked, regarding the Ministry, “Aren't you guys, like, 'hyper-Euros' or something? What is that supposed to mean, anyway? And aren't you 'Loehists' who insist that 'no one but an ordained pastor can ever forgive sins?' How would you compare your Doctrine of the Ministry to that of WELS?” The first answer I got went like this, “Huh? I really don't know what 'hyper-Euro' means – I think that is a term invented by Jack Cascione, before he fully investigated his sources. So it could mean anything. Or nothing at all.”

The second answer I got was much more specific, and went something like the following: “Our doctrine of the Ministry is succinctly stated in Article V and Article XIV of the Augsburg Confession [and Apology]. 'The Ministry of Teaching the Gospel and administering the Sacraments' (AC:V) is clearly one Ministry; the public teaching and administration of such (or 'The Ministry') is clearly defined as 'Ecclesiastical Order' (AC:XIV); and the phrase 'Unless he be regularly called' (AC:XIV) pretty much excludes those without a Divine Call. And what do you do with Article XIII of the Apology? 'We are not unwilling to call ordination a sacrament' (AP:XIII:11)? If we are 'not unwilling to call it a sacrament', what does that say about our confession with respect to it? That it is something to be regularly omitted? No, rather, that ordination is a regular part of the Divine Call, that a regular Lutheran Ecclesiastical Order requires of itself that Ministers of the Word be ordained. This stands in opposition to everything the WELS Doctrine of the Ministry represents, doesn't it?” The latter point may seem to have been a bit of hyperbole, but if there are those among us in WELS who hold a Divine Call which does not include the regular teaching of the Gospel and administration of the Sacraments, who are nevertheless defined as “Ministers of the Word,” or if there are those among us who regularly carry out those ministerial functions without a bona fide Divine Call – then such an answer, a Lutheran answer straight from our Confessions, does require some serious reflection. In addition to the sections just cited, a good place to start is the index of the Concordia Triglotta (Sadly, yes, it it true: our own Northwestern Publishing House (NPH) no longer prints the Triglotta, nor do they even make it available in print form. New, it is only available now in paperback from CPH “Print on Demand,” sans Bente's “Historical Introductions”...). Here are some selections from the index:

Regarding church polity, there are many Christians (pietists, in particular, though not exclusively) who prefer the display of shared hegemony demonstrated at the Apostolic Council of Jerusalem (Acts 15), where all believers clearly stood shoulder to shoulder as equals, without distinctions based on ones “ecclesiastical office,” in the decision-making of the broader Visible Church. This model served the New Testament Church for about the first two centuries, though as early as the late-Apostolic Age it began to give way to an episcopal polity. By the time of Cyprian (A.D. 195-258), however, it was widely recognized that a political structure modeled after the Apostolic Council was insufficient to ward off the withering attacks of the World, which, under the guise of Gnosticism, had by then wormed its way into Christianity as an equal voice, eventually challenging the Church to answer the questions, “What and where is True Christianity?” The Christian answer eventually came to rest, in part, on the ones God has uniquely equipped and Called to stand in the stead of Christ, for the purpose of caring for His sheep and defending against heresy; and so it also came to rest on the visible bishopric that emerged from them: “There is where True Christianity is.” Following from this response later emerged the idea that communion with Christ was only possible through communion with the bishop; thus also emerged the framework for absolute subordination of laity (“the masses”) to clergy (“the chosen ones”). Over time, under the influence of such ideas and in response to the needs of the Church in a changing society, this episcopal polity gave way to a papacy, with a single leader serving as Christ's representative on Earth, by whom all matters of doctrine and practice were ultimately decided.

These political structures, as political structures (without reference to the false doctrines either underlying them or emerging from them), served the Church well in the various circumstances she found herself facing in the tumultuous times of the Early Church. Today, in a church body largely unencumbered by heresy coming from the outside (as in the case of hyper-separatists, perhaps, or perhaps also in very small church bodies where everyone is personally known to each another), a purely collegial and brotherly Apostolic polity, that does not recognize legal distinctions associated with one's “ecclesiastical office” for the purpose of making corporate decisions, may be appropriate. However, when it becomes obvious that serpents have slithered in, exploiting and abusing brotherliness for the sake of their secret heresies, such a political form becomes both impractical and dangerous, as it did in the post-Apostolic era. The situation had changed, so the political structure of the Church changed along with it, in order to more effectively combat the manifest danger. Likewise in the early years of the papacy – the Fall of the Roman Empire and the rapid disintegration of Western society which followed, left the West open to the deleterious impacts of barbarism that soon took the place of civil society (incessant war, crime and disease, pervasive illiteracy, ignorance and poverty, etc.). Strong central leadership equipped the Church to deal with this flood of barbarism which followed the Fall of Rome. It wasn't the political structures themselves so much as the abuse of these structures that became problematic for the Church, and required, by the time of the Reformation, dramatic correction. Nevertheless, rather than endorse a radical break with the catholicity of the Church, our Confessions directly embrace a desire and intention to retain the catholic church polity modeled after the old episcopacy:
    [I]t is our greatest wish to maintain church-polity and the grades in the Church [old church-regulations and the government of bishops], even though they have been made by human authority... For we know that church discipline was instituted by the Fathers, in the manner laid down in the ancient canons, with a good and useful intention... Furthermore, we wish here again to testify that we will gladly maintain ecclesiastical and canonical government, provided the bishops only cease to rage against our Churches. This our desire will clear us both before God and among all nations to all posterity from the imputation against us that the authority of the bishops is being undermined, when men read and hear that, although protesting against the unrighteous cruelty of the bishops, we could not obtain justice. (AP XIV)

In my discussions with WELS and LCMS Lutherans, the topic of polity often arises in a way that recognizes the insufficiency of 19th Century political structures to respond to the manifold abuses everyone seems to recognize nowadays. The loopholes, weaknesses and inconsistencies of such structures have long been discovered and seem subject to frequent exploitation. WELS pastors have often told me, “In practice, WELS political structure does not even reflect its own doctrine of the Church, but that of LCMS. Same is true of LCMS in reverse – in practice, they reflect more WELS theology.” Some in LCMS have complained to me directly, “What we need is to get rid of lay influence. They are ruining our Synod. We need to have only pastors, a bishopric, making decisions.” In such cases I have responded, “Your episcopate in that case would be only as sound as your bishops. What, then, can the laity do when the bishops are, or become, corrupt?” Likewise in WELS, “These pastors are either heretics or cowards!” Then, variously, “They won't do anything other than go along with sectarian fads!” or “ They won't do anything other than what has been done for 100 years!” Then, unanimously, “We need the laity to rise up and take control!” ...And variously, “We need to run the Synod more like a business! Let's get our successful business guru's to take over where these untrained pastors seem to miserably fail all the time!” or “We need the laity to withhold their offerings until the spend-thrift heretics run out of money, and force them back to orthodoxy!” To which I respond something like the following: “Perhaps. But what happens when the laity, thinking either only pragmatically (as they usually do), or worse, with a hyper-spiritual disregard for biblical Stewardship (as some zealots have been known to do), unwittingly abandon orthodoxy? What happens when they become enamoured with the latest fads and fashion of the sects, or adopt the amoral ideologies of today's business leaders, because, through lack of training and giftedness, they have neither the perspective to recognize the error, nor the ability to articulate it to others? What do you do when the untrained laity make pragmatic decisions which fly in the face of orthodoxy, either because they don't care or because they lack sufficient perspective?”

Indeed, what do we need when both the laity and the clergy of a given church body become corrupt, and when all reasonable attempts to extract that corruption from ecclesiastical leadership fail? Answer: We need a new church body – hopefully with leaders of sufficient orthodoxy and perspective to choose a suitable polity, one that is consistent, Biblically and Confessionally defensible and well-suited to guard against the kind of heresies which attack us in our current age. For my part, I find that the ELDoNA has succeeded in this. As for the layman, in the ELDoNA, the rights of the layman are bound up with his responsibilities (as they should be), not to blindly trust what is handed down to him from ecclesiastical authorities (of which there are none for the layman in the ELDoNA, other than his own pastor), but at all times to diligently search the Scriptures, to affirm the orthodoxy of his pastor and the Diocese with which he is affiliated; and having done so, he, along with his fellow Berean-laymen, has full right and power to act according to the convictions the Scriptures have made him certain of, again without any interference from a higher ecclesiastical authority. That is to say, the “rights of the layman” are not extended to him by ecclesiastical authority, nor do they descend to him through its polity, but are his in proportion to his own Berean diligence. Though his “rights” do not extend beyond the congregation, they don't need to since neither the authority nor the polity of the Diocese extend to the congregation in the first place.

More to come, tomorrow...
Click here to Continue to PART IV


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