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I just received my copy of the latest ELCA sexuality study, and it couldn't have been more timely. You see just the other day my teenage son came home from public school and complained that all the kids down there ever want to talk about is whether or not someone has to be circumcised or not to enter into the kingdom of God. This is a serious problem. In fact, he said, it is so bad that a guy can't even get a date with a decent girl these days unless he can not only prove that he is circumcised, as well as keeping every rule and regulation of the Torah as well as the Talmud. So it is with keen interest that I read this latest report from the ELCA.
We are FREE OF THE LAW.....Film at 11:00. Yes, we are....yes, indeed, it is true. No more pencils, no more books, no more pastor's dirty looks. Yep...we can do anything we want. So I have personally decided to schedule an ADULT retreat with the young women's prayer group for next weekend.
HOWEVER, the new study is not without controversy.....
At once I became aware of a serious problem. Apparently, my Bible, as well as the Bibles of other members of my congregation have become infected with a horrible literary virus--one of the very worst--known as the the CORINTHIAN VIRUS. You see, when a Bible becomes infected with this virus, the reader is inclined to read absolutely offensive passages like 1Corinthians 5, Romans 1--or the entire Old Testament, for that matter, (except for the good parts, of course, like where David lusted just like we all do and had some great ideas on how to get away with it!) and the like. How could anybody actually believe that such drivel could for a moment be considered part of the Christian Bible?
In fact, now that we have been so enlightened by the ELCA, wouldn't it be great if Augsburg Fortress put out a NEW BIBLE VERSION that would REMOVE all those inconvenient and restrictive passages which have been infected by the CORINTHIAN VIRUS. Gee....maybe Augsburg Fortress could produce a Bible without the Old Testament....and without Romans...and the rest of Paul's letters...because Paul certainly did not understand the gospel at all....and then there is all that restrictive stuff that came out of the Council of Jerusalem in Acts....Yikes!.....and maybe take out Revelations and the letters of John, Jude, Peter, Hebrews, etc.....too.....hmmmm.....Geee.....Do you think the ELCA could put out a Bible that just had Galatians in it?
And so here we have it....and brand NEW and improved ELCA SEXUALITY STUDY.
BTW...Isn't it nifty that they put a coupon for a complementary box of Viagra and a free box of condoms between page 62 and page 63?
Those devils in the ELCA......LOL....I'm almost beginning to like them.
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No one could have expected
that the Reformation would be launched by Martin Luther's Ninety-Five Theses
against Indulgences in October 1517. The document itself simply proposed the
framework for a university debate. Luther was arguing only for a revision of
the practice of indulgences, not its abolition. He was certainly not offering
an agenda for widespread theological and ecclesiastical reform.
Indeed, he had already said
much more controversial things in his Disputation against Scholastic Theology
of September 4, 1517, in which he critiqued the whole way in which medieval
theology had been done for centuries. That disputation, however, passed without
a murmur. Indeed, humanly speaking, it was only the unique combination of
external factors—social, economic, and political—that made the
later disputation the spark that lit the Reformation fuse.
The Heidelberg Disputation
Once the fuse had been lit,
however, the church made a fatal error: she allowed the Augustinian Order, to
which Luther belonged, to deal with the problem as if it were a minor local
difficulty. There was to be a meeting of the Order in Heidelberg in April 1518, and Luther was asked
to present a series of theses outlining his theology, so that it could be
assessed by his brethren. It was here, then, that the relatively bland
Ninety-Five Theses gave Luther an important opportunity to articulate the
theology that he had expressed in his September Disputation.
The Heidelberg Disputation
is significant for two things. First, there was at least one other future
Reformation giant present. This was Martin Bucer, the Reformer of Strasbourg,
who would end his days as professor of divinity at Cambridge. A man of vast intellect and wide
ecumenical vision, Bucer was to have a profound influence on a generation of
Reformers, not least John Calvin. And his first taste of Reformation thinking
was provided by Luther at Heidelberg
in 1517. Yet, while Bucer left the disputation marveling at how Luther had
attacked what the church had become, he missed the theological core of what
Luther was saying. This is the second point of importance: the theology of the
cross.
The Theology of the Cross
Toward the end of the
disputation, Luther offered some theses which seem (in typical Luther fashion)
nonsensical, or at least obscure:
19. That person does not
deserve to be called a theologian who looks upon the invisible things of God as
though they were clearly perceptible in those things which have actually
happened [Rom. 1:20].
20. He deserves to be called
a theologian, however, who comprehends the visible and manifest things of God
seen through suffering and the cross.
21. A theologian of glory calls
evil good and good evil. A theologian of the cross calls the thing what it
actually is.
22. That wisdom which sees
the invisible things of God in works as perceived by man is completely puffed
up, blinded, and hardened.
These statements actually
encapsulate the heart of Luther's theology, and a good grasp of what he means
by the obscure terms and phrases they contain sheds light not just on the
doctrinal content of his theology, but also on the very way that he believed theologians
should think. Indeed, he is taking Paul's explosive argument from 1 Corinthians
and developing it into a full theological agenda.
At the heart of his argument
is his notion that human beings should not speculate about who God is or how he
acts in advance of actually seeing whom he has revealed himself to be. Thus,
Luther sees God's revelation of himself as axiomatic to all theology. Now,
there probably is not a heretic in history who would not agree with that,
because all theology presupposes the revelation of God, whether in nature,
human reason, culture, or whatever.
Luther, however, had a
dramatically restrictive view of revelation. God revealed himself as merciful
to humanity in the Incarnation, when he manifested himself in human flesh, and
the supreme moment of that revelation was on the cross at Calvary.
Indeed, Luther sometimes referred enigmatically to Christ crucified as
"God's backside"—the point at which God appeared to be the very
contradiction of all that one might reasonably have anticipated him to be.
The "theologians of
glory," therefore, are those who build their theology in the light of what
they expect God to be like—and, surprise, surprise, they make God to look
something like themselves. The "theologians of the cross," however,
are those who build their theology in the light of God's own revelation of
himself in Christ hanging on the cross.
Implications
The implications of this
position are revolutionary. For a start, Luther is demanding that the entire
theological vocabulary be revised in light of the cross. Take for example the
word power. When theologians of glory read about divine power in the Bible, or
use the term in their own theology, they assume that it is analogous to human
power. They suppose that they can arrive at an understanding of divine power by
magnifying to an infinite degree the most powerful thing of which they can
think. In light of the cross, however, this understanding of divine power is
the very opposite of what divine power is all about. Divine power is revealed
in the weakness of the cross, for it is in his apparent defeat at the hands of
evil powers and corrupt earthly authorities that Jesus shows his divine power
in the conquest of death and of all the powers of evil. So when a Christian
talks about divine power, or even about church or Christian power, it is to be
conceived of in terms of the cross—power hidden in the form of weakness.
For Luther, the same
procedure must be applied to other theological terms. For example, God's wisdom
is demonstrated in the foolishness of the cross. Who would have thought up the
foolish idea of God taking human flesh in order to die a horrendous death on
behalf of sinners who had deliberately defied him, or God making sinners pure
by himself becoming sin for them, or God himself raising up a people to newness
of life by himself submitting to death? We could go on, looking at such terms
as life, blessing, holiness, and righteousness. Every single one must be
reconceived in the light of the cross. All are important theological concepts;
all are susceptible to human beings casting them in their own image; and all
must be recast in the light of the cross.
This insight is one of the
factors in Luther's thinking that gives his theology an inner logic and
coherence. Take, for example, his understanding of justification, whereby God
declares the believer to be righteous in his sight, not by virtue of any
intrinsic righteousness (anything that the believer has done or acquired), but
on the basis of an alien righteousness, the righteousness of Christ that
remains external to the believer. Is this not typical of the strange but
wonderful logic of the God of the cross? The person who is really unrighteous,
really mired in sin, is actually declared by God to be pure and righteous! Such
a truth is incomprehensible to human logic, but makes perfect sense in light of
the logic of the cross.
And what of the idea of a
God who comes down and loves the unlovely and the unrighteous before the
objects of his love have any inclination to love him or do good? Such is
incomprehensible to the theologians of glory, who assume that God is like them,
like other human beings, and thus only responds to those who are intrinsically
attractive or good, or who first earn his favor in some way. But the cross
shows that God is not like that: against every assumption that human beings
might make about who God is and how he acts, he requires no prior loveliness in
the objects of his love; rather, his prior love creates that loveliness without
laying down preconditions. Such a God is revealed with amazing and unexpected
tenderness and beauty in the ugly and violent drama of the cross.
The Key to Christian Ethics
and Experience
Luther does not restrict the
theology of the cross to an objective revelation of God. He also sees it as the
key to understanding Christian ethics and experience. Foundational to both is
the role of faith: to the eyes of unbelief, the cross is nonsense; it is what
it seems to be—the crushing, filthy death of a man cursed by God. That is
how the unbelieving mind interprets the cross—foolishness to Greeks and
an offence to Jews, depending on whether your chosen sin is intellectual
arrogance or moral self-righteousness. To the eyes opened by faith, however,
the cross is seen as it really is. God is revealed in the hiddenness of the
external form. And faith is understood to be a gift of God, not a power
inherent in the human mind itself.
This principle of faith then
allows the believer to understand how he or she is to behave. United to Christ,
the great king and priest, the believer too is both a king and a priest. But
these offices are not excuses for lording it over others. In fact, kingship and
priesthood are to be enacted in the believer as they are in
Christ—through suffering and self-sacrifice in the service of others. The
believer is king of everything by being a servant of everyone; the believer is
completely free by being subject to all. As Christ demonstrated his kingship
and power by death on the cross, so the believer does so by giving himself or
herself unconditionally to the aid of others. We are to be, as Luther puts it,
little Christs to our neighbors, for in so doing we find our true identity as
children of God.
This argument is explosive,
giving a whole new understanding of Christian authority. Elders, for example,
are not to be those renowned for throwing their weight around, for badgering
others, and for using their position or wealth or credentials to enforce their
own opinions. No, the truly Christian elder is the one who devotes his whole
life to the painful, inconvenient, and humiliating service of others, for in so
doing he demonstrates Christlike authority, the kind of authority that Christ
himself demonstrated throughout his incarnate life and supremely on the cross
at Calvary.
Great Blessings through
Great Suffering
The implications of the
theology of the cross for the believer do not stop there. The cross is
paradigmatic for how God will deal with believers who are united to Christ by
faith. In short, great blessing will come through great suffering.
This point is hard for those
of us in the affluent West to swallow. For example, some years ago I lectured
at a church gathering on this topic and pointed out that the cross was not
simply an atonement, but a revelation of how God deals with those whom he
loves. I was challenged afterwards by an individual who said that Luther's
theology of the cross did not give enough weight to the fact that the cross and
resurrection marked the start of the reversal of the curse, and that great
blessings should thus be expected; to focus on suffering and weakness was
therefore to miss the eschatological significance of Christ's ministry.
Of course, this individual
had failed to apply Luther's theology of the cross as thoroughly as he should
have done. All that he said was true, but he failed to understand what he was
saying in light of the cross. Yes, Luther would agree, the curse is being
rolled back, but that rollback is demonstrated by the fact that, thanks to the
cross, evil is now utterly subverted in the cause of good. If the cross of
Christ, the most evil act in human history, can be in line with God's will and
be the source of the decisive defeat of the very evil that caused it, then any
other evil can also be subverted to the cause of good.
More than that, if the death
of Christ is mysteriously a blessing, then any evil that the believer
experiences can be a blessing too. Yes, the curse is reversed; yes, blessings
will flow; but who declared that these blessings have to be in accordance with
the aspirations and expectations of affluent America? The lesson of the cross
for Luther is that the most blessed person upon earth, Jesus Christ himself,
was revealed as blessed precisely in his suffering and death. And if that is
the way that God deals with his beloved son, have those who are united to him
by faith any right to expect anything different?
This casts the problem of
evil in a somewhat different light for Luther than, say, for Harold Kushner,
the rabbi who wrote When Bad Things Happen to Good People. They happen, Luther
would say, because that is how God blesses them. God accomplishes his work in
the believer by doing his alien work (the opposite of what we expect); he
really blesses by apparently cursing.
Indeed, when it is grasped
that the death of Christ, the greatest crime in history, was itself willed in a
deep and mysterious way by the triune God, yet without involving God in any
kind of moral guilt, we see the solution to the age-old problem of absolving an
all-powerful God of responsibility for evil. The answer to the problem of evil
does not lie in trying to establish its point of origin, for that is simply not
revealed to us. Rather, in the moment of the cross, it becomes clear that evil
is utterly subverted for good. Romans 8:28 is true because of the cross of
Christ: if God can take the greatest of evils and turn it to the greatest of
goods, then how much more can he take the lesser evils which litter human
history, from individual tragedies to international disasters, and turn them to
his good purpose as well.
Luther's theology of the
cross is too rich to be covered adequately in a single article, but I hope that
my brief sketch above will indicate the rich vein of theological reflection
which can be mined by those who reflect upon 1 Corinthians 1 and upon the
dramatic antitheses between appearance and reality that are scattered
throughout Scripture and marshaled with such force by Martin Luther. An
antidote to sentimentality, prosperity doctrine, and an excessively worldly
eschatology, this is theological gold dust. The cross is not simply the point
at which God atones for sin; it is also a profound revelation of who God is and
how he acts toward his creation.
The author is professor of church history and
historical theology at Westminster Theological Seminary in Philadelphia. He is the author of Luther's
Legacy: Salvation and English Reformers 1525–1556. Reprinted from New
Horizons, October 2005.
Mr. Rooney, having been
chewed up by the dog, is walking down the street. A school bus driver lets him
onto the bus, where the students are staring at him. Rooney notices one
student has "SAVE FERRIS" written on his binder.
Ferris comes out of
bathroom: "You're still here? It's over. Go home."
It’s been more than a
year—15 months to be exact--since
I shut down Kairos_News and walked away from it….forever.
Last Fall I resigned as
President of the Evangelical Lutheran Confessing Fellowship. I do not regret
that decision in any way, shape or form. The ELCA is as dead as a door nail.
Presently, I am on the clergy roster of Lutheran Congregations in Mission for Christ and
struggle to serve as a pastoral counselor amid a world gone mad. And I continue
to serve a tiny urban congregation as well (oh, yeah, well I guess they still
consider themselves part of the ELCA, at least for the moment…though they
have absolutely no respect for the chief vagabond and bandit …er bishop).
What really perplexes me is
that after 15 months of inactivity, Kairos_News has 371 members!
My gosh! Matthew Broderick
and I should likely join in chorus is saying: "You're still here? It's
over. Go home."
So often I have debated
simply firing off those “delete” torpedoes” so that
Kairos_News could sink beneath the icy Atlantic
to rest atop the ELCA for which she was organized to reform.
But maybe there has been
some good purpose why you all have not simply gone away.
Luke 18 Then Jesus told his
disciples a parable to show them that they should always pray and not give up. 2
He said: “In a certain town there was a judge who neither feared God nor
cared about men. 3
And there was a widow in that town who kept coming to him with the plea,
‘Grant me justice against my adversary.’
4
“For some time he refused. But finally he said to himself, ‘Even
though I don’t fear God or care about men, 5
yet because this widow keeps bothering me, I will see that she gets justice, so
that she won’t eventually wear me out with her coming!’”
6
And the Lord said, “Listen to what the unjust judge says. 7
And will not God bring about justice for his chosen ones, who cry out to him
day and night? Will he keep putting them off? 8
I tell you, he will see that they get justice, and quickly. However, when the
Son of Man comes, will he find faith on the earth?”
Perhaps persistence does pay
off.
But as I stated, I no longer
am interested in reforming the ELCA. The ELCA is beyond reform. In my appraisal
it is like a dead man too stunned by the impact of the death wound to know when
to fall over and actually be DEAD. But in this case dead is DEAD.
However, there is much more
to life and the world around us. Culture continues to challenge the faithful.
Biblical and Confessional Reform is surely neither over nor a lost cause.
So, if you have remained
here, let me know your interests. I must confess, however, that I no longer
spend such late nights writing, nor do I read so much. And I am better for it,
I am sure.
http://www.mcall.com/features/religion/all-
faithhershmanmay21,0,7402602.story?coll=all-featuresreligion-hed
From The Morning Call
How the Emmaus experience applies
May 21, 2005
Luke's gospel (24:13-35) reports that on the day Jesus rose from the
dead, two of his followers were walking to Emmaus, a village seven
miles from Jerusalem.
They spoke of their sadness and as they discussed the past week in
which Jesus was betrayed, arrested, tried and executed. They also
expressed confusion over the accounts of some women followers and
that Jesus' tomb was empty, and that angels said Jesus was alive.
They even claimed to have seen Jesus.
As they walked, Jesus approached and joined their conversation. But
they didn't recognize him. After listening for a while, this
supposed stranger chided them for their unbelief: ''How foolish you
are, and how slow of heart to believe all that the prophets have
spoken! Did not the Christ have to suffer these things and then
enter his glory?''
Jesus then explained how the scriptures explained the meaning of the
Messiah and these very events. When they arrived in Emmaus, they
pleaded with Jesus to stay with them because it was evening. He
agreed. But it was only when Jesus was at the dinner table, took
bread, gave thanks, broke it and offered it to them that ''their
eyes were opened'' and they recognized Jesus. In a moment, he
disappeared from their sight, but they said, ''Were not our hearts
burning within us while he talked with us on the road and opened the
Scriptures to us?'' They immediately rushed back to Jerusalem where
they found the others assembled together. ''It is true! The Lord has
risen!'' they explained as they recounted the way to Emmaus, and how
they recognized Jesus in the breaking of the bread.
When I visited the Holy Land, I discovered that at least four
separate towns claim to be ''Emmaus.'' Perhaps this is fitting.
Several points can be made about how the Emmaus experience applies
to each of us as we make own way in life.
First, their confusion and unbelief seems incredible. They certainly
knew Jesus, heard his teaching, preaching, and predictions about
death and resurrection. They knew about the empty tomb.
Yet even Jesus commented upon their foolishness. But then, our own
unbelief is also incredible. Human history has been shaped by God's
mighty acts. Millions of transformed lives have witnessed to the
positive value of religious faith in dealing with daily trials and
tribulations, as well providing hope for eternal life. And yet so
many of us remain unconvinced!
Second, they didn't recognize Jesus until he was made known to them
in the breaking of the bread. For Christians the Word of God and
sacraments reveal God's promises. Just as few recognized Jesus'
incarnation his unknown presence on our journey through life also is
typically unrecognized. Christians believe that God is revealed
through the Word of Scripture, the sacraments of Baptism and Holy
Communion, faithful obedience and acts of love towards others.
Third, the resurrected Jesus immediately transforms their fear and
despair to faith, hope and joy. This powerful transformation drives
them all the way back to Jerusalem where others are also transformed
by the presence of Christ and the gift of spiritual peace.
As the public role of religion continues to be debated in our
society, let us remember the positive value of religious faith in
shaping our world.
Healthy religious convictions necessarily engender self respect and
positive growth, as well as charity toward others.
Trying to force religion on other people is akin to the members of a
symphony orchestra convincing people that music is beautiful by
beating them with their instruments.
Religion, like fine music, is best expressed by living it through
integrity, sharing the transforming beauty of faith by wholesome
values, peacefulness and the widespread expression of love.
The Rev. Christopher Hershman is pastor of St. James Evangelical
Lutheran Church, Allentown, and a licensed psychologist at the
Marriage and Family Institute, Wescosville.
Copyright 2005, The Morning Call