Showing posts with label LCMS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label LCMS. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 24, 2013

Ahead of Convention: “Issues Facing Confessional Lutheranism Today”



The following podcast is a July 12, 2013, Issues, Etc. interview of Lutheran Church – Missouri Synod (LCMS) President Rev. Dr. Matt Harrison, ahead of the 2013 Triennial LCMS Convention (July 20-25, 2013). Heading into our own WELS Convention next week, SP Harrison's remarks are a good reminder of the issues underlying the challenges we face, as well.

 


This podcast is taken from the July 12, 2013 edition of Issues, Etc.
(Right-click here to save MP3)

Listen to this podcast to hear how SP Harrison characterizes the Issues listed below:
    Worldwide Issues...
    • Human Sexuality
    • Ordination of Women
    • Gay Marriage
    • Natural Law
    • Culture Wars
    • Gospel Reductionism
    • Historical Critical Method
    • Death of Systematic Theology
    • Biblical Inerrancy
    • Confessional Integrity
    • Unionism
    • Open Heterodoxy

    Issues within LCMS (and maybe WELS, too?)
    • Too many pastors languishing in CRM status
    • Two tier pastorate (“called & ordained” -vs- “staff minister”)
    • Roles of Men & Women
    • Church Growth Movement
Are there Synodical or other fundamental issues that were not directly addressed by SP Harrison in this interview, that confessional Lutherans in America ought to concern ourselves with? Yes, of course. A couple that come to mind – which seem to currently be on prominent display on the LCMS website – are:
  • National Rural and Small Town Mission Conference: The plight of the small rural congregation is a serious concern. In some corners of LCMS, there seems to be a concerted effort to strengthen rural congregations, to keep them serving Lutherans into the future instead of abandoning them and forcing rural Lutherans to travel inordinate distances each week to attend suburban mega-churches. I know of two rural LCMS congregations nearby that are languishing (one of which is hanging on by its fingernails, with basically only a couple large dedicated families remaining), and another in a nearby small town (a “small town” that is actually the largest town in the county) that can't get a pastor and is very near giving up – and will be giving up a nice masonry gothic structure on main street, as well. The local pentecostals will thank them for the building. Far too many rural WELS congregations are being counciled to close up shop, and sell their property, as well (and again, it's usually the renegade pentecostals that gobble up that property). I know of two in my own vicinity that have been so counciled, and continue to refuse – but finding pastors to serve them seems to be getting more and more difficult. I know of another nearby rural congregation that left WELS for a more accommodating Lutheran church body, after being pressured to merge with a larger WELS congregation.

  • How can we as Lutherans live in but not succumb to the culture?: Too many Lutherans are under the mistaken impression that “being in the world but not of it” really means “look like you're of the world in every possible way, but deny it when asked and act offended when a fellow Christian mistakes you for being worldly.” Perhaps there was a time when Christianity was of such positive and overwhelming influence in society, that it was hard to distinguish being “of the world” from merely “being in it.” Not anymore. Society has progressed so far beyond what Christian liberty can justify, that there can now be no possible way of maintaining fidelity to our faith while also adopting the World Views and Worldly Ways of unregenerate society. We are called out by God from among them, such that now there can be no mistaking, “being in the world but not of it” means that, as we continue to live in all Christian propriety, we actually appear differently to our unregenerate neighbors. Much like the early Christians in pagan culture were noticeably different – yes, even weird, though in a curious and endearing way – as they helped those around them in their various forms of need.
What other fundamental issues can you identify?

 

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

Wednesday, January 9, 2013

LCMS Commission on Theology and Church Relations (CTCR) recommends against NIV 2011

In December of 2011, a similar headline appeared on Intrepid Lutherans: ELS doctrine committee recommends against NIV 2011. In that post, we reported that the Doctrine Committee of the Evangelical Lutheran Synod (ELS), “based on preliminary study of the NIV 2011” upon which they found “significant changes to the text of the NIV (1984)... diminish[ing] the accuracy of the NIV,” proceeded to publicly “recommend against the use of the NIV (2011).”

In August of 2012 – coincidentally, shortly following the last of the WELS 2012 District Conventions – the Commission on Theology and Church Relations (CTCR) of the Lutheran Church - Missouri Synod (LCMS) issued a similar, though more lengthy, statement expressing their opinion on the strength of the NIV 2011 as a suitable translation for use in the congregation, specifically with reference to its rendering of the Biblical texts in gender inclusive language. The statement was issued at the request of LCMS Synod President Rev. Matt Harrison. The name of this document is CTCR Staff Opinion on Inclusive Language in the New International Version (2011). They conclude on page four:
    ...[W]e find the NIV's Committee on Bible Translation [CBT] decision to substitute plural nouns and pronouns for masculine singular nouns and pronouns to be a serious theological weakness and a misguided attempt to make the truth of God's Word more easily understood. The use of inclusive language in NIV 2011 creates the potential for minimizing the particularity of biblical revelation and, more seriously, at times undermines the saving revelation of Christ as the promised Savior of humankind. Pastors and congregations of the LCMS should be aware of this serious weakness. In our judgment this makes it inappropriate for NIV 2011 to be used as a lectionary Bible or as a Bible to be generally recommended to the laity of our church. This is not a judgment on the entirety of NIV 2011 as a translation – a task that would require a much more extensive study of NIV 2011 – but an opinion as to a specific editorial decision which has serious theological implications.

    (NOTE: in all quotes from this Statement, emphasis is mine)
Leading up to this conclusion, the August 2012 CTCR Statement makes plain that the issue of Gender Neutrality is not one that hasn't already been thoroughly investigated by the LCMS. Unlike WELS, they are not just beginning to discuss it as a Synod, but took the issue of gender neutral Bible translation seriously when it first emerged in the 1990's. Responding to gender neutral editorializing of the Bible, such as that taken up by the translators of the New Revised Standard Version, the CTCR examined the issue closely and at length, issuing in 1998 a document entitled, Biblical Revelation and Inclusive Language (BRIL). The August 2012 CTCR Statement on the issue of inclusive language in the NIV 2011 quotes at length from this 1998 document. It states that, while BRIL “recognizes that 'language evolves' and so takes no position with regard to the propriety of inclusive language in everyday life,”
    [t]he concern that led to [BRIL] had to do with the removal of gender specific language from translations of the Holy Scriptures... and the substitution of gender inclusive language that is not present in the original languages and texts of Scripture. In this regard [BRIL] takes a clear position grounded in the understanding of revelation itself that is held by us as Lutheran Christians:

      This raises a different set of difficulties, for the Scriptures are not merely the rendering of a culturally based understanding of God. They are to be regarded as revelation whose author is finally God himself. Moreover, not only the concepts of Scripture but the very words of Scripture have been given to the biblical authors to write (1 Cor. 2:9-13; 2 Tim. 3:16; 2 Pet. 1:19-21; Jer. 30:2). While the church will certainly wish to accommodate modern sensibilities and translate anew where the language of the Scriptures allows, the church is not free to alter the language of revelation.
Quoting from BRIL, the August 2012 Statement of the CTCR goes on to say,
    It is in the Word made flesh (John 1:14) that God has fulfilled “his purpose for humankind's eternal destiny.” This purpose, in one particular Person born of Mary at a particular time and place, is revealed in the particularity of Holy Scripture and most specifically “in the written testimony of the evangelical and apostolic writings of the New Testament.” The specificity and particularity of the Word made flesh and the sacred Scriptures compel the church to “resist demands to change the words of Scripture or to replace them with words derived from common human experience, cultural predilections, or the ideas of philosophers and lawgivers.

    Biblical Revelation and Inclusive Language considers two aspects of the debate about masculine language in the Scriptures: the language that is used to refer to God and the language that is used to refer to humanity (both Christians and humanity in general). With regard to biblical language about God, the CTCR concludes: “If one wishes to translate accurately the words of the Scriptures, the language of both the Old Testament and the New Testament is clear enough concerning the terminology about God. God and his Spirit are consistently referred to in masculine terminology.” With regard to language about people, BRIL asserts that whenever the Scriptures speak about people, the texts should be translated in a way that is consistent with “the language which the biblical authors in fact use.”
While merely interpreting concepts and rendering them “with words derived from common human experience, cultural predilections, or the ideas of philosophers and lawgivers” (the way that NIV 2011 does), instead of translating the actual words and grammar “which the biblical authors in fact use,” doesn't adversely affect the meaning of a translation in every case, the August 2012 CTCR Statement stresses that this ideology of translation itself violates our understanding of Biblical revelation in principle, and that this is sufficient grounds for rejecting it, and thus also the NIV 2011. Nevertheless, this brief statement goes on to give two “very significant” examples where the meaning of Scripture is, in fact, adversely affected by the gender inclusive principles espoused by the translators of the NIV 2011. Rather than reproduce the entire Statement here, I leave it to the reader to download and digest its contents. Again, those documents are as follows:It should not escape the readers notice that, based on the CTCR's appeal to the Lutheran understanding of the very nature of Biblical revelation, for WELS to continue embracing the NIV 2011 as a viable translation that is not only suitable but recommended for use in our pulpits and in the homes of our laymen for private study, and which will serve as the Standard translation in all WELS publications – from devotions to hymnals, catechisms and commentaries, and even theological works published by Northwestern Publishing House (NPH) – is to invite a rift with nearly all other confessional Lutherans in America over the nature of Biblical revelation itself, including the doctrines of inspiration, inerrancy and perspicuity.

Friday, January 27, 2012

They have kneelers - and they use them

I promised to share a few impressions of the symposia last week at Concordia Theological Seminary in Ft. Wayne. I won’t bore you with a play-by-play journal of the week. But here are some things that struck me.

I didn’t attend the Exegetical Symposium that took up the first part of the week. Instead, I attended the presentations for the Symposium on the Lutheran Confessions (Wednesday afternoon through Friday morning). The overarching theme was: Justification in a Contemporary Context.

The presentations were very scholarly. I think all the presenters had a doctorate in something or other, and several came from non-Lutheran circles. It seems that the purpose of the presentations was not to teach the truth, but to inform the audience regarding current philosophies and trends in the broader “Christian” context. Rather than, “This is what God says,” it was more, “This is what so-and-so thinks (or thought) about justification.” While that may be helpful for ecumenical dialogue, I would have preferred more discussion of the Scriptures and Confessions themselves. Justification is an article of doctrine that urgently needs to be studied among Lutherans, and the best way to get back to a Lutheran understanding of the chief article, in my opinion, would be to set aside everything written about it in the last 300 years. First Scripture, then the Confessions, then Luther and Chemnitz. Once we have learned from them how to believe and to speak like Lutherans again, then we can move forward cautiously from the 16th century.

For me, the high point of the week was getting to know the LCMS pastors and laity, as well as their culture. In addition to their friendliness, there was a seriousness among them that I have rarely seen in WELS circles, an eagerness to discuss theology and doctrine that was very refreshing. As one pastor told me, “It’s a way of life.” Say what you want about the problems in Missouri, but their conflicts and battles have forced them back into the Scriptures and the Confessions, and as a result, they are far more ready to speak and discuss than those who simply assume their orthodoxy or take it for granted.

There was actually a very open and honest admission in Ft. Wayne that the LCMS has major problems that need addressing. This didn’t just come from a few disgruntled rabble rousers. It came from everyone - from recent seminary graduates to seminary professors to the synodical president Matt Harrison (who, I should mention, expressed to me his heartfelt love and appreciation for our president Schroeder and his joy in renewed discussions with the WELS). It seems to be a given in Missouri that the synod is sorely divided and in desperate need of repentance and help from Above.

…which brings me to what struck me most about the seminary in Ft. Wayne, and it has to do with their chapel. It’s a beautiful, reverent chapel, with a baptismal font filled with water in the entryway. Many, though not all, would dip their fingers in the water and make the sign of the cross on themselves. There was lots of crossing oneself during the Matins and Vespers services, and a reverent bowing of the head at the Gloria Patri – without prompting and without any sort of chatty instruction from the presiding minister. There was a natural piety evident among the worshipers and among the ministers that was shamefully unfamiliar to me. Most noticeably to me, in their chapel they have kneelers – and they use them.

In all my years in the WELS, I can’t remember ever kneeling in church. I recall seeing kneelers (but not using them) in the pews at only a few old WELS churches I have attended, and they were unheard of at the synodical schools I attended. (I honestly don’t know if the chairs in our “newly” renovated seminary chapel have them. Maybe they do.)

What does this mean? It means nothing in and of itself. But to me, the kneeling I witnessed in Ft. Wayne is representative of a very salutary spirit within the Missouri Synod. Both of our synods have the Scriptures and the Confessions as their foundational documents. But both synods have clergy and congregations that have moved away from these foundations in this or in that area. Missouri tends to err more on the side of unionism, while the WELS tends to err more on the side of sectarianism. Neither synod practices much synodical discipline (at least, not the Scriptural kind). Neither synod is united within its own walls regarding the Office of the Holy Ministry, and both have remnants of Pietism and Church Growth philosophies and methodologies running rampant.

But Missouri is, for the most part, honest about this, open about her disunity, and prepared to acknowledge the seriousness of her flaws. More than that, her current president has repeatedly and publicly called his people (starting with himself) to repentance, and seems committed to addressing every issue from the Word of God. I see many, many LCMS pastors fighting for the historic, apostolic, Lutheran faith. But they are not fighting from a high horse. They are fighting from their knees. And that is a good thing. I hope it continues.

And I pray it rubs off. I know it did on me.

Tuesday, May 10, 2011

Emmaus Conference - Recap

I’ll attempt a short recap of the Emmaus Conference that wrapped up last Friday afternoon. Bottom line up front: all three synodical presidents displayed an unprecedented commitment to confessional Lutheran doctrine and practice, and also to humble, fraternal dialogue.

Let me begin by thanking our ELS brothers in the Pacific Northwest for organizing this event. They rendered a significant service to Lutheranism in America by hosting this conference, and they should be commended for their foresight and zeal for this kind of necessary discussion among the three largest confessional Lutheran church bodies in the United States.

The Lecture

Pres. Schroeder’s 48-page essay was entitled, “Walking Together with Jesus: Church Fellowship and its Implications for Confessional Lutherans.” It will soon be posted on the Emmaus Conference website, but until then, it has just become available on the Wisconsin Lutheran Seminary Library essay file. (Note: The WLS essay file, while useful, is not a storehouse of official WELS doctrine.)

Schroeder's essay is, in my humble opinion, brilliant. It’s insightful, engaging, evangelical, historical, and honest, but the honest evaluation of the matters that brought about the demise of the Synodical Conference is presented with the utmost humility and tact.

The essay tells the story of church fellowship beginning on Easter Sunday and continuing through the Lutheran Reformation and Lutheranism in 19th century America. It goes into detail regarding the matters that caused the split with Missouri, which, in the words of Harrison, "you had to do when you did, and so you avoided the next 40 years of turmoil that we faced in the Missouri Synod." Then Schroeder clarifies some aspects of the WELS teaching on church fellowship that have been misrepresented or misunderstood. Finally, Schroeder offers some suggestions for moving forward in our discussions with the LCMS, including the suggestion, "Is a 21st century 'Formula of Concord' effort possible?"

Schroeder's final admonition is especially poignant:
    As we strive to apply the scriptural principles of fellowship faithfully, remaining separate when we must on the basis of our confession, we should just as energetically seek to determine where doctrine and practice are one, to trust in the power of the Word for results, and to rejoice in a unified confession if and when God brings it about.
I strongly encourage all our readers to take the time to read and digest the essay for yourselves. I don’t think you’ll be disappointed.

The Reactions

Pres. Moldstad was the first reactor. Since so much ground had been so thoroughly covered by Pres. Schroeder already, it seemed like there would be little left for Pres. Moldstad to say, except for “I concur.” Still, he presented a fine evaluation of the lecture and the state of the fellowship discussion from the perspective of the ELS. One important point he made was the reason why the ELS (and presumably also the WELS) declined former LCMS Pres. Kieschnick’s invitation to dialogue among the three synods in 2003. It was pointed out that this was soon after the fateful “Yankee Stadium event,” at which an LCMS district president participated in a unionistic and even syncretistic public service. I believe it was even called “A Prayer for America.” Although DP Benke was briefly suspended for this action, he was later exonerated and his suspension lifted by the leadership of the LCMS (as I understand the situation from Moldstad’s reaction), signaling that the leadership of the LCMS was, at that time, unwilling to submit itself to the Word of Christ in the area of church fellowship, although several confessional men in Missouri, like Kurt Marquart, denounced Benke’s actions and the official rationalization of them.

It was important, I think, for Yankee Stadium to be brought up in a discussion on fellowship. This is exactly the kind of situation that the WELS teaching on prayer fellowship addresses. Too often WELS sources turn the issue of prayer fellowship into an individual, private matter, almost characterizing any table prayer with one’s Christian (but non-WELS) relative as a denial of Christ and His Truth. This is ridiculous. The issue of prayer fellowship should be taught as a public matter between churches or representatives of churches. President Schroeder did make those distinctions in his essay, although I wish he would have spoken even more strongly on that point in order to move the discussion entirely out of one’s dining room and into the public forum, where it belongs.

Unlike Pres. Moldstad, Pres. Harrison did not have a written reaction, but spoke from notes, and did not exactly react to the essay as much as he simply talked in general terms about Lutheranism in America and the value of discussing doctrine and pursuing at least the possibility of unity with the WELS and the ELS. One might have wished that he had commented more directly on President Schroeder’s essay, but there was nothing disappointing in anything he said. This was the first time I had heard Matt Harrison speak. He has a presence that simply fills a room. He comes across as very intelligent but very down to earth and friendly, with a genuine sense of humor. He admitted having much work to do in his own synod before real progress can be made in doctrinal discussions with other synods. But that was not to imply that these doctrinal discussions ought to wait for in-house business to be completed. He insisted, “We have to do both.”

Harrison expressed a bit of confusion over the issues WELS emphasizes about prayer fellowship. He admitted that it was an issue that had simply never been on the radar for him personally. He joked disarmingly, “We’ve had to concentrate on questions like, ‘Is the Bible the inerrant Word of God?’ and ‘Should women be ordained?’ and things like that.” But in saying that, he made it clear he was not dismissing the WELS concerns over this issue. “It’s something I realize now I have to study. You’ve given me much to think about.”

President Schroeder, President Moldstad and President Harrison are to be commended, among other things, for their gracious demeanor. There was not even a hint of arrogance or an attitude of superiority among the three presidents. President Schroeder quoted Missouri Synod sources favorably (including Matt Harrison himself) over a dozen times in his essay, along with other WELS and ELS sources. Each president spoke of repentance in his own self and in his own synod as the first step toward fruitful discussion.

My Prediction

Here is my (very conditional) prediction, as well as my prayer. If the pastors and congregations of the WELS, ELS and LCMS will adopt the humility and doctrinal commitment of their respective presidents, then I have no doubt that the fellowship of the former Synodical Conference will be restored.

Why? Because the ruling authority of the Scriptures and the ruled authority of the Lutheran Confessions form the foundation of all three church bodies. The authority of the Scriptures was being attacked from within the LCMS 50 years ago, but by the grace of God, such is no longer the case. Church Growth theology has infected all three church bodies to some degree, but all three presidents have spoken out against this false theology, expressing trust in the Means of Grace rather than in human methodology. So there is no reason why church bodies that are committed to the Scriptures and the Confessions should not be able to work out their differences through fraternal dialogue, unless 1) contrition and repentance are lacking on either side, or 2) the external preservation of the institution supersedes the confession of the truth.

If contrition and repentance are lacking in either the WELS or the LCMS, then puffed-up egos on one side will always treat the other side with indifference, condescension or even contempt. If the primary goal of the institution is to preserve the status quo or keep from losing numbers, then truth will take a backseat to expediency, and what is expedient for one synod will likely be unacceptable or even detrimental to the next.

But if the leaders of the synods approach one another in a spirit of contrition and repentance, then egos will not get in the way of God’s clear Word and the Church’s historical interpretation of His Word. And if the primary goal is faithfulness to the truth of Christ rather than to preserving the status quo at all costs, then the Spirit of Truth Himself will fight for the unity of His Church. May God grant it!

Emmaus Conference 2012
  • April 19 and 20
  • Parkland Lutheran Church, Tacoma, WA
  • Lecturer: The Rev. President Matthew Harrison
  • Reactors: The Rev. President Mark Schroeder and the Rev. President John Moldstad

Thursday, September 2, 2010

All in favor, say "Yep!"

The Brothers of John the Steadfast have posted this comment by WELS President Mark Schroeder and are making arrangements for this most official summit. If you would like to see such a summit take place, say "Yep!"

WELS President Schroeder Reaches Out with Offer of Banjo/Guitar Summit, by Pr. Rossow


The Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod (WELS) President, Mark Schroeder, dropped a fun little comment on our site this week. He said:


I sugggested to President-elect Harrison that, if I brush up on my guitar, the two presidents could tape a YouTube video entitled, “Dueling Confessional Banjos.” (see comment #5 on this post by Norm)



We are very honored to have President Schroeder visit our site. His work and leadership in the WELS is consistent with what we are doing here at BJS to uphold Biblical, traditional, historic, liturgical Confessional Lutheranism. President Schroeder has been no stranger to the BJS site. (Use the search mechanism on the right hand sidebar and under “WELS, Schroeder” you will find six posts on the WELS here on BJS. Here is the shortcut to the list.)

Issues, Etc. host Todd Wilken has hosted President Scrhoeder on the show and has done Lutheranism a big favor by providing a means for confessionalism in the LCMS and the WELS to hear each other. Schroeder’s Banjo/guitar gesture suggests that there will be a healthy interaction on the highest administrative levels between the two orthodox Lutheran bodies.

The LCMS is a two-million member denomination head-quartered in St. Louis and is the largest Lutheran denomination in America. The Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA) is the largest Lutheran body by name but with their recent votes against the Bible’s teaching on sexuality it is accurate to say that they bring shame to the name of our beloved church father Martin and ought not to be considered Lutheran. The WELS asserts on their website that they are the third largest Lutheran body in America but by our count, dismissing the ELCA as Lutheran, our buddy, President Schroeder can consider the WELS to be the second largest Lutheran body on the continent with nearly 400,000 baptized members.

But of course the Lord does not focus on numbers. He focusses on faithfulness and so the real question to ask is this: “Is your denomination faithful to the Scriptures and the Confessions?’ For the most part the WELS and LCMS are faithful and so are other smaller bodies such as the Evangelical Lutheran Synod (ELS), Lutheran Church – Canada (LC-C), the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Haiti, the Church of the Lutheran Confessions (CLC), the United Lutheran Mission Association (ULMA), ELDONA, etc.

Surfing the WELS website I was reminded that both the WELS and the LCMS have large parochial school systems. Our Concordias have certainly done their fair share of turning out undesirable “church growth” church workers but overall, our schools have contributed to confessional strength in Lutheranism and ought to be supported.

In true Lutheran fashion I have taken a fun gesture and turned it into a serious discussion of church and theology. In an attempt to return to the fun I’ll close with a challenge to our readers. Let’s help the two presidents out by providing some ground rules for the Lutheran Banj0 Diplomacy Summit (LBDS). I’ll open the bidding with the following:

Rule #1 - No riffs on “Pass it On.” We might allow “The Lamb” but under no circumstances shall there be any “fires lit by any sparks.”

(Comments on other points above are also welcome.)

Saturday, July 10, 2010

Praying for the LCMS in convention

This week, the LCMS will meet in convention. Although the WELS is not in fellowship with the LCMS, I know that there are still many, many confessional Lutherans within the LCMS, and I pray for them and for their synod, that it may be brought once again to true confessional Lutheran unity.

From an outsider’s perspective, it seems like there are several questions that need to be answered in the Missouri Synod. Some of them may begin to be addressed at their convention this week:

  • Will they discuss doctrine and practice openly, admit mistakes humbly, and address problems scripturally?

  • Will they make a clean break from false teachers in heterodox church bodies?

  • Will they recognize that practice cannot be divorced from doctrine?

  • Will they commit to insuring that practice coincides with doctrine in their member congregations?

  • Will they trust in the Means of Grace and be faithful in their use, leaving all the results in God’s hands?

  • Will they be fully identified with the historic, orthodox, Lutheran, catholic confession?


We would expect all these things from any confessional Lutheran church body, wouldn't we?

Are they willing to do these things in the Missouri Synod?

Are we?

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