Showing posts with label Sacrament. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sacrament. Show all posts

Thursday, March 28, 2013

A Second Sermon for Thursday of Holy Week, or 'Maundy Thursday' — by Dr. Martin Luther

Dr. Martin LutherOn Wednesdays through the Lenten Season this year (2013), we published sermons from Dr. Adolph Hoenecke (1835-1908), who is among the most important theologians of the Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod (WELS), and from Dr. Paul E. Kretzmann (1883-1965), a prolific author, educator, historian and theologian of the Lutheran Church — Missouri Synod (LCMS) and among the more significant figures of 20th Century American Lutheranism. We will do the same through Holy Week. Except for today, Maundy Thursday. Instead of Dr. Hoenecke and Dr. Kretzmann, we will hear from Dr. Martin Luther himself, from his Hauspostille.

Normally, we read sermons from Dr. Luther's Hauspostille as they come to us in the collection recently edited by Eugene F.A. Klug, and translated by him and others. This is the same Hauspostille included in the seven-volume Complete Sermons of Martin Luther published by Baker Book House. There were two collections of Luther's Hauspostille: one from the stenographic notes of Veit Dietrich and one from those of Georg Roerer, both of whom copied the words of Luther as he preached to his students in his home. Roerer's notes were published in 1539 without Luther's approval, while those of Veit Dietrich were published later, in 1545, and carried with them Luther's endorsement. The newly translated Hauspostille contained in the Baker publication comes from the Roerer collection of Luther's Hauspostille, under the rationale that “the consensus of scholars has more and more moved in the direction of Roerer's transcription of Luther's house postils as the source most complete, exact, and trustworthy.”1

We will not be reading a sermon from Roerer's collection, however. Missing from that collection, and contained only in Veit Dietrich's collection, are two Maundy Thursday sermons from the First Epistle of St. Paul to the Corinthians. Veit Dietrich's collection of Dr. Luther's Hauspostille was translated from German into English in 1871. In this post, we publish Luther's Second Sermon for the Day of the Lord's Supper, from the second English edition of that translation effort, published in 1884.2




A Sermon for Maundy Thursday

Second Sermon for the Day of the Lord's Supper

by Dr. Martin Luther2
    Text: Wherefore whosoever shall eat this bread, and drink this cup of the Lord, unworthily, shall be guilty of the body and blood of the Lord. But let a man examine himself, and so let him eat of that bread, and drink of that cup. For he that eateth and drinketh unworthily, eateth and drinketh damnation to himself, not discerning the Lord's body. For this cause many are weak and sickly among you, and many sleep. For if we would judge ourselves, we should not be judged. But when we are judged, we are chastened of the Lord, that we should not be condemned with the world. Wherefore, my brethren, when ye come together to eat, tarry one for another. And if any man hunger, let him eat at home; that ye come not together unto condemnation. And the rest will I set in order when I come. (1 Corinthians 11:27-34)

This text is of great importance and deserves to be attentively considered by Christians. We have already learned, from the previous sermon, how the people misunderstood these words, so as to deprive themselves of the comfort contained in the Sacrament of the Lord's Supper, yea, even shunned it as something dangerous. It is true, Judas did not receive this Sacrament to his consolation or amendment. There were also many among the Corinthians, as St. Paul tells us, who received it unworthily, and thus brought upon themselves bodily and spiritual punishment. There is indeed a difference in the reception of this Sacrament; some partake of it worthily and unto eternal life, but others unworthily unto condemnation, inasmuch as they do not repent and have true faith. Hence it is of the first importance that we learn to know what is meant by the expression “eating and drinking worthily or unworthily.

Wednesday, March 27, 2013

A Sermon for Thursday of Holy Week, or 'Maundy Thursday': “The Holy Sacrament” — by Dr. Martin Luther

Dr. Martin LutherOn Wednesdays through the Lenten Season this year (2013), we published sermons from Dr. Adolph Hoenecke (1835-1908), who is among the most important theologians of the Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod (WELS), and from Dr. Paul E. Kretzmann (1883-1965), a prolific author, educator, historian and theologian of the Lutheran Church — Missouri Synod (LCMS) and among the more significant figures of 20th Century American Lutheranism. We will do the same through Holy Week. Except for today, Maundy Thursday. Instead of Dr. Hoenecke and Dr. Kretzmann, we will hear from Dr. Martin Luther himself, from his Hauspostille.

Normally, we read sermons from Dr. Luther's Hauspostille as they come to us in the collection recently edited by Eugene F. A. Klug, and translated by him and others. This is the same Hauspostille included in the seven-volume Complete Sermons of Martin Luther published by Baker Book House. There were two original collections of Luther's Hauspostille: one from the stenographic notes of Veit Dietrich and one from those of Georg Roerer, both of whom copied the words of Luther as he preached to his students in his home. Roerer's notes were published in 1539 without Luther's approval, while those of Veit Dietrich were published later, in 1545, and carried with them Luther's endorsement. The newly translated Hauspostille contained in the Baker publication comes from the Roerer collection of Luther's Hauspostille, under the rationale that “the consensus of scholars has more and more moved in the direction of Roerer's transcription of Luther's house postils as the source most complete, exact, and trustworthy.”1

We will not be reading a sermon from Roerer's collection, however. Missing from that collection, and contained only in Veit Dietrich's collection, are two Maundy Thursday sermons from the First Epistle of St. Paul to the Corinthians. Veit Dietrich's collection of Dr. Luther's Hauspostille was translated from German into English in 1871. In this post, we publish Luther's First Sermon for the Day of the Lord's Supper, from the second English edition of that translation effort, published in 1884.2

(NOTE: Due to the length of this sermon, I have taken the liberty of adding subheadings,
to break up the content for those with short attention span.)



A Sermon for Maundy Thursday

First Sermon for the Day of the Lord's Supper

by Dr. Martin Luther2

The Holy Supper
    Text: For I have received of the Lord that which also I delivered unto you, that the Lord Jesus the same night in which he was betrayed took bread: And when he had given thanks, he brake it, and said, Take, eat: this is my body, which is broken for you: this do in remembrance of me. After the same manner also he took the cup, when he had supped, saying, this cup is the new testament in my blood: this do ye, as oft as ye drink it, in remembrance of me. For as often as ye eat this bread, and drink this cup, ye do shew the Lord's death till he come. (1 Corinthians 11:22-26)

The Last SupperAccording to a time-honored usage, more people come to the Lord's Table at this season than at any other time during the year. This fact, together with the urgent necessity that on a stated day the doctrine of the Sacrament of the Lord's Supper be plainly taught the people from the pulpit, prompts us to consider now the words of St. Paul, which you have heard read in our text. From these words we learn that this Sacrament was in no wise instituted or introduced by men, but by Christ Himself. In the night in which He was betrayed He instituted it for His disciples, yea for all Christians, that it might be unto them His Testament, His parting gift, full of great comfort and blessing.

Tuesday, March 19, 2013

'Crucible Moments' and 'Becoming Lutheran'

Becoming Lutheran
It is very likely that most readers of Intrepid Lutherans have not been following this research, if they even knew about it, but Rev. Matthew Richard (CLBA), who is working on a doctoral degree from Concordia Seminary - St. Louis, has finished the research stage of his dissertation. The title of his dissertation is Becoming Lutheran: Exploring the Journey of American Evangelicals Into Confessional Lutheran Thought, and the research consisted of three surveys whose participants were once active Evangelicals that have made the transition to confessional Lutheranism, or those who are in the process of making that transition. I was one of the survey participants (along with hundreds of others).

The first two surveys (quantitative and qualitative surveys, respectively) have been published:It is unknown to me if he will be publishing the results of the third survey, which concerned advice for Lutheran pastors with respect to prospects or parishioners who are going through the transition.

Rev. Richard has been compiling the results of his research on his Research Journal blog. In addition, he was the subject of a very interesting interview on Worldview Everlasting TV after the results of the first survey were released last February.


Having personally been through the lengthy transition from “Evangelical” to “confessional Lutheran,” and having done so reflectively (that is, I wasn't just jumping from one Evangelical church to another, like so many Evangelicals tend to uncritically do), I find that his results describe very well the process that we endure, and that they also help explain why many of us who've made the transition as adults (again, reflectively and deliberately) cling so tenaciously to sound and genuine Lutheranism and warn so vigorously against anything that smacks of contemporary Evangelicalism. Indeed, both Rev. Richard and Rev. Fisk discuss this very thing in the interview, above. Unlike those Lutherans who have become enamoured with sectarianism and adjure their brothers to “just give it a chance,” we've already “given it a chance,” already know very well the ruin to which it leads, and, rejecting it, urge others not to even dabble in it. Just as there are no non-smokers like former smokers, there are no non-Evangelicals like former Evangelicals. I'm one of them. I highly recommend looking at his research.

Crucible Moments
In the first survey issued by Rev. Richard, “Fear” and “Anger” emerged as two themes repeatedly observed. These two emotions were explored in the second survey – certainly for the sake of gaining a deeper and more objective understanding of these two factors, but, it seems reasonable to think, perhaps also seeking a way of “easing the process.” With the results of the second survey now published, however, I think it is pretty clear that these “emotions” are necessary aspects of the process, and that if a person does not endure them then it seems difficult to say whether a genuine transition to confessional Lutheranism has been made (assuming they actually believed the Evangelical teaching they had previously imbibed over the years).

Worldview Change is Repentance from Falsehood
Worldview Change is
Repentance from Falsehood
This result (which may be surprising to some) reminds me of a statistic reported by Josh McDowell in his book, Right from Wrong: 90% of one's values are developed by age 13, while the rest develop mostly between the ages of 13 and 18, and remain essentially fixed through the rest of his life – barring what McDowell called “crucible moments” during adulthood, or moments of ideological or worldview crisis. These “crucible moments” force a person into deep reflection, like no other kind of life experience can, and often result in either a change to, or a significant reinforcement of one's worldview. For any such change to occur in adults, whose values are essentially fixed, worldview crisis is necessary for the change to occur.

As the rest of Rev. Richard's research seems to show, the journey from contemporary pop-church Evangelicalism to genuine confessional Lutheranism is a very definite worldview change. I can personally attest to this fact. If “alleviating” or “easing the process” means hiding distinctive Lutheran teaching and practice in order to avoid “offending” prospects, or to soft-pedal the Second use of the Law in order to avoid “offending” the unregenerate, or to hide the Sacrament for fear of “offending” visitors, then the only effect “easing the process” might have is to attenuate the genuine change itself. That would be unfortunate. Perhaps it is best to simply be aware that individuals making a journey from “Evangelicalism” to “confessional Lutheranism” are struggling through internal conflict, and merely receive it as an explanation for what a given pastor observes as he brings disaffected Evangelicals through adult catechism? Perhaps it is best for a pastor to simply offer direct Scriptural support for every doctrinal claim he makes during the process, instead of trying to practice some form of “armchair psychology,” and leave the prospects to wrestle with the clear statements of Scripture on their own and arrive at their convictions through the Holy Spirit's working? I ask these questions rhetorically, of course, while agreeing with Rev. Richard in the interview, above, that, at the very least, confessional Lutheran pastors ought to patiently stick with disaffected Evangelicals who are in the midst of a worldview crisis.

Anyway, I think that the final product of Rev. Richard's research (which won't be published for several months it appears) will make for interesting reading – as will the many journal articles it will no-doubt produce. For now, I hope our readers will use the links above to give his raw research a look, and I hope that they find something interesting or beneficial in it.

 

Wednesday, April 13, 2011

Differences between Reformed and Lutheran Doctrines

[The following is a response to a commenter who asked regarding the differences between Reformed and Lutheran theology. The following response was a little too long to post as a comment...]



Lutheran Book of ConcordPatricia,

I realize this response is a little late in coming, but I have finally found the time that I earlier thought I would have had, to work up a brief response to your questions on “differences” between “Reformed” and “Lutheran” teachings. The difficulty in making such a comparison, of course, is in first defining what we mean by “Reformed” – and also what we mean by “Lutheran” – systems of theology. What we mean by the “Lutheran system of theology,” firstly, is what we publicly confess, in the Lutheran Book of Concord of 1580 (which contains the confessional documents of Lutheranism, such as the Augsburg Confession and the Formula of Concord), to be the teaching of Scripture on points which are generally disputed by Christians; secondly, is that body of theological writings which have come to us since the Reformation, and which in many cases existed even long prior to it, that are faithful to the very words of Scripture as well as these confessional documents. This is what we mean, therefore, when we qualify ourselves as confessional Lutherans, as those who subscribe to and meticulously affirm the teachings of Scripture as expressed in the Book of Concord. This subscription implies a relatively reliable consistency throughout the history of confessional Lutheranism, making it reasonable to characterize what “we” believe, teach and confess. It is also the reason why, though you asked me what “I” believe, I can answer you by describing what “we” believe: all ~400,000 of us in the Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod (WELS), and especially the ~1,000 pastors who serve us in various capacities, enjoy a unity of belief, publicly confessing the same doctrine and striving to represent that doctrine in our public practice. That this unity, due to our own fallibility, is imperfect, we all admit – which is why, though we take such confessions at face value, we do not rest secure in them but continually examine and affirm our doctrines according to the teachings of Scripture and the Lutheran Confessions, and evaluate our practices relative to them. This is also why we are diligent to point out to our brothers when we detect that their doctrine or practice may be straying from our mutual confession, in order to call them to repentance (or to have ourselves corrected) that we may continue to enjoy our unity and to work together for the Truth. This latter point, is the primary reason our blog exists.

We also qualify ourselves as confessional Lutherans to distinguish ourselves from the vast majority of “Lutherans” throughout the world (~65 million) who have been given over to the errors of Liberal protestantism, who have given up the Reformation principle of Sola Scriptura (“Scripture Alone”), and therefore, in our opinion, even the right to call themselves “Lutheran” at all. The Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA) is one such “Lutheran” church body – and believe me, it is no small matter of frustration for us confessional Lutherans that the ELCA continues to retain the label “Lutheran.” Out of the number of people in the world who allow the label “Lutheran” to apply to themselves, we would estimate that ~5 million could safely be characterized as confessional, ~3 million of which are located in the USA (and those estimates are probably a bit optimistic). Of those ~5 million, WELS enjoys full agreement in all matters of doctrine and practice with approximately 10 percent, in twenty other church bodies throughout the world, as members of the Confessional Evangelical Lutheran Conference (CELC). Outside of that 10%, we stand separate, both in order to preserve true unity among ourselves under God’s Word, and in order to call the others to repentance.

(NOTE: The author, though at the time he wrote this essay was a member of the Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod [WELS], has since left that church body over serious issues of doctrine and practice, and is now a member of an independant Lutheran congregation, served by a pastor from the Evangelical Lutheran Diocese of North America (ELDoNA). Though none of the issues prompting him to leave the WELS impact the content of this essay, given the frequency with which this essay is visited each week, it may nevertheless be of interest to the reader to know what those issues were. Those issues were explained in a letter to his former congregation that was made public on this blog: What do you do with a Certified Letter? Here is one idea.... If the reader has further interest in the ELDoNA, he may also read the author's nine-part series, published in June and July of 2013, beginning with the post Impressions from My Visit with ELDoNA at their 2013 Colloquium and Synod – PART I.)

Westminster ConfessionAs complex as that may seem, what we would identify as a “Reformed system of theology” is a little more difficult to pin down these days. The Reformed confession with the widest subscription is the Westminster Confession, although there are quite a number of other historical confessions that are important among the Reformed, including the Belgic Confession (Dutch Reformed) and the Gallic Confession, all of which would be strongly identified with the teachings of Calvinism. However, also falling under the umbrella of a “Reformed system of theology” are the teachings of Arminianism, which have influenced many Baptist groups since the 17th Century, and which characterize the theology of Methodist and Wesleyan traditions. While there are a variety of confessions and “teachings” which would officially fall under the umbrella of a “Reformed system of theology,” there is the added problem that, generally speaking, there does not seem to be firm commitment among those who identify themselves these days as “Reformed” to any specific confession or body of theology. Although there seems to be a growing confessional movement among some Reformed Calvinists, for the most part, we see Reformed teaching as a continuum between Reformed Calvinism and Reformed Arminianism – and this is especially the case in modern American Evangelicalism, which, due to its inherent ecumenism, tends to broadly yet non-specifically identify with Reformed teaching.

Anyway, I checked out the church body you are a member of – the Associate Reformed Presbyterian Church (ARP) – and according to your doctrinal statements, your church body confesses the Westminster Confession, placing you square within a Calvinist confession. The doctrinal statements of our church body, the Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod (WELS), can be found online in the document entitled, This We Believe, which is a document which clearly states, in thesis/anti-thesis format, our position with respect to Christian doctrines that are generally disputed. Another document, entitled, What the Bible and Lutherans Teach is a positive description of the doctrines that all confessional Lutherans, and many other Christians, agree on. Unfortunately, neither of these documents appear to be available from the WELS website in PDF format anymore, so these web documents will have to suffice for the purposes of comparison with the PDF your church body provides. In addition, Luther’s Large Catechism and Small Catechism are contained in the Lutheran Book of Concord, and may make for an interesting comparison with the large and small Westminster Catechism’s, as well.

Given the availability of these documents, what I am not going to do is walk through them line by line (since I am sure that you are fully capable of doing so). Instead, I will describe in sentence-paragraph format some of the main differences between Reformed (Calvinist) and confessional Lutheran teaching as I have encountered them, starting with a bit of history, and then concluding with recommendations for additional books, if you’re interested in further study.

The School of Athens, by Raphael
Some influences on the Swiss and German Reformers, both common and divergent

The foundation for both the agreement and the disagreement we find between Reformed Calvinist and confessional Lutheran bodies of doctrine can be traced to the period of the Reformation itself, generally to the Renaissance, which carried with it the very positive humanist priority of ad fontes, of returning to the sources of knowledge – like the original texts of the Bible, of the Greek philosophers, of the Roman statesmen, etc. This was a reaction against the method of Mediæval and Scholastic traditions of education, which at that time bound contemporary knowledge to the accumulated wisdom of the ages that was represented, not in the original documents themselves, but in commentaries of the originals, and commentaries on the commentaries, and commentaries on those commentaries, etc., compounded through the centuries. Along with this new-found fidelity to the sources, came a new form of learning which rested on examination and assimilation of those sources.Mediaeval Commentary

We also find more specific, and divergent, influences in the social, political and religious realities of the regions where the Swiss and German Reformations took place. While Germany and the Alsace were firmly within the rule of the Holy Roman Empire, France was independent from it, the nobility of France having been established since the time of the Carolingians, and Switzerland was growing in its independence from the Empire, having formed a confederation of independent states, adopted a republican form of government and even graduated by then to a form of democratic-republic. The leaders of the Reformation in Germany were Dr.’s Martin Luther, Phillip Melanchthon and (at first) Andreas Karlstadt. In the generation following Luther, Dr. Martin Chemnitz led the Lutherans to unity, serving as principle author of the Formula of Concord, and gathering the other confessional documents into a single collection called the Book of Concord, to which all Lutherans, in order to be Lutherans, would unconditionally subscribe. In Switzerland, the leaders of the Reformation were Ulrich Zwingli (German Switzerland), and later, John Calvin and Theodore Beza (French Switzerland). John Knox led the Reformation in Scotland, following from his association with John Calvin.

In Germany, Luther, as an Augustinian monk and professional theologian, wrestled with the reality of his own salvation, struggling under the unbalanced notions of God as a Righteous Lawgiver and angry Judge, who demanded that man follow His Law for the sake of his own salvation. He realized that he, as a depraved sinner, could not keep the Law; but the collected wisdom of the Roman church taught that he must.

Dr. Martin LutherAs a professor at the University of Wittenberg, Luther lectured on the books of the New Testament. Influenced by the new Renaissance learning, rather than relying on the old commentaries, Luther prepared for his lectures by meticulously studying the books of the New Testament directly, not only in Latin, but in their original language, as well. There he discovered that indeed, the Law is harsh and demanding, that man is depraved and incapable of its demands, but most importantly, that man is Justified, not by the works of the Law, but by faith alone in the promises of Jesus Christ. When he discovered that the Church’s teaching under the Roman Pope was false and damnably misleading, he sought to reform the Roman Church, to return the Church to the true apostolic doctrine and biblical practice. Thus the German Reformation under Luther was principally about man’s relationship with God (i.e., by God’s grace alone through faith alone in Christ’s redemptive work alone), the importance of pure Scripture doctrine to maintain the correct view of that relationship (Scripture alone), and the subordinate role of human reason to the authority of Scripture. The German Reformation was a conservative one – one which looked back through the history of the Church to the teaching of the Apostles, seeking to correct only what was in error while conserving the rest, and maintaining the character, unity and continuity of the Church. The resultant separation from Rome and loss of visible unity was something that was necessary due to Rome’s obstinacy, but which was neither planned nor desired.

Ulrich ZwingliSuch was not the case in Zurich, however. Ulrich Zwingli, a Roman Catholic priest, had involved himself deeply in the humanist movement and had earned a reputation as an outspoken activist. He was very active in politics, as a proponent of the cause of Swiss unity and independence. This cause faced itself in the direction of the future, not the past, and thus required a new platform for social order. Hence, when he sequestered himself in his house to study the Scriptures, Zwingli’s purpose was not to reform the Church. The Swiss needed a new one. On the contrary, his purpose was to ‘develop a true philosophy of Christ’ which would ‘impact social and political change.’ Thus the Swiss Reformation, under Zwingli (and later, Calvin and Beza), was not a conservative one, but radical. Without knowing what they may be, one can perhaps already appreciate that such differences of purpose would result in differences of doctrine.

Luther and Zwingli meet to discuss doctrine
Marburg ColloquyNevertheless, the Renaissance principles of humanist learning at the time – principles shared by all the reformers – required fidelity to the sources. The result was that, even though they approached the Scriptures from essentially incompatible starting points, Zwingli and Luther found themselves in such agreement that they desired to meet, to debate those points of disagreement in hopes of resolving them and of declaring their unity under the teachings of Scripture. They met in 1529. The event is known as the Colloquy of Marburg. With fifteen critical points of doctrine separating them when they met, after their debate the separation was reduced to only one, that of the presence of Christ in the Eucharist – Zwingli and his followers having conceded every other point of doctrine to Dr. Luther. On this final point, Luther opened the discussion by drawing a large circle on a table and within it writing the words “This is my body.” Zwingli objected to the plain meaning of the words offered in Scripture on the basis that “the physical and the spiritual are incompatible,” and that therefore the presence of Christ can only be spiritual. He insisted that the words must be symbolic, and no more. Despite their fundamental disagreement, however, Zwingli conceded to the same use of language as the Germans under Luther, if only between them they understood that while Luther meant that Christ was both physically and spiritually present, Zwingli meant that He was only spiritually present. At this, Dr. Luther became incredulous. It was one thing to misunderstand Scripture – to be a weak and erring brother – but it was quite another to knowingly allow a misrepresentation of Scripture to stand for the sake of outward unity. The result is not Scriptural unity – full agreement regarding what the Scriptures teach. On the contrary, such a compromise would result in a purely outward, political unity. That Zwingli was willing to compromise regarding what he was convinced, as a matter conscience, the Scriptures taught, signaled to Dr. Luther that all of his concessions at Marburg were just that – compromises. Thus Dr. Luther pronounced to Zwingli, “Yours is of a different spirit than ours,” cutting Zwingli to the bone, and ending the Colloquy. Six months later, Dr. Luther was proven correct: Zwingli reversed all of the concessions he made at Marburg, announcing that he never really agreed to them in the first place.


Significant differences between Reformed and Lutheran teaching remain

From this episode of history, we learn of several differences which impact Reformed and Lutheran teaching to this day, beginning with the role of human reason relative to the Scriptures, and extending to the teachings of Predestination, of Christology, of God’s Grace and the Means through which He works, of Baptism, and of the Lord’s Supper. There are other doctrines impacted, of course, but these will suffice.

They differ regarding the role and authority of human reason with respect to Scripture
Plato and Aristotle discuss philosophy, from School of Athens by RaphaelLuther and Zwingli, like Calvin and Beza who followed him, were exceptionally well-educated men, learning, teaching and leading during an exciting time of rediscovery, intellectual cultivation and application of the classical sources. The gift of the Renaissance was that men once again learned the art of human reason from the masters. But if reason were to remain a true gift, and not a Trojan Horse, what authority should it carry in matters of Scripture’s teaching? Luther insisted that human reason must remain subordinate to the very words of Scripture – as “the handmaiden of Scripture.” If seeming paradoxes of Scripture could be harmonized through use of reason, without compromising the plain meaning of the statements of Scripture as one would understood them in their natural context, then such was considered helpful. If, however, such harmonization required that the plain meaning of the Scriptures be understood differently than they directly stated, then the words of Scripture, along with the paradox, stood, while reason was subordinated to them. Zwingli, and later Calvin, thought differently. They reasoned that Scripture, as pure Truth revealed by God, could not contain paradox or mystery. As a result, they required a closed system of theology, against which unsanctified reason was powerless, since all questions were reasonably answered. Thus, in Reformed systems of theology, reason is more than just the “handmaiden” of Scripture, but in many cases, stands as its arbiter.

They differ regarding the starting point of Christian teaching and central teaching of Scripture
John CalvinOne of the first evidences of the difference between Reformed and Lutheran teaching regarding the role and authority of human reason, is in the starting point of their respective systems of theology. John Calvin saw the unfolding of Scripture – the power of God’s Word that by it He could speak the universe into existence, that infractions of His Holy Law would carry eternal consequences, that He accomplished man’s Salvation and is solely responsible for it apart from man’s miserable efforts – as the story of God’s omnipotence. A very reasonable conclusion, indeed. Hence, God’s Sovereignty, according to Calvin, is the subject of Scripture, and is therefore the starting point of the Calvinist system of theology, with the central doctrine being that of Sovereign Grace – that God has mercy on those whom He will, apart from any effort of their own. Lutherans, on the other hand, while not denying the Sovereignty of God in any respect, nor that He alone, apart from man’s efforts, is responsible for man’s salvation, take Scripture’s own testimony regarding its subject: Jesus refers to the Old Testament Scriptures as “they which testify of Me” (Jn. 5:39), and the New Testament directly testifies the same regarding itself – in other words, according to the direct testimony of the Bible, its subject is the Messiah, Jesus Christ. Thus, the starting point in the Lutheran system of theology is not God’s Sovereignty, but the person of Jesus Christ, and our central doctrine is Justification by Faith Alone – the teaching by which we gain access to His gracious work on behalf of all mankind (Ro. 5:1-2).

They differ regarding the person of Christ
But Who is Jesus? We Lutherans, like the Reformed, teach that Jesus is both fully God and fully man. But there the similarity ends, for we Lutherans, confessing with Scripture that, “in Him dwelleth all the fullness of the Godhead bodily” (Co. 2:9), also believe and teach that Jesus in His divine nature shared in His human attributes, and in His human nature shared in His divine attributes. As Luther taught, Wherever you can say, “There is the Son of Man,” there also you must say, “There is the Son of God.” The Reformed reject the teaching that Jesus in His human nature shared in His divine attributes, that the Son of Man is omniscient (though Jn. 1:43-51; 11:3-11; Mt. 16:21 show Jesus’ omniscience as man), omnipotent (Mt. 9:6; 28:18 show Jesus claiming omnipotence to Himself as man) or bodily omnipresent (Mt. 28:20; Ep. 1:23; 4:10 show Jesus as bodily omnipresent). This may seem like much ado over nothing, until one asks himself the following questions:Christ on the Cross, by Peter Paul Rubens
    Who was it who died on the cross? Surely, Jesus in His human nature died on the cross, but did Jesus in His divine nature also share in that death? Did "God" die on the cross, or did just a man die on the cross?
We Lutherans confess with St. Peter, who, preaching to the Jews following Pentecost, accused them by identifying the Man who died on the cross according to His divinity, saying, “You have killed the Prince of Life” (Ac 3:13-15). But how could an eternal God die, and yet still be eternal? Scripture doesn’t say – but it says most clearly both that God is eternal and that He shared in the experience of Christ’s death. Scripture teaches both, and we believe, teach and confess both. But look at the astounding consequences of this death, and the positively galvanizing reality of what St. Peter was preaching to his fellow Jews. Not only did Christ, by His death as man, pay the penalty of man’s sin, finishing His work on behalf of mankind, His death as God terminated the Old Covenant with Israel – for we know that the death of one or both parties to a covenant is the only condition which legally terminates it. What St. Peter was preaching was that, no matter how the Jews or anyone else looks at the situation, there is absolutely no hope for them in the Old Covenant. None whatsoever. The work is finished, and the manner of its completion leaves no doubt regarding the status of that covenant, since the completion of Christ’s work also supplies the legal criteria for its termination. Rather, their only hope is in the “New Testament,” or the new promise, of the Man Who in His human body lived perfectly under God’s Law, Whose precious blood was shed as a propitiation for the sins of the World, and Who, by His Resurrection, showed Himself to be the eternal God that He claimed to be, and Who now promises forgiveness of sins and righteous standing before God to those who through faith receive them. This teaching gives no quarter to Dispensationalism, or any other system of belief which tries to retain a special arrangement between God and the Jews, for “There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither bond nor free, there is neither male nor female: for ye are all one in Christ Jesus” (Ga. 3:28).

They differ regarding the presence of Christ in the Eucharist
Dr. Martin ChemnitzAnd this “New Testament” was exactly what Luther and Zwingli debated at Marburg. Christ, in the night in which He was betrayed, took bread, and when He had given thanks, broke it saying, “Take, eat; this is My body, which is given for you. Do this in remembrance of Me” (Lk. 22:19; Mt. 26:27; Mk. 14:22; 1 Co. 11:24). In the same manner also He took the cup when He had supped, and when He had given thanks, He gave it to them, saying, “Drink ye all of it; this cup is the New Testament in My Blood, which is shed for you for the remission of sins. This do, as oft as ye drink it, in remembrance of Me” (Lk. 22:20; Mt. 26:28; Mk. 14:23-24; 1 Co. 11:25). This “New Testament” offered by Christ in His Blood, was a specific kind legal arrangement that is common in probate law even to this day. Luther, who was trained as a lawyer before entering the Augustinian Order, knew very well the ancient principles involved, and we are informed in great detail by his contemporaries why it was that Luther held so strictly to the very words of institution: Christ, in using this phraseology, was offering his “last will and testament.” Very fitting, given that He knew that He was going to die on the cross the very next day. What this means for the bequeathed, if they would benefit from the Testator’s will, is that, if it is established that the Testator was of sound mind when He issued His will, and if the words coherently express the Testator’s wishes, the words must be followed precisely and to the letter – even if they sound unreasonable. This in order that the will of the deceased may actually be honored. For example, if Uncle Felix bequeathed to his nephew Horace his entire estate, on the condition that Horace hop on his right leg three miles into town, bark like a dog for five minutes in the town square, and then hop on his left leg back home, that means that if Horace wants his inheritance, he had better get hopping – the will of Uncle Felix is clear, even if it makes no sense why Horace needs to do what is requested of him in order to receive his inheritance. In other words, the objections of reason against the clear will of the Testator are invalid.

Jesus Christ is the Testator of the New Testament (He. 9:14-17). “Do this” was the clear instruction that Christ gave as He issued His “last will and testament”; and in “doing this,” it is clear that we are to regard the bread and wine as not only bread and wine, but as Body and Blood – as the very Body and Blood that was given and shed. But how can bread and wine also be Body and Blood? We Lutherans don’t claim to know. But we are quite certain that the same God Who can speak the universe into existence, Who can also pull off the Incarnation and the Virgin Birth, can, by His command and institution, also manage the sacramental union of His Body and Blood with the elements of the Eucharist. The question isn’t how can this be? but what do the Scriptures say?:
    This cup of blessing which we bless, is it not the communion of the blood of Christ? The bread which we break, is it not the communion of the body of Christ? For we being many are one bread, and one Body; for we are all partakers of that one Body (1 Co. 10:16-17).
Communion, Consecration of the ElementsBut what are the implications of this teaching for the Lutheran communicant? They are quite significant. Jesus Christ, in His human body, lived a perfect life under God’s Law. In this perfect body, He became sin for our sake, taking on the sin of the World, and suffering sin’s penalty – death and separation from God. The perfect Blood He shed in His death for our sin, was considered by God to be sufficient payment for the World’s sin, for the sin of each individual. He was found to be Just in the sight of God, and returned to life. When the Lutheran communicant receives the consecrated bread and wine in the Holy Supper, he is not merely partaking in a “meal of remembrance”. Rather, Christ Himself physically comes to the communicant and gives Himself to him. The Lutheran communicant is actually physically united with the perfect Body of Christ, which lived perfectly in the sight of God under His Law and continues its perfect existence in the presence of God. The Lutheran communicant is actually united with the Blood of Christ, which was declared by God to be Just payment for his sins. Thus united with Christ, the Lutheran stands united with those communicants who have likewise received Christ’s Body and Blood; and together they stand before God in the work and righteousness of Christ – their sin is atoned for and they are fully righteous in the sight of God. And this is our inheritance as sons of God, is it not? There is no more personal, more intimate assurance of our “remission of sins” than this, for in the Holy Supper, the Logos, the Word of Forgiveness Himself, is physically united with us.

Zwingli objected, “Christ physically ascended into heaven, therefore He is physically present only in heaven. He cannot be present in heaven and also be present here on earth, in the Eucharist, as well. Therefore, we can say only that He is spiritually present in the bread and wine.” Calvin concurred with this, though attempted a mediating position between Zwingli and Luther, claiming that the communicant, as he receives the bread and wine, is transported to heaven where the body of Christ is located, and is united with Him there, apart from the bread and wine. We Lutherans agree that Christ bodily ascended and is present locally in heaven. But this is not the limit of His bodily presence. Responding with Scripture to Zwingli’s objection, we confess: “Christ fills all” (Ep. 1:18-23; 4:9-10). Further, there is no basis in the testimony of Scripture for dividing the natures of Christ or separating His divine from His human attributes, while there is every reason to require that they remain united: “the Word became flesh” (Jn. 1:1-5,14) and “the fullness of God dwelt in Him bodily” (Co. 2:9). Therefore, we conclude with Scripture that Christ fills all in His human, as well as His divine natures; and if Christ can fill the whole universe, He can also be physically present in the bread and wine. Likewise, we can also trust His promise, “I am with you always, even to the end of the world” (Mt. 28:20), and believe that He is actually here with us.

They differ regarding Grace, and the Means by which the sinner gains access to it unto Salvation
God’s Word, a Means of GraceBut Zwingli also countered, “The physical is incompatible with the spiritual.” That is to say, divine perfection can have no part with the “fallen matter” that makes up the physical world, since it is infected with sin. Calvin concurred. Not only did this notion impact their formulations regarding the presence of Christ in the Eucharist, it also lies at the root of some very serious differences between Reformed and Lutheran doctrines. The Reformed teach a doctrine called Immediate Grace, that is, that God works apart from means of any sort, that He works directly in an individual, strictly apart from any means, to bring him to Salvation. We Lutherans, on the other hand, teach that God the Holy Spirit works to produce and strengthen saving faith only through the Gospel, and the Gospel comes to man only through means. We call them the Means of Grace, and have identified three such means appointed by God in His Holy Word, through which He works:
  1. the Word of God (which was “written that we might believe,” Ro. 10:17; Jn. 20:31)
  2. the Sacrament of Holy Communion (given “for the remission of sins,” Mt. 26:28), and
  3. the Sacrament of Holy Baptism (which is “for the remission of sins” and which “does save us,” Ac. 2:38; 22:16; 1 Pe. 3:18-22)
Thus, in response to Calvin and Zwingli, we Lutherans answer, not only does the Bible state directly that God works through the Gospel in Word and Sacrament to create and strengthen faith, we can find no evidence in Scripture that He works apart from these Means. Sure, our reason tells us that since the Scriptures say God is sovereign and omnipotent, He can do any thing He wants, any time He wants, any way He wants. But this, alone, is of no comfort to the Christian at all, who wants assurance of God’s working in himself, and wants to direct others to God where He can be found.

“How do I know that God is at work in me?” This question becomes all the more critical when we consider another teaching regarding Grace that is espoused in Reformed doctrine: Particular Grace. In this teaching, we are told that God, in His sovereignty, has turned His gracious countenance toward only some, and not others, that God does not love all sinners equally, and that as a result, He did not come to atone for the sins of all mankind, but only for the sins of some. Thus, the Reformed also teach, Limited Atonement. After all, Hell will be populated, and it would place limitations on God’s omniscience if we were to assume that He did not know beforehand who would populate it! If He knew beforehand, then certainly it is reasonable to conclude that God’s sovereign plan of salvation was limited to only some, that His saving Grace was reserved for particular persons and not others. This leaves the poor Christian wondering if he were one of those God had chosen at the foundation of the world; and without the comfort of objective means through which he is promised that the Holy Spirit will work in him, he is left to look within himself, searching for evidence that he is among God’s elect. The consequence is that Reformed preaching tends to equip the believer for this task, by focusing on issues of Sanctification.

Lutherans, on the other hand, do not teach that Grace is “particular” or that Christ’s atoning work was “limited” to some, but not to others. Instead, we confess what the Scriptures directly say, and teach Universal Grace (Jn. 3:16) and Universal Atonement (1 Jn. 2:2; Co. 1:19-22). Moreover, because the Scriptures teach that the Holy Spirit is present and working through the Gospel in Word and Sacrament, the Lutheran is confident that (a) since God loves all people, (b) since God atoned for the sins of all people, and (c) since God works to produce and strengthen faith through His appointed Means, then (d) the Christian can confidently seek God outside of himself, placing his trust in the objective promises of the Gospel, knowing that the Gospel is intended for him, and that God is at work through it to save him and to keep him as His own; and (e) the Christian can confidently preach this same message to unbelievers, knowing that He is faithful to work through His appointed Means to produce faith and thereby bring the unbeliever from death into life as His own dear child. The consequence is that true Lutheran preaching dwells, not on subjective themes of Sanctification, but on the objective message of Law and Gospel, on the message of Justification by Faith Alone.

They differ regarding Predestination
This is the one big difference that everyone likes to start with when discussing the differences between Reformed and Lutheran teaching. I thought it best to end with this particular teaching in my little summary of theological differences, in order to display in leading up to it the Lutheran attitude toward the authority of Scripture and the role of reason relative to it. Obviously, we Lutherans are not unaware of the challenges reason hurls at our body of teaching. Calvin himself was rather merciless in his criticism of Luther, and Lutheran doctrine, declaring us guilty of “stupefying irrationalities.” Yeah, we get it. Nevertheless, we consider it safer to stand on the very word of God, than to deviate from it in either “jot or tittle.”

Predestination, or “Election to Grace,” is a biblical teaching. Both Reformed and Lutherans teach this doctrine. Scripture refers to those who have faith as the elect (Ep. 1:3-14; 2 Th. 2:13-14), as those chosen by God at the foundation of the World. However, we Lutherans are quick to point out that 2 Th. 2:13-14 makes clear this election to grace was not a naked decree, but includes in the eternal act of God’s choosing the Means and process through which one’s election is made sure – “through sanctification of the Spirit and belief of the truth” (v13). That is, God’s choosing of His elect included the preaching of the Gospel and the work of the Holy Spirit through the Gospel to create faith in the heart of its hearer.

In addition to “Election to Grace,” Reformed Calvinists also teach that, as a consequence of God’s Sovereign omniscience, He also predestined some to Hell. This teaching is called “Election to Reprobation,” and it is a teaching rejected by Lutherans. It is nowhere stated in Scripture. Some Reformed authors will cite Jude 4, Romans 9:17-24, or 1 Peter 2:8 in support of this doctrine, but upon close examination it is found that these verses fail to teach this doctrine. In Jude 4, prographo (“before … ordained”) is not a reference to ancient or eternal decree and is never used in this sense in any of the other places it is used in the New Testament (like Ro. 15:4; Ga. 3:1; Ep. 3:3), but is used to indicate writing beforehand, and probably refers to those St. Peter warned of in 2 Peter 2:3, given that Jude writes after St. Peter to the same audience, describing the same people that St. Peter warned of. Likewise, use of 1 Peter 2:8, “whereunto also they were appointed”, ignores the context, that such appointment is the consequence of their rejection of the Gospel, not antecedent to it.

By far, Romans 9:17-24 seems to be given the greatest weight by Reformed commentators defending “Election to Reprobation.” Often, however, the difference between “fitted for destruction” (v22) and “afore prepared unto glory” (v23) is glossed over. Those vessels “fitted for destruction” were so fitted as a consequence of their rejection of God’s repeated and long-suffering overtures of grace toward them, not antecedent to their rejection. On the other hand, those “afore prepared unto glory” are so prepared from eternity, consistent with the doctrine of predestination that Lutherans and the Reformed agree to.

We Lutherans confess that Scripture teaches Predestination, or “Election to Grace,” but that it does not teach “Election to Reprobation.” Rather, we confess that Scripture teaches it is God’s antecedent will that all men be saved (1 Ti. 2:3-6 – God’s will from eternity for all mankind), but it is His consequent will that those who reject Him suffer damnation (God’s will in response to an individual’s rejection of His grace, not from eternity). “Double Predestination” or “Election to Reprobation” is the Reformed Calvinist’s way of reconciling what appears to be divine paradox – that (1) it is God’s eternal will that all men be saved, and (2) not everyone will be saved – and is accomplished by qualifying the word “all” as “all those He came to save.” The way of the Reformed Arminian is to elevate the role of the human in his own salvation, by making him a co-operator through his own will and intellectual assent. The Bible speaks against this as well. In John 1:13 it makes clear that the will and decision of man is not involved; and the second chapter of 1 Corinthians clearly teaches that man’s intellect is of no aid to him in understanding the things of God (for to him it is all foolishness), but that God’s truth must be taught to him by the Holy Spirit, apart from Whom true knowledge of God is impossible.

The fact is, all attempts to harmonize the statements of Scripture regarding election result in two errors. The first error is that statements not contained in Scripture are held up as Scripture's doctrine (i.e., God predestines some to hell [Calvinist], or, man co-operates in his own salvation [Arminian]). The second is that clear and direct statements of Scripture are rejected (i.e., it is not God’s will that all mankind be saved [Calvinist], or, there is no eternal election [Arminian]). Further, the Holy Spirit has offered no harmonization of these statements in His Word. So how do we Lutherans handle this? First, we believe, teach and confess that it is God’s will that all mankind be saved – His gracious countenance shines on all mankind. Second, we believe, teach and confess that Hell is a real place, prepared for the Devil and his angels, and that those who obstinately reject the gracious overtures of God in the promises of His Gospel, will spend an eternity in that place, separated from God forever. In other words, the Bible teaches both that God wants all people to be saved, and that Hell will be populated. The Bible teaches both. We believe both. And we leave it at that – accepting these statements of Scripture as they stand and leaving them unresolved.

Conclusion
The Renaissance, they say, was the bridge from the Mediæval period to the Modern period of Western history. From the Renaissance, Luther faced backward in time, looking through history to the teaching of the Apostles. Though benefiting from the Renaissance humanism and classical learning of his time, he was square within a Mediæval frame of mind, fully comfortable with the mysteries placed before him in the clear and certain testimony of Scripture. To this day, genuine Lutheran theology retains this distinctly Mediæval character, comfortable, as we stand on the direct positive statements of Scripture, with the divine mysteries of the person of Christ, His presence in the Eucharist, or the work of the Holy Spirit through the Means of Grace, and as we continue to move into the future by facing the past, by looking through the Reformation to the teachings of the Apostles, and by retaining the historic and Scriptural practices of the Church which have given expression to those teachings over the millenia. Zwingli and Calvin, on the other hand, were building toward a future of Modernism. With Scripture as foundation, they faced forward in time from the Renaissance into an unknown in which human reason would be king. Now that Modernism has passed into history, now that Materialistic Rationalism is itself flailing violently near the throes of death, now that we are entering into a Postmodern Era, it will be interesting to see the impact of these two similar, yet divergent, “systems of protestant theology.” Will they continue to retain their character?


If any of the Lutheran teachings discussed above are of interest to the lay-reader, I supply the following list of books for further investigation:


Finally, if you’re interested in what confessional Reformed and Lutheran dialogue sounds like, a good radio program to listen to is The White Horse Inn Classic, a program in the weekly line-up of Pirate Christian Radio.

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

"Walking Together Sunday" - The Service (Updated!)

The specially created Order of Service offered as a resource for the WELS Walking Together Sunday is outlined below. I’ve noted in parenthesis how Law and Gospel are used throughout the service.
  • Hymn: CW#556 – (Gospel, Law – 3rd Use)

  • Invocation (Gospel)

  • Opening Litany: Isaiah 60:1-6, read responsively (Gospel)

  • Confession and Absolution: Ps. 51:1-4 and 1 Pet. 2:9-10, read responsively (Gospel)

  • Hymn: CW#64 (Gospel)

  • Prayer of the Day

  • First Lesson: Daniel 7:13-14

  • Psalm of the Day: Psalm 67

  • Second Lesson: Revelation 14:6-7

  • Gospel: Matthew 2:1-12

  • Hymn of the Day: CW#570 (vv. 1-2) (Law – 3rd Use)

  • WELS Connection Video

  • Hymn of the Day: CW#570 (vv. 3-4) (Law – 3rd Use)

  • Sermon: Revelation 14:6

  • Creed (not specified)

  • Offering

  • Responsive Prayer of the Church

  • Lord’s Prayer

  • Hymn: CW#394 (Gospel)

  • Responsive Prayer

  • Blessing (Gospel)

  • Hymn: CWS#778 (Law – 3rd Use)

Observation #1: The Use of Law and Gospel


As noted above, there are several proclamations of the Gospel in one form or another, and some proclamation of the 3rd Use of the Law (Guide) in some of the hymns.

The proposed service itself does not proclaim the Law in its Second Use (Mirror). This is not a criticism of the service, but a simple observation, the point of which will become clearer in the post on the sermon. A regular liturgical service doesn’t usually proclaim the Law in its Second Use, either, except at times in the Scripture readings for the day, or in an occasional hymn.

I’m not referring here to the result of the Second Use, that is, the contrition of the sinner or the sinner’s prayer of confession or supplication to God. I’m speaking only of the actual proclamation of the Law that "afflicts the comfortable," either from the pastor to the people or from the people to the people. Again, just an observation that will be clarified in the next post.

Observation #2: The “Confession and Absolution”


The “Confession” in this service consists in the congregation reading Psalm 51:1-4. That’s not a bad confession of sins, and it’s by far preferable to a “new” confession crafted for this particular day.

But the “Absolution” is not really an absolution. “You are a chosen people, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people belonging to God, that you may declare the praises of him who called you out of darkness into his wonderful light. Once you were not a people, but now you are the people of God; once you had not received mercy, but now you have received mercy” (1 Peter 2:9-10). At best, it’s an indirect and impersonal absolution in which the pastor quotes a Scripture verse to the people, speaking to them as if he had applied the loosing Key, without actually applying the loosing Key. 1 Peter 2:9-10, in context, reminds Christians of what we are by faith in Christ’s atoning sacrifice. The Absolution is intended to be more than a reminder, but to actually apply Christ’s atoning sacrifice to us and give the forgiveness of sins to the penitent.

Observation #3: A Non-liturgical Service


A synod that wants itself to be known as a confessional Lutheran synod would do well to promote a service that retains at least the basic structure of the historic Lutheran (i.e., Christian) Liturgy, which the Lutheran Confessors retained and devoutly celebrated.

[Update! This paragraph has been added since the original post.] Part of being non-liturgical is setting aside the Church Year in order to preach on a topic of choice. The Gospel for the day in this order of service is the Epiphany Gospel, Matthew 2:1-12. This illustrates the point about swapping in "special service" readings for the regular Lectionary readings. The Church has known for centuries that the Festival of the Epiphany - January 6th - has a special "missions" emphasis. Why bring the Magi into the Proper of the Pentecost season three months before Christmas? Why insert this Gospel artificially in September when it fits into the Church Year so naturally three months from now? Speaking of the Proper...

One could say that the service includes a sort of Proper (in the hymns, prayers and Scripture lessons), but since it’s disjointed from the liturgical calendar, it’s a Proper without an anchor, and if having hymns, prayers and Scripture lessons qualified a service as liturgical, then practically any Christian denomination could be considered liturgical.

But the Liturgy includes more than this. It also includes the Ordinary. The Ordinary, however, is almost entirely missing from the WT service. Of the five historical parts of the Ordinary (the Kyrie, the Gloria, the Nicene Creed, the Sanctus and the Agnus Dei), only the “Creed” remains, and since it’s not specified, the Apostolic Creed will likely be used in many cases, thus leaving none of the historic elements of the Ordinary.

This does not make the service “sinful.” But it does make it non-liturgical, together with the following observation…

Observation #4: Where is the Sacrament?!?


The Liturgy includes the Sacrament. This, to me, is the most glaring omission from the proposed service. We all know that most congregations in the WELS do not celebrate the Sacrament every Sunday. And no one is suggesting that the Synod ought to compel a congregation to celebrate the Sacrament on Walking Together Sunday.

But would it be too much to ask the Synod to at least encourage that a congregation include the Sacrament with the Word, or at very least offer an option for including the Sacrament in this “special service”?

Instead, the service suggests showing the WELS Connection Video between stanzas of the Hymn of the Day! This is not an improvement.

WELS president Mark Schroeder recently defined well what the essence of Lutheran worship is:
“Lutheran worship is primarily the proclamation of the gospel in Word and sacrament. As we gather together for worship, God speaks to us in his Word. Through the preaching of his law he crushes us with the stark and painful reminder of our own sin and unworthiness; he causes us to tremble at his holiness and justice; he speaks to us his urgent call to repentance. But in that same time of worship, a gracious God speaks to us words of full and free forgiveness. He points us to Christ and to the cross where his sacrifice paid the price of our sin, removed our guilt, and opened the door to heaven itself. In that same time of worship, we poor miserable sinners kneel side by side and receive the same body and blood that were given and shed for us. We commune with our God and with each other."

If only the Order of Service published by the WELS that promotes Walking Together Sunday in the WELS reflected the same Word-and-Sacrament emphasis that WELS President Schroeder describes! Wouldn't a service with Holy Communion reflect and inspire a much more real "Walking Together" with our brothers and sisters in the faith than any video ever could? United together as “one loaf” around the Lord’s Table, proclaiming together the Lord’s death until he comes, singing the ancient texts that the saints have been singing on their walk together for centuries, and giving thanks to God for the Gospel that he has graciously placed into our trembling hands in the WELS – wouldn’t that make for a truly “special service” on Walking Together Sunday?

Maybe next year?

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