As much as some want to rush into such hot button issues as sex and gender, what about the bread and butter of Christian dogma? Is the Trinity also a subject for conversation in which the Trinitarian statements of the Creeds are not allowed to be the end? Can we talk about God as if the Trinity were not settled doctrine? Should we? Is original sin also a subject for conversation in which what the Church has said and believed is not necessarily where we might end up? Should it be? You could add in any number of things Scripture says and the Church confesses and has confessed through the ages that now some want to talk about because they no longer like where the conversation went. My question is more basic. If that is the definition of the conversation, then we cannot talk about anything unless we are willing to forego the conclusion the Church has made and turn a closed question into an open one. Who does that benefit -- apart from those who do not want to end up where the Church has?
Accordingly, the only purpose of the conversation is NOT to end up where the Church has and to introduce a different conclusion. While this is the modern penchant, it is alien and destructive of the Church's faith and confession. What good does it do to make cultural-specific or relative what the Church has confessed, without any real change, for a couple of thousand years? There can be only one justification for such a conversation and that is to make a change, to depart from what has been taught and confessed through the ages, to ignore what Scripture clearly says, and to invent another conclusion.
There is also something else. Failure to allow the conversation to end at a point other than what the Church has always believed and confessed is itself judged negatively as intolerance or unfriendliness or arrogance. There are those who believe if you could make a case for a different end, you must make that case and you must allow that conclusion to stand at least along side what the Church has always believed and confessed OR you must replace the sacred deposit with the new invention. Now you get what is the problem in the modern theological conversation. While it is hard to made the case for change strictly from Scripture, it is possible to make the case on "theological" grounds. Herein lies the problem. Theological and Biblical are allowed not simply to compete but to conflict and the weight lies on the theological over the Biblical. This is the fallacy of the modern era and one that makes what Scripture says and the Church has confessed as a mere starting place and not an ending point. This is also the modus operandi of liberal and progressive churches -- put a question mark where the Church has put a period and put doubt where Scripture has put confidence. The end result is that love becomes the only thing and love is so weak that it can only affirm and must approve whatever the individual has deemed right and true in his own eyes.
Besides the theological and Scriptural arguments, there is, I believe, another one: the argument from the absence of Scripture. One of those is the statement in the Small Catechism, that we receive the forgiveness of sins when we drink the blood of our Lord in the Sacrament. This is a belief the church held before Luther, and Luther never bothered to check whether there is Scriptural support for it. The fact that “IT is poured out for many for the forgiveness of sins,” does not mean that we receive forgiveness when we drink it.
ReplyDeleteThe notion that the Holy Spirit left David after he committed adultery with Bathsheba is a terrible error. The story is in Scripture so that we would know that God forgives even the worst sin. In denying this, we take away the consolation of many sinners. We literally deny the Gospel. Our Lord said, Matthew 12:31, “And so I tell you, every kind of sin and slander can be forgiven, but blasphemy against the Spirit will not be forgiven.” It is difficult to argue that adultery and murder are sins against the Holy Spirit.
The translation of Torah as “Law” contributes to some confusion in our Confessions. There are others, Luther’s interpretation of “Thy Kingdom come,” and the notion that a Christian continues to repent as they had at conversion, until death. This is a translation error from the German, which affects only English speaking Lutherans.
Peace and Joy!
George A. Marquart