Book Review: A Giant Sleeper?

Waking the Sleeping Giant Book

A book review of Waking the Sleeping Giant: The Birth, Growth, Decline, and Rebirth of an American Church. By Gerald B. Kieschnick, Concordia Publishing House, 2009. 288 pages. $16.99. By a contributing editor.

In the 15th century, a hodgepodge was a stew made from whatever vegetables and meat was on hand. In the case of the stew, the ingredients might or might not go together on their own but were cooked until they blended into a thick paste. In the case of Gerald Kieschnick’s Waking the Sleeping Giant, the book is a hodgepodge of stories, letters, emails, bullet points, convention overtures, Commission on Theology and Church Relations (CTCR) documents, statistics, quotations from the Lutheran Confessions, and the Scriptures thrown together and stewed into a book of 288 pages, including the appendices.

Perhaps anticipating potential questions why Kieschnick, a man not known for his literary works, was writing a book a few months before the 64th regular convention of the Lutheran Church Missouri Synod (LCMS), he writes, “My life and ministry have been tested in the crucible of nearly 40 years of ministry in various roles in the LCMS. I believe I have something worth saying” (15). Indeed, most authors feel that they have something worth saying or they would not undertake the endeavor of ink to paper. Yet Kieschnick explains further, “a book is a vehicle in which information may be shared in a way that clarifies misunderstandings and refutes misinformation about many matters, including what this church body and its president believe, teach, and confess” (15). Precisely, what misinformation and misunderstandings he has in mind must be left to the reader’s inference from the topics he chooses to address.

One of Kieschnick's main points is that doctrine is a strength of the “sleeping giant” while dogmaticism is “non-productive,” that is, “becoming our own worse enemy.” In chapter two, Kieschnick produces a 29-point list of the “major theological positions of The Lutheran Church—Missouri Synod” that have made “our church the theological giant it has been since its inception” (30). His list includes the five pillars of Christian fundamentalism plus statements on the ethics of abortion, homosexuality, the nature of marriage, etc. In the next chapter, Kieschnick proclaims, “We have so much more that unites us than divides” (36).

He next produces historical examples of how the practice of doctrine did not keep up with the rapidly changing world. His list of seven includes: the purchase of life insurance, questions of membership in the Boy Scouts, Lutherans being excommunicated for dancing, the forbidding of Lutheran musicians from performing in the weddings or funerals of non-Lutherans, the forbidding of Lutheran pastors and laity from praying with non-Lutherans, the forbidding of men and women from sitting together in church, and conflict over the use of English in formerly German congregations.  While C.F.W. Walther in his Pastoral Theology did caution against seductive society, unsupervised get-togethers between the sexes, and indecent games, he nowhere speaks of excommunicating people for dancing. In fact, Walther’s counsel is not much different than that given by pastors and church fathers since the earliest days of the church. No doubt we would be better off today if we heeded the calls of our forefathers toward more modesty. Other parts of the list are if not historically inaccurate, are greatly exaggerated. Kieschnick’s list is troubling not only because it is presented without any historical explanation why the church issued such cautions (nor does he acknowledge that the majority of Christian churches in the 19th century said exactly the same sorts of things), but also because these apparently unreasonable and unfathomable concerns become the straw man or foil for his list of “doctrines” some in the Missouri Synod do not agree on today.

According to Kieschnick, the five areas of doctrinal disagreement, or in his words, “The slumbering and snoring of the giant,” in the Missouri Synod today can be summarized impiously as wine, women, and song. Regarding wine, Holy Communion, Kieschnick states the disagreement is over who should be admitted to the Lord's Supper. His characterization of the conflict and strife portrays two groups: one group allows and encourages anyone who believes, is baptized and agrees with some minimal doctrinal statements to commune regardless of church membership, the other group are those who “hold that only ‘card-carrying members’ of the LCMS should commune in our Congregations” (43). He addresses these two “ends of the spectrum” not with an exegesis of pertinent Biblical texts or with as a study of the Lutheran Confessions (although Appendix C excerpts 32 pages of the Tappert edition of the Book of Concord; one wonders why not the Concordia edition produced by CPH?), but samples of communion statements from various churches in the Missouri Synod, quotations from Synodical Convention overtures and CTCR documents. In fact, every doctrinal matter is treated in the same manner, with Synodical Convention overtures cited as the primary sources for a doctrinal position with CTCR statements following close behind—an approach that has much akin to the citing of Canon Law by Rome. As for the doctrinal concern over who is admitted to Holy Communion, Kieschnick is content to place “the principal burden of this decision upon the prospective communicant.” (49) If such an analogy were extended into the medical field, patients would diagnose and medicate themselves with prescription drugs under their own responsibility, whether or not such treat was actually beneficial or, worse yet, harmful. Whom the Lord invites to His Table is not something for us to review or revise, as Kieschnick seems willing to consider.

Kieschnick also touches on the role of women in the church, the proper form of worship (formal, liturgical, traditional on one pole and “blended,” “contemporary,” and praise teams on the other), inter-Christian relations, and the proper relation between laity and clergy. In brief summary, Kieschnick says little on the role of women, deferring to recent Synod Convention overtures that “honor the gifts of women and encourage those gifts be used in appropriate ways.” In regard to worship, Kieschnick notes that pastors tell him the “overwhelming majority of new members are first introduced to the congregation through the informal, blended, or contemporary services rather than through the traditional, formal services of worship” (61). He mentions that he has “never worn a miter, carried a crosier, or swung an incense pot,” which is probably true for the majority of pastors in the Missouri Synod, including those who use Lutheran Service Book every Sunday. A major point of his discussion on worship was the interpretation of the LCMS Constitution, Article VI, “Exclusive use of doctrinally pure agenda, hymnbooks, and catechisms in church and school.” Apart from encouraging “great care” in worship matters, Kieschnick concluded this section by reproducing a convention resolution from 2004, “To Affirm Responsible Use of Freedom in Worship.”

In regards to church relations and the LCMS’ historic position that renounces “unionism and syncretism of every description,” Kieschnick writes, “these requirements have the appearance of sectarianism and communicate the wrong message to Christians from other denominations” (67). Kieschnick tells a couple of stories on how the non-participation of LCMS pastors in community prayer services, etc. have communicated the wrong message, “Instead of presenting a faithful witness to the truth of the Gospel, in many cases the message communicated by non-participation is one of exclusivity or aloofness, telegraphing a false spirit of being ‘holier than thou’” (71). Kieschnick concludes this section by saying, “In the present and into the future, the LCMS must rethink its position in this regard” (80). A couple of chapters later, Kieschnick reopens the discussion of the infamous Yankee Stadium event from 2001 by likening President David Benke’s prayer to a giant encountering another giant or Elijah responding to the opportunity given him by the prophets of Baal. This is one of the few times Kieschnick cites Scripture that was not previously quoted in a Convention Resolution or CTCR Document. Kieschnick reaffirmed that President Benke made a “pastoral decision to participate in the Yankee Stadium event, doing so with my counsel as ecclesiastical supervisor” (142). Considering that this issue has been on a low simmer, if not lukewarm, it is surprising that the Yankee Stadium event received such treatment in Kieschnick’s book. Apparently, this is one of the matters Kieschnick felt where misunderstandings needed clarifying and misinformation refuting.

Other sections of the book deal with the declining demographics of the Missouri Synod and what Kieschnick thinks needs to be done to reverse some of these trends. He also treats the topic of funding the mission of the church. These chapters mention the various initiatives begun during the Kieschnick administration such as “Ablaze,” One Mission. One Message. One People.”, the “Blue Ribbon Task Force on Structure and Governance” (BRTFSSG), et al.  He quotes the BRTFSSG where it says, “We also acknowledge in our report that the divisions in our church over the last 30 years have hampered our effectiveness no less than the factions in Corinth emptied that first century church of the power available to them. Add to that the fact that our structure has been created piecemeal over the last 100 years and needs to be addressed for the maximum efficiency of the Lord’s resources… This new way of ‘operating together’ will not happen overnight” (123). While not explicitly stated, part of Kieschnick’s vision for waking the sleeping giant involves restructuring and reorganizing the Missouri Synod in a way he considers more efficient.

Kieschnick closes his book with the metaphor of a 160-year-old woodpile that is seasoned and ready to burn. “It is full of potential to bring the light and warmth of Jesus Christ to a cold, gloomy, sin-filled world. And yet, too often, ignition that could lead to a roaring blaze is doused by our own hand. We pour water on our own wood. We pour water on another’s fires because we don’t like the way our brother is going about building and burning his. It’s not exactly how we would do it, and so for some reason it isn’t right. We meddle in so many other fires that we fail to tend to our own” (196). In his analogy, doctrine and practice is the neatly stacked pile of wood that can either be used for the “slow, smokeless burning decay” or for the “light and warmth and energy produced by a roaring fire.” The proper burning of the Missouri Synod’s wood will make the giant rise.

Due to Waking the Sleeping Giant’s hodgepodge, the book was difficult to review. A variety of metaphors and similes were employed through the book, metaphors that frequently did not mix well or blend into a stew. In places rather than a clear thesis statement, a section would end with a metaphor or story, leaving the reader with the task of discerning the point. Although Kieschnick states in the preface, “the observations regarding life, ministry, and vision for leadership articulated in the chapters that follow are applicable to an audience not limited to The Lutheran Church—Missouri Synod” (13), it is difficult to imagine anyone outside of the Missouri Synod desiring to read this book. For that matter, the book while purporting to articulate a vision for leadership, the book does is not inspirational or devotional in any sense. It is not unfair to say that the book is a convoluted compilation of various short speeches and addresses given by President Kieschnick at a variety of venues over the past 9 years, mixed with Synodical Convention Resolutions and CTCR statements. Indeed, there may be some people who find such things stimulating or interesting. Apart from the value of having President Kieschnick’s vision for the future on paper and a historical overview of the events that occurred during the past decade of President Kieschnick's tenure, most pastors and laity within or without of the Missouri Synod would gain little from reading the book.

Bless Saint Mary

A sermon Rev. Ronald F. Marshall
Text: Luke 1:48

Sisters and brothers in Christ, grace and peace to you, in the name of God the Father, Son (+) and Holy Spirit. Amen.

Today we come to this consecrated church to keep the Sabbath Day holy. And we do that by worshipping God, the Father, Son and Holy Spirit – the holy Trinity. We thank him for his goodness and mercy and reach out to him for his wisdom through his holy Word. Today we learn from that word that we are to honor St. Mary, the Mother of Our Lord Jesus Christ – the Blessed Virgin.

All Generations

In Luke 1:48 we’re told that all generation are to call Mary blessed because of the good things God has done for her. And yet close to a quarter of the two billion Christians on the earth today refuse to do so. I know about that personally. When I grew up in a Lutheran church in Tacoma, WA, we worshiped across the street from a Roman Catholic parish – and we all but threw rocks at them for worshiping what we thought was an infallible pope and a divine virgin. But that was a poor witness. Those attacks weren’t constructive (1 Corinthians 8:1). Ironically, my first sermon honoring St. Mary was called “crap” in a letter by a life-long Lutheran attacking me (Myron Warren, August 27, 1980)! No, the most constructive way to proceed would simply be to follow Luke 1:48 on this score and call St. Mary blessed – and leave it at that.

Beyond Biology

But what is the best way to bless St. Mary? Knowing that we should bless her is one thing, but knowing exactly how to do that, in the right way, is an altogether different matter! The best way forward here, I think, is simply to find out what exactly God’s blessing was that he bestowed on the Blessed Virgin. What exactly was it that God did for her that was so wonderful, and inspiring of our celebration on this Feast of St. Mary, the Mother of Our Lord?

Most Christians would say it was her virginal conception and the birth of Jesus – the only Son of God. And that would be right to a degree, but it wouldn’t be the whole answer – strange as that may sound! For we wonder what could be greater than the towering miracle of the Virgin Birth!? Now Martin Luther (1483-1546), our “most eminent teacher” [The Book of Concord (1580), ed. T. Tappert (1959) p. 577] helps explain just what that would be:

When the Virgin Mary conceived and bore Christ, Christ was certainly a real, physical, visible man and not only a spiritual being; yet she conceived and bore him spiritually also. How? In this way: She believed the word of the angel that she would conceive in her womb and bear a son. With the same belief in the angel’s word she conceived and bore Christ spiritually in her heart at the same time as she conceived and bore him physically in her womb. If she had not conceived Christ spiritually in her heart, she would never have conceived him physically.... Now what did she conceive in her heart? Nothing else than what the angel’s words declare.... Since she grasped the word and through faith became pregnant with it in her heart, she also became physically pregnant with that which the word in her heart said to her.... [Therefore] the physical conception would have been of no avail to her if it had taken place without the spiritual conception (Luther’s Works 37:89-90).

So Mary didn’t conceive by way of a divine, male impregnation, as in Greco-Roman mythology [Raymond E. Brown, The Virginal Conception (1973) p. 62]. It therefore would be wrong to call God Mary’s husband. If he were in fact her husband, she couldn’t then have been the mother of our Lord – as odd as that too may sound.

The Logic of Motherhood

This crucial point hinges on the very logic of what it means to be a mother. Again, it is Luther who helps us figure this out. He explains that God could have

made Christ’s body from her body in her sleep, without her knowing it, as he made Eve from Adam, but then she would not have been his mother, just as Adam was not Eve’s mother (LW 37:89).

Now this explanation establishes the superiority of the spiritual conception over the physical one, and moves the matter of what’s so glorious about St. Mary beyond biology onto the matter of faith. For it was her faith that made her pregnant – period. For when she heard that she was to bear the Savior of the world, she famously said, “Let it be” (Luke 1:38). In that acclamation was her great moment of faith – and also the greatest miracle of her life!

So Mary’s conception did not occur by a physical or sexual insemination of any kind whatsoever. No, it simply was the result of an odd, verbal insemination, if you will. Luther again explains:

How did... Mary become pregnant? Although it is a great miracle when a woman is made pregnant by a man, yet God reserved for him the privilege of being born of the Virgin. Now how does the Mother come to this?.... The angel Gabriel brings the word: “Behold, you will conceive... and bear a son, etc.” With these words Christ comes not only into her heart, but also into her womb, as she hears, grasps, and believes it.... The power comes through the Word [although] no one knows how it comes about (LW 36:341).

This verbal insemination assures that Mary remains a virgin, for even if the sexual, physical insemination were from God the Father himself, as the Muslims erroneously surmise it would have had to have been (Qur’ān 6:102; 72:3), her virginity would be lost because of the male involvement by God the Father. So the truth regarding the virgin birth of Jesus can have nothing to do with sexual insemination – even if it comes from God! Mary’s conception instead happens, as Luther further explains, at

that moment when Mary assented to the angel Gabriel’s announcement.... In that hour when she said, “Be it unto me according to your word,” she conceived and became the mother of God; and Christ, therewith, became true God and true man in one person [Luther’s House Postils, ed. E. Klug (1996) 3:290].

So the great miracle of the incarnation is not some mixed form of divine and human parthenogenesis – to exalt her against her “consent” (LW 51:213), but simply her faith. Therefore as Luther said, if we truly believe that Christ is our Savior and Lord – as Mary did – then we “shall not fail to love the mother Mary” (LW 51:216)!

A Sea of Bitterness

Mary’s faith is a great witness to us, because without it, she never would have been able to withstand the avalanche of scorn and misunderstanding that came her way from being chosen to be the mother of our Lord. No sooner did Joseph find out about her pregnancy, than he wants to divorce her (Matthew 1:19)! What choice did he have? He doesn’t know anything about a virginal conception – and if he did, he couldn’t understand it (LW 36:343). And so, as a rationalist, he regards her as a promiscuous fornicator – condemned under the law of God (Exodus 20:14; Ephesians 5:5).

This Marian trauma, if you will, is so heavy, that she cannot bear it without her faith in Christ (1 Peter 5:9). For Mary is “so poor and despised a mortal” (LW 21:322) that she can’t make it on her own. Søren Kierkegaard (1813-1855) – that Danish admirer of Luther – elaborates upon Mary’s shame in his pseudonymous book, Fear & Trembling (1843), which is his classic text on the trial of Abraham in Genesis 22 (Kierkegaard’s Writings 6:64-65):

Who was as great... as that favored woman,... the Virgin Mary?....To be sure, Mary bore the child wondrously, but she nevertheless did it “after the manner of a woman,” and such a time is one of anxiety, distress, and paradox. The angel was... not a meddlesome spirit who went to the other young maidens in Israel and said: Do not scorn Mary, the extraordinary is happening to her. The angel went only to Mary, and no one could understand her. Has any woman been so infringed upon as was Mary, and is it not true here also that the one whom God blesses he curses in the same breath? [LW 2:5].... She is by no means a lady idling in her finery and playing with a divine child.

Luther therefore rightly notes that the name Mary means “a sea of bitterness,” which shows that

there is in her not merely a drop, nor a stream, but a whole sea of bitterness; a deluge of suffering inundates her, so that she is well named “Mary,” a “bitter sea” (LW 52:120).

God, however, doesn’t leave her high-n-dry in this most painful shame and distress. She suffers alright – but not by herself.

“This encourages us,” Luther notes, “to believe that henceforth He will not despise us poor lowly ones, but graciously regard us also” (LW 21:323):

[For] the exceeding riches of God joined in her with her utter poverty, the divine honor with her low estate, the divine glory with her shame, the divine greatness with her smallness, the divine goodness with her lack of merit, the divine grace with her unworthiness (LW 21:323).

Blessing St. Mary on this day then will mean entering into the fray with her – fighting the good fight of faith with her (1 Timothy 6:12). It’ll mean trusting in the Lord to carry us through the hard times (Matthew 11:28) – just as he helped St. Mary out.

Just One Saving Death

But how does Christ help us, strengthen and sustain us? Galatians 4:5 says he does this by redeeming us from the law. And Galatians 3:13 says this is crucial because the weight of the law is a curse. The way Jesus redeems us is not by changing the law so that it no longer threatens us. No, he redeems us from the curse of the law by becoming a curse for us himself. He does this by dying on the cross – whereby he “cancels the bond which stood against us with its legal demands” (Colossians 214). He is punished in our place that we might become righteous (2 Corinthians 5:21). For indeed,

God.... gives Himself to us, so that... we... may cast our weakness off on Christ. If I am a sinner, Christ is righteous; if I am poor, Christ is rich; if I am foolish, Christ is wise; if I am a captive, Christ is present to set me free; if I am forsaken, Christ takes me to Himself; if I am cast down, Christ consoles me; if I am weary, Christ refreshes me (LW 17:28).

No wonder then that Luther rejects the view that St. Mary is some sort of “divine being” (LW 21:324)! No, she instead directs us to Christ – that is her only “worthiness” (LW 21:327)! “She traces all to God, lays claim to no works, no honor, no fame” (LW 21:329).

For Jesus is the one redeemer, the one mediator (1 Timothy 2:5). No one else – nor we ourselves – can save us (Psalm 49:7-9; Acts 4:12) – for salvation “comes completely from the outside and is foreign” (LW 25:136). That’s because Christ alone sacrificed himself for our sins (Hebrews 9:26; 1 John 2:2) – performing his “mightiest work” on the cross (LW 21:340). “Mary.... did not redeem” us (LW 22:146). “Mary.... was not crucified... for us” (LW 69:262). Only Jesus delivers us from sin and death (Romans 7:24, 6:23). Even though his blood was partially intermingled with Mary's in utero, she never shed that blood on the cross for sinners.  So Mary, weeping at the cross, didn’t somehow join “herself with [the] sacrifice [of Jesus] in her mother’s heart” – somehow mixing her tears with his blood for our salvation [contra the Catechism of the Catholic Church, 2nd edition (1999) §964]. No, never!

Only Christ can carry us into the kingdom of God (Colossians 1:13). The law of God can point us in the right direction – like a hand signaling the way to go – but it can’t get us there. For that we will need “feet, a wagon to travel in, or horses to ride on” (LW 22:143). And Christ alone is that transportation for us – only he has the feet to carry us into God’s kingdom. For if it is true that

God became man,... yet without sin, it then follows that as far apart as God and man formerly were from each other,... they now belong closely together; therefore, no kinsman... is as closely related to me as is Christ, the Son of the everlasting Father [Luther’s House Postils, 3 vols, ed. E. Klug (1996) 3:211].

Pleasing Mary

Rejoicing in this salvation through faith in Christ, we also struggle to live lives that are pleasing to God (Hebrews 11:6) – knowing that we are saved “for good works, which God prepared beforehand, that we should walk in them” (Ephesians 2:10). These deeds will not save us – but we do them precisely because we have already been saved by faith in Christ:

Yes, clothed in Christ’s... righteousness, I can... begin to love God and my neighbor. Where I still lack and fail, I have a precious “umbrella” in Christ who shades me with his fulfillment.... Hitherto, I thought that it was up to me to keep the Law; now I realize that’s impossible for me.... Under Christ,...I am always covered; and so, I am as pure and innocent as the sun, but always on account of Christ in whom I believe [who] has paid my account (LHP, 1:186).

On this feast day, then, dedicated to St. Mary, the Mother of Our Lord, let us do these works in honor of our salvation in Christ.

First, Luther says that “nothing would please St. Mary” more than to turn from “all lofty things on which men set their hearts” and “gladly associate” with things of “low degree” (LW 21:323, 315; Romans 12:16). So hanging around with – or even wanting to be involved with – the rich, influential and powerful isn’t the Christian way – and that is in large part why God didn’t select Caiaphas’ daughter instead to be the mother of our Lord (LW 21: 314). We all know that we secretly hanker after the benefits these associations bring us – like fine food, fancy surroundings, and choice entertainment. But on this feast day – in thanksgiving for St. Mary and in honor of Christ – let us purge our hearts and minds of these thoughts and “put to death” all such longings (Colossians 3:5). In Luther’s treatise on The Magnificat (1521), he elaborates this point most helpfully. Ungrateful people, he explains,

despise the good gifts of God which are showered so abundantly upon them and which they overlook – such as life, body, reason, goods, honor, friends, the ministrations of the sun and all created things.... They act as they do because they look above them and not beneath them; if they looked beneath them, they would find many that have not half of what they have and yet are content in God and sing His praise. A bird pipes its lay and is happy in the gifts it has; nor does it murmur because it lacks the gift of speech. A dog frisks gaily about and is content, even though he is without the gift of reason. All animals live in contentment.... Only the evil, villainous eye of man is never satisfied.... It always wants the best place at the feast as the chief guest (Luke 14:8) (LW 21:320).

And secondly let us recite daily the Hail Mary, those venerable lines from Scripture about St. Mary – absent the last words about praying for us sinners now and in the hour of our death, since they go against the Scriptures [contra the Catholic Catechism, §2677]:

Hail, Mary, full of grace. The Lord is with thee; bless-ed art thou among women and blessed is the fruit of thy womb, Jesus Christ [Luke 1:28, 42] (LW 43:39).

Luther argued that we should neither turn the Hail Mary into “a prayer nor an invocation,” but leave it as a mediation on the “grace God has given her” (LW 43:39-40). So even though “blessed Mary prays for the church,” we must not invoke her or trust in her to “appease Christ” for us (BC, pp. 232-233)! That’s because we “would necessarily be guilty of eternal death if Jesus Christ... did not still intercede and plead for us as a faithful, merciful Mediator, Savior, and the only Priest and Bishop of our Souls” (LW 37:362)!

Finally let us on this day do whatever we can to get the good news out about Christ to generations everywhere – either by going to the ends of the earth ourselves, or by praying for and financially supporting those who travel hither and yon (Isaiah 61:9; Matthew 28:19-20). And let our efforts in this regard find inspiration in Luther admonitions from his 1523 sermon on 1 Peter:

We live on earth only so that we should be a help to other people. Otherwise, it would be best if God would strangle us... as soon as we were baptized and had begun to believe. For this reason, however, he lets us live that we may bring other people also to faith as he has done for us [Luther Texts on Mission, ed. Volker Stolle (2003) p. 20].

May all three of these good deeds – associating with the lowly, reciting the Hail Mary, and promoting Christ among all generations – be a joyous part of our blessing of St. Mary today. Amen.

(Preached by the Rev. Ron  F. Marshall on the Feast of St. Mary, Mother of Our Lord, August 17, 2008, at First Lutheran Church of West Seattle).

 

What in the World is God Doing?

A sermon by John T. Pless delivered Tuesday in Epiphany I, 12 January 2010, at Kramer Chapel of Concordia Theological Seminary, Fort Wayne, Indiana. Sermon text: Isaiah 43:8-13.

I think that Isaiah must have read Luther’s On the Bondage of the Will.  They do sound a like. If you are troubled with Luther’s assertions about God working all things out of His divine necessity, then you cannot but find Isaiah’s portrayal of the Lord’s epiphany as anything but offensive for here God asserts that He alone is the Lord. He puts the peoples of earth on trial, inviting them to enter into disputation with Him. This is the God who determines the rise and fall of nations. This is the Lord declares that that there is no Savior beside Himself. He is the God who does His work and none can deliver from His hand or overturn what He has accomplished.

 

We get jittery and protest anything that sounds like determinism because it puts us out of control. Root of the problem is that we think we are more reliable, more trustworthy than God Himself. I don’t know if God can be trusted but I can trust myself. Pro-choice is not just a political slogan; it describes the old Adam. We are all pro-choice! We insist on having our say, making our choice, and exercising our free will. We might be persuaded to deliver our lives into God’s hands, but God’s absolute insistence that He is God in all that He does robs us of the freedom to do things our way. Instead we are bound and determined make a god that we can live with, a tamed deity who knows his place and will not interfere with our precious freedom.

But such a God is not the Lord who is made manifest in Isaiah’s preaching. This is the God who says “I, I am the Lord, and besides me there is no Savior. Isaiah knew what the Apostle Paul would later write in his first letter to the Corinthians that an idol has no real existence and although “there may be so-called gods in heaven or on earth as there are indeed many ‘gods’ and many ‘lords” – yet for us there is one God, the Father, from whom are all things and for whom we exist, and one Lord Jesus Christ through whom are all things and through whom we exist” (I Cor. 8:5-6).

Gods and lords abound. One need not look only to Hindu temples well populated with idols fashioned by hearts and hands. There are the counterfeit gods cranked out by our hearts, that idol-factory as Calvin called it. No mass production, no one-size fits all here. This idol-factory is creative and imaginative, specializing in custom order gods.

It is not enough to speak of our culture’s false gods or to smugly critique atheisms old or new. Enshrined in our own hearts of darkness is the will in bondage to itself, enslaved to the notion of its own lordship. Such a lord might do many things. It might inflate your self-esteem or give you a reason to live. It might motivate, inspire, and empower you for an ethical life and it is not unlikely that it has the power to make you feel good about yourself. But make no mistake about it; such a god can never be a Savior. Live with such a god and you will be at the mercy of its future and you will suffer its fate.

There is only One who can announce “I am the Lord, and besides me there is no Savior.”

He is the One who stands in Jordan’s stream and of whom the Father says “This is my beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased.” Here is the Lord who determines your future with a certainty that does not terrify but gives consolation in His good and gracious will. His future is your future. His cross is your cross. His resurrection is your resurrection. His baptism is your baptism. His sonship is Your sonship for in Him you are a child and heir of His Father. This Lord has done for you just what Isaiah promised. He has redeemed you by His blood and called you by name. You are His. You did not choose Him; He elected you to be His own in time and for eternity.  

The First Commandment forecloses on all other gods for God is a jealous Lord; He will share you with no other. Having this Jesus as your Lord, you have the only God you need. Amen.

The peace of God which passes all understanding keep your hearts and minds in Christ Jesus to life everlasting.    

 Prof. John T. Pless+

Latin American and U.S. Latino Lutheranism

19-1Epiphany 2010, Volume XIX, Number 1Table of Contents

(Introduction by Leo Sanchez)

As a vicar in Caracas, Venezuela, I ventured every so often to one of the largest Roman Catholic bookstores downtown to peruse various collections of dogmatic treatises. On one of my visits, I started a casual conversation with a Venezuelan priest who asked about my background. After learning that I was a Lutheran seminarian, the priest, somewhat perplexed, exclaimed something like, “Latino Lutheran? That is not possible. You cannot be Latino and Lutheran.”

Prior to his ordination into the priesthood, my confounded conversation partner had been a sociologist. Although we did not make time to go a bit more deeply into the topic at hand, I could only imagine how easy it might have been for a sociologist to think of Lutheranism mainly as a German transplant in the Americas, a form of Christianity for a few immigrants of German background, a Protestant movement with no historical or religious roots in the minds and hearts of Latin Americans.

The priest with a sociological streak had not been entirely wrong. If one reads Rudy Blank’s article on Lutheranism in Venezuela, one will find stories of German immigrants or American (meaning South- and North-American) missionaries of German roots establishing Lutheran congregations in predominantly Roman Catholic territory. Some years ago I taught a course at Seminario Concordia in the city of Buenos Aires, Argentina, where I was graciously hosted by pastors with last names like Franck, Fischer, and Meyer. Needless to say, similar stories can be told of the origins of the Lutheran churches in Argentina or Brazil.

Where the Venezuelan priest had not been entirely on target was in his somewhat naive assumption that  Spanish Catholicism had overwhelmingly won over the hearts and minds of the evangelized peoples of the Americas. Undoubtedly, after centuries of presence in the Americas, the Roman Catholic Church has  defnitely left marks among the people. Doug Rutt’s article points in particular to the image of the dying Christ who suffers along with us — an image with medieval Roman Catholic roots — as the dominant symbol that historically has captivated especially the suffering masses of Latin Americans. However, Rutt also implies that the popular appropriation of the dying Christ by the people, in spite of its accompanying fatalism and not always clear soteriological meaning, has functioned among the masses as a form of silent protest in the face of oppression. By identifying with us in his innocent human suffering, Christ shows his solidarity with those who suffer unjustly.

 

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A Review of A Little Book on Joy

Luther Howling Dog

Book review by Dr. Albert Collver

A Little Book on Joy: The Secret of Living a Good News Life in a Bad News World. By Matthew C. Harrison. Fort Wayne, Indiana: Lutheran Legacy Press, 2009. Individual copies: $9.95; bulk (5 or more copies): $5.99.

 A Little Book on Joy is a very fitting title in a world that seems to have so little joy. At first glance, there would seem to be little to say about joy. A search on Amazon.com turns up remarkably few books on the subject of joy, many of which deal with mental health or Eastern religion. It seems that “joy” is not even a topic popular for a self-help type of book. If the self-help book market has relatively little use for “joy,” what of the Christians? While there are some Christian authors writing on “joy,” it seems that Harrison’s got it right. “So many churches, so many pastors and Christians have so little joy today . . . These are difficult times” (p. 2). Indeed, these are difficult times for many as the news media has titled the first decade of the 21st century, “The Noughties.” Even in the Church, outside of the Christmas season with “Joy to the World,” when is the message of “joy” heard?

“To my exuberant surprise, I found joy everywhere” (p. 3), Harrison writes after mining the Psalms, Moses and the Prophets, the Gospels, and the letters of Paul. His search for joy continues through Martin Luther, Walther, and the church fathers. Joy it seems, turns up over and over in the lives of those touched by the Gospel. As Harrison writes, “where there is Jesus, there is joy” (p. 8). In contrast to the run-of-the-mill, ten-step books that promise to deliver if their exercises are followed, A Little Book on Joy offers no such formula. Instead, it guides the reader to find “joy in the mud”—that is, to see how Jesus comes to us where we are at, not afraid to muddy himself in our mess. In the recognition that Jesus is right there with us, we find joy. There is comfort in Ambrose’s observation, “Even Job on his dunghill was not deserted by the Lord.” Harrison’s secret for joy is profoundly simple: “If we seek Jesus, we shall be engulfed and inundated by joy, and quite by surprise” (p. 9).

The book itself contains twenty chapters, each dealing with a different aspect of joy. After the first chapter reveals that joy is all over the place in both the Scriptures and the lives of the saints (Luther, Walther, the church fathers, et al.), the next chapters connect us with “joy” as expressed, revealed, and gifted to us by the Trinity, the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit (Chapters 2, 3, 4). Chapters 5 and 6 guide the reader to find joy in repentance and in the reconciliation brought to us by the righteousness of Christ. In other words, there is joy in confession and absolution. Chapter 7 brings us to the “community of joy,” that is, the church where “all rejoice together” (1 Corinthians 12:26).

Chapters 8 through 20 constitute a second part of the book, describing joy in everyday life. These chapters find joy in marriage, family, humor, worship, life, creation, in the pastoral office, in giving, in weakness, and in everyday life. Throughout the book, but especially in these sections, Harrison demonstrates that he is an engaging and vivid storyteller. (See, for instance, the wife/snowmobile and the BB gun stories.) No surprise to anyone who has read other works by the author (such as At Home in the House of My Fathers), Harrison also finds great joy in Lutheranism (Chapter 19). This should do much to help put to rest the notion that confessional Lutheranism is dead, dry, or heartless. Instead of so-called “dead orthodoxy,” Harrison finds “the joy of generous, faithful Lutheranism” (p. 167). In the final chapter, joy gives us hope for the future, hope in the promises of Christ, and ultimately in our resurrection because Christ himself rose on the third day.

If this were not enough, A Little Book on Joy gathers a selection of biblical texts into a concluding section titled, “The Great Ninety Days of Joy after Joy.” This is a meditative and devotional guide to joy beginning on Ash Wednesday and concluding with Pentecost. This wonderful appendix makes the book an excellent resource for both congregational and personal devotions during Lent and Pentecost. Portions of the book could even become a Lenten mid-week sermon series. Each chapter closes with study questions written by Prof. John Pless designed to lead the reader or small group into a further exploration of joy.

The forward by Rev. John Nunes, President of Lutheran World Relief, is both erudite and accessible; it is a joy itself to read. The afterward by Rev. Bernie Seter describes joy from the perspective of a parish pastor and a congregational reconciler. Also impressive is the plethora of quotations of what people all over the world are saying about A Little Book on Joy—from laypeople and churchmen, including district presidents, bishops, seminary professors, and pastors from Myanmar, Germany, Indonesia, Russia, India, Canada, Australia, Latvia, Africa, and the United States. Another final charming aspect of the book is the artwork by Rev. Kurt Onken at each chapter head. Particularly endearing is the illustration of Martin Luther playing his lute while his dog, Klutz, howls away.

To say it was a joy to read A Little Book on Joy is more than a trite truism. Joy is also found in the reasonable price of the book at $9.99 for single copies and $5.99 in bulk. No doubt this book will provide its readers with joy for many years to come and serve as an excellent resource for both personal and congregational use.

 Order the Book from http://logia.org/alittlejoy

 Albert B. Collver
St. Louis, MO

 

 

For the Nuns of 1523 who Fled to Wittenberg

by January Pearson

For the Nuns of 1523 who Fled to Wittenberg

I'll tell you a story
of such blessed serendipity
it could be myth,
but it is true.

Twelve nuns broke
solemn vows and
escaped a convent.
It could have been nine or thirteen

but twelve, the perfect symbol
for this little church,
this lowly nation. It was Easter Eve, no less,

when the wagon arrived
stocked with dead fish;
the nuns piled in and
one whispered "Jonah,"

causing quiet overflowing
laughter to lift them like water.
They shivered
in their modest habits,

criminals to the state,
to the outsider, peculiar,
speaking rarely a word
as they held hands

and gripped a prayer
and went to a place
where lilies bloom
from the stones.

When they arrived
the Reformer diligently
settled them in homes
and marriages --none was left destitute.

But that night
as they huddled like children
in the dark, in this hideaway,
this sanctuary,

chanting alleluias before the vigilant air,
they didn't know what lay beyond
the cobbled road – they only knew
they left a life, a home, a name,

to become beggars,
so that they might be free
and given to
by Christ alone.

January Pearson teaches college composition courses and is a member of Holy Trinity Lutheran Church in Hacienda Heights.

What Do You Do With the Body?

A sermon preached by John T. Pless on Tuesday in Pentecost 18, 6 October 2009 at Kramer Chapel, Concordia Theological Seminary, Fort Wayne, Indiana; Sermon text: 1 Corinthians 6:12-20

"May God the Father, who created this body; may God the Son, who by His blood redeemed this body; may God the Holy Spirit, who by Holy Baptism sanctified this body to be His temple, keep these remains to the day of the resurrection of all flesh." These words are, of course, the words spoken at the committal in the Service of Christian Burial. At that most sober and somber moment they proclaim the truth about the body of the believer; it is body created by the Maker of heaven and earth, purchased with the blood of Christ, and hallowed by the washing of the water with the Word. It is not a left-over carcass to be tossed aside but a body given by God and now rendered back to Him.

The body is yours; it is uniquely you. Yet it does not belong to you. You did not create yourself. While we read of the wizardry of post-human futures with synthetic parts that replace worn out limbs and organs, we finally cannot transcend the reality that we are flesh and blood which will perish. We may view the body as a pod that houses our creative (and free) will. We may treat the body as an instrument of our hedonisms, as a plaything for our pleasure. Then we need not be surprised that once the toy of the flesh breaks down we seek ways to be relieved of the burden. Enter assisted suicide and euthanasia. If we can't finally master the body and control the suffering of disease or old age, we will put an end to it at the time and place of our own choosing. We speak of the person committing suicide as "taking their own life" as though it were theirs to take. We think, at least, we will be done with burden of the body.

 

What do we do with the body? That's a question faced not just at the time of death but here and now as we live in the body. When the spirit of the age is mistaken for the Holy Spirit, the body will be thought of as incidental to spirituality. Such was the case with the super-spirituality of the Corinthians who apparently thought that something as bodily as sexual intercourse could not affect life in the Spirit. Freedom in the Spirit translated into a life unhampered by restrictions, boundaries or limitations. Homosexual practice, prostitution, and even incest were fair game. Perhaps they reasoned that the bounds of Christian liberty were wide, expansive and permissive since "food is meant for the stomach and the stomach for food and God will destroy both." It could be that they mistakenly thought that the Gospel is message of liberation from the body. The glue that binds us together, we are told, is the Gospel, Baptism, and mission. Something as mundane as a sexual ethic should not get in the way of these! We need an ethic that is more relational and less "physicalist" was the argument advanced by one of the proponents of change in the debates within the ELCA leading up that church body's adoption of novel policies that run counter to the Sacred Scriptures this past August.

 

The Apostle takes a position and asserts an ethic that is physicalist indeed for "The body is not meant for sexual immorality, but for the Lord, and the Lord for the body." What you do with your body does matter. Listen again to Paul: "Do you not know that your bodies are members of Christ?" It is a matter of ownership. You can't take the body which belongs to Christ-bought with His blood and washed by His Spirit in Holy Baptism and join that body to a prostitute. To do so, Paul says, is to sin against your own body. Hence he says "flee sexual immorality" for every other sin a person commits outside of his body-but this sin is against your body- the very body that God has created, redeemed and sanctified.

 

Christ Jesus will not have the body that belongs to Him rendered unclean; desecrated by fornication and enslaved by a fleshly union to one who is not your spouse. Christ Jesus would not have you live in bondage to another lord for He has made you His own. He has purchased and won you from all sins, from death, and from the power of the devil, not with gold or silver but with His holy, precious blood and with His innocent suffering and death that you may live under Him in kingdom ad serve Him in everlasting righteousness, innocence and blessedness just as He in His body is risen from the dead and lives and reigns to all eternity. Your body belongs to this Lord so the Apostle says "glorify God in your body" for your body is the place of His Spirit and it is destined for the resurrection of the flesh. So now present your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and acceptable to God. This is your spiritual worship. Amen.

 

The peace of God which passes all understanding keep you in body and soul to life everlasting.

-Prof. John T. Pless

Wittenberg & Mecca

Wittenberg & MeccaReformation 2009, Volume XVIII, Number 4Table of Contents

(Introduction by Adam Francisco)

No matter how much the media sugarcoats it or others dismiss it as a passing trend, careful Christian ana­lysts view the resurgence of Islam as a major challenge to Christianity. Much attention has been given to the startling demographic trends in western Europe and the political ramifi­cations associated with it, but, interestingly, little attention has been given to its theological implications. In fact, most are con­tent to see Islam as just another private system of belief.

Some Christian theologians have even gone so far as to assert that there is a common theological platform that Christians and Muslims share (see, for example, www.yale.edu/faith/acw/acw.htm).

This could not be further from the truth. Islam's opposition to the gospel is multilateral. Theologically, it denounces the core confession of the church - that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of the living God - as an abominable and damnable doctrine. Polemi­cally, it endeavors to discredit Christianity by denying the his­torical crucifixion, death and resurrection of Jesus. Politically, culturally, and legally it strives to advance the cause of Islam in secular space using a variety of means to achieve the goal of total Islamization.

This may sound like hyperbole, but consider Islam's history. Immediately after the death of Muhammad (570-632), who re­portedly summed up the goal of Islam as the struggle to bring about the conversion of the world, Muslim armies began a pro­gram of expansion into territories to the north, east, and west of the Arabian peninsula. This happened rapidly, within a century or so, and the result was that Christians (and other non-Mus­lims) found their lands occupied and eventually governed by Muslim forces. The gradual result was that Christianity in the Mediterranean rim all but disappeared by the end of the eighth century. Subsequent centuries saw the movement of Islam in an eastward direction, as the center of the Muslim world shifted from Medina to Damascus in 661 and then to Baghdad in 750. It remained there until 1258, when after more than a century of conflict with a variety of imperial contenders it finally made its way to Constantinople in 1453.

In Luther's day Islam penetrated central Europe. Following the conquest of Belgrade in 1521, the Ottoman Turks pushed their western border up into Hungary. By 1529 they were poised to take Vienna with hopes of assaulting Germany sometime thereafter. Fortunately they were unsuccessful. Otherwise the history of Europe and Christianity would have turned out very differently. Luther himself feared this when he wrote in his Widmungsbrief (1540) if history was not winding down, as he thought, the world might "go Muhammadan" (WADB 11II: 381). Despite his eschatological hopes, though, Luther did not recommend apathy or retreat from the multiple challenges facing the church. At the same time that he wrote this, he also commented in a preface to a Latin translation of the Qur'an:

None of this should be thought of lightly, particularly by those of us who teach in the church. We ought to fight against the armies of the devil everywhere. Just how many various enemies have we seen in our own age? Papal defenders of idolatry, Jews, a mul­titude of Anabaptist monstrosities, the party of Servetus [that is, Unitarians], and others. And now we must prepare ourselves against Muhammad. But what are we able to say about things of which we are ignorant? It is, therefore, useful for those who are experienced to read the writings of the enemy in order to refute accurately, to damage and destroy them so that teachers in the church might be capable of correcting anyone and equipping our people with substantive arguments [for the faith] (WA 53: 572).

Interestingly, the ferocious advance of Islam in the 1520s and early 1540s simmered down by the middle of the sixteenth century. As the economic center of the world shifted out of the Mediterranean and into the Atlantic, the Ottomans simply could not compete with the west. Politically, all the turmoil associated with "the terror of the Turks," (as one Lutheran hymnal put it) dwindled - with one exception. They were able to muster enough strength to assault Vienna once again in the fall of 1683, but, while they experienced some initial success, the tide turned on September 11 of that year. The Turks were forced to retreat. This was a pivotal event, for in a way it marks the last gasp of Is­lamic imperialism. While still a matter of speculation, it seems that September 11, 2001 was chosen for a reason: to signal to the west that Islam was back.

We no longer live in the days of empires. The shape of the Muslim world is much different than it was in former centuries, but one cannot deny that Islam is again poised - and has been for several decades - to make a mark globally. Christians need to be aware of the ramifications in both the left and right hand kingdoms. Because much of what the various media report is political, this issue of Logia focuses primarily on the theologi­cal. You will find articles written by pastors, missionaries, and scholars of Islam, all with the goal of informing readers of some of the challenges posed to Christianity by Islam.

Adam S. Francisco Guest Editor, LOGIA, Volume 18, Number 4

 

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What is going on at Fishers? And a Few Predictions

by Rev. David Ramirez, Lincoln, Illinois

 

This Friday and Saturday, September 25-26, 2009, Lutheran CORE is holding a convocation in Fishers, Indiana, to discuss how to proceed in the aftermath of this summer's ELCA Assembly. Lutheran CORE is the organization through which the vast majority of "traditionalists" in the ELCA have attempted to fight the ELCA's slide into liberal Protestantism. There is no doubt that this meeting will prove to be an "I was there" event. One could draw parallels between this meeting and the withdrawal of the Pennsylvania Ministerium from the General Synod in 1864. However, this is not to imply that a new Lutheran body will emerge this weekend. There seems to be a complicated plan (or argument) concerning the relationship of Lutheran CORE to the ELCA. Will Lutheran CORE fight from within, leave as swiftly as possible, or limp along double-mindedly? Regardless of the specific fate of Lutheran CORE, I believe it is clear that this meeting signals the emergence of a large "moderate" Lutheran synod in America. We must remember that the General Council was not formed until 1867. Likewise, Fishers will not be the final break, but rather mark the beginning of the end of the ELCA as we know it now. The strongest parallel to this situation may be with the recent history of the Missouri Synod. Perhaps we could liken Lutheran CORE to ELIM, and the future "moderate" Lutheran body, which shall surely emerge, to the AELC, which was not constituted until the very end of 1976, almost 3 years after the Walkout in 1974.

 

But what specifically is going on with the "traditionalists" in the ELCA? What are people thinking, as they head to Fishers? What are the groups and the arguments? And what will transpire and be solved there? While I cannot yet answer the last question, I will be in Fishers to observe. Please check back here at Blogia Web Forum next week for a summary and some commentary on the proceedings. As for the other questions, I will attempt to provide a very general lay of the land.

 

The Lay of the Land

 One can make some important, broad observations about the different groups of "traditionalists" in the ELCA. For one, there is the "former LCA" and "former ALC" distinction. The ALC was more congregationalist, more conservative, more "low-church," less concerned about Lutheran unity in America, had closer ties to the Missouri Synod, and its greatest strength lay in the upper Midwest. The LCA was more hierarchical, more "high-church," very ecumenical and strongly desired to see Muhlenberg's dream of a united Lutheran Church in America realized, accepted liberal theology before other Lutherans in America, and had much of its strength in the East. The third predecessor body, the AELC, is less easy to classify. Many of the most vigorous proponents of the new stance on homosexual behavior are former Missourians, but there are some on the "traditionalist" side as well.

 

There is also the distinction between "confessing evangelicals" and "evangelical catholics" amongst the ELCA "traditionalists." These two groups are probably best represented by the WordAlone Network (WAN) and the Society of the Holy Trinity (STS), respectively. {{Please make the above highlighted names be links to these two organizations' home pages}} The "confessing evangelicals" seem much better prepared to take action, which is most likely due to their focus on the local congregation, less denominational loyalty to the ELCA, and prior crystallization into a powerful organization (WAN) during the debate over full communion with the Episcopalians.

 

"Evangelical catholics" seem to have the most difficult dilemma. They tend to have greater institutional loyalty than any other conservative group. This is in part due to the strong identification of the ELCA among former LCA members as a legitimate continuation of the LCA. Muhlenberg's dream of visible Lutheran unity in America is also still very important to them, and therefore they have doubts as to whether another split is beneficial. Many "evangelical catholics" do not relish the thought of being in a synod dominated by "confessing evangelicals."  They are wary of the importance laid upon the "priesthood of all believers" and worship influenced by American evangelicalism found in "confessing evangelical" circles. Some "evangelical catholics" look to Rome; however this would most likely entail abandoning their congregations. While the STS is a growing and vibrant organization of "evangelical catholics," it has thus far attempted to distance itself from church politics. And most importantly, unlike the "confessing evangelicals," the "evangelical catholics" have no clear landing pad.  

 

Responses

There appear to be three categories of response to the ELCA Assembly by "traditionalists," which cut across the distinctions made above. First, there are those who believe that it is time to go. They may not leave immediately, but the questions they are considering are "When?" and "How?" There will be differences of opinion about where they should go, but the question is not, "Should we leave?" Secondly, there are those who still wrestle with whether or not they should remain in the ELCA. However, this response will swiftly evolve into two divergent groups. On one hand, there will be those who will ultimately give an affirmative answer to the question "Should we leave?" and join the first group. On the other hand, there will be those who answer in the negative. They will advocate vigorously that it is faithful to remain in the ELCA and perhaps even harden their position to "one ought to stay." And thirdly, there are the wild card responses, such as writing to the pope for a Lutheran Rite, which will gain no serious traction.

 

Prediction: A "Moderate Synod"

 Sooner or later the people that are ready to leave, will; and they will not wait indefinitely for the others. The "Word Aloners" will control this new "moderate synod." This "moderate synod" will welcome the "evangelical catholics" and other types of traditionalists, but will be dominated by "confessing evangelicals." At least a couple hundred congregations will leave within two to two and a half years. The following are my reasons:

 

1. (The Biggest Reason) The WordAlone Network (WAN) has been organized for over a decade. There are already over 230 WAN congregations. Congregations, that's the important part! The WAN is not only an association of pastors, but churches who have already taken the steps necessary to vote together to make a statement against the ELCA. The path has already been cleared for these congregations to leave. The WAN congregations don't need to be primed and led out of the ELCA; many are prepared to leave immediately. Plus, they are mostly former ALCers who had deep misgivings about the merger in the first place. Also, we cannot forget about the LCMC, former "Word Aloners" who have their own parachurch organization. They already have almost 230 congregations, and are already independent of the ELCA structure. It is likely that they would join with those leaving, greatly bolstering the numbers of a "moderate synod."

 

2. If you read the Lutheran CORE Statement in response to the ELCA Assembly, you saw that they suggest not sending benevolence dollars to the ELCA Churchwide level. This kind of move tends to lead to a split; they are putting their money where their mouth is.

 

3. ELCA members are angry. While it certainly can no longer be said that "there is no such thing as a liberal Lutheran," the average ELCA layman is not pleased with the recent decisions of the ELCA. In short, something has to give.

 

For the next several years, congregations and families will stream from the ELCA into this "moderate synod." I believe that within five to seven years there will be a reasonably large "moderate synod" with approximately 500,000 members. This could easily come to pass sooner and result in a larger synod, if the iron is struck while it is hot.

 

Fears

 My first fear comes from a heartfelt concern for those in the ELCA. I fear that "traditionalists" who realize that the ELCA is a sinking ship will move into action too slowly. I fear they will squander far too much time, energy, and momentum by going round and round with the "traditionalists" who believe one ought to stay. Sometimes, the most faithful form of persuasion is leading, and eternally "remaining in dialogue" is no virtue.

 

My second fear is that the Missouri Synod will not take advantage to confess clearly during this time of confusion and reevaluation for ELCA members. I pray that we in the Missouri Synod reach out in love and truth on a local level. I fear that unfortunately, many conservative ELCA members will walk away from Lutheranism altogether.

 

My last fear is in regards to the nature of the "moderate synod." What will this synod be like? I fear it will not be a flight from blatant heterodoxy to orthodox Lutheranism. I do not doubt that the ordination of women will be tolerated, and thus the relationship between women's ordination and toleration of homosexual behavior will be ignored. Also, toleration of error and the understanding of the church, especially church fellowship, must be addressed if the new "moderate synod" is to avoid the pitfalls of the ELCA. However, I have little hope that a "moderate synod" will return to the church catholic's biblical doctrine of closed communion. I pray that the "traditionalists" in the ELCA will take a fresh look at what it means to confess that the Scriptures are the inspired Word of God. No church body in America that has denied inerrancy has escaped the slide into liberal Protestantism. This includes the Roman church in America, which is functionally the largest liberal Protestant church in America. I fear that a "moderate synod" will just be a turning back of the clock to thirty or forty years ago, when the ELCA "traditionalists" were comfortable. The deeper, underlying issues will not be addressed.

 

What Does a "Moderate Synod" Mean for the Missouri Synod?

I am sure that Missouri Synod congregations across the country will receive many families from the ELCA. We will even gain congregations here and there. However, I fear that few pastors will consider the Missouri Synod as an option. Regardless of who inquires, we must be prepared to have serious conversations with those who will have them.

 

I also hope that the Missouri Synod's theological muscles haven't atrophied from having such an easy theological punching bag in the ELCA for the last twenty years; and that we can still offer a cogent critique of a "moderate synod."  Falling back on differentiation based on abortion and homosexual behavior will not be an option in reference to this new "moderate synod."

 

Off to Fishers

 The convocation in Fishers will prove to be an interesting two days. What is Lutheran CORE's plan? Who will be the leaders in this movement? What will be presented? What will the "evangelical catholics" do? What will be the doctrinal confession of the "traditionalist" ELCAers? And the most burning question...What will prove to be the strangest speech from the floor?"

A Call to Faithfulness, Then and Now

by Rev. Daniel Biles, St. Paul Lutheran Church, Spring Grove, PA

 

[Editor's  note: This article was written before the ELCA Churchwide Assembly took place, August 17-23, 2009]

 

By odd, or perhaps divine, coincidence, the ELCA Churchwide Assembly will end on the Sunday on which the Old Testament reading is from Joshua 24:  the renewing of the covenant at Shechem, with Joshua's ringing clarion call to God's people:  "Choose this day whom you will serve, but for me and my house, we will serve the Lord."

 

Joshua's challenge to the tribes of Israel as they prepared to enter the Promised Land was a call to faithfulness:  faithfulness to the covenant God had made with His people at Mt. Sinai, following their salvation from slavery in Egypt.  Coincidentally, the sexuality statement before the Churchwide Assembly bears the title, Journeying Together Faithfully.  The difference between Joshua's call and the Sexuality Task Force's claim should not be overlooked.  Joshua issued a challenge to the people of God to be faithful to the covenant the Lord had made with them.  The ELCA document presumes that we are "journeying together faithfully."  That is a great, even arrogant presumption, for our faithfulness to the Lord is a judgment only God can render. 

 

It occurs to me, also, that this summer is the 20th anniversary of a similar Joshua-like call to faithfulness:  the first "Call to Faithfulness" assembly at St. Olaf College in 1989.  That conference was called because many in the newly-formed ELCA feared that the faithfulness of Lutheranism in the United States, and the ELCA in particular, was in doubt.  The keynote speech for that conference was titled by the same name, by Robert Jenson.

 

I recently pulled that speech from my filing cabinet and re-read it, curious to find out if Jenson's lecture was prophetic of the future of the ELCA.  Alas, as despair might have predicted, it was; the speech was a prescient anticipation of the course of events in the ELCA over the last twenty years.  We have not arrived at this Churchwide Assembly by accident.  We were warned.  A few reflections on Jenson's lecture will serve the purpose of this writing; those interested in the pursuit of faithfulness may wish to re-read Jenson's lecture in full and draw their own conclusions. 

 

 

**********

 

Jenson began his speech with the claim:  "Faithfulness is a uniquely biblical blessing.  [It] arises when we commit our future selves to some particular possibility, as against incompatible other possibilities - when, for example, we choose one man or woman to be the spouse instead of all others."  Only a religion shaped by covenant can call forth faithfulness as its chief virtue.  Only a God who makes covenants with His people can be jealous - and that is to our good, for all true love is jealous of its beloved.  The call to faithfulness to the covenant - Sinai's, our Baptism into Christ - is simply the virtue God's jealousy requires of us.

 

By contrast, said Jenson, the normal gods of religion shape and fit themselves to serve our wants and needs.  The pagan gods of antiquity "were marvelously tolerant."  So are the modern versions that parade under the banal banner of "inclusivity." 

 

The particular form this takes, asserted Jenson, is gnosticism:  "Gnosticism appeared in the first centuries of the Gospel's history as the Gospel's inevitable alternative and great test....  Gnosticism of the purest form is as vital in San Francisco or Minneapolis as ever in Alexandria or Corinth ... [it] ‘stays' in Christianity ... to transform its discourse into expressions of ‘our' spirituality or ‘our' suitable God." 

 

Does any of this sound familiar?

 

**********

 

We are called "to be faithful to a particular God among the many candidates... This God has an identity.  He can be picked out and addressed specifically.  A faithful Church is one that is careful to do so."  At its basic level, that means honoring the proper name of God:  Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.  "A faithful Church would be faithful to these names, and so to the particularity of her God."  This led to the most famous, and for some the only remembered, line of the speech:  "A Church ashamed of her God's name is ashamed of her God."

 

"Ashamed of her God"?  The ELCA is positively embarrassed about it.  Simply go to most any worship service organized by an agency of the ELCA:  a synod assembly, a seminary chapel service, youth gathering.  Or check out the ELW. 

 

**********

 

"Second, we are to be faithful to that individual person by whom God identifies Himself to us, Jesus called the Christ.  That this man is God's self-identification for us ... is the insight which throughout Christian history has distinguished Christianity from its alternatives.  [The] doctrine of the Trinity ... is the great doctrine about faithfulness."  

 

Gnosticism in the Church can always be distinguished by this:  it finds the historical particularity of Jesus offensive.  "Surely, it is said, God cannot be in any person at all...whatever may be true of the human individual Jesus ... surely the "Christ" of Christianity must be a "Christ-principle...."  That Jesus was a male, a Jew, a friend of sinners, a drinker of wine, that He died on a cross, that He was "hung up on righteousness," or, we might add now, that He taught marriage as between male and female, for life:  all of these and more are attributes of the particular human being Jesus Christ, Who is the Second Person of God, Who is our Lord.  "A faithful Church would at any time or place cherish and flaunt precisely those particularities of the man Jesus, which the religiosi of that time and place were most unwilling to associate with God.  For these will be the marks by which the Church's God will be at that time and place most clearly distinguished from the run of religious offerings. 

 

**********

 

The next section of the speech exposed in advance what would become the works-righteous activism that has come to dominate so many quarters of the ELCA:  "We are faithful to God in that we are faithful to the Gospel.... The Gospel is a message ... that ‘One, Jesus the Israelite, is risen from the dead.'  A faithful Church would see the one purpose of her existence in the bringing of this message to the nations and ages.  The Church is permanently tempted to put other commissions ahead of this one ... The Gospel, faithless Christians think, is ‘just words,' whereas we want ‘really' to ‘do' something in the world."  Therein is exposed much of the ideologically-driven political or social agendas operative in the ELCA today.

 

**********

     

Jenson identified the norms of faithfulness - Scripture, creed, confessions - as the means to faithfulness.  "God uses them to keep us faithful to Himself."  But, he went on to say, "Canon, creeds, and confessions cannot have their role in God's providence for the Church unless the actual texts are present in the Church's life. ... When the Church has wished to be faithful, it has been concerned with the precise text of Scripture - and of creed and confession - as with life or death. ... A faithful Church would love and read and meditate the very words... But if the text is not there, nothing can be done with it.  Some may wish that the grammatical gender of Israel's God were not masculine, or at least that biblical authors' texts were not so syntactically complex as to need pronouns to make sense.  But neither of these is fact; and readers who rewrite to pretend they are the fact simply rob their hearers of the text of Scripture." 

 

On this score, the recently-published (and misnamed) Evangelical Lutheran Worship, blithely adopted by most pastors and parishes, is the greater danger to the faithfulness of the ELCA than anything that the 2009 Churchwide Assembly could do.  For it is training us to pray and worship in a language other than that of the Bible.  As Jenson predicted it would, "In wide territories of the Church ... ideology has banished the text of Scripture from the life of the congregations."

 

***********

 

One could go on.  Readers may wish to read the lecture in full, if they can find it.  Was Jenson right in what he said?  If yes, what conclusions should we draw for our ELCA today? 

 

And this Sunday, as the Scripture is read, may we hear Joshua's call to faithfulness to the covenant of our Baptism with fresh ears, as judgment, blessing, and challenge for the ELCA, our congregations, for us all:  "Choose this day which God you will serve." 

 

Pr. Daniel Biles
St. Paul Lutheran Church
Spring Grove, PA

Word Alone and the LCMS

by Rev. David Ramirez, Lincoln, Illinois

 

Of late, the idea has been circulating that the only substantial difference between the LCMS and the WordAlone Network (WAN), a reform group within the ELCA, is the ordination of women.  This idea, whether produced in ignorance or out of misguided hope, unfortunately does not stand up to much investigation.  Furthermore, even if the ordination of women were the only issue that separated WAN from the LCMS, it is highly unlikely that WAN would change its position on this matter.  Female "pastors" are not an incidental part of the organization.  They hold positions of leadership at every level, with one even holding the presidency of the WAN.

 

Word Alone describes itself in its Mission Statement as "a Lutheran grassroots network of congregations and individuals committed to the authority of the Word manifest in Jesus the Christ as proclaimed in Scripture and safeguarded through the work of the Holy Spirit. WAN advocates reform and renewal of the church, representative governance, theological integrity, and freedom from a mandated historic episcopate."  Hope for a LCMS-WAN relationship is not new.  Over the last few years there has been talk of creating a way for Word Alone seminarians to attend Concordia Seminary-St. Louis.  The seminary even went so far as to appoint a liaison to the WAN. 

 

With the important showdown in Minneapolis now past and the crisis in the ELCA over homosexuality convincingly settled, concern for reaching out to disaffected ELCA members has grown in the LCMS.  This pastor applauds the heightened awareness of the ELCA situation by the LCMS; however, we also must be careful not to overlook reality. 

 

While we ought to give thanks for much of the work and doctrinal positions of the WAN, especially its resistance against the homosexual agenda in the ELCA, it holds to many teachings that are in contradiction to genuine Lutheranism.  The WAN does not affirm the inerrancy of the Scriptures as classically upheld by the Lutheran Church.  The WAN does not maintain the doctrine of closed communion.   However, perhaps to really understand how deep the divide truly is between the LCMS and the WAN, we ought to look at the WAN's reaction to ecumenical agreements advanced by the ELCA.  While the WAN staunchly resisted full communion with the Episcopalians, it was nearly silent concerning the full communion agreement with three Reformed bodies.  Or more recently, where was the outrage from the WAN over the proposed full communion agreement with the United Methodists, which passed by 95%?  The overwhelming majority of votes in favor of the full communion agreement means that not just the liberal wing of the ELCA voted for this resolution, but that the majority of every other group did also, including WAN members. 

 

It could be argued that this was not the big issue of the Assembly this summer, and that the WAN had plenty on its hands with the debate on homosexuality.  But the passage of the full communion agreement with 95% of the vote does not allow us to merely conclude that the WAN had bigger fish to fry.  At best, the WAN sympathizers at the Assembly were ignorant of the mutually exclusive claims of Lutheranism and Methodism.  At worst, they understood the difficulties but voted for full communion anyway.  Either way this example betrays a weak understanding of historic Lutheranism.  An understanding of Lutheranism that sees nothing wrong with full communion with the United Methodists is a far cry from orthodox Lutheranism, and probably just a wee bit further from the LCMS than a disagreement over the ordination of women.

 

However, an important question still remains.  How should Missourians reach out to "WordAloners"?  I believe the overarching answer is this: We should remind them of their history and their fathers in the faith that did clearly confess orthodox doctrine.  The liberal agenda of the ELCA counts upon historical ignorance and what C.S. Lewis liked to call "chronological snobbery".  The majority of WordAloners are former ALC members and congregations.  What is ironic is that on all three of the points discussed above (ordination of women, closed communion, and inerrancy) much of the ALC, and especially its predecessor bodies, staunchly supported the classic Lutheran position.  In fact, by the 1930s, the "old" ALC (a predecessor body to the ALC) and the LCMS had come to agreement with the Missouri Synod concerning the doctrine of election, and if the "old" ALC had not become soft on the "Four Points" (altar fellowship, pulpit fellowship, lodge membership, and chiliasm) perhaps God-pleasing church fellowship could have been realized.  Unfortunately, by mid-century theological liberalism and neo-orthodoxy deeply infected the ALC.  Discussion of the WAN's heritage would be a profitable conversation for the members of the LCMS to have with their neighbors in the WAN.  Glossing over real differences never serves any good; rather it delays true reconciliation through lies.  A real gift would be to remind the WAN of its fathers in the faith such as Hermann Amberg Preus, J. Michael Reu, and many others, and the beautiful biblical doctrine which they championed.

 

Rev. David Ramirez
Lincoln, Illinois

Tributaries into the River JDDJ

by Armand Boehme, Associate Pastor of Trinity Lutheran Church in Northfield, Minnesota. The Joint Declaration on the Doctrine of Justification (JDDJ) did not appear in a vacuum, but a theological history laid its groundwork. One part of that history involves Karl Holl, a renowned Luther scholar whose work brought about the twentieth-century renewal of Luther studies called the “Luther Renaissance.”Holl’s studies of Luther’s early writings led to supposed new insights into Luther’s theology, including the idea that Luther taught analytic or effective justification in contrast with synthetic or forensic justification. This study examines two aspects of Holl’s “Luther Renaissance” — the primacy of the early Luther, and the analytic understanding of justification — and then traces the influence of these two aspects in Lutheranism and beyond.

 

Download Full Article (PDF)

Tributaries into the River JDDJ by Armand Boehme

The Joint Declaration on the Doctrine of Justification (JDDJ) did not appear in a vacuum, but a theological history laid its groundwork. One part of that history involves Karl Holl, a renowned Luther scholar whose work brought about the twentieth-century renewal of Luther studies called the “Luther Renaissance.” Holl’s studies of Luther’s early writings led to supposed new insights into Luther’s theology, including the idea that Luther taught analytic or effective justification in contrast with synthetic or forensic justification. This study examines two aspects of Holl’s “Luther Renaissance” — the primacy of the early Luther, and the analytic understanding of justification — and then traces the influence of these two aspects in Lutheranism and beyond.

Download Full Article (PDF) by Armand Boehme, Associate Pastor of Trinity Lutheran Church in Northfield, Minnesota.

The Banff and Jasper Commissions

Review by Mark Mattes of Grand View University, Des Moines, Iowa

     The Banff Commission.  Delhi, New York: American Lutheran Publicity Bureau, 2008.

     The Jasper Commission.  Delhi, New York: American Lutheran Publicity Bureau, 2008.

These two books seek to address specific concerns before North American Lutherans, particularly the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Canada and the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America.  The Banff Commission examines the lack of confessional integrity among North American Lutherans and The Jasper Commission looks at the attempt to legitimate same sex relations among North American Lutherans.  Both commissions were requested by Ascension Lutheran Church in Calgary Alberta which authorized its pastor, K. Glen Johnson, to establish an international ecumenical commission to analyze the current theological morass that confronts the Lutheran and other "mainline" churches, particularly with reference to the debate over same sex relations.  The Banff Commission was a gathering of theologians and teachers of the church from Canada, the United States, and Germany who gathered in February 2008 specifically to address wishy-washiness among mainline Protestants, especially Lutherans.  The members of the commission included K. Glen Johnson, Patrick Henry Reardon, Reinhard Slenczka, J. Larry Yoder, James Arne Nestingen, and Robert Benne.  The Jasper Commission was a gathering of psychiatrists, psychologists, theologians, and pastors who met in March 2008 specifically to address issues surrounding the legitimating of same sex relations in and by the church.  The members of this commission included Joe Nicolosi, James Nestingen, Merton Strommen, Lee Griffen, Victor Mollerup, and Phillip Gagnon.

 

The Banff Commission opens with a confession of faith agreed upon by the participants.  From their perspective, the church is teetering on false belief and practice.  Hence a word of conviction needs to be asserted over against much of the church. The commission affirms a Mandate to uphold (1) the authority of the scriptures, (2) the authority of Christ (and not synodical majority vote), (3) the true, orthodox church in the face of the false, apostate church, (4) that God now judges and will judge the world when Christ returns, (5) fidelity in the midst of apostasy, and (6) God's call to repentance. 

Well-known Orthodox theologian Patrick Reardon notes that "...if Lutherans have learned anything from their past, it should be the importance of resisting heresy in general, and heretical bishops in particular.  It is truly distressing to see some Luther-ans today conceding more infallibility to their synodical conventions than Roman Catholics are prepared to concede to the Pope" (35).  On a similar note, Reinhard Slencka observes that "the church is not a political pressure group, but according to the world of her Lord, she is the ‘salt of the earth', the ‘light of the world', and a ‘town on a hill'" (49).

Not only are the ELCC and the ELCA criticized, but also more doctrinally conservative Lutherans.  For instance, Larry Yoder quotes an LCMS pastor that "Schmucker has won." Schmucker "had not only infiltrated but was threatening to dominate the LCMS, in the form of the triumph of ‘church growth' practices over the theology and worship according to the tradition.  Especially the worship.  Incipient in user-friendly, non-confessional worship is a theology flaccid as to Law and gospel, as to simul Justus et peccator, semper penitens, as to who and what are being confessed and believed.  Lex orandi, lex credenda" (53).  But Yoder's main target is the ELCA, especially those ELCA theologians who contend that the ELCA needs both a "traditional" and a "contextual" approaches to hermeneutics.  By "contextual" is meant that hermeneutics can be informed by one's experience and perspective...what the interpreter himself or herself brings to the enterprise (65).  Surely, for this reviewer, the approach Yoder criticizes in the ELCA is nothing other than pure Schleiermacherianism, the theology of the old Prussian Union now updated for today's world.

James Nestingen anticipates concerns expressed in The Jasper Commision.  He contends that "the abstraction of sexuality from its context in marriage and the family, along with the assertion of personal sexual autonomy, definitely raises questions of idolatry" (81).  And, Robert Benne laments that the ELCA wants to snuggle up with liberal Protestants such as the UCC, the UCC, the UMC, and the Presbyterian Church (USA) (89) and thus compromise its witness.

The Jasper Commission, dealing with matters of same sex relations, provides short, popular essays which all affirm the church's traditional position with respect to sexuality.  However, the complexity entailed by matters that arise at the intersection of psychology and sexuality are not given the technical attention that a skilled therapist might want.  Most of these authors appeal to "reparative therapy" for homosexual behavior but this therapy is not described in detail.  Nevertheless, given that our culture is awash in sexual matters (almost as if salvation comes through those sexual practices one considers most self-fulfilling), these essays are pertinent for any Christian.  Specifically, with the widespread concern of mainline Protestant churches to normalize same sex relations, these essays merit attention.

 Joseph Nicolosi notes that "the belief that humanity is designed for heterosexuality has been shaped by age-old religious and cultural forces, which must be respected as a welcome aspect of intellectual diversity.  Our belief is not a ‘phobia' or pathological fear" (11).  For Nicolosi, "our bodies tell us who we are" (10).  James Nestingen takes a "love the sinner, hate the sin" approach and sees the answer to improper sexual behavior in the rite of confession and absolution.  He notes that Jesus Christ "loves sinners, real ones.  But in the wake of this outsized first priority, a second follows: to assist the sinner in coming to terms with the self-loss, the problematic behavior.  Theologically the absolution stands alone.  On a personal level confession and absolution are incomplete without the other" (21). 

Critiquing mainline Protestantism, Lee Griffen points out that "the church is trying to substitute compromise for compassion, and relativism for holiness.  Designating that something is wrong and tragic is not the same as calling it ‘normal' in order to lessen the pain" (37).  And, Victor Mollerup notes that "scientifically valid research now provides evidence that change of homosexual orientation may be possible through involvement in religiously mediated ministries and involvement in such change process is not generally harmful to the individuals involved" (47).

                These two books by noted theologians and counselors examine matters of weighty importance: will the church be faithful to apostolic beliefs and practices? 

                Mark Mattes
                Grand View University
                Des Moines, Iowa

 

Book Review: At Home in the House of My Fathers

At Home in the House of My Fathers: Presidential Sermons, Essays, Letters, and Addresses from the Missouri Synod’s Great Era of Unity and Growth. Compiled, translated, and annotated by Matthew C. Harrison. Fort Wayne, Indiana: Lutheran Legacy Press, 2009. $19.95. Review by Albert B. Collver, III, Saint Louis, MO.

 

            Among the clamor of the emergent church movement with its makeover of Christianity and the boastful proclamation of pastors and church officials alike that “it’s not your grandfather’s church,” a quiet movement has spread through the church. In the early years of the twenty-first century “the most vibrant and serious field of Christian study” is that of the church fathers. (First Things November 2006, 15). Anecdotal evidence suggests that this revival is happening along generational lines with the younger generations rediscovering their heritage, as the Boomer generation, in particular, seeks something new. This church father study revival is not limited to those fathers of the first five centuries but has extended to cover the fathers of various confessional movements, including Lutherans.  The most recent book in the Lutheran tradition from this rediscovery of the church father movement is Matthew C. Harrison’s At Home in the House of My Fathers.

 

            Harrison’s At Home in the House of My Fathers is a massive tome of more than 800 pages, containing nearly 100 essays, addresses or sermons. In many cases for the first time, translations of works primarily by the first five presidents of the Lutheran Church Missouri Synod are made available to readers of English. The book also compiles many works from various sources that are difficult to obtain or are hidden away in the vaults of Concordia Historical Institute in St. Louis, MO. These works by C.F.W. Walther, Friedrich Wyneken, Heinrich Schwan, Francis Pieper, and Friedrich Pfotenhauer span 91 years of the Missouri Synod’s history. If this volume were produced for a jubilee celebration of the Synod, a subtitle of the book might have read, “One hundred essays for Missouri’s first hundred years.” The sheer weight of the book, both literally and figuratively, is impressive. It is also surprising that a Synodical publishing house, seminary, or any other official entity did not produce this book. Rather the book is primarily the work of one individual and an independent press.

            An 800 page book can be intimidating to any reader, be it the scholar, interested churchgoer, or the busy pastor. The physical layout of the book is very reader friendly. Despite its size, the volume is not cumbersome to hold. The type is clear and of sufficient size not to require a magnifying glass to read. The layout and design is crisp without distracting the reader. There is a timeline at the front of the book showing when each author held office as Synodical president. Photographs of each president mark the beginning of each section. The ca. 90-page report of the Walther and Wyneken trip to Germany is broken up with several period pictures and photographs to help illustrate pertinent items mentioned in the text. The book also contains helpful footnotes and annotations explaining or clarifying various items in the text. These refinements greatly increase the accessibility of this book to both the casual reader and the scholar alike.           

With nearly 100 pieces by several different authors covering almost a century, something of interest can be found for all. Many of the pieces give the impression of having been written yesterday. Topics include many of the issues that have afflicted the Lord’s church since St. Paul worked with the congregation in Corinth, ranging from ecumenical concerns, lay preaching, clergy depression, divisions, confessional allegiance, worship and song, stewardship, and more. What is most helpful is not the discovery that the church in the past suffered from many of the same afflictions that she does today, but rather, the Scriptural, Confessional, theological, and pastoral way in which men approached the problems. We would do well to follow in their path. Essays by C.F.W. Walther include, “On Luther and Lay Preachers,” “Counsel to Remain in a Corrupt Church: Make Them Throw You Out!”, “Duties of an Evangelical Lutheran Synod,”  “Methodist Hymns in a Lutheran Sunday School,” and “The Fruitful Reading of the Writings of Luther.” In an essay titled, “On the Spiritual Priesthood and the Office of the Ministry,” Friedrich Wyneken writes, “We will not tolerate it that the souls freed and purchased by the blood of Christ be brought again under the yoke of any little Lutheran pope.” Heinrich C. Schwan asks, “Are the best years of the Synod behind us?” Francis Pieper writes on “The Offense of Divisions in the Church.” Friedrich Pfotenhauer bids “Encouragement for Lonely Preachers and Teachers.” In our age of Church Growth Pfotenhauer addresses “How Did We Grow?” He also warns “God’s Co-Workers Do Not Lust for Power.” With a Synodical convention approaching for the Missouri Synod in 2010, one cannot get more prescient than Pfotenhauer’s Synodical Address from 1923 on “Avoiding Political Factions in the Church.”

            All of these church fathers realized the peril and threats that the Gospel faced in their day and addressed these concerns both faithfully and pastorally. They were deeply aware that historically a church body was rarely blessed to retain the pure doctrine of the Gospel for more than a generation or two. They sought to remain faithful individually and as a church body by repenting and believing the faith handed down to them by their fathers. When expounding 1 Thessalonians 5:20,  “Do not despise prophecy,” C.F.W. Walther said, “Do not despise the writings of the old faithful church fathers… Otherwise you disobey the Holy Spirit.” (Synodical Conference Essay, Cleveland, Ohio, August 1884). May we too be at home in the house of our fathers who handed us the faith.    

           

Albert B. Collver, III

Saint Louis, MO

JDDJ After Ten Years

Journal CoverHoly Trinity 2009, Volume XVIII, Number 3Table of Contents

(Introduction by Scott Murray)

One Sunday in early November 1999, as I was preparing for early service at the parish I serve, I heard shouting across the street from our church. When I emerged to see what the fuss was about I was greeted by the sight of a large man with a floppy Bible draped over one hand gesticulating with the other and howling about the capitulation of the truth the “Lutherans” had just perpetrated through the “signing” of the Joint Declaration on the Doctrine of Justification (JDDJ).

Before I could gather my wits (a daunting task at the best of times), he got into his idling getaway car and sped off, never to be heard from again. I wanted to shout back, “We aren’t those Lutherans!” And of course, ironically all Lutherans are not “those Lutherans,” since no one actually signed the Joint Declaration itself, only the Official Common Statement (OCS). Later, it occurred to me that if the JDDJ so unhinged the floppy Bible crowd, maybe it wasn’t so bad after all.

By now, however, it appears to be a moot point. What was to be an ecumenical turning point has catalyzed both theological and ecclesial second thoughts about the method of arriving at this point of uncertainty and ambiguity. Reconciled diversity may have been interred by the Joint Declaration and its aftermath. Ten years ago, there was a great deal of enthusiasm for the ecumenical process that generated the JDDJ and its officially more significant evil twin, OCS.

This issue of LOGIA is dedicated to a reevaluation of where the JDDJ experience has ended up ten years later. If, in fact, the so-called reconciled diversity of late twentieth-century ecumenism has come to a bitter and abrupt end, it remains to ask what are the lessons to be learned for the ecumenical process and where might those lessons lead. Is there a way to resurrect the process that will be truly fruitful to the Lutheran and Roman Catholic communions?

What the aftermath highlighted among other things was the ambiguity of the ecclesial structures that act like or call themselves “church” in the modern context. The Lutheran World Federation, which as Kurt Marquart said is neither Lutheran, worldwide, nor a federation, was handicapped by its inability to herd the various segments of its membership into an adoption of the JDDJ. It was a bit like pushing on a string. Rome was frustrated by this apparent ecclesial confusion among the Lutherans, who were acting like autonomous Protestants. However, as it turned out Lutherans had not cornered the market on ecclesial ambiguity. The various curial forces ripe with Romanitas all put their own political spin on the (non)agreement: Cassidy, Kasper, and Ratzinger, just to mention a few, all took their swings at the knuckle ball pitched by the signing. Finally, no one was sure if we were reconciled or diversified and what that might mean. We have returned to the most basic question, “What does this mean?” It is a matter of abiding grief that no one is quite sure how to answer.

Our authors present their own unique viewpoints. Pr. Gottfried Martens characteristically points out that the JDDJ does nothing to resolve the content of the proclamation in the ecclesial communities involved in its production. For Martens the question is this: How is Christ proclaimed so as to free the hearer from the fear of death and divine judgment at the consummation of the age?

Pr. Mark Menacher looks at much of the same material handled by Prof. Theodor Dieter, but from a much more polemical perspective. Menacher’s article is a biting condemnation of the ecumenical politics of Chicago and Geneva.

Professor Theodor Dieter provides an excellent recitation of the way in which the JDDJ was used in the last ten years, especially in Europe.

Msgr. James B. Anderson is a Roman Catholic priest and professor. His article recites some of the history of the JDDJ and its reception by Rome from the Roman perspective. The most helpful aspect of his article may be the material on John Adam Moehler, which documents Roman ecumenical method’s roots in nineteenth-century dialecticism.

So, enjoy the read. Where to from here? There may be hints of that in the assessment of ten years of aftermath. Wherever that is will be just fine as long as it continues to unhinge the floppy Bible crowd.

 

...purchase the full journal here

Evangelical and Catholic?: The ‘Conservative' Reformation's Scriptural Principle and the Catholicity of the Gospel

Jack Kilcrease is an instructor in theology at Marquette University, Milwaukee, WI. He recently successfully defended his doctoral dissertation at Marquette entitled "The Self-Donation of God: Gerhard Forde and the Question of Atonement in the Lutheran Tradition."

 As a Lutheran Christian one is bound to find popular Christianity in the United States to be a grave disappointment. The theological shallowness of the televangelists and prosperity mongers is unbearable. One is equally horrified by the mainline Protestant churches with their massive bureaucracies devoted to promoting whatever has become the new secular, political soupe du jour. In both cases, one finds a mixture of works righteousness, synergism, and enthusiasm.

 In reaction to this situation, a group of theologians associated with the journal Pro Ecclesia and the Center for Evangelical and Catholic Theology have attempted to develop an alternative to and a synthesis of both the classical Reformation and Roman Catholic models of authority. For this reason they have in accordance with the name of their research center termed their theology "Evangelical Catholicism." Those connected with this journal and research center, both founded by Carl E. Braaten and Robert W. Jenson, generally come from mainline Protestant denominations caught up in moral and doctrinal anarchy. For this reason they see a strong need for there to be a reassertion of authority within the visible church. Though they range in their opinions about ecclesial authority, the belief of most persons within this group is that the current situation in American and European Christianity stems for the most part from the Reformation's scriptural principle. Sola scriptura, in their view, has proven itself to be deficient. Though theology should center on, and promote the gospel, it is necessary to have a visibly unified church with the magisterial authority that is able to "enforce" correct doctrine and morality. Though most of them do not directly accept the principle of papal infallibility, the idea of the unification of all Christians with the bishop of Rome is an important concept to many of them.[1] It is for this reason that this group has enthusiastically defended the JDDJ. Mere verbal agreement is a first and extremely important step for reunification with Rome, for only Rome can both serve as a symbol and enforcer of unity.[2] In this, "catholicity" for this group of theologians has come to mean something very close to "Roman Catholicity."

What I would like to argue below is that this particular understanding of being an "Evangelical Catholic" with its rejection of the scriptural principle is inherently at odds with the sola gratia of the Reformation. The difference between Roman Catholics and Lutherans, "The Conservative Reformation,"[3] that is, the truly "Evangelical" and "Catholic" Reformation, regarding the role of sacred Scripture and the authority of the church are inexplicably tied up with their understandings of the doctrine of grace and justification. Furthermore, I will argue that only a belief in the monergism of divine grace, the "Evangelical" principle, and the scriptural principle can account for a truly "catholic" theology. In this sense, the "Evangelical" principle of the Reformation sola gratia, sola fide, naturally leads to the derivative reality of the catholicity of Christian truth. The Christian freedom that the gospel brings about bears the fruit of true catholicity and therefore does not need enforcement by the introduction of a new and man-made law of magisterial authority. Because of this, acceptance of the scriptural principle is the only true foundation of true "Evangelical" and "Catholic" theology of the Lutheran Reformation.

 

A Representative Position: Paul Hinlicky's Doctrine of Scripture and Church Authority

Before developing a response to the present attack on the scriptural principle, it is necessary to give a fair exposition of the perspective of our opponents. To do this, we turn to the representative position of Paul Hinlicky, an ELCA theologian teaching at Roanoke College in Virginia. In his article The Lutheran Dilemma, Hinlicky develops an "Evangelical Catholic" model for understanding Scripture, tradition and authority within the visible church.

Hinlicky begins his article by unequivocally attributing to Luther the position of gospel-reductionism.[4] According to Hinlicky, without giving a single citation, Luther held that the canon was a mere invention of the church.[5] Because this was the case, Hinlicky states, Luther believed that real divine authority lay with the message of the gospel.[6] As a result, Luther had no difficulty criticizing the content of individual books of Scripture. It does not apparently occur to Hinlicky that, as Franz Pieper once observed, questioning the canonicity of certain books, notably James, Hebrews and Revelation, does not amount to questioning the doctrine of inspiration or the infallibility of the actual books that one counts as Scripture.[7] Predictably following the meta-narrative of neo-orthodoxy,[8] Hinlicky precedes to claim, citing no evidence again, that Luther's principle of "gospel authority" was betrayed by the Lutheran scholastics in their war against the Counter-Reformation.[9] Instead of frankly admitting human origin of Scripture and discerning between what was gospel and not gospel, Lutheran scholasticism insisted on the sole authority of the Bible and its self-authenticating nature.[10]

Beyond Hinlicky's difficulties with Lutheran orthodoxy's supposed break with Luther in regard to the scriptural principle, he also finds fault with its apparent re-definition of the proper relationship between Scripture and tradition. Because Scripture was the sole authority and not the traditions of the church, this meant that Scripture's meaning could become the object of secular inquiry. Therefore the content of the Bible could be torn from its proper place ensconced in the tradition of the church, and thereby become subject to the interpretations of the secular worldview.[11] In other words, sola scriptura presupposes that the Bible is not bound to a particular range of meanings already stabilized by the church's tradition and therefore means that the Bible is capable of other meanings destructive to the faith.[12] Similarly, claims Hinlicky, this created a problem for certain articles of the faith. One cannot find certain doctrines in the Bible which are important to the Christian faith, namely, the fully developed doctrine of the Trinity. Therefore relying on Scripture alone ultimately ends in the destruction of many important truths. Beyond these problems, the variety of meanings that can be derived from the Scriptures without the guard of the Church's tradition also led to the multiplications of various sects within Protestantism. Hinlicky states that this in fact shows that scriptural meaning is in fact not clear and must be mediated through the teaching tradition of the church.

What of Luther's repeated and loud claims regarding the clarity of the Bible? Though Luther might very well have stated this, in reality his own practice does not lend credibility to the truth of this claim. The meaning of Scripture which he derived was in fact "passed down to him" by the actually existing "eucharistic fellowship."[13] Furthermore, states Hinlicky, Luther struggled with the meaning of Scripture. If he had to struggle with the meaning of the Bible, then the Bible cannot be clear.[14] There is no attempt here, strangely enough, to distinguish between what Luther called "internal" and "external" clarity (AE 33:28). In this, Hinlicky also attributes a high view of the church's tradition to Luther. This, he claims, stands in contradiction with Lutheran orthodoxy which, he seems to suggest implicitly, had a low view of tradition.[15] To put it mildly, such a claim can hardly be taken seriously and shows little familiarity with the sources of early Lutheran thought. Anyone who has read the work of Martin Chemnitz or Johann Gerhard knows that these two theologians are if anything more dependent on patristic and medieval sources than Luther ever was![16]

In light of this apparently dire situation and the breakdown of all credible authority within the Lutheran church due to the scriptural principle, what does Hinlicky suggest as a way out? Holy Scripture cannot assert its own authority within the church; rather it participates in the "ambiguity of human history. It is vulnerable to abuse and is constantly in need of faithful interpretation."[17] We must retrieve "[c]anon, creed and episcopacy"[18] so that their authority can be coordinated. This does not mean the creation of an arbitrary authority. The gospel must remain central to the life of the Church, as should the Scriptures. Hinlicky describes this position with the slogan prima scriptura as opposed to sola scriptura, echoing the theology of many Roman Catholic theologians during the post-Vatican II era.[19] Though the Holy Spirit works through the community to apply the "gospel" to different situations in the life of the church, this apparently involving the creation of new doctrines such as the Trinity, teaching which directly deviates from the Scriptures cannot be tolerated.[20]

In this sense, Hinlicky appears to view the Spirit as working in the minds of the Christian community itself apart from-perhaps more accurately-in coordination with the word. The word is, for Hinlicky, an inert object. Human beings are subjects who look at the word and in fact misinterpret it by the misuse of our human faculties. Therefore it is necessary to have special persons, namely bishops or the believing community in general, to generate Spirit-inspired traditions which will help us correctly understand the Bible. At the same time, Scripture or, rather more accurately "the gospel," regulates the growth of tradition and what the episcopacy can say. Of course, this is a little ambiguous. How is it the case, that new doctrines, such as the Trinity, can be invented, while at the same time maintain the authority of the gospel/Scripture, which apparently do not contain them? What appears to be going on here is that Hinlicky is assuming something like Cardinal Newman's seed theory.[21] Namely, that although the Trinity is not really a biblical doctrine per se, what is in Scripture has a certain trajectory which is fulfilled in the church's Spirit-inspired doctrine of the Trinity. The same might be said regarding the two natures in Christ.

 

Strengths and Weaknesses of Hinlicky's Model

First it is important that we acknowledge that not all that Hinlicky has said is necessarily wrong. Hinlicky is correct to assert that the Lutheran Reformation had a high regard for the catholicity of gospel. He is also correct to observe that the visible church must throughout its history deal with a number of historically conditioned doctrinal challenges. The apostle Paul, for example, did not have to deal with the heresy of Donatism or Arianism. Neither did he have, like Luther, to deal with the teachings of the via moderna. For this reason, it is important to recognize the value of the tradition as the accumulated exegetical wisdom of the church as to how to deal with a variety of heresies that stand in conflict with the Bible.

Nevertheless, the Lutheran Reformation did not accept church tradition in an unqualified manner. The Wittenberg Reformation has often been characterized as following a view of Scripture and tradition referred to, in the manner that Heiko Oberman puts it, as "Tradition I." In delineating this particular way of construing the problem of Scripture and tradition, Oberman distinguishes "Tradition I" from what he calls "Tradition II."[22] He attributes Tradition I mainly to the ante-Nicene Fathers and to the magisterial Reformation, whereas he attributes Tradition II to the medieval canonists and the Council of Trent. The former holds that tradition is important because it is the church's historic confession of what Scripture teaches in a variety of polemical situations. If tradition comes into conflict with the clear meaning of Scripture, then Scripture must have the final word. The later suggests that Scripture is in itself incomplete and therefore must be supplemented by the church's unwritten or extra biblical tradition.

It should be observed that in the body of his essay, Hinlicky invokes Oberman and the Tradition I model, thereby claiming it for his position.[23] What is interesting about this invocation is that as we have seen, Hinlicky actually holds something rather closer to Tradition II. One would hesitate to say that he unambiguously understands his own position as holding that tradition supplements Scripture. Nevertheless, tradition brings to expression doctrines not taught by, but developed out of Scripture. He is, as we have seen, quite clear that Scripture lacks a fully developed doctrine of the Trinity, it was in effect the Spirit inspired church's vocation to develop such a doctrine.

But as a result, Hinlicky has created a number of serious problems. For example, his position creates a great deal of ambiguity regarding the relationship between the proclamation of the articles of the faith and the church's identity. If we cannot find the doctrine of the Trinity in the Bible, can't the church actually be the church without it? In other words, if the apostolic church was the church, why add onto what they established and invent the doctrine of the Trinity? Would not the development of such a doctrine corrupt the church? If one argues the way Newman did that there are legitimate development of the "seeds" of biblical teaching into the later full grown doctrinal position of the later church, one is on no more solid ground. First, if the later church unfolds the earlier church's doctrines with greater clarity, does this mean that it grows to become church in a more full sense? Would this then mean that the Nicene Fathers are more the church than the apostles, who were appointed as Christ's infallible witnesses?

Again, beyond this difficulty, one is also faced with the problem of discovering who legitimately is the church and therefore capable of developing the articles of the faith. Not all the Fathers agree with one another. Similarly, there are obviously a multitude of traditions that claim legitimacy as the true expression of Christianity. Perhaps Hinlicky and others think this could legitimately occur through the acceptance of the principle of apostolic secession. Nonetheless, even if we were to take seriously the claims of Rome to apostolic succession, why should we not take other claims of apostolic succession equally seriously? Why not the claims of the Old Catholic Church, the Anglican Church, the Church of Sweden, the Eastern Orthodox churches, the Ethiopian Church, and the various Monophysite and Nestorian churches of the Middle East? Based on their conflicting claims of apostolic succession and authority we would either, accept Ephesus and reject Chalcedonian Monophysites, or reject Ephesus and Chalcedonian Nestorians, accept the first seven ecumenical councils, but not Trent, Eastern Orthodoxy in general, accept Trent, but not Vatican I and Vatican II, (Old Catholicism) and so on and so forth. For this reason, apostolic succession offers no real resolutions to the problem of conflicting doctrinal claims.

Hinlicky of course would respond that the "gospel" and the Scriptures which witness to it have a regulating effect on what can be regarded as legitimate, but is he not making a circular argument here? If, as Hinlicky claims, the Bible is not clear in and of itself, and therefore needs both the episcopal office and the tradition of the church for it to be understood, how would one be able to criticize both the bishops and subsequent traditions of the visible church on the basis of the gospel? It would in effect be like sawing off the branch upon which we are standing. Among the varying traditions that claim legitimacy as "Christian" the only real criticism that could be made would be to claim that your tradition is not my tradition, and that is no argument at all.

With all this in mind, what appears to be one of the roots of the problem is Hinlicky's rather exaggerated attempt to make up for his low view of Scripture. If Scripture is really only partially or indirectly inspired by God,[24] it must be deficient and in need of a higher authority to supplement its deficiency. In other words, if one is able to feel confident in his ability to criticize Scripture, then one must clearly believe himself to have discovered something higher than it. Similarly, if one has found something higher and more perfect than the Bible, then one must clearly be acting in such a way as to supplement its deficiencies, in other words, one has moved directly into the realm of Tradition II.

Being weary of the Protestant orthodoxy's high view of Scripture, as well as the re-establishment of a magisterium, the way most modern Protestants have engaged in this supplementation of scriptural authority since the Enlightenment is either by positing an overly optimistic view of human reason on the one hand or the authority of interior religious experience on the other. The former is suspect in light of the fact that post-modern thinkers have accurately highlighted the fact that rationality is by no means universal, but is rather historically conditioned and operative within a tradition of thought.[25] This by no means leads necessarily to a form of relativism, in any case it need not automatically lead in this direction, rather it means that the Enlightenment's secular worldview need not be something that Christians try to carve out space within in order to maintain their beliefs. There is nothing universal or necessary about secular or humanistic reason, it is byproduct of certain cultural trends within the middle classes in European and North America from the seventeenth century to the present.

Similarly, the ultimate results of accepting the parameters of secular reason can only be the wholesale rejection of the Christian faith or an equally uneasy truce. Even if one believes that Scripture is revelatory in some sense, one will automatically discount its descriptions of violent and disruptive supernatural revelation, either by only accepting selective events or by suggesting that they are "mythological" or "sagic" descriptions of a gradual process of revelation occurring over a longer period of time. Ultimately this uneasy truce must find a breaking point. Since the articles of the faith are dependant on actual historical events, one must either unequivocally accept those events as factual or reject the role of history at all and create a religion of interior experience (Schleiermacher) or an existential one (Bultmann). Furthermore, one cannot go down the route of a figure such as Wolfhart Pannenberg and claim that secular historical reason gives a sufficient basis for the confession of the faith. The articles of the faith must be absolutely certain-otherwise what we are told by the proclaimed word and the sacraments is uncertain. History studied on the basis of secular methods can only be "probable." Based on the gospel and sacraments I know that I am absolutely (and not merely "probably"!) forgiven and destined for eternal life-for this reason I cannot leave it to secular history to tell me that Christ "probably" died for my sins and "probably" was raised for my justification.[26] If I believe that God has been truthful with me in regard to my own justification, I cannot be incredulous when he tells me of the events that are the basis of that justification.

The second act of supplementation occurs in the form of "personal experience." Within liberal Protestantism, and its ancestor Pietism, this took the form of an interior enthusiastic religious experience meant to make a person credulous of what the Bible and the sacraments had already told them in no uncertain terms. Within the present ELCA, of which Hinlicky is extremely critical, this has metamorphosed into the denominational policy of creating quotas of various historically marginalized groups in the church assembly and other apparatuses. Following modern liberationist, "queer,"[27] womanist, mujerista, and various other feminist theologies, the ELCA bureaucracy claims a sort of de facto magisterial authority of the oppressed group. Again, because Scripture is an inert object of human consciousness, God reveals himself not through his mighty word, but through the interior consciousness of various oppressed minority groups who sit in judgment over Scripture.

In the case of Hinlicky, having bought into both the Enlightenment's trust in historical criticism and liberal twentieth century Lutheranism's gospel reductionism-while simultaneously rejecting the option of liberal Protestantism's religious consciousness, and its contemporary expression in the form of the ELCA and other mainline Protestantism's identity politics, it is the magisterial authority of the visible church that must ultimately pick up the slack for the insufficient authority of the Bible. The irony of this is extreme. Whereas Hinlicky and his colleagues cannot possibly believe in verbal inspiration or in every act of supernatural revelation recorded in the Bible, he can most certainly believe in a miraculously Spirit-filled tradition of the church. In the same way that those who reject the doctrine of penal substitution in favor of moral influence theories of atonement merely shift the locus of the fulfillment of the law from Christ to human agents, so Hinlicky and his group merely shift the locus of miraculous inspiration from the Bible to the history of the "Great Tradition" of the visible church.

 

The Apostle Paul's Concept of the Clarity and Efficacy of the Word of God

For all his logical difficulties, as well as his historical inaccuracies, Hinlicky's major problem appears to be his lack of understanding of how the Lutheran and Roman Catholic models of authority organically grow out of differing conceptions of human agency, the means of grace and the gospel itself. To observe how this is the case, we will first begin with the biblical tradition focusing on the apostle Paul's conception of the clarity and efficacy of the word of God. By beginning at this point, we will not only begin to develop our understanding of the clarity of Scripture from what the Bible says about its own power, but we will be able to observe clearly the deep connection between the clarity and efficacy of the Scripture and the article of justification. From there we will move to a discussion how this conception of the word finds expression in Luther and orthodox Lutheran theology. By examining this we will observe how claims about the nature of the gospel naturally correlate to differences between Roman Catholics and Lutherans over the issue of the clarity of Scripture and the magisterial authority of the church.

In turning to Paul, we must recognize that the New Testament canon had technically speaking not been formed when he wrote. Nevertheless, he possessed the Old Testament, and recognized the authority of the apostolic kerygma of which he himself was a propagator and which was in the process of being "deposited" in writing (1 Tim 1:14). For this reason it is possible to look at what Paul, as an inspired instrument of apostolic teaching, understands regarding efficacy and clarity of the word of God.

Paul holds that his proclamation is an exposition of the true meaning of the Hebrew Scriptures in light of the revelation of Jesus (Rom 3:21). The word of God which he proclaims is not something inert or (as Hinlicky puts it) "vulnerable." For this reason he does not attempt to appeal to a faculty within human beings through his preaching, but rather he simply preaches the word believing that the Spirit will actively convict through its power: "My message and my preaching were not with wise and persuasive words, but with a demonstration of the Spirit's power" (1 Cor 2:4) Indeed, apart from divine agency working monergistically, the human subject will always necessarily be unreceptive of his teaching: "The man without the Spirit does not accept the things of God, for they are foolishness to him, and he cannot understand them, because they are spiritual discerned" (1 Cor 2:14). In fact, it is not merely the flesh which rejects God's truth, but the devil is active in those who do not accept the word of God: "...our gospel is veiled to those who are perishing. The god of this age has blinded the minds of unbelievers, so that they cannot see the light of the gospel of the glory of Christ" (2 Cor 4:3-4). There are also divisions and heresies in the visible Church for precisely this reason: "I hear that when you come together as a church, there are divisions among you...no doubt there have to be differences among you to show which of you have God's approval" (1 Cor 3:18-19). Though this "veil" covers the hearts of those who read the Scriptures in unbelief, through faith in Christ, such a veil is taken away and the Scripture becomes clear: "whenever anyone turns to the Lord, the veil is taken away" (2 Cor 3:14-16). For this reason, only through the inner clarity of the gospel does the Word of God become understandable.

The message that Paul preaches is evidently a divine one because God's agency works through it. Nevertheless, we cannot leave it at that. Divine agency functions through Paul's preaching with a definite content, specifically "Christ and him crucified" (1 Cor 2:2) This is a message of reconciliation, in that Paul has been appointed to a "ministry of reconciliation" (2 Cor 5:18) The content of Paul's message also reveals itself as divine in that God alone can forgive, and only God can counteract in the person of his Son the infinite judgment of the law (2 Cor 5:19, Jer 23:6, Heb 9:14). Therefore, the word of reconciliation centers on the delivery of the gift of the gospel which has been brought about by Jesus' substitutionary death and resurrection (Rom 5:15).

The fact that the gospel is a gift has two important implications. First, if the ministry of reconciliation for Paul is aimed at delivering this gift, then as we have seen, it must find its center in testimony concerning Christ who has fulfillment of the Old Testament and its promise of redemption. From this it logically follows that Christ is the key to and center of all the Scriptures: "(the Church is) built on the foundation of the apostles and prophets with Christ Jesus himself as the chief cornerstone" (Eph 2:20). Secondly, it must, as we have earlier observed, discount human beings' ability to reconcile themselves to God. That humans need this reconciliation effectively presupposes their total spiritual death: "we were dead in our transgressions" (Eph 2:5) If Christ must reconcile us, then there is no neutral ground or goodness left in us, otherwise there would be no need for his reconciliation in that we would be capable of it in and of ourselves. From this it follows that the Scriptures and their clarity, which results in our knowing them as the means of our salvation, cannot come from ourselves but must be brought about by the work of the Holy Spirit through the gospel.

It is also for this reason that Paul describes the word as being the means through which God wholly destroys and re-creates the human being as a new creature of faith. There is no rationality or autonomy to which he can appeal within the human being that is not distorted by sin. The word that Paul preaches "destroy[s] the wisdom of the wise [and] the intelligence of the intelligent" (1 Cor 1:19) At the same time, through the word of God we are made "a new creation" (2 Cor 5:17) In other words, the word of God is destructive and creative, it is law and gospel: "for the letter kills, but the Spirit gives life" (2 Cor 3:6). From this the word reveals that it is indeed the "power of God" (1 Cor 1:18). God is only the Redeemer because he is the Creator. If the word destroys and re-creates, then it does what only God can do and is clearly divine. The word, to use a phrase of Gerhard Forde's, "does God"[28] or as Oswald Bayer would say we "suffer God"[29] through the word. Through the word we are "...conformed to the image of his [God's] Son" (Rom 8:29). We are united to Christ in death and resurrection by law and gospel and thereby conformed to the image of the narrative of his existence: "If we have been united with him like this in his death, we will certainly also be united with him in his resurrection" (Rom 6:5). Indeed, as Gustaf Wingren observes "law and grace" are "death and resurrection."[30]

 

The Ecumenical Problem of the Efficacy and Clarity of Scripture in Light of the Question of Justification

As we can observe, from the biblical perspective there is an intimate connection between justification, and the clarity and efficacy of the word of God. Luther also recognized this aspect of the Bible and used it in his debate with Erasmus over the question of free will. Though many would not see a direct connection between the issue of free will and the clarity of the Scriptures, Luther perceived how unified the two issues were.

Erasmus, as is well known, held that the Scriptures were something like a wax nose that could be molded as one pleased. For this reason, even though he considered the Scriptures to be a bit unclear on the issue of free will, he thought it was better to expound them so as to promote the concept. Otherwise ‘simple' people might be encouraged to engage in impiety and immorality.

Luther rejected this notion and claimed that God himself made Scripture clear to those whom he had elected and justified. There are, according to Luther "...two kinds of clarity in Scripture...one external and pertaining to the ministry of the word...[the other] internal" (AE 33:28). These two forms of clarity are related, but nevertheless distinct. The first kind of clarity pertains to "grammar and vocabulary" (AE 33:25) of the Bible. On this level, Scripture is clear because discerning its teaching is merely a matter of understanding the proper meaning of certain Greek and Hebrew words. Working from the perspective of this sort of clarity, Luther launched many of his criticisms of late medieval Catholic practice by pointing to the distortions of the Vulgate.

For this reason, this particular kind of clarity pertains to the task of the office of ministry (AE 33:25). Not all are competent in regard to this particular form of clarity, in that all do not know Hebrew and Greek and all are not called to the office of ministry. Furthermore, it should be noted that this clarity is not absolute. In that we do not live in the ancient near East, we cannot know everything about the modes of locution of the ancient Israelites or the earliest Christians. Therefore there are some obscure parts of Scripture in regard to grammar and vocabulary (AE 33:26).

Nevertheless, although our understanding of the grammar and vocabulary of Scripture is very important, Christ himself and the message of the gospel is ultimately that which make for Scripture's "internal clarity" (AE 33:27). Such internal clarity does not come by human work or will, but through the operation of the Spirit, a point we also observed in Paul. Again, we can see why the Scripture's clarity and the article of justification are deeply interconnected. The human being is utterly mired in sin and therefore is in need of the message of justification through the blood of Jesus. In the same way, if a person is mired in sin, he is utterly corrupt and cannot understand the word and the message of justification by any other means than the work of the Spirit. In that he receives the Spirit through the proclamation of the gospel, otherwise he would not be able to understand the gospel, the gospel itself must logically be the key to interpreting the Bible's meaning.

Much like the external clarity related to the public ministry of the Church, internal clarity is connected with the priesthood of all believers. Since the central meaning of the Bible becomes clear as a result of faith in the gospel, this sort of clarity may be perceived by all Christians who read the Scriptures with faith. Notice however that this sort of clarity does not come by some sort of interior experience or private judgment. For ordinary Christians, that is, those not called to the office of ministry, internal clarity of the Scriptures can only come through the correct exposition of the external clarity of Scripture by those called to the office of ministry. Therefore the right to read and make spiritual judgments from Scriptures is never something private, but rather mediated by the means of grace and the public ministry of the visible church.

From this perspective then, Hinlicky's comment about Luther's struggle with the Scriptures seems a little puzzling. Luther could most certainly struggle with the external clarity of the Bible by his own reason and strength, as did Paul when he was a Pharisaic rabbi. Both would have freely admitted this. The clarity of the articles of the faith only came to them by the power of the Bible's internal clarity. Neither Paul, nor Luther, as we have seen, attributes this clarity to their own personal agency, but rather to the Holy Spirit's work through the gospel. Of course, the two kinds of clarity are clearly interconnected in that one does not get to internal clarity except through the concrete words of the Bible. Nevertheless, even if one does know the grammar and vocabulary of the Bible very well, one will not understand it properly if one does not have the Holy Spirit. That Luther took this attitude can be shown by his famous description of his Reformation breakthrough. "At last by the mercy of God, meditating day and night, I gave heed to the context of the words, namely, ‘In it the righteousness of God is revealed, as it is written, "He who through faith is righteous shall live"'" (AE 34:337, emphasis added).

From this we can observe why Hinlicky's position is inherently contradictory. If one claims that the gospel is the center of Christian proclamation, one cannot claim that the Scriptures whose chief end is the proclamation of the gospel are "vulnerable." Yes, they are "vulnerable" in the sense that those without faith and the Spirit will always misinterpret them, but one can do very little about that. As the Augustana says, God creates faith through the means of grace when and where he chooses (AC V). Similarly, as we observed with Paul, it would appear that divisions within the visible Christian church, though certainly not approved by God, are allowed by God in order that he might manifest all the more clearly the truth of the gospel in contrast to the error of the heretics. Indeed, throughout the history of the church heresy has continuously given occasion to Christians to make a bold confession of the faith.

We can therefore also observe how the Roman Catholic concept of the magisterium and its doctrine of grace and justification are interconnected. If, as a Roman Catholic, one believes that human beings are free and rational, one must give a reason for free and rational creatures to accept certain teachings. Hence, instead of relying on the efficacy of the word and its ability to work faith monergistically in what it demands, narrates and promises, one must come up with an elaborate argument about the apostolic succession of the church, unwritten apostolic traditions and the magisterial authority of the church in order to rationally justify its authority to make pronouncements about various subjects and "enforce" true doctrine and morals. Divine truth is not efficacious per se; it is "vulnerable." In fact, if one insists that human beings have free will and that they can cooperate with grace and merit salvation, a person cannot really believe that Scripture is efficacious. If one did, then one would have to admit divine monergism and that would violate human free will.

These rival perceptions of divine and human agency clearly define the fundamental difference between the Lutheran concept of "confession"[31] and the Roman Catholic concept of magisterial "decree." For the Lutheran, to use Bayer's term, one "suffers" the Word and thereby is determined as a believing and grateful creature. By becoming a person of faith, one's natural response must be a confession of the truth of that faith out of gratitude. Such a confession of course can occur in a number of different situations and therefore the public, written confessions of the church are completely necessary and deadly important as a witness to the teaching of Scripture. It is also, as we have observed a necessary aspect of the external clarity of Scripture as a work of the public ministry of the church. Persons can fall away from the faith and therefore it important and necessary to identify what is contrary to the faith in a given situation. If one does not, it is difficult to know how one is to teach the faith or exercise the power of the keys in order to protect one's flock against deadly power of heresy.

In the case of the Roman Catholic, the church is in effect inspired to dispense truth and to develop doctrine. Faith is, as Thomas Aquinas argues, a habitus which develops into a virtue.[32] That is to say, it is something which gives an aptitude to do something and then develops into the ability to do it. It is, in effect, an augmentation of one's previous ability to be rational. If faith is not a firm trust in the word of God, and rather an extension of knowledge above its normal boundaries, then one must, as in other epistemic situations, have a rational justification to believe a particular authoritative teaching. For this reason such authority cannot be self-authenticating. Faith does not "suffer" God and bring the creature to the recognition that he or she is an object of God's address as law and gospel, rather the articles of faith and therefore God himself, are inert objects understandable and believable through the elevation of the human intellect by the habitus of faith. One will need to weigh rival interpretations of Scripture rationally and will find no tipping point other than the assertion of special magisterial authority.

The structure of magisterial authority then works from the same assumptions regarding human agency's relationship to divine agency. The person invested with magisterial authority is a subject looking upon the Scriptures and the tradition as his objects. His intellect and will are elevated under certain special conditions, whether this involves his sitting on an infallible council or speaking ex cathedra as pope, in that he can properly discern the meaning of revelation.[33]

Nevertheless, this ultimately makes revelation a kind of law that one will obey or not obey. If one rejects monergism and the self-authentication of the Scriptures, one will cease to view Scripture as primarily an instrument to deliver Christ and his benefits and will begin to see it as a law book. If the Bible it is not a delivery system to give a gift to the bound sinner, it must have some other purpose, namely to engage one's own free will and rationality. In this, it will eventually become partially obsolete. Obsolete because although human behavior is generally fairly universal, there will be situations which arise which will not be covered directly by the law book. If one believes that he merits salvation through following the law book, how will one know whether or not he is applying the law book properly in every new situation? One will clearly need a magisterial authority to apply the law book authoritatively to the new situation so as to guarantee salvation. It is therefore logical and correct to agree with Luther in the Schmalkald Articles, that the papacy and the Mass are mutually legitimating (SA II, 2). If one believes that one must do works not revealed or given by God to earn salvation, there must be someone with the authority to prescribe them. If one has the job of prescribing meritorious works, those works clearly must save. This also means that church authority and individual believers will be caught up in an endless circle of self-justification. One will be constantly attempting to obey magisterial authority in order to justify himself, but will always fall short-similarly magisterial authority will constantly need to justify itself and therefore will need to create more works to do. Similarly, the magisterium will be unable to admit its own mistakes, because the system of works and authoritative teaching will automatically come into disrepute.[34]

Moving on to the question of catholicity of Christian truth, the monergism of the gospel also answers the Roman Catholic objections regarding the sectarian nature of the Lutheran Reformation's teaching of sola scriptura. First, it is evident that the typical Roman Catholic complaint, echoed in Hinlicky, that sola scriptura only results in sectarianism doesn't really work when applied to the Conservative Reformation, but only when applied to Arminians, particularly those living in contemporary America. If the unity of the church lies in the proper teaching of the word, in accordance with the gospel, and its natural corollary of the proper administration of the sacraments (AC VII), the church will always have true agreement about what the Scriptures teach, because the gospel always places all the articles of the faith in their proper light (analogia fidei).[35] Even if theologians may disagree to a certain extent or evolve their ideas about aspects of the external clarity-we need not agree, for example, about who "Gog and Magog" are[36]-there will be essential agreement about the internal clarity and thereby about the "whole counsel of God." On the other hand, if a person is an Arminian who believes in free will in spiritual matters, he will have to justify the existence of his new sect by claiming he has discovered new ways of engaging human freedom through a new interpretation of the Bible. As each person comes up with his own interpretation of how to engage human free will, sects multiply.

Furthermore, if as a member of the Conservative Reformation, one holds that God preserves the church in every age and does so by his monergistic action through the means of grace, one will also seek to read the Scripture with the great tradition of the church and see the church's historic exposition of the Scriptures as an important witness. In fact, it will be impossible not to read Scripture in relationship to the church's tradition of public proclamation of the word in that, as we have seen, the internal clarity is tied up inextricably with the external clarity of the public proclamation of God's word. In this regard as well, the Arminian also loses the catholicity of truth because he has already lost the evangelical center of the Bible. If it is the case that we adhere to the truth of the gospel by our own "reason and strength," then it is possible to believe that one is the first person between the closing of the canon and the present time to have properly used his or her rationality and autonomy to understand the meaning of the Bible correctly. This probably accounts for the almost total lack of interest of American Evangelicals in church history or in patristic studies, as well as their propensity for developing charismatic forms of leadership that function as a de facto magisterial authority, such as, Ellen White and David Koresh.

From this as well it is possible to observe why in order to preserve the catholicity of truth, Roman Catholics insist on the necessity of magisterial authority. If I am free to cooperate with grace or not, the word of God must be something inert that one can simply ignore if one wants to. Therefore catholicity of truth and the continuity of the church's identity must come from some other source, namely magisterial authority. Catholicity in this case must in a sense be imposed from above, in that the word is too weak to bring it about by its own agency.

This of course raises the question of the catholicity of Roman Catholicism. If something is already a "catholic," that is, universal, truth of the Christian faith why does it need to be decreed or asserted by a council to be believed or to be true? Some might say, and rightly so, that due to a particular polemical situation the church must take a stand and thereby develop new formulations of doctrine. True enough. But contemporary Roman Catholics following Newman would like to say a great deal more than that, namely decrees of councils actually develop doctrine in and of themselves.[37] Leaves and branches may indeed be potentially within the seed, but properly speaking a seed does not have leaves and branches. In this, Newman's seed theory again reveals its weakness. The truth that is now asserted as "growing" out of the earlier truth through the development of doctrine cannot be exactly the same truth and therefore cannot be truly universal. By losing the "evangelical" nature of divine truth, based on the scriptural principle and the monergism of the gospel, one necessarily loses true "catholicity" of truth. Only by our proclamation being the proclamation of the same gospel and truth that the Scriptures teach can there be a universality of truth. Only by the monergism of the gospel and the scriptural principle can the truth and universality of the church's proclamation be recognized as being guaranteed by God's unilateral action.

In light of these observations we can see the dangers of so-called "Evangelical Catholic" theology in its attempt to re-establish authority within the Christian tradition on the basis of the Roman Catholic model. Primarily what we have observed is the absolute necessity of the maintenance of the scriptural principle of the Conservative Reformation. The abandonment of the scriptural principle logically leads to the abandonment of the article of justification and thereby all the articles of the faith. Only by a proper appreciation of the logical implications of the article of justification can one come to recognize the necessity of scriptural authority and achieve a true "Evangelical Catholic" theology that does not descend into either "Gospel Reductionism" or the re-establishment of magisterial authority. In this, one can come to appreciate both the freeing nature of the gospel, as well as the unity and catholicity of the Christian church from age to age. Indeed, it is enough for us for us to believe in Christ's promise that the content of Peter's confession, that is the articles of justification, (Mt 16:18-19) will be a firm foundation that can never be conquered by the gates of Hades. It is because we trust in this promise that we need not secure the church and its confession by our own devices.


[1].          See Reinhard Hütter, Suffering Divine Things: Theology as Church Practice (Grand Rapids: Wm. B. Eerdmans, 2000). Unsurprisingly, Hütter has since the writing of this work become a Roman Catholic. Also see David Yeago, "The Papal Office and the Burden of History: A Lutheran View" in Church Unity and the Papal Office: An Ecumenical Dialogue on John Paul the II's Encyclical Ut Unam Sit, Carl E. Braaten and Robert W. Jenson, eds. (Grand Rapids: Wm. B. Eerdmans, 2001), 98-124.

[2].          See this argument in several authors in Carl E. Braaten and Robert W. Jenson eds., The Ecumenical Future, Background Papers for One Body in the Cross: The Princeton Proposal for Christian Unity, (Grand Rapids: Wm. B. Eerdmans, 2004).

[3].          See Charles Potterfield Krauth's masterful The Conservative Reformation and Its Theology (Minneapolis: Augsburg Publishing House, 1963).

[4].          That this is not even a remotely responsible interpretation of Luther's position has been demonstrated a number of times. See Eugene Klug, From Luther to Chemnitz: On Scripture and the Word (Grand Rapids: Wm. B. Eerdmans, 1971); Arthur Wood, Captive to the Word: Martin Luther Doctor of Sacred Scripture (Grand Rapids: Wm. B. Eerdmans, 1969); Mark D. Thompson, A Sure Ground on Which to Stand: The Relation of Authority and Interpretive Method in Luther's Approach to Scripture (Waynesboro, GA: Paternoster Press, 2004); Michael Reu, Luther and the Scriptures (St. Louis: Concordia, 1980). Also see the comments of the most brilliant Richard A. Muller in Post-Reformation Reformed Dogmatics: Vol. 2, Scripture, the Cognitive Foundation of Theology, 2 ed. (Grand Rapids: Baker Academics, 2003), 63-70.

[5].          Paul Hinlicky, "The Lutheran Dilemma," Pro Ecclesia 8, no. 4 (1999): 393.

[6].          Hinlicky, 393.

[7].          As the sources that I cite above demonstrate, in actuality Luther had no difficulty with the claims of the inspiration of Scripture or its infallibility. Being untrained in the history of Lutheranism (particularly knowing little about Lutheran scholasticism), liberal Lutheran theologians frequently confuse Luther's distinction between the Homologoumena and Antilegomena (a distinction going back as far as Origen and accepted by Chemnitz, Flacius and the majority of the Lutheran scholastics!) with a rejection of the doctrine of inspiration and inerrancy. It is one thing to question the canonicity of certain books based on the standard of better attested and more clearly apostolic content and quite another thing to question the verbal and plenary inspiration of Scripture. See Heinrich Schmid, The Doctrinal Theology of the Evangelical Lutheran Church, trans. Charles E. Hays and Henry E. Jacobs (Minneapolis: Augsburg Publishing House, 1961), 88-91; Franz Pieper, Christian Dogmatics, vol. 1 (St. Louis: Concordia, 1950), 330-338.).

[8].          For an example of a similar argument see Jaroslav Pelikan, From Luther to Kierkegaard (St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1963).

[9].          Hinlicky, 395.

[10].         Hinlicky, 395.

[11].         Hinlicky, 395.

[12].         Hinlicky, 395.

[13].         Hinlicky, 399-400.

[14].         Hinlicky, 395.

[15].         Hinlicky, 399-400.

[16].         See Martin Chemnitz, The Two Natures in Christ, J.A.O. Preus, trans. (St. Louis: Concordia, 1971) and Examination of the Council of Trent, 4 vols., Fred Kramer, trans. (St. Louis: Concordia, 1971-1986). Also see Johann Gerhard, Theological Common Places, 2 vols., Richard Dinda, trans. (St. Louis: Concordia, 2004-2007).

[17].         Hinlicky, 398. Emphasis added.

[18].         Hinlicky, 402.

[19].         See how this is worked out in Vatican II's decree regarding the Word of God, available from: http://www.vatican.va/archive/hist_councils/ii_vatican_council/documents/vat-ii_const_19651118_dei-verbum_en.html; accessed 30 September 2008.

[20].         Hinlicky, 395.

[21].         John Henry Newman, An Essay on the Development of Christian Doctrine (New York: Longmans, 1949).

[22].         See Heiko Oberman, The Harvest of Medieval Theology (Grand Rapids: Wm. B. Eerdmans, 2000), 371-93. Also see Oberman, The Dawn of the Reformation (Edinburgh: T & T Clark, 1986), 270-88.

[23].         Hinlicky, 399-400.

[24].         Hinlicky, 398. Hinlicky states: "Misleading doctrines of miraculous dictation obscure...reality...[t]he Bible originates historically as a tradition of the Church."

[25].         See Alasdair C. MacIntyre, After Virtue (Notre Dame: Notre Dame University Press, 2000). And also Alasdair C. MacIntyre, Whose Justice? Which Rationality? (Notre Dame: Notre Dame University Press, 1988).

[26].         See similar arguments in Kurt E. Marquart, "The Historical-Critical Method and Lutheran Presuppositions," Lutheran Theological Journal 8 (1974): 106-24; Kurt E. Marquart, "The Sacramentality of Truth," Lutheran Quarterly 22, no. 2 (2008): 177-91.

[27].         For those unfamiliar with the various Liberation theologies, the author is not using a pejorative term here. Gay and Lesbian Liberation theologians refer to their theology as "Queer."

[28].         Gerhard O. Forde, Theology is for Proclamation! (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1990), 100.

[29].         Oswald Bayer, Theology the Lutheran Way, Mark C. Mattes and Jeffrey Silcock, trans. and eds. (Grand Rapids: Wm. B. Eerdmans, 2007), 139.

[30].         Gustaf Wingren, The Living Word, Victor C. Pogue, trans. (Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1960), 137.

[31].         See the good discussion on the Church's identity as a confessing body in Herman Sasse, "Church and Confession (1941)" in We Confess Jesus Christ, Norman Nagel, ed. and trans. (St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1984), 71-87.

[32].         See the brief discussions of the nature of habitus in Anthony Kenny, Aquinas on the Mind (New York: Routledge, 1994), 53, 121.

[33].         See the description in The Catechism of the Catholic Church, 2 ed, (Rome: Libereia Editrice Vaticana, 1994), 27.

[34].         This need for self-justification of the system that promotes self-justification is no more prominent than in the sex-abuse scandal within the Roman Catholic Church. It is not that Roman Catholics have a particular predilection for such behavior-at the very least, they have no more predilection for it than any other group of human beings. Nevertheless, why the scandal happened and how it reached such epic levels is an expression of the need for self-justification. In other words, what appears to have consistently happened is that bad priests were moved around when complaints occurred and their deeds were covered up. Why could the Church not simply come clean about it? Because if one's system is based on the trustworthiness of the Church as a visible institution, then one will cover up anything that casts doubts on the credibility of the Church. In this sense, the system must justify itself continuously and can never admit that it has been wrong. It lacks the freedom of the gospel to justify God by admitting its own guilt.

[35].         Schmid, 70, 76.

[36].         See the distinction between essential and non-essential articles of the faith in regard to fellowship in Nicolaus Hunnius, Diaskepsis Theologica: A Theological Examination of the Fundamental Difference between Evangelical Lutheran Doctrine and Calvinist or Reformed Teaching, Richard Dinda and Elmer Hohle, trans. (Malone, Tx: Repristination Press, 1999).

[37].         The Catechism of the Catholic Church, 29: "Thanks to the assistance of the Holy Spirit, the understanding of both the realities and the words of heritage of the faith is able to grow in the life of the Church" (emphasis added).

JDDJ Ten Years Later-The Historic Divide Endures

Rolf Preus is pastor of First American Lutheran Church in Mayville, North Dakota, Grace Lutheran Church in Crookston, Minnesota, and First Evangelical Lutheran Church in Fertile, Minnesota.

 

Was the Lutheran Reformation a good thing, or was it a tragedy? Did it serve the salutary purpose of restoring the central teaching of the Christian religion to its purity and clarity, or did it cause the scandalous division of the church? The way we answer these questions may determine the way we approach the Joint Declaration on the Doctrine of Justification.

 

If the article on justification through faith alone is that truth upon which the church stands or falls this is because there is no other church but the assembly of saints. When Lutherans define the church as the "assembly of saints in which the Gospel is taught purely and the sacraments are administered rightly" (AC VII) we do so not merely to mark the presence of the church by the gospel and the sacraments, but to confess as well that the church is and consists only of those who are justified through faith alone. The pure gospel and the rightly administered sacraments are marks of the church precisely because they are means of grace, that is, means by which the Holy Spirit graciously bestows the forgiveness of sins and in so doing creates the faith that receives this forgiveness and through which the believer is justified.

The church must be, by definition, the assembly of saints, that is, those who are justified through faith alone. The church has the holy things. But her holiness consists in more than that. She is not what she has. She is what she is. She is the holy people. Just as surely as we cannot understand or identify the church without reference to those holy things entrusted to her stewardship through which God grants forgiveness of sins and true righteousness, so we may not define the church except as the holy people who are holy because God has justified them by Jesus' blood. They are holy because they are justified. They are fully forgiven of all their sins for Christ's sake and this makes them righteous before God. Were they not fully forgiven of all their sins for Christ's sake they would not be the communion of saints and the church would not be holy. We cannot know what the church is unless we know that it is a communion of saints. We cannot know what the church is apart from understanding what makes a sinner a saint. We cannot conceive of the church apart from a clear understanding of justification.

For Lutherans justification informs true ecclesiology. It is not merely "an indispensable criterion, which constantly serves to orient all the teaching and practice of our churches to Christ." (JDDJ, par 18) It is the indispensable criterion. When the Vatican succeeded in placing the indefinite article "an" before the words "indispensable criterion" within The Common Understanding of Justification it succeeded in displacing justification as the central article. An indispensable criterion cannot be the article on which the church stands or falls. It cannot be the central article. It can only be one indispensable criterion among several.

Thus the question was answered. The Lutheran Reformation was a tragedy to be overcome. The scandal of the sixteenth century was the external division of Western Christendom. All other considerations must be subordinated to the need to do what we can to heal the breach. Since the clarity with which the doctrine of justification was taught and confessed was a chief cause of the breach, healing it would require at least the obscuring of this doctrine. The obfuscation of the confessional Lutheran teaching on justification was the prerequisite for success in the dialogue between Lutherans and Roman Catholics on this doctrine.

Did the strong desire for consensus lead to a watering down of the doctrine that divided, or did the loss of doctrinal substance facilitate the success of the dialogue and the consensus that it yielded? Which caused which? Each aided the other.

Both the ecumenical spirit and a lack of clarity on justification were evident among Lutherans long before the conversations that culminated in the production of the JDDJ. When the Lutheran World Federation met in Helsinki in the summer of 1963 it was clear that the biblical underpinnings of Christian doctrine had crumbled to such an extent as to make clear and binding doctrinal assertions difficult if not impossible.

Doctrinal terms can convey nothing more substantive than what is written in the Holy Scriptures. But the unity of the Scriptures had been lost. Justification had become one image among many in the biblical account of what God has done for us in Christ.

Whereas the Reformers saw the message of the Bible in unitary and almost monolithic terms, we now see much greater variety and diversity among the biblical writers. The Reformers believed that justification is the theme that dominates the entire New Testament. We now recognize that justification is indeed an image present in the earliest Christian tradition, but as one image among the many used to set forth the significance of God's deed in Jesus Christ.[1]

If justification is one image among many, it cannot be the central teaching of the Christian faith. At best it can be an image of the central teaching of the Christian faith. An image is a picture. Pictures change. As the LWF noted at Helsinki: "In this earliest stage the term justification is one of many pictures used to set forth the meaning of God's deed in Christ."[2]

Changing pictures cannot convey unchangeable doctrine, especially when the spirit of the time dictates that the world sets the agenda that the church must follow. If modern man is not asking to be justified, but is rather seeking to discover the meaning of life and whether or not God plays a role in such a discovery, it is incumbent upon the church to find a more compelling picture of the relevance of God than the picture of justification. The central article was set off on the periphery. The Lutherans did this to their own doctrine quite ably without any impetus from the larger ecumenical agenda.

If the Bible contains different theologies that reflect preferences for this image over that image it will be difficult to appeal to the biblical text to settle a debate about biblical doctrine. The use of the historical-critical method by theologians within Rome and Lutheranism thus helped to break down biblical barriers between the two communions' respective teachings on justification. This was frankly admitted and celebrated in Justification by Faith: Lutherans and Catholics in Dialogue VIII, produced in America in 1983 and one of the documents from which the JDDJ arose.

In recent decades developments in the study of Scripture have brought Catholics and Lutherans to a fuller agreement about the meaning of many passages controverted at least since the sixteenth century. Of special importance has been, within general Roman Catholic biblical emphasis, the encouragement given by church authority to Catholic interpreters in the last fifty years to make use of historical-critical methods, thus sharing in a mode of interpretation employed by Protestants for a longer time.[3]

Historical criticism finds varying theologies within the scriptures. This corresponds to varying theologies within the branches of Christendom. Differences that previously constituted a doctrinal divide are now regarded as complementary. No specific "image for the saving action of God in Christ" may be given "exclusive primacy" over other images.[4] Debating doctrinal substance is one thing. Arguing about which metaphor more effectively conveys a deeper concern shared by the other side is another matter altogether. Less is at stake.

Once the biblical divide between Lutherans and Roman Catholics was bridged by "our common way of listening to the Word of God in Scripture" (JDDJ par 8) which includes "appropriating insights of recent biblical studies" (JDDJ par 13) it remained for the participants to deal with Luther and the Lutheran Confessions on the one hand and the Roman Catholic tradition and the Council of Trent on the other.

Luther scholars have long sought to distance the reformer from his most faithful students. This is done by admirers of Luther who bemoan what they view as a loss of his more sanative and less purely forensic understanding of justification by later Lutherans from the Formula of Concord and Martin Chemnitz down through the seventeenth century and beyond. Whether Karl Holl (God justifies the sinner in view of what he shall become) or Tuomo Mannermaa (justification as Christ present in faith) on the Lutheran side or Hans Küng, Daniel Olivier, or George Tavard on the Roman Catholic side, those who love Luther do not necessarily love the Lutheran Confessions. Despite differences among themselves, they attempt to distinguish between Luther's doctrine of justification and the unambiguously forensic definition of justification presented especially in the Formula of Concord in which the righteousness of faith is the vicarious obedience of Christ (for example, FC SD III paragraphs 9, 14, 15, 30).

The greatest barrier to the consensus claimed by the JDDJ was the explicit teaching of the Lutheran Confessions and the Council of Trent. Indeed, those devoted either to Trent or to the Lutheran Confessions with anything approaching an unconditional adherence are those who argue that the consensus claimed by the JDDJ is somewhat illusionary. From the traditionalist right within the Roman Catholic Church we find an article titled, "Critical Analysis of the Joint Declaration on the Doctrine of Justification" by the Most Rev. Donald J. Sanborn[5] that excoriates the JDDJ and the "heretic" Martin Luther with equal enthusiasm. From a more mainstream Roman Catholic vantage point Avery Dulles demonstrates his devotion to Tridentine doctrine and on the basis of that loyalty questions the adoption of the JDDJ while conceding its symbolic benefit.[6] Representatives of the ELCA have generally praised the JDDJ. In a series of opinion pieces published on the ELCA website[7] on the occasion of the fifth anniversary of the signing of the JDDJ we find both a celebration of the JDDJ along with expressions of disappointment at how little it has changed the way Lutherans and Roman Catholics in America interact with one another. The faculties of both LCMS seminaries wrote evaluations of the JDDJ[8] that took issue with its claims of consensus. In short, Roman Catholics devoted to Trent and Lutherans devoted to the Lutheran Confessions remain critical of the JDDJ, questioning the consensus that it claims.

One way to bridge the chasm between Trent and the Lutheran Confessions on the doctrine of justification is by finding a way to express their respective teachings while avoiding the sixteenth century condemnations of the same. The sixteenth century condemnations of the positions set forth in the sixteenth century cannot be set aside. The JDDJ does not claim that they can be. What is claimed is that, "In light of this consensus, the corresponding doctrinal condemnations of the sixteenth century do not apply to today's partner" (JDDJ par 13). While we cannot revisit history to effect change, we can restate the historic teaching in a new way and thus be able to set aside the mutual condemnations of a previous era.

Thus the doctrinal condemnations of the 16th century, in so far as they relate to the doctrine of justification, appear in a new light: The teaching of the Lutheran churches presented in this Declaration does not fall under the condemnations from the Council of Trent. The condemnations in the Lutheran Confessions do not apply to the teaching of the Roman Catholic Church presented in this Declaration (JDDJ par 41).

The removal of mutual condemnations does not apply to the teachings of the Roman Catholic Church and the Lutheran Church of the sixteenth century. The removal of mutual condemnations does not apply to the teachings of the Council of Trent and the Lutheran Confessions. The removal of mutual condemnations does not apply to the present teachings of the Roman Catholic Church and the Lutheran Church. The removal of mutual condemnations applies only to the teachings of the Roman Catholic Church and the Lutheran churches that are presented in the JDDJ. Thus the consensus achieved is far more limited in scope than the celebratory headlines of a decade ago might warrant. The JDDJ is not normative for the teaching of either communion that agreed to it. Its purpose is not to teach or to bind anyone to specific teaching. Its purpose is symbolic more than didactic. The Rev. Dennis A. Andersen, Ecumenical Representative, Northwest Washington Synod of the ELCA put it this way:

The reception of the Declaration has been less oriented to the specific issues of justification than it has been welcomed as one more sign of rapprochement between our faith traditions.  It has served as one more indication to the grass roots of the church to move forward in affirming nascent patterns of mutual understanding, communication, and cooperation.[9]

If "rapprochement" between Rome and Lutheranism is the chief purpose of the ecumenical dialogues involving both communions then the JDDJ shines forth as a symbol of their success. But what if the purity and clarity of the central teaching of the Christian faith is objectively more important for the church than a visible sign of her unity? What if the scandal of the sixteenth century was not the external division between papists and Lutherans? What if there was and remains to this day a schism more profound than that visible to the world-a division of Christians from their birthright in the pure gospel of the gracious imputation to them of Christ's righteousness by which God reckons them to be righteous through faith alone? What if the Lutherans were right all along in insisting that union with the pope was too high a price to pay for the sacrifice of the pure gospel by which Christ's merits are magnified and the conscience burdened by sin is comforted? If so, the JDDJ is a deception of the first order, for the essential doctrinal divide of the sixteenth century remains the same.

If the chief benefit of the JDDJ is that it signifies movement toward the healing of a scandalous schism of Western Christendom, the main harm caused by the JDDJ is that it perpetrates a cover-up of that scandal by which the little ones who belong to Christ are made to stumble and fall. Perhaps cover-up is the wrong word, for the JDDJ is actually quite revealing. A better word might be misdirection. The seriousness of the historic divide is minimized even while it is quite evident within the JDDJ itself.

What is the historic divide? It is more than an academic question. It runs deeper than the official teaching of either the Roman Catholic Church or the Evangelical Lutheran Church. It is an issue of personal faith and pastoral care. It concerns the meaning of words and doctrinal distinctions but the true battle is not over terms. It is over the souls of Christians. The divide-which remains as wide today as it was during the sixteenth century-is over three topics that are intertwined. Each informs and depends on the others. The divide concerns the realities of sin, righteousness, and faith.

 

The divide remains over the reality of sin.

Concupiscence is the constant inclination toward evil. Rome reasons that baptism remits sin but concupiscence remains in the baptized, and since sin in order to be sin must involve a conscious choice to do what is forbidden, we must conclude that concupiscence is not really sin. It comes from sin that has been remitted (and so is no more) and it leads to sin, but by Roman Catholic definition it cannot actually be sin. It can be called sin on account of whence it originally proceeds and on account of its potential to lead into future sin but it cannot actually be sin.

Here is how Rome set forth its opinion at Trent:

This concupiscence, which the Apostle sometimes calls sin, the holy council declares the Catholic Church has never understood to be called sin in the sense that it is truly and properly sin in those born again, but in the sense that it is of sin and inclines to sin.[10]

The Roman Catholic portion of the JDDJ on this topic remains dutifully within the Tridentine parameters:

There does, however, remain in the person an inclination (concupiscence) which comes from sin and presses toward sin. Since, according to Catholic conviction, human sin always involves a personal element and since this element is lacking in this inclination, Catholics do not see this inclination as sin in an authentic sense. They do not thereby deny that this inclination does not correspond to God's original design for humanity and that it is objectively in contradiction to God and remains one's enemy in lifelong struggle (JDDJ par 30).

Rome continues to teach, in accordance with the infallible declaration of Trent, that what St. Paul by inspiration of the Holy Spirit called sin is not sin. He only called it sin because it comes from sin and presses toward sin. And while is "does not conform to God's original design" and "is objectively in contradiction to God" it is not really sin.

If it is not sin it does not need to be forgiven. Indeed, if it is not sin it cannot be forgiven. Christians who are caught in the spiritual struggle between the Spirit and the flesh (Romans 6-8) and cry out for deliverance "from this body of death" (Romans 7:25) cannot find in the gospel the healing power over what is not sin. What is "objectively in contradiction to God and remains one's enemy in lifelong struggle" cannot be forgiven.

If concupiscence is not really sin, a man whose inclinations are to have a sexual relationship with another man is not guilty of sin on account of that inclination even though it is contrary to God's design and goes directly against what God wants. If concupiscence is not sin the forgiveness of sins cannot enter. Thus the treatment of sin devolves into an elaborate analysis of what is and is not sin.

Lutherans confess that concupiscence is sin. Indeed it is the essence of sin. Luther addressed this subject repeatedly. He writes in Against Latomus:

As yet I do not know whether sin ever refers in Scripture to those works which we call sin, for it seems almost always to refer to the radical ferment which bears fruit in evil deeds and words.  It is the law which reveals that what was before unknown and dead (as Romans 5 [:13] says) is properly speaking sin, and that it is very much alive, though hidden under the false works of the hypocrites.[11]

If concupiscence is not really sin, a penitent who struggles with various sinful desires and bears the consequent guilt these desires impose cannot be absolved of the sin inherent in these desires. He may rest assured that what Scripture identifies as sin and what the Christian conscience informed by God's revealed law feels is sin is not really sin at all because it lacks the necessary element of a personal choice.

But how do we know what is a choice and what simply happens? What is willful and what is not?  When does the desire to sin give birth to the sin itself? Such questions arise because Rome chooses to define sin in such a way that the "radical ferment" within is not really and truly sin. Pastoral care under these circumstances cannot rely on the efficacy of the absolution. The efficacy of the absolution is contingent on discerning what cannot be discerned. Repentance remains ever illusive because it must constantly be engaging in undistinguishable distinctions. In response to the Roman Catholic view of sin and repentance Lutherans confess:

This repentance is not fragmentary or paltry-like the kind that does penance for actual sins-nor is it uncertain like that kind. It does not debate over what is a sin or what is not a sin. Instead, it simply lumps everything together and says, "Everything is pure sin with us. What would we want to spend so much time investigating, dissecting, or distinguishing?"(SA III, III, 36).[12]

This wholesale dismissal of scholastic distinctions is necessary if the Christian is to find full forgiveness of sins and attain the confidence of justifying faith. Sinners cannot perfectly discern their own sin. We acknowledge our sinful wretchedness not because we can feel it, discern it, or understand it, but because God's word reveals it to us. In is only from the posture of helplessness over the mass of sinful desires, inclinations, feelings, and thoughts that the righteousness by which sinners are justified can be grasped.

 

The divide remains over the reality of righteousness.

A false articulation of the point of controversy between Lutherans and Rome in the sixteenth century will yield a false conclusion about consensus in our day if the alleged point of controversy appears to have been overcome  The issue has never been whether or not justification is a forensic declaration of God. Both sides affirm this. Nor has the dispute been about whether or not the declaration of God in pronouncing one just is based on a real righteousness, a righteousness that actually corresponds to true obedience to God's commandments. Both sides affirm this as well.

The point of controversy has always been whose obedience has wrought the righteousness that God imputes. Rome can call this righteousness "God's righteousness" as do Lutherans. But Rome does not teach that the righteousness that God reckons to faith is the obedience of Christ. The Catechism of the Catholic Church states it this way:

Justification is at the same time the acceptance of God's righteousness through faith in Jesus Christ. Righteousness (or "justice") here means the rectitude of divine love. With justification, faith, hope, and charity are poured into our hearts and obedience to the divine will is granted us. ...[Justification] conforms us to the righteousness of God, who makes us inwardly just by the power of his mercy (CCC par 1991-1992).[13]

The JDDJ affirms that "Christ himself is our righteousness." It does not affirm that Christ's righteousness is reckoned to us. It says: "Justification thus means that Christ himself is our righteousness, in which we share through the Holy Spirit in accord with the will of the Father" (JDDJ par 15). We share in Christ's righteousness. How so? By God imputing it to us? Or do we share in it through the Holy Spirit who grants to us obedience to the divine will so that we become inwardly just according to the Father's will? To say that Christ himself is our righteousness is not necessarily to say that this righteousness is reckoned to us and by that divine reckoning we are justified. The JDDJ says no such thing.

Even where the Lutheran position is set forth, it hedges on the divine reckoning of the righteousness of Christ to faith:

When Lutherans emphasize that the righteousness of Christ is our righteousness, their intention is above all to insist that the sinner is granted righteousness before God in Christ through the declaration of forgiveness and that only in union with Christ is one's life renewed (JDDJ par 23).

It is true that the declaration of forgiveness and justification are the same thing. But the truth is that when Lutherans emphasize that the righteousness of Christ is our righteousness it is above all to insist that the righteousness that God reckons to us is the vicarious obedience of Christ.

Thus, the righteousness that out of sheer grace is reckoned before God to faith or to the believer consists of the obedience, suffering, and resurrection of Christ because he has satisfied the law for us and paid for our sins. ...Therefore his obedience consists not only in his suffering and death but also in the fact that he freely put himself in our place under the law and fulfilled the law with this obedience and reckoned it to us as righteousness (FD, SD, III, par 14, 15).

Who can find fault with Christ? Can anyone point to a sin he committed? Can God in heaven find in Christ a flaw, a failure to do what love required, or refusal to suffer what love must suffer? Let the divine law examine Jesus. Where is there any desire to sin? Where is there an inclination to sin? Where is lust or concupiscence? Where are the venial sins, mortal sins, gross sins, casual sins, willful sins, or accidental sins? There is no sin and there are no sins. There is true righteousness. This is the righteousness that God reckons to us. This is the righteousness by which we are justified. This declaration is not merely forensic as if to say that God says what is not so and we pretend that it is. The declaration of God that we are righteous is grounded in the only true righteousness that has ever been offered up to God by a man. We are genuinely righteous not because we have been internally renewed but because we have, as the gift God grants to faith, a real righteousness with which there is no lack or flaw. This is what justifying faith believes and through such faith receives the righteousness that God gives.

 

The divide remains over the reality of faith.

How much depends on a preposition! The role of faith in justification is determined by the righteousness that God imputes to us. The righteousness that God reckons to faith is the righteousness of the active and passive obedience of Christ by which he fulfilled all the demands God's law placed upon us and which he rendered to God vicariously for us. The role of faith in our justification must be a purely passive reception of this righteousness. In order to express the purely receptive role that faith plays in our justification we speak-as do the Holy Scriptures and the Lutheran Confessions-of being justified through faith. On the other hand, if the righteousness that God reckons to faith consists to any extent in the renewal or renovation of the Christian then we could no longer speak of justification through faith alone. We could, however, speak of justification in faith alone.

To be justified through faith alone requires that the justification be complete prior to its reception through faith. To be justified in faith alone does not require this. The JDDJ consistently replaces the preposition "through" with the preposition "in" throughout the document. Let us consider just two such instances. The first is from "The Common Understanding of Justification" (JDDJ par 14-18) that forms the heart of the document.

By grace alone, in faith in Christ's saving work and not because of any merit on our part, we are accepted by God and receive the Holy Spirit, who renews our hearts while equipping and calling us to good works (JDDJ, par 15).

What does it mean to say that we are justified in faith? It could mean that we are justified in connection with faith or within the context of faith or by that which proceeds from faith or from an experience that is associated with faith or any number of other possibilities. It is even possible that it could mean that we are justified through faith. This, of course, is why the preposition "in" was used. It accommodates a variety of conflicting points of view. Both Catholics and Lutherans can speak of being justified "in" faith.

What is particularly troublesome is that this replacement of "through" with "in" is also done in those portions of the document in which the Lutherans are speaking for themselves and not together with their Catholic partners in dialogue. We read: "According to Lutheran understanding, God justifies sinners in faith alone (sola fide)" (JDDJ, par 26). Sola fide has never referred to God justifying sinners in faith alone. That is not what the term means. Why does it mean that now?

The replacement of justification through faith with justification in faith was a critical concession by the Lutherans. This prepositional change represents Lutheran acquiescence to the Roman Catholic insistence that the divine imputation by which we are justified is not the reckoning to us of the obedience of Christ. But if it is not, we are not truly righteous. Only Christ's righteousness is genuine. If what God achieves within us becomes the essence of that righteousness that God reckons to us, Christ is no longer our righteousness. Faith is no longer the purely receptive organ by which justification becomes our own. The Lutheran doctrine is overthrown.

Sinners need a real righteousness that exists outside of them and is perfect apart from their experience or faith. Sinners sin. That is what they do. They do what is in their nature to do. To deny that the inclination to sin is indeed sin is to ignore the sinner's deepest need. We need forgiveness at the very core of our being. Without it we will either fall into despair or con ourselves into thinking that what God calls sin is not really sin. It is precisely the desire or inclination to evil that needs to be forgiven. Forgiveness may not be partial. If it is, it is useless. Only the divine reckoning of the obedience-wrought righteousness of Jesus is sufficient. It is sufficient for faith. It is the foundation of faith. It defines faith as pure receptivity. What else could faith be when Jesus Christ, the Righteous, has already done and suffered all that God required of us? Only such a purely receptive faith can flower into genuinely good deeds. Their true virtue and value are seen only in the divine reckoning. This reckoning graciously replaces our disobedience with Christ's obedience.

How important is this? It is the most important thing in the world. It is the truth in light of which all of God's revealed truth must be understood. This is the truth of our reconciliation with our Creator. Knowing this truth is to know that we are indeed righteous before the God who made us. It is to know that we Christians are indeed a communion of saints whose holiness cannot be ruined by human failure and sin. Knowing this article of justification in its purity is to know that in which the true unity of Christ's church consists. To compromise on the central article of Christian doctrine for the sake of peace with Rome is a bad trade. It is not worth it.


[1].          "On Justification" Document No. 3 Fourth Assembly of the Lutheran World Federation 30 July-11 August 1963 Helsinki, Finland. Reprinted by Concordia Theological Seminary Press, Fort Wayne, IN, 6-7.

[2].          Ibid., 27.

[3].          "Justification by Faith: Lutherans and Catholics in Dialogue VII," H. George Anderson, T. Austin Murphy, and Joseph A. Burgess, eds. (Minneapolis: Augsburg Publishing House, 1985), 58.

[4].          Ibid., 47.

[5].          From www.traditionalmass.org.

[6].          "Two Languages of Salvation: The Lutheran-Catholic Joint Declaration" First Things, December, 1999.

[7].          http://archive.elca.org/ecumenical/ecumenicaldialogue/romancatholic/jddj/Ecclesial_Reflections.html.

[8].          Published by the CTCR of the LCMS in 1999.

[9].          http://www.elca.org/Who-We-Are/Our-Three-Expressions/Churchwide-Organization/Ecumenical-and-Inter-Religious-Relations/Bilateral-Conversations/Lutheran-Roman-Catholic/Joint-Declaration/Ecclesial-Reflections.aspx.

[10].         Canons and Decrees of the Council of Trent, H. J. Schroeder, trsl. (St. Louis and London: B. Herder Book Company, 1941), 23.

[11].         AE 32, 224.

[12].         Citations from the Lutheran Confessions are taken from Kolb-Wengert The Book of Concord: the Confessions of the Evangelical Lutheran Church (Augsburg Fortress, 2000).

[13].         Catechism of the Catholic Church (Mahwah, NJ: Paulist Press, 1994), 482.

 

A Response to Jack Kilcrease

The following is a response to Jack Kilcrease's article:

Evangelical and Catholic?: The ‘Conservative' Reformation's Scriptural Principle and the Catholicity of the Gospel

Response by Paul R. Hinlicky, Tise Professor of Lutheran Studies, Roanoke College, Salem VA  

I should be flattered by the extravagant attention Dr. Kilcrease has paid to my article from 1999.[1] It is in any case interesting for me to be criticized from the theological Right-an uncommon experience for me in the ELCA. Thanks to the editor's gracious invitation to respond, I have a precious opportunity to offer amplifications and clarifications on my theological project to friends in Lutheranism outside my own troubled denomination.

 

Since Kilcrease makes such a big to-do about my supposed affiliations, readers deserve to hear straight from the horse's mouth. First, I don't know if the theologians around Pro Ecclesia would so confidently count me as one of their fellow travelers, as does Kilcrease.

Truth be told, I have found myself less inclined in recent years to use the party slogan, "evangelical catholic," even though I do not renounce it. As for "gospel-reductionism," that accusation takes me back thirty years-though I would be lying to say it fills me with nostalgia for my youth when my church imploded. I suspect that certain Elertians and Fordeans today-who really are guilty of this reductive move-would likewise not be happy to regard me as one of their own. I hold in distinction from them the primacy of the gospel narrative concerning Jesus Christ, not the primacy of an existentially moving contemporary word of liberation. For what it is worth, in short, I don't have any other purpose in my theological thinking than to be a catholic or ecumenical theologian in the tradition of Luther, let the chips fall as they may.

Personally speaking, the unkindest cut of all is Kilcrease's allegation of my "ignorance" of the theological tradition of Lutheran Orthodoxy. I have just published with Dennis Bielfeldt and Mickey Mattox a book on Luther's late disputations on the Trinity,[2] and before that a major study under the editorship of Oswald Bayer on Luther's Disputatio de divinitate et humanitate Christi.[3] I am about to publish a major study, Paths Not Taken: Fates of Theology from Luther through Leibniz.[4] I trust that upon a careful study of these more recent efforts Kilcrease's premature judgment about my "ignorance" (not to be confused with my critical reception) of Lutheran Orthodoxy will be rectified. In any event, the "perplexity" Kilcrease experiences in interpreting my 1999 article results from his own polemical procedure, as we shall see, not my alleged "ignorance."

I want to get to the heart of the matter Kilcrease has raised-my proposed revision of the Lutheran doctrine of Holy Scripture away from the general Protestant teaching of "Bible alone." Kilcrease gets the gist of this: sola scriptura, understood as an unmediated Word from God (thus operating monergistically) yet expressed through the many human words of the biblical authors. This all self-destructs in the sense that it generates multiple, contradictory readings; thus rendering Scripture itself incoherent and producing the corresponding Protestant sectarianism. What is controversial about that? It was, I recall, Hermann Sasse who noted that for Lutherans it is not the Bible, but the Bible rightly interpreted which bears authority in the Church, as the norm by which fidelity to Jesus Christ and his gospel is tested. If one grants the latter, it is not "Bible alone," but the Bible with the tradition of its right interpretation to which the Lutheran Confessions make claim. I agree with this.

What I propose (prima Scriptura) is professedly an innovation within the tradition of Lutheran theology, which had come in the course of anti-Catholic polemics to speak like the Reformed of sola Scriptura. This happened by extending the "exclusive particle" from soteriology to epistemology, that is, from the original use to modify grace, faith and Christ in the doctrine of justification to the Bible as the written Word of God in a general doctrine of revelation or inspiration. With this move the Bible became the sole and miraculous source of information about all sorts of things, such that the gospel cannot be discussed, let alone set the agenda for discussion, until the credibility of the Bible is first determined. Couple this move with further borrowing of the correct teaching of monergism in regard to salvation, and the credibility of the Bible has to be gained by sheer fiat: The Bible is true because God says it is true. End of discussion.

This question-begging move skewers everything. Kilcrease, as it seems to me, comes perilously close to the logic of Protestant fundamentalism: "God said it; I believe it; that settles it." He simply jettisons the entire problem of hermeneutics in dogmatic theology: "Yes, God has said it, but do you understand it? Why has God said it? To whom has God said it? What kind of literature is this? How can you understand it to be God's Word when it is manifestly the human words of Peter, John or Paul, etc. handed on in the church?"

My proposed revision, then, is a needed and legitimate one, not only because it retrieves Luther's more original conception of the authority of the Scriptures in the church as the Spirit-designated canon of the gospel, but also because it requires under the conditions of our times renewal of the theological task of interpretation of the Bible in the church in dogmatic theology.

I cannot in passing do other than protest Kilcrease's caricature of my 1999 article and the method by which he comes to it.

It ought to discomfit readers to learn that I simply do not recognize what I wrote ten years ago in the portrait Kilcrease provides them. I urge readers to study the article for themselves. They will learn that its goal-admittedly Quixotic in hindsight-was for the Lutheran World Federation to adopt an ecclesiology of communion. They will also discover that the eventual unity with Rome which I envisioned in 1999 would have to come at the cost of Rome's renunciation of Obermann's Tradition II-a cost that has hardly escaped the notice of Roman Catholic readers of the article!

But one would never know such things from Kilcrease's account, with the result that my statements are torn out of context and interpreted apart from the guiding light of express authorial intention. In spite of his announced desire "to give a fair exposition of the perspective of our opponents," we are instead treated to an exercise in the Procrustean Bed Method of polemical theology: a preconceived framework (the "Conservative Reformation's Scripture Principle") is deployed to weigh and find wanting statements ripped out of context. So a straw man is erected and slain, but the real target is missed.

It would be tedious to itemize all Kilcrease's misrepresentations, so let these few stand for the whole: I am said to argue:

"the rejection of the scriptural principle" (not the revision of it)

 

to regard "the canon [as] a mere invention of the church" (not the Spirit-guided reception of the apostolic and prophetic books)

to follow "the meta-narrative of Neo-orthodoxy...that Luther's principle of ‘gospel authority' was betrayed by the Lutheran scholastics" (not that the "Bible alone" doctrine proved incapable of sustaining Luther's gospel authority in the passage to modernity)

to hold that "the Word...is an inert object" (not that the Incarnate, proclaimed and written Word is vulnerable to abuse and misinterpretation-the very reason why we need dogmatic theology!).

In sum I am found guilty of a "rather exaggerated attempt to make up for [a] low view of Scripture" (not trying, in good faith, to resolve a paralyzing confusion in Lutheran theology of the Word, who is the second person of Trinity, incarnate for us and for our salvation and proclaimed in the church through the gospel, with the text of the Bible taken by itself as a miraculous statement of God's opinion about all sorts of things). I could go on. It ought to come as a relief when Kilcrease acknowledges that "not all that Hinlicky has said is necessarily wrong," but alas, since I have not said and do not hold most of the things which Kilcrease imputes to me, instead of relief I sense only waves of confusion on top of confusion.

I teach my students this principle: "You are not allowed to criticize the opinion of an opponent until you can state the opinion with such clarity, insight and sympathy that your opponent, upon reading your account, would exclaim, ‘That's it! I couldn't have said it better myself!' Then and only then may criticism begin, because then and only then are you engaged with the real opponent and not a convenient fiction of your own imagination." I submit this principle to Dr. Kilcrease for his earnest consideration.

At the same time, I am grateful to my opponent for provoking me to defend the doctrine of Holy Scripture, the "prophetic and apostolic writings of the Old and New Testaments, as...the pure, clear fountain of Israel, which alone is the one true guiding principle, according to which all teachers and teachings are to be judged and evaluated."[5] The metaphor of the fountain here is the telling one. Christians do not, or should not, hold an Islamic theology of inspiration, in which the angel instructs Mohammed to set aside all human thoughts and simply recite the divine words. Instead, the actual human, historical testimony of prophets and apostles engaged in the history of their own times in speaking the word of the Lord are written down, preserved, collected, and tested against other writings claiming similar revelation or inspiration in a process of holy paradosis. It is "holy" in that, as a better doctrine of inspiration would rightly teach, the work of the Spirit is to be discerned in, and not apart from, this canonical process of handing on the word of the Lord from one generation to the next amid the claims of false prophets and false messiahs (Mk 13:22). So understood, everything depends on grasping the criteria by which the Spirit rules one writing in and another out.

In this light we would see that the particular books of the New Testament together form a Christological decision against Docetism; that the union of the New and Old Testaments together form a monotheistic decision against Gnostic dualism; that the perception of the one divine economy of salvation engendered by the emerging Genesis-to-Revelation canon form a Trinitarian decision against Arian Unitarianism; that the cross of the Incarnate Son at the center of the canonical narrative therefore teaches against Nestorianism the unity of the Person of Christ such that "one of the Trinity suffered" (that is the teaching of the 5th Ecumenical Council).

The hermeneutical function of the Reformation doctrine of justification likewise makes sense in light of this continuing canonical process under the Spirit's promised guidance to lead to all truth by recalling the word of Jesus. The Reformation brings a new insight, not into what the gospel is, but rather how it is to be rightly used: to tell (or receive) Christ (as identified in the ecumenical dogmas' interpretation of Scripture) in such a way that self-entrusting faith suffices to have him with all his blessings.[6]

The foregoing conception of the process of Scriptural tradition in the light of the gospel makes a definite correlation between the Spirit's first (prima) formation of the Holy Scriptures and the Spirit's on-going formation of God's holy people in the course of time: it is here in the church that the Scriptures are received and recognized.[7] This location of the Scripture in the church as formative of the church is hermeneutically decisive. This is how I mean prima. The canonical Scriptures are the primal fountain, but the fountain flows! Indeed, the flowing is the Spirit's point!

Who then has a low view of Scripture or thinks the Word "inert"? I certainly do hope that the "church grows to become Church in a more full sense!" I don't mind invoking the Puritan divine who held "that God has yet more truth to break out of his Holy Word." None of us have arrived; we are all still on the way.

Given this location of our theological work among the pilgrim people of God between the already and the not-yet, Kilcrease is forced to concede that I would hold that "the ‘gospel' and the Scriptures which witness to it have a regulating effect on what can be regarded as legitimate." But Kilcrease dismisses this correlation of the Holy Scriptures with the Holy Church by the Holy Spirit, however, as a "circular argument." How, he asks, "would one be able to criticize the bishops and subsequent traditions of the visible Church on the basis of the gospel?"

Good question! And he is right to infer that in one sense any such criticism would be "like sawing off the branch on which we are standing." I do think that the kinds of radical criticism of church tradition that have evolved into liberal Protestantism "saw off the branch." I do think that right kind of criticism of the bishops and subsequent traditions are pruning operations on a common root and tree and branch of faith, neither the radical reinvention of Christianity in liberalism, nor the radical repristination claimed by Kilcrease's sola scriptura conservativism.

What matters is that the Scripture principle is not made into a blind appeal to arbitrary authority, but rather that one can and should give good reasons theologically why the particular books of the Bible are included in the canon and how they are accordingly to weigh in judging doctrine. For theology in Luther's tradition the reasons which count as good derive from canonical Scripture's chief content, the good news of Christ the Crucified's Easter victory. This is God's authoritative Word, which authorizes the Christian community, calling God's people out of the world and into the coming kingdom, making them by faith the ek-klesia.

That this is Luther's teaching in the Latin Preface to his collected writings, to which the Formula appealed, seems to me undeniable. As such it specifies the sense of the claim that "God's Word alone ought to be and remain the only guiding principle and rule of all teaching," which, as the Solid Declaration immediately goes on to clarify, "does not mean that other good, useful, pure books that interpret Holy Scripture, refute errors and explain the articles of faith are to be rejected."[8]

I hold this position, but I hold it critically at the beginning of the 21st century. That means that I have to hold it under certain conditions that did not obtain for the historical Luther or Lutheran Orthodoxy. Among these conditions are inescapable cultural facts, such as the rise of the scientific world-view, including the historical criticism of the Bible. I do not invest a lot theologically in this fact, as theological liberals do. Historical criticism is in fact under a lot of pressure today from post-modernist critiques of its pretensions to objectivity and neutrality. Yet it remains a fact that we cannot read the Bible after historical criticism (if ever we could have) like Muslims read the Holy Quran: as only, uniquely, miraculously a word directly from God without human mediation. Any such theory of "recitation" is impossible for us after historical criticism.[9]

Instead we today have to read the books of the Bible first of all as Paul's, or Mark's, or John's historically specific words to their own communities, and only then with all the others together in the grand narrative constructed by the Spirit through the church of the world's course from Genesis to Revelation; that is, in the perspective of the divine economy of salvation, bearing unique and authoritative witness to Jesus Christ as the good reason for the church's existence. Other uses of the Bible, including putatively orthodox ones for arbitrary, authoritarian proof-texting of opinions about anything under the sun, are abuses of the Bible as the Spirit's book "from faith for faith" in the light of the gospel.

Kilcrease takes offense when in this context I say that the word of Scripture is "vulnerable," even though after a lot of rhetoric, he concedes the substance of my point and then comments: "one can do very little about that." I very much beg to differ. Dogmatic theology is what we can do about that, the renewal of which as a contemporary task under contemporary conditions (not the repristination of some favored 17th century authors) is an urgent need in the confused world of American Christianity.


[1].          I wrote this article on the basis of my Habilitation study on the Lutheran-Catholic dialogue while teaching in Bratislava and had it published there as Buducnost Cirkvi: Co by pre nas malo znamenat rimskokatolicky-evanjelicky dialog? ("The Future of the Church: What the Lutheran-Catholic Dialogue Ought to Mean for Us," Tranoscius, 1999).

[2].             Paul Hinlicky, Dennis Bielfeldt, Mickey L. Mattox, The Substance of the Faith: Luther's Doctrinal Theology for Today (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 2008).

[3].          Oswald Bayer, Creator est Creatura: Luthers Christologie als Lehre von der Idiomenkommunikation, Benjamin Gleede, ed., (Berlin: Walter de Gruyter, 2007).

[4].          Paul Hinlicky, Paths Not Taken: Fates of Theology from Luther through Leibniz (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2009).

[5].          Robert Kolb, Timothy J. Wengert, eds., The Book of Concord (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 2002), 527.

[6].          I am in negotiation now with Fortress Press for a new book, The Theo-logic of Creedal Christianity, which will make the argument sketched in this paragraph in detail.

[7].          Thanks, in part, to the ministry of oversight which aims to teach in continuity with the prophets and apostles, that is the kind of "evangelical episcopacy" that Melanchthon envisioned in Augustana XXVIII. Kilcrease makes a big deal about my supposed embrace of apostolic succession, when I have repeatedly endorsed the highly qualified language of the Lutheran-Episcopal dialogue to speak of apostolic succession as a "sign, not a guarantee." I no more hold to a superstitious view of apostolic succession as a guarantee of doctrine than I hold a superstitious view of Scripture as a guarantee of doctrine-both for the same reason, namely, a blind appeal to arbitrary authority not theologically warranted by the evangelical criteria.

[8].          The Book of Concord, 527 (emphasis added).

[9].          In my view, notions of recitation or dictation were constructed during the Middle Ages in response to increasing knowledge of the Quran's criticism of Jewish and Christian Scripture for being corrupted by human additions to a pristine, original revelation.