“Because the foolishness of God is wiser than men, and the weakness of
God is stronger than men.” (1
Corinthians 1:25)
This simple principle is one of
the most profound truths that helps us navigate around all of the errors that
are in the world. The wisdom of this
world cannot compare to the Maker of this world. The weakness of God is also stronger than any
man. Why settle for less when the Lord
offers life in Him? Come to the One who
made all wisdom and has all strength and learn from Him what life is to be
like.
Lord, You offer wisdom through Your Word by the power of the Holy
Spirit. In the greatest demonstration of
strength in weakness on the cross, You conquered death, the recompense of
sin. Guide me, O Lord, in the way of
truth that I may now and always abide with You wherever that may lead. Guide me according to Your goodness to look
at You and live in the truth You have revealed for all ages.
Lord Jesus, You did not resist
those who mistreated You, but died for them as well on the cross. The world calls this foolish, but You have
used what the world calls foolishness to make our salvation possible. Guide me now and always to see that in You
alone is the hope for every age, that I may live into the promises You give to
those who are faithful. Lead me now and
always, O Lord. Amen.
Devotion for Thursday, November 14, 2019
written by Jeffray Greene | November 15, 2019
“For indeed Jews ask for signs and Greeks search for wisdom; but we
preach Christ crucified, to Jews a stumbling block and to Gentiles foolishness,
but to those who are the called, both Jews and Greeks, Christ the power of God
and the wisdom of God.” (1 Corinthians
1:22-24)
These ideas still circulate
today. There are those who await
miraculous things, those who think they can figure things out and those who
follow the Lord of all: different times, but the same pursuits. Be led by the promise of the One who is
forever and see that there is nothing new under the sun. Christ is the power of God and in Him alone
will you find true wisdom. Follow the
Lord.
Lord, teach me to open myself to Your Word and all that You give. Guide me according to Your goodness to see
that in You alone is the hope of every age.
Lead me according to Your goodness to walk in Your grace and seek the
wisdom You give. Help me now and always
to turn to You first and neither seek this world’s wisdom or its signs and
wonders. Lead me according to Your
purpose.
Lord Jesus, You performed many signs and wonders and yet many did not believe. Guide me, O Lord, in Your goodness that I would be one who believes despite neither signs nor wonders. Lead me into the eternal truth You have revealed once for all and the salvation You have prepared through the cross. Let me not be worried what the world calls me otherwise than Your follower. Amen.
Devotion for Wednesday, November 13, 2019
written by Jeffray Greene | November 15, 2019
“Where is the wise man? Where is the scribe? Where is the debater of
this age? Has not God made foolish the wisdom of the world? For since in the wisdom of God the world
through its wisdom did not come to know God, God was well-pleased through the
foolishness of the message preached to save those who believe.” (1 Corinthians 1:20-21)
Listen to the noise in our age. “Go here, do this or that, believe what you
want.” It is noise that may bring
momentary pleasure, but accomplishes nothing.
Be guided by the truth revealed once for all through Christ, who alone
is the Savior. Be a fool for Christ, for
what difference will it make what others think when You stand before the One
through whom all things have their being.
Lord, help me unlearn the foolishness of this age to which I cling and
replace it with the eternal truth You have revealed. Guide me according to Your goodness to see
that in You alone is the hope of every age.
Lead me in the way of everlasting life that I may now and always abide
in You as You abide in me. Teach me to be
bold in faith that I may share with others what You have shared with me.
Lord Jesus, You said, “Come,
follow me.” Help me this day to follow
You wherever You lead. Guide me in the
Holy Spirit to speak what You give me to speak.
Help me always to be willing to appear foolish in this age that the
truth of the cross may always be proclaimed by me. Let me stand with You always that I may stand
in the presence of the Father. Grant me wisdom
to walk in the narrow way this day.
Amen.
Whoever said it, said it well:
without the absolution—“I forgive you all your sins for Jesus’
sake”—Lutheranism has no particular reason to exist. Every issue of the Reformation, from
preaching and the sacraments to papal authority, revolved around the bedrock
confession that sinners receive mercy through Christ alone. Luther put it clearly in the Large Catechism:
“Everything, therefore, in the Christian Church is ordered to the end that we
shall daily obtain there nothing but the forgiveness of sin” (Large Catechism,
The Creed). Forgiveness is God’s
mission, and there is no clearer statement of it than the absolution. If we want to talk renewal, both in the
Church and in society, it must begin with that justifying word.
For Jesus’ Sake
I see a video of prisoners in
Madagascar crowding around a Lutheran pastor for worship. What brings them? I imagine, perhaps wrongly, that they are
like the incarcerated men and women to whom my congregation has
ministered. Some of them come because
they want a good word, while others are there to look good or because it’s a
break from the cell. Despite such mixed motives,
they also come knowing something basic about the faith: it’s supposed to be
good for people with problems. It’s
supposed to welcome people like them. Why
do they think so? Where could such a
rumor have started? “I forgive you all
your sins for Jesus’ sake.” The Holy
Spirit has fitted those words like a virus to the mixed up ideas and motives of
men. It seeps through the cracks of all
our walls as a day-long conference on dismantling patriarchy never could.
But now I come to a church near you, the one that promises to welcome everyone. I spend 65 minutes there trying to be invisible, as I’m on vacation and don’t feel social. Yet where I usually fail at being invisible, something else succeeds at doing so perfectly well: “I forgive you.” Where did it go? Is it still around here somewhere? Why, yes, it’s buried between two hard covers the color of a Thanksgiving relish, and it stayed there, too. There was a lot of splashing about at the font — it’s the “Thanksgiving for Baptism,” the bulletin says — but no one ever heard what it’s all about. Is renewal possible here?
The absolution is the renewal, for both church and society, for several reasons. First, it renews the church because it puts the church back where it belongs: in front of the empty tomb, facing the wide-open future that shines in the face of Christ. Like the empty tomb, forgiveness doesn’t erase the past. To the contrary, it carries the past forward — He’s still the man who died on the cross, wounds and all — but in such a way that this person with such a past may yet live, love, be worthy, and even rule. What excitement! What release!
Lost in Jesus
So if we want to renew the church’s mind on the matter of sexual ethics, for example, then we need to start talking forgiveness into that subject. That is, we must show more than how the New-Old Lies, with all their denial of family and creation, drift from the Biblical prescriptions. We must also carry those prescriptions to their end and show how the New-Old Lies corrupt the proclamation of forgiveness. Did Jesus die for this or that behavior? If so, then He died to forgive it, and we must contend for such — Christ’s honor demands it. “I cannot say it isn’t a sin, for then I would be stealing Christ’s glory from Him. He died to forgive it, you see. It’s in His hands, not yours or mine.” The sin must get lost in Jesus somewhere between Gabbatha and the grave, preached as sunken into His flesh and buried with Him, so that it’s no longer God’s to condemn nor ours to practice. It’s all on Jesus now—you can’t have it back!
That kind of absolution-thinking keeps opening a new future to the same old past. It disarms those who would make our debates a matter of old vs. new, letter vs. spirit, Pharisees vs. Jesus People (the binary couplings that even revisionists can’t kick, apparently), and turns our controverted subjects towards God’s mission, the speaking of the Gospel into every sin and circumstance. Most importantly, it passes on the rumor that first spread like fire among the apostles: God’s in love with you, and isn’t counting sins against you. This faith is good for us people with problems. It gives us a future with God and with each other and all of creation—“for wherever forgiveness is, there also are life and salvation” (Small Catechism, The Sacrament of the Altar).
Infectious Rumor of Mercy
Yet this absolution, coming from God, may renew things well beyond the church, because God’s goodness always seems to spill over its borders. The absolution carries in itself more than a new future and a happy Lord. It carries also the stamp of that Lord’s virtue and wholesome way. To trust forgiveness is to trust patience and compassion—who can forgive a sinner without taking the time to sympathize with him? And for Christians to trust and preach forgiveness is to trust and preach Christ crucified, the very picture of God “counting others better” than Himself (Philippians 2:3). When that image and rumor of mercy start permeating Christians, and Christians start seeping into society and infecting it, they take that virtue and ethic with them.
I read a poll recently that said
most people think America stands on the brink of a civil war. The sexes, too, are increasingly estranged,
as young people avoid dating either because they fear relationships or just
getting arrested and sued. What we do as
children becomes national news and a cause for mockery or hate. How can it be otherwise in a land that has
mostly stopped hearing absolution? Roman
Catholics find they can commune just as well without it, and Protestants are
busy casting new visions for ministry or splashing at the font or running a
stewardship drive. With the gradual
disappearance of absolution and its attendant preaching, so also fades the best
image we have of patience, compassion, humility, and the thirst for reconciliation—and
if absolution fades, can Lutheranism shine?
Renewal in Absolution
I include this latter reflection about
societal renewal because I know that cultural as well as churchly issues lie
heavy on the hearts of Lutheran CORE folk.
I commend to you the thought that both society and church will find
their renewal in the absolution that we alone may speak: “I forgive you all
your sins for Jesus’ sake.” Lose that absolution, and you lose the point
of being Lutheran. Lutheranism is simply being God’s church, and
God’s church exists to preach and believe forgiveness. Speaking, preaching, and believing it, for
sure, remain the priority. Consider also
what the absolution teaches about God’s will for His creation and who you are
and what life really is, or how it delivers both righteousness and holiness of
living. Any Christian or church could
benefit from such reflection on God’s most important word.
And a good place to start might be,
you know, actually going to confession and hearing it.
Obsessed with Diversity
written by Dennis Nelson | November 15, 2019
There were several things in the October 10 News Story about the September 26-30 meeting of the ELCA’s Conference of Bishops that I found to be most interesting, significant, and troubling. A link to that news release can be found here.
First,
I assume that the ELCA Conference of Bishops’ highest value and greatest joy must
be the dynamic that was highlighted in the title for the news story as well as
what is emphasized in the second paragraph.
The title is “ELCA Conference of Bishops welcomes greater diversity.” The Rev. William O. Gafkjen, chairperson, described
the conference as “more diverse in more ways than it has ever been.” He also referred to the ELCA as “a church
unaccustomed to such blessed diversity.”
Evidently
the ELCA Conference of Bishops’ highest value and greatest joy is not the joy
of heaven, which is described in Luke 15 as being like the rejoicing of a
shepherd who finds the lost sheep, the woman who finds the lost coin, and the
father whose son has returned home.
Instead their highest value and greatest joy is diversity.
ELCA and the Diversity of Opinion
Second, considering the recent ELCA Churchwide Assembly, I wonder how much diversity actually exists in the ELCA. Sure, the Conference of Bishops might now have more racial and ethnic diversity in their membership than ever before, but is there also a diversity of opinion? Is a diversity of opinion even welcome in the ELCA? Because orthodox students at ELCA seminaries tell me about being bullied and even silenced, I would say, “No.” Two resolutions that were voted on at the Churchwide Assembly – to approve the social statement on “Faith, Sexism, and Justice” and the “Declaration of Inter-Religious Commitment” – received a resounding “Yes” from at least 97% of the voting members. Reading that, I wonder, is there really any diversity of opinion in the ELCA? Would a diversity of opinion be welcome? Would it be tolerated? I would say, “No.” An amendment was proposed to the “Declaration of Inter-Religious Commitment,” which would have removed the statement, “We must be careful about claiming to know God’s judgments regarding another religion.” That proposed amendment was based upon the clear words of Jesus in John 14: 6 – “I am the way, the truth, and the life; no one comes to the Father except through me.” When I read about how discussion of that amendment was almost immediately cut off and the amendment was soundly defeated, I say, “A diversity of opinion is not welcome in the ELCA.”
Diversity Among ELCA Bishops?
The 2009 social statement, “Human Sexuality: Gift and Trust,” described four different views on same sex relationships and stated that all four views would be honored and treated with respect within “this church.” We now have a bishop – Bishop Leila Ortiz of the Metro Washington D. C. Synod – who accepts polyamory (three or more partners). A link to a video where she speaks in an accepting way about that kind of a relationship can be found here. That certainly is a kind of diversity. But is there also a diversity among the Conference of Bishops so that at least one bishop holds to and advocates for traditional views? If there is, why do we never hear from that bishop? Is that kind of diversity either not present, not allowed, or not allowed to be expressed?
Not Equal
Third,
Bishop Gafkjen describes the results of this “blessed diversity” in this way. “It uncovers assumptions, challenges
disparities and inequities, and calls for repentance and transformation” in the
church. What in the world does that
mean? Whatever it means, I am certain it
does not refer to the “disparities and inequities” of the way in which the last
ten years the ELCA has only supported and promoted the most revisionist views
of human sexuality. It has not shown
equal “profound respect for the conscience-bound belief” (“Human Sexuality: Gift
and Trust,” page 21) of those who hold to traditional views, even though those
who hold to traditional views were led to expect such “profound respect,” based
upon the language of the 2009 social statement.
No Mention of Report
Fourth, I find it absolutely astounding that there is no mention at all that the Conference of Bishops discussed at all the recent report from the ELCA’s Office of Research and Evaluation, and the article by Dr. Dwight Zscheile of Luther Seminary, that was based upon that report. Dr. Zscheile’s article is entitled “Will the ELCA Be Gone in 30 Years?” Those documents reveal some rather shocking numbers based upon current trends in the ELCA. A link to Dr. Zscheile’s article can be found here. Is it really possible that membership in the ELCA could drop from just under 3.5 million in 2017 to just over 66,500 in the year 2050? Is it really possible that average Sunday morning attendance across the entirety of the ELCA could actually drop from 899,000 in 2017 to less than 16,000 in 2041? Could the ELCA basically cease to exist within one generation? Dr. Zscheile writes, “For all the energy spent on trying to turn things around over the past 40 years, there is little to show.”
I understand that this study came out last spring, so I find it absolutely astounding that there is no mention that either the Churchwide Assembly or the Conference of Bishops even brought up the report. Rather what are they doing? Celebrating their “blessed diversity.” Reminds me of the definition of insanity – thinking that you can get different and/or better results just continuing to do the same thing. It would be like the crew of the Titanic celebrating their “blessed diversity” even after the ship ran into an iceberg.
Fifth, I find the comment from Presiding Bishop Elizabeth Eaton in the third paragraph to be very revealing. She said, “I am convinced that the decisions we took were . . . not a flash-in-the-pan, reflexive attempt to seem ‘relevant.’” Why would she make a statement like that unless she was concerned that that is exactly what the decisions were or that is an accusation that she heard?
Sixth,
I find it astounding what she says next.
She quotes from Acts 15: 28, which is part of the letter from the
Conference in Jerusalem to the “believers of Gentile origin.” “It seemed good to the Holy Spirit and to
us.” How in the world could she make a
claim like that – that the Holy Spirit agrees with the ELCA?
Go and Make Disciples
Compare the book of Acts and the letters of Paul, which are full of references to Jesus and to God, with the summary of actions from the ELCA Churchwide Assembly, where there is no mention of Jesus and only one mention of God. A link to that summary can be found here. Compare the clear message of the Bible that it does matter whether people know, love, believe in, and put their trust in Jesus with the words of the “Declaration of Inter-Religious Commitment.” That document says, “We must be careful about claiming to know God’s judgments regarding another religion.” The final words of Jesus to his followers were, “Go and make disciples of all nations.” According to the “Declaration of Inter-Religious Commitment,” our main role is not to do that, but only to love and serve our neighbor.
Cause of the Decline
How
can someone say that the Holy Spirit agrees with the ELCA when the ELCA is saying
that the Christian faith has nothing unique that is important and essential to
offer to the world? Again I would like
to quote from Dr. Zscheile’s article mentioned above. Dwight Zscheile and his colleague, Michael
Binder, give as one of the ways of naming the root cause of the ELCA’s precipitous
decline, “We aren’t clear about what’s distinctive about being Christian.” If the ELCA believes that it has nothing
unique that is important and essential to offer to the world and if the ELCA is
not clear about what is distinctive about being Christian, then how could the
ELCA hope to experience the power of God and how could the ELCA say that the
Holy Spirit agrees?
No Presentations on Traditional Views
Finally, the news story mentions that the Conference of Bishops received a training session by the executive director of Reconciling Works, that focused on sexual orientation, gender identity, and gender expression. Just as there was no representation of traditional views at the 2018 ELCA Youth Gathering, where a transgender advocate and two members of the “Naked and Unashamed” movement were among the keynote speakers and one of the most prominent voices in the ELCA led 30,000 young people in a chant rejecting traditional views as a lie, so the Conference of Bishops once again receives no presentation from those who hold to traditional views. If they were to do so, would that be just too much “blessed diversity”?
Recap of Encuentro 2019
written by Keith Forni | November 15, 2019
“Build Yourselves Up in Your Most Holy Faith” Jude 20
“…Mantenganse en el amor de Dios, edificandose sobre la base de su santisima fe…” Judas 20
On Holy Cross Day, Saturday September 14th over seventy lay leaders, pastors and neighbors gathered at St. Timothy Lutheran Church in Chicago’s Hermosa neighborhood for the inter-Lutheran “Encuentro” for Hispanic Latino Ministries, sponsored annually by Lutheran CORE.
Mariachi Tamazula Juvenil
Encuentro — “encounter”– is an apt name for this event. In coming together, participants convene in the name of the Triune God — Father, Son and Holy Spirit — and encounter one another through a full day of fellowship, prayer, learning, reflection and conversation. Some who attend have little or no experience in Spanish language or bilingual Parish Ministry but they come to encounter… to listen to and dialogue with those who have served in such contexts. All who participate meet one another in a hospitable atmosphere which provides for joyful exchange of culturally contextual, Christ-centered ministries and resources. Consider for example the spirited celebration of the Misa Panamericana, led by Mariachi Tamazula Juvenil, in a sanctuary built by Lutheran’s of Norwegian heritage.
Lutherans of various denominational bodies ELCA, LCMS, NALC and LCMC have taken part in the Encuentro over the years, defying a prevailing pattern of denominational separation. Lutheran cousins come together around the power of Christ’s Great Commission (Matthew 28). In Chicago, this pattern of inter-relational ministry in Hispanic Latino neighborhoods actually reflects the tone of cooperation shown by earlier Lutheran generations in the 1960s and 70s when the first Lutheran Latino Ministries were being planted in the city.
Dr. Maxwell Johnson
Dr. Maxwell Johnson, an ELCA pastor and professor at the University of Notre Dame, presented “Baptism: Walking Wet in the Via Crucis.” That topic coupled wonderfully with the rededication of a long out-of-use baptismal font, now placed in St Timothy’s sanctuary for sacramental use.
Participating in that rededication was the Rev. Yehiel Curry, Bishop of the Metropolitan Chicago Synod ELCA, who expressed delight at being able to attend a portion of the gathering –even if it was at the end of a very busy day. “I represent the entire Synod,” he noted, adding that congregations should anticipate visitation by him and his staff on the Lord’s Day. “I will tell my staff that Sunday is a work day for us.”
“The Virgin of Guadalupe: Not Just for Roman Catholics Anymore” was Dr. Johnson’s afternoon address. At the heart of this Mexican apparition’s legacy is the story of “the God who cares for the lowly.” The Biblical touchstone for this tradition is the Magnificat: Mary’s song which exalts the Lord God and highlights His “casting down the mighty from their thrones and raising up those of low degree.”
This Encuentro, hosted by an ELCA / Lutheran CORE member parish in a neighborhood called “beautiful” (“Hermosa“) welcomes Lutheran believers by the power of the Holy Spirit to envision and experience church with an expanded embrace of racial diversity. This is a humbling privilege for those who are involved as it plays out against the trend of mainline churches like the ELCA which has shifted in membership from 92% white to 94% white in just three years from 2015 to 2018 according to the Rev. Chris Boerger, outgoing ELCA Secretary (see his 2019 Churchwide Assembly Report reference in “Living Lutheran,” September / October ’19).
Encuentros…. meetings… in culturally diverse neighborhood parishes can fortify the Church’s passion for her Lord’s Great Commission. Secretary Boerger has noted: “If there is to be a future for this denomination, we must pay attention to who is living in our neighborhood and our community.”
Just so, when encuentros with neighbors multiply and relationships within and beyond church walls grow, breakthrough moments can occur.
At the conclusion of Dr. Johnson’s presentation, one such neighbor, Genoveva, stood up and, in her native Spanish and surrounded by her family, invited all at the Encuentro to come to her home (just around the corner from St. Timothy) on December 11th for Advent songs, prayers, traditional tamales and champurado (a hot beverage) on the eve of the commemoration day for the Virgin of Guadalupe.
That’s an encuentro that is eagerly anticipated!
ELCA: Answer the Question!
written by Dennis Nelson | November 15, 2019
There
is a question I have asked several times, but I have been unable to get an
answer. The question is this –
How can the ELCA say that 2019 is the tenth anniversary of LGBTQIA+ persons’ being able to serve freely in the church when what was actually voted on and approved at the 2009 Churchwide Assembly was only the ordination of persons in publicly accountable, life-long, monogamous same gender relationships?
Recently
I was sitting at a table during lunch with several pastors from the synod in
which I have been rostered since retiring.
When I realized that one of the persons at the table was a member of the
synod council, I figured this was an opportunity to ask my question. So I did.
His reply was, “I am new to the synod council.” He then added, “That sounds like a question
for the bishop.” To which I responded,
“I have asked the bishop, but I did not get an answer.”
I
then asked another person at the table, who told me, “I was hoping that you
could answer that question.”
I asked a third person. His immediate response was, “Cognitive dissonance!” I answered, “I do not see how this could be cognitive dissonance, and who are you saying is having cognitive dissonance? The ELCA in its making a claim about a tenth anniversary? L, G, B, T, Q, I, A, or plus persons, who are now able to serve freely? Or people like me who are asking the question?”
He
never replied. Instead he said, “The
world has changed since 2009.” I said
that I agreed that the world has changed since 2009, but that does not change
what was voted on and approved in 2009.
He then argued, “Same sex marriage has become legal across the country
since 2009.” Again, I said that I agreed
that that has happened, but, again, I made the point that that did not change
what was actually voted on and approved in 2009.
He then said, “LGBTQIA+ persons’ being able to serve freely is the logical next step to what was approved in 2009.” To which I replied, “There were many back in 2009 who were concerned – and who were belittled for being concerned – that if the ordination of people in publicly accountable, lifelong, monogamous same gender relationships was approved, then that would lead to the approval of the ordination of other persons who were not eligible for ordination prior to 2009.” I then added, “There are many who believe that they were deceived. The vote was purposefully defined as being only about persons in publicly accountable, lifelong, monogamous same gender relationships in order to get enough votes to get the resolution approved. And then once the resolution was approved, then the description of who would now be eligible for ordination would be expanded.” He replied, “That would be an example of the hermeneutics of suspicion.” To which I agreed that, yes, many people were suspicious about what was being said back in 2009 versus what was intended for the future.
I
then asked him, “If the ELCA is now allowing LGBTQIA+ persons to serve freely
in the church, what is the standard by which the ELCA will decide what new
sexual identities, expressions, and behaviors – now identified by the “+” part
of LGBTQIA+ – would be approved and what would not be approved for ordination?” He did not have an answer, nor did he even seem
to feel that there was a reason to be concerned about and ask such a question. Rather what he said next was, “Where are you
from?” I was perceptive enough to
realize that the conversation was over.
Not Here to Be Boiled
written by Brett Jenkins | November 15, 2019
On August 25, 2010, at a meeting of Lutheran CORE that would at its close give birth to the separate organization of the North American Lutheran Church (NALC), I wrote this in my blog:
What the upcoming internet broadcasts and book are sure to fail to convey, however, is the sense of hopeful expectancy that characterizes these proceedings. The Spirit is definitely doing something amazing, as seemingly just the right people with just the precise expertise needed to tackle the issues before us as a church have been assembled from the disparate corners of North American Lutheranism. Not only has this been an immensely satisfying—though extremely challenging—couple of days intellectually, it has also been so emotionally and spiritually. … Simply put, it is humbling to be here.
Because
I had just taken a call at an ELCA church whose statement of faith aligned with
that of Lutheran CORE but who needed to yet have the conversation about whether
they could maintain that position within the ELCA, I would not join the ranks of
the NALC for another 5 years. When I
finally did become a pastor of the NALC, it felt nice to simply breathe easily
for a while; to not feel like I was fighting every aspect of the institution
that was supposed to help me proclaim the gospel just for the
opportunity to do so.
No More Easy Breathing
Nine years into the NALC’s
life, the time for breathing easy is over.
Oh, we seem to be handling
our inevitable disagreements healthfully, without a trace of the Politburo-style
ecclesiastical maneuvering we all experienced within the ELCA, where, to paraphrase
Orwell, it was clear that “some Christians are more equal than others.” There is also no hint of doctrinal departure
from Great Tradition Christianity or the revisionist hermeneutics that breed
the same—yet.
I add the “yet” in that last sentence not because I see it happening now but can foresee it happening before my funeral liturgy. I foresee this as I teach my confirmation class full of 7th and 8th graders and my Tuesday morning Bible study full of 70 and 80 year olds, because I see the vast distance between the experiential, intellectual, and imaginative worlds they inhabit. The older group are largely unaware of how different the world the young live in is from the one they grew up in and they are shocked when I acquaint them with some of its contours. The young are being trained by their schools, entertainment, and constant diet of technology to view the older as at best hopelessly out of touch with the self-evidently true and even scientifically “proven” categories of the new (liberal) orthodoxy. At worst, they are being trained to view them as oppressors to be forcefully sidelined, re-educated—and if necessary, silenced.
Oh, the latter, rage-filled
part of that progression will largely not come until their thorough catechesis
into the new civic religion at the collegiate level, but the foundations are being
laid far earlier. Six years ago, I had a
youth group member inform me that she was an “LGBT ally,” and many more former
youth group members have done the same.
Some of these had attended the local evangelical Christian high
school. Others were attending an
evangelical fellowship in college and were even engaged in active Christian
outreach on campus.
Billboard in the heart of Pennsylvania Dutch Country
Could I have imagined such a reality, coming of age in the 1980’s? Could my Bible study participants, doing the same in Eisenhower’s America, have imagined it? Could the founders of the NALC imagine, less than a decade ago, that a local fire company would raise money by offering as bingo prizes not homemade jams and pies but sex toys or the billboard pictured with this article, planted in the heart of historically Pennsylvania Dutch country? Could they imagine that people could be publicly shamed and careers summarily ended for even questioning whether a person’s experience of being in the wrong body could be anything other than an absolute and legitimate expression of identity?
It is a brave new world.
The Authority of Holy Scripture
I focus on the sexuality issues not because of any inherent interest in them, but because as Dr. Robert Gagnon noted so many years ago, you cannot espouse the new, affirming positions on these issues without evacuating the Bible of its authority as Holy Scripture and the Word of God. You cannot affirm the authority of Genesis while espousing a “non-binary” (Trans) view of human sexuality. As the ELCA has recently confirmed, without a high view of Biblical authority, you cannot assert the uniqueness and necessity of Jesus Christ for human salvation. It was by reflection upon the books that we know as the canonical New Testament that the Council of Nicaea shifted from being predominantly Arian in its view of Christ to articulating the doctrine we know as the Hypostatic Union with near uniformity. (Not surprisingly, Arius and a close personal friend held out for their own view against the assembly.) It was fifteen years ago that an ELCA pastor brazenly asserted to me as a seminarian at a regional youth gathering that, “we only know about the Trinity from the Bible; God could easily be more like the Hindu idea of Brahmin, having countless avatar pseudopods to minister to the ‘endlessly diverse people’ s/he has created.’”
Without a high view of Biblical
authority, we can glean from its pages the sorts of vaguely inspiring ideas
about God that are largely our projections in the first place, but we cannot receive
revelations about God—or about God’s will for us, His creatures.
Danger of Theological Revisionism
And that is exactly what theological
revisionism is all about; it is about recasting God’s revelations as human
conceptions, and once everything is a human conception, all is mere politics,
the rules of which we know well from Plato, Hobbes, Machiavelli, Nietzsche, and
Foucault… not to mention Marx, Lenin, Mao, and Alinsky. In such a world, it is perfectly legitimate
for the philosopher-kings-and-queens to determine which views are “more equal
than others” and to eliminate cross-examination in the interest of “justice.”
And this is exactly what is
happening. Consider this letter sent by
‘We, few of the Black students here at Pomona College and the Claremont
Colleges’ to the administration of Claremont McKenna College, who had dared to
permit conservative scholar Heather Mac Donald to speak on campus:
Historically, white supremacy has venerated the idea of objectivity, and wielded a dichotomy of ‘subjectivity vs. objectivity’ as a means of silencing oppressed peoples. The idea that there is a single truth – ‘the Truth’ – is a construct of the Euro-West that is deeply rooted in the Enlightenment, which was a movement that also described Black and Brown people as both subhuman and impervious to pain. This construction is a myth and white supremacy, imperialism, colonization, capitalism, and the United States of America are all of its progeny. The idea that the truth is an entity for which we must search, in matters that endanger our abilities to exist in open spaces, is an attempt to silence oppressed peoples.[1]
Unlikely Ally
Douglas Murray recounts the
incident in his recent book The Madness of Crowds. If a gay intellectual from Great Britain
seems an unlikely ally of a Christianity that is both evangelical and catholic,
read the way he goes on to analyze this letter:
“‘The Truth’ is a construct of the Euro-West. It is hard to think of a phrase which can at one and the same time be so wildly misguided and so dangerous in its implications. If ‘the Truth’ (in scare quotes) is a white thing, then what is everyone else meant to live in and strive towards?”
Stalin pithily noted, “Ideas
are far more powerful than guns. We don’t let our people have guns. Why should
we let them have ideas?” Our young
people are being deprived of the most important idea ever, an idea that is not
white or black, gay or straight, Christian or otherwise; they are being
systematically deprived of the idea of truth. Furthermore, they are being taught that the
pursuit of it is disloyal, bigoted, and dangerous.
Future Outlook of the NALC
As a fellow NALC clergyman noted to me recently, “The NALC was formed at the last possible moment it could have been, historically-speaking.” This undoubtedly displays an admirable ecclesiological instinct, for it is indeed part of Great Tradition Christianity that the Church of Jesus Christ is “one, holy, catholic, and apostolic.” It also sets forth the challenge clearly before us, as it was founded by people I would categorize as the last well-catechized generations. Here I refer to their catechesis not only with the Church, but their cultural catechesis as well. Most of us on the clergy roster of the NALC are still here because we underwent a migration made necessary by counter-cultural convictions. What will become of the NALC as its first native-born daughters and sons rise to offices of prominence within the church? Philosophy was once described as the handmaiden to theology because it provided categories of meaning that helped people do the very difficult work of theology. What will happen to the church’s proclamation when its young pastors have not been formed in the fundamental categories of meaning that make clear thinking about the Bible possible? What will happen to it if they are convinced by their primer school training that to even consider certain ideas makes them the moral equivalent of a Nazi?
Students of Christian history
can broadly trace the theological revisionism of our day back through the
social gospel movement of the early 20th century to the “higher
critics” of the Enlightenment. It is a
history of more than ideas; it is a history of people, of champions of ideas
who viewed themselves as the saviors of a movement with some social utility
(Christianity) whose convictions were hopelessly backwards and out of touch
with the “obvious truths” of the modern world.
For all orthodox Lutherans, the NALC included, the challenge is to catechize
a new generation of theologians from elementary school age on up in an
intentionally countercultural way.
We will need to be aware of the prevailing ideas and neologisms that are
being introduced in a deliberate ploy to undermine a worldview congruent with
that of orthodox Biblical Christianity.
As Christians, we have no stake in Western culture qua Western
culture, but to the degree that what we know as Western culture is the product
of Christian theology, including its emphasis on truth as a fundamental
category of meaning, we need to advocate for what is in imminent danger of
being lost.
Written nearly thirty years
ago, in his classic book The Once and Future Church, Loren Mead noted
that the West was becoming the Church’s new mission field and that state church
traditions like Lutheranism, used as they were to cultural underwriting of
their religious project, were likely to have the most difficulty adapting to this
new reality. It remains for us to
determine whether his words were merely cautionary… or prophetic.
We Must Teach All Our People
Most importantly of all, we need to communicate to our people from the oldest to the youngest how the orthodox Biblical teachings on creation and fall, judgment and grace, repentance and forgiveness, faith and obedience, spiritual bondage and true freedom are more compelling and truly loving than the secular narratives with which they are being daily indoctrinated. We must teach them who God is and who we are meant to be as creatures made in His image but defaced by sin almost to the point of being unrecognizable. We must teach them that because of that reality, no matter the strength of our emotions, our own narratives about our inner lives are not the most reliable story about ourselves, but rather God’s story about us, recounted in the Bible, holds primacy of place.
We must do this knowing
that our work is being undermined both by determined ideologues and
well-meaning people engaged in herd behavior, what Murray accurately deems “the
madness of crowds.” We must be clear
with them that this dynamic is going to be part of their experience as
Christians in this culture without becoming reactionary or uncharitable toward
those who hate us.
In one of the responses to my Postmodernism articles, I was accused of being a “reactionary theologian.” I confess that I have never heard the term before, but it sounds like the sort of jingoistic turn of phrase intended to make the hard work of thinking through complex issues unnecessary—a word like “anti-revolutionary.” On the August day in 2010 recounted earlier, Dr. Steven D. Paulson reminded the gathered assembly that Martin Luther had noted that “it is a characteristic of love to be easily deceived.” We must highlight this reality and remind them that their love—especially their love of friends and the consequent alliances they make with them—like the rest of themselves, is fallen, disordered, and so, unreliable until it is conformed to the revealed Word of God.
The Frog
We all know the old saw. How do you boil a frog? If you put him in hot water he will jump out
before he gets too injured, but if you put him in cold water and turn up the
heat slowly, he will be boiled before he knows what happened to him.
Most reading this article have spent our lives watching the Lutheran frog being boiled. Some of us felt the need to “go out and be separate.” If we hope to not see our frogs boiled in the way other communions have unfortunately experienced, we will need to be intentionally countercultural. Our catechesis and our sermons will need to be apologetic in tone, whether we are apologists by vocation or not. We will need to listen carefully to a world that hates us so we may build bridges to their linguistics worlds of meaning and so that we can dismantle Trojan Horses meant to destroy Christianity and its necessarily attendant, coherent worldview from within.
In 1809, biographer Thomas
Charlton popularized the phrase, “the price of liberty is eternal vigilance” in
our newly-birthed republic. The bloody
reign of terror had just recently ended in France, a cautionary tale for those
who might have complacently believed that the new order was enough to insure
against future tyranny.
We ought to take a lesson from this page of history. The price of the liberty that the true gospel of Jesus Christ alone can bring is free, but the price of preaching that gospel fully and faithfully is eternal vigilance.
Vigilance Required
On August 26, 2010, as the
theological conference transitioned to the constituting convocation of a
re-visioned Lutheran CORE, I reflected in my blog that “it was time to see if
this dog would hunt.” Could the ideas we
had bandied about for two days now become incarnate, take on flesh in a living
institution that actually facilitated the living proclamation of “the eternal
gospel” in the ways God has ordained that it should?
As I reflect on the state of the Church and the
nature of its current mission in the wake of Reformation Sunday, I give thanks
that it could happen, but I note that we are sitting in water that seems to be
already getting warm. Vigilance is
required.
[1]
Murray, Douglas. The Madness of Crowds . Bloomsbury Publishing. Kindle Edition.
Reflections on the Augsburg Confession
written by David Charlton | November 15, 2019
Life Together?
“The Model Constitution is how we have agreed to live together,” she said. “No,” I thought to myself, “the Augsburg Confession is how we have agreed to live together.” The conversation arose because the synod office had asked me to update my congregation’s constitution. I began work on it, but had a concern about a part of the Model Constitution that seemed to require me to violate the Augsburg Confession. When I shared concern with the synod office, that was the reply.
One of my greatest frustrations serving as a pastor in the ELCA is the feeling that the Augsburg Confession has been eclipsed as the standard for how we will live together. A perfect example of this is a video greeting given by Bishop Guy Erwin for the Southwest California Synod at the beginning of the 2019 Pride Month. He said, “Lutherans believe that God’s love and mercy accepts us as we are, with no prior conditions, and then teaches us to love each other in return. This is what we call the Gospel.”
Now why get worked up about a message of acceptance to those who often feel unwelcome and condemned? It is not the idea of acceptance or the audience that causes me concern, but the message. I only mention Bishop Erwin’s summary of the Gospel, because I have been hearing the same message for several years and in multiple contexts. I have heard it from bishops, teaching theologians, and churchwide staff. You might say that it has become the official definition of the Gospel in the ELCA.
Article IV Defines the Gospel
What is the problem? There is no mention of sin and forgiveness. Article II of the Augsburg Confession defines our problem as sin. This sin separates us from God and one another and leads to eternal death. Article IV defines the Gospel as the message of forgiveness of sins for Jesus sake that is received by faith. Article III connects Articles II and IV by speaking of what God has done in Christ to reconcile us to himself and save us from our sins. A message of welcome and acceptance is surely appropriate, but it is not the Gospel. The Gospel is about redemption through Jesus Christ from sin, death and the devil.
I can remember a time in my life when I was acutely aware of
my sinfulness. I would be horrified by
the dishonesty, selfishness, self-righteousness and ill will of others, only to
realize again and again that it was my own sin that I saw reflected in
others. If you had told me at that time
that God accepted me the way I was, it would have been of little comfort. I wanted forgiveness, reconciliation and a
new beginning. That is what the Holy
Spirit, working through the Gospel and the Sacraments gives.
Later on, in the same message, Bishop Erwin says, “We oppose
all efforts to use our ancient scriptures to condemn others or separate them
from us.” I certainly have no desire to
use the Scriptures to condemn others or separate them from us. There is only one qualification for those who
would seek God. That is to be a sinner
in need of forgiveness. If the Church
took a page from Alcoholics Anonymous, it might look something like this: “Hi,
my name is David. I’m a sinner.” “Welcome, David.”
However, the statement that we do not use the Law to condemn
others sounds strange coming from a leader of the ELCA. First of all, while we do not use Scripture
to condemn others, we are to use the Scriptures to proclaim the Law. This Law reveals our sin and makes us aware
of our need for Christ. It is the
business of the Church to proclaim the Law and the Gospel.
Condemned by the ELCA
What makes that statement stranger still is that the ELCA
has become quite good at condemning others and making people feel
unwelcome. If you happen to be a person who
isn’t convinced about Global Warming, doesn’t believe Scripture sanctions same
sex marriage, is a police officer, a member of the armed forces, is a supporter
of Israel, supports enforcement of immigration laws, or who opposes abortion,
you are quite likely to feel condemned by the ELCA. Although I myself am more of a political
moderate than a conservative, I am quite aware of how it must feel for a
conservative member of my congregation to listen to what is said at synod
assemblies, in print and in various messages from this church. When I raise these concerns, I do not always
get a sympathetic ear.
What is most disappointing about all of this, is that in all the condemnation of those with wrong political and theological views forgiveness is seldom offered. The strange, and I assume unintended result, is the loss of the central mission of the Church. In the midst of talk about acceptance, we are a church that is quite good at condemnation. What we fail to offer to either those we accept or those we condemn is the forgiveness and new life that come through Jesus Christ. The Augsburg Confession, which for Lutherans is “how we have agreed to live together,” points us to a better way.