This is Lawrence Rast's blog. It deals with stuff that interests him--especially American Religious history, Lutheranism, the Pennsylvania Railroad, obscure music, and Africa.
Sunday, March 31, 2013
Sunday, March 10, 2013
Getting Ready for Conclave
There are plenty of websites out there to keep up with the latest news on the election of the next pope. http://www.aleteia.org/en/special/the-papal-election-322001?gclid=CP3jzcL88rUCFaI-MgodQzoAHQ offers a Roman Catholic perspective on the central players.
I always heard "you can't tell the players without a program," and that brought this to mind.
I always heard "you can't tell the players without a program," and that brought this to mind.
LCMS Lutheran Withdraws from Consideration for Luther College Presidency
It looked like Dr. MarkHagerott, military professor and
senior military officer of history at the United States Naval Academy and
candidate for the presidency of Luther College in Decorah, Iowa, was on his way
to be elected to the top position of that school. The presidential search committee had narrowed the list of candidates to two, and the Board of Regents appeared to have moved
toward consideration of only Mr. Hagerott. Decorahnewspapers.com reported the Board of
Regents as follows:
After receiving the report from the Presidential
Search Committee, the Luther College Board of Regents charged the committee to
further explore the candidacy of a single finalist, Dr. Mark Hagerott, and to
report back to the Regents no later than April 30, 2013. Â We look forward to
additional engagement with Dr. Hagerott. Any decision about the election of
Luther's next president will be deferred until after the receipt of the
committee's subsequent report to the Board.
A clarifying statement appeared a few days later, which delayed the presidential election to later in the Spring.
How had the train gone off the tracks?
Some discomfort in
the Luther community on Hagerott's affiliation with The Lutheran Church--Missouri Synod emerged. One example of this in the Luther College student
newspaper, CHIPS, published an opinion piece titled "Lutheranism and the Luther Presidency."
The article's bottom line was straightforward: "The ELCA and the LCMS are both Lutheran, but only one
denomination represents the Luther College community."
On Tuesday, March 5, Dr.
Hagerott withdrew from consideration for the office. Decorahnews.com has
an article on Hagerott's withdrawal here. Hagerott's own "Reflections on a College
Search" may be found in CHIPS. A couple of quotes from Hagerott's reflections follow.
It was with sadness that I withdrew from the
Luther College search. My wife and I found it to be a wonderful place. People
we met were so genuinely friendly. But in light of articles published in this
paper and the college paper that used a very narrow lens to interpret who I am
and what I stood for, I feel it now necessary to explain why I withdrew from
consideration. Moreover, how I was portrayed and judged in the articles holds
implications for Luther's future hiring and promotion practices.
Despite my record, the debate as framed both in
the school newspaper and the community paper became one sided, portraying a
requirement for theological conformity. Counterpoints were conspicuously
absent. Such a demand for conformity surprised me, because as I read on the
website, the Luther family was "...of all backgrounds, we embrace
diversity". At Annapolis I worked with, hired, mentored, and led persons
of all faiths, genders, sexual orientations, and political persuasions, and I
maintained an impeccable record of tolerance.
Perhaps it is fitting that these questions come
to the fore now, as we approach the 500 year anniversary of the Protestant
Reformation, when Martin Luther challenged the reigning orthodoxy of his time.
Perhaps the orthodoxy today is “political correctness” on college campuses
across America? My hope is that Luther College will be a source of a new
reformation, one that encourages persons, from liberal to moderate to religious
conservative, to participate with confidence in the mission of educating the
next generation of undergraduates. It was to that end, and is my hope now, that
my decision to end my candidacy will allow this important debate to continue
without distraction at Luther College.
Wednesday, February 27, 2013
A Prayer of Justus Falckner
Students in my Church History IV course at Concordia Theological Seminary, Fort Wayne, all learn the hymn "Rise, Ye Children of Salvation" (TLH 472). They hymn's author, Rev. Justus Falckner, was the first Lutheran to be regularly ordained in North America (November 24, 1703). In preparing for an upcoming section of Church History IV, I came across this little prayer of Falckner's, cited by Henry E. Jacobs in "Justus Falckner," Lutheran Church Review 23 (January 1904): 171.
"O God, who has thrust me into this harvest, be Thou with me, Thy lowly and very feeble laborer, with Thy special grace, without which I must perish under the burden of trials that often overwhelm me. In Thee, O Lord, have I trusted; let me not be confounded. Fit me for my calling. I did not run, but Thou didst send—Thou didst force me into this office. Do Thou forgive whatever wrong a corrupt nature hath unconsciously wrought within me; pardon me, humbly praying through our Lord—yea through my Jesus Christ. Amen."
Thursday, February 21, 2013
Obama Nominates Gard for Navy Reserve's Highest Rank
President Barack Obama has nominated the Rev. Dr. Daniel L. Gard, an LCMS chaplain in the U.S. Navy Reserve and professor of Exegetical Theology at Concordia Theological Seminary, Fort Wayne, Ind., to serve as a rear admiral (lower half) in the role of deputy chief of chaplains for Reserve Matters, U.S. Navy.
Gard's nomination as rear admiral, the highest rank for a chaplain in the Navy Reserve, must be confirmed by the U.S. Senate.
U.S. Secretary of Defense Leon E. Panetta announced the promotion, along with several others, Feb. 14.
Gard said he is humbled by the opportunity that awaits him.
"To be a pastor is the greatest honor a person can have and then to have been sent in uniform to minister to America's magnificent men and women who risk all for freedom is a privilege beyond what I deserve," he said. "All I can say is 'Soli Deo Gloria' -- to God alone be the glory!"
Gard is completing a tour of duty as Joint Task Force Guantanamo chaplain, Joint Task Force, Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. He will resume his seminary teaching duties during Holy Week. He also is the dean of Military Chaplaincy Programs at Concordia Theological Seminary (CTS).
"Dr. Gard's service to this seminary, the church at-large and to his country has been exemplary and provides an excellent example of a good and faithful servant of Jesus Christ," said CTS President Rev. Dr. Lawrence R. Rast Jr. in a seminary news release.
Gard asked for prayers that he be a "faithful servant of our Lord."
"God has blessed me with a wonderful wife and family and with the support of a unique community of faith, study and prayer at Concordia Theological Seminary in Fort Wayne," he said. "There we have a mission that is unequaled in this world -- to form servants in Christ Jesus to teach the faithful, reach the lost and care for all."
To read the U.S. Navy's release about Gard, click here.
Posted Feb. 21, 2013
http://reporter.lcms.org/pages/rpage.asp?NavID=20882
Thursday, February 07, 2013
Ethiopian Lutherans Break Fellowship with ELCA
Significant news that affects world Lutheranism.
http://www.elca.org/Who-We-Are/Our-Three-Expressions/Churchwide-Organization/Communication-Services/News/Releases.aspx?a=5276
ELCA NEWS SERVICE
February 7, 2013
Lutheran church in Ethiopia severs relationship with ELCA
13-8-MRC
CHICAGO (ELCA) -- The Ethiopian Evangelical Church Mekane Yesus is severing its relationship with the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA), the Church of Sweden and “those churches who have openly accepted same-sex marriage.”
The action for “all Ethiopian Evangelical Church Mekane Yesus departments and institutions (at every level) to implement this decision” was ratified at the denomination’s general assembly, which met Jan. 27-Feb. 2 in Addis Ababa. The denomination’s church council took action at its July 2012 meeting to initially sever these relationships.
“The ELCA is very saddened by this decision,” said the Rev. Rafael Malpica Padilla, executive director for ELCA Global Mission. “The ELCA and its predecessor church bodies have been walking with the people of Ethiopia for more than 50 years, and our sister church, the Church of Sweden, for more than 150 years. In this journey, we have learned from one another, we have deepened and extended the bonds of fellowship and partnership in the gospel.” Malpica Padilla was in Addis Ababa for meetings with program and ministry partners of the Ethiopian Evangelical Church Mekane Yesus.
To ensure that the decisions by the Ethiopian Evangelical Church Mekane Yesus are implemented, members of the denomination “will not receive Holy Communion from the leadership and pastors of the (ELCA and the Church of Sweden). The Ethiopian Evangelical Church Mekane Yesus will not distribute communion to these churches,” as stated in the minutes of the denomination’s July 2012 council meeting.
“Representatives of these churches at national level or leaders at every level would not be invited to preach or speak at the Ethiopian Evangelical Church Mekane Yesus congregations or other gatherings. They should not be invited for any spiritual ministries of this church,” stated the minutes, which also reflects that leaders and pastors of the Ethiopian Evangelical Church Mekane Yesus “at every level will not visit the synods, dioceses, congregations and national offices of churches that have accepted this practice without proper permission from the head office of the Ethiopian Evangelical Church Mekane Yesus.”
While the Ethiopian Evangelical Church Mekane Yesus is “closing the door to this partnership,” Malpica Padilla said that the ELCA and the Church of Sweden “are not locking the doors from our side. It is open for when you decide it is time to resume this journey together. It is my hope that in the near future, we will again walk together in Christian love. We will do this not because of doctrinal agreements or consensus, but because the gospel compels us to do so.”
The ELCA has consistently kept its Lutheran companion churches informed about the ELCA’s process that led to the 2009 ELCA Churchwide Assembly decisions, which included the adoption of a social statement on human sexuality, said Malpica Padilla.
“We shared the study documents and invited their input,” he said. “When decisions were made, we wrote to (leaders of the Ethiopian Evangelical Church Mekane Yesus) expressing our commitment to not impose our actions and to respect the policy and practice of the Ethiopian Evangelical Church Mekane Yesus in the assignment of mission personnel,” he said.
The Rev. Mark S. Hanson, ELCA presiding bishop, said the actions of the Ethiopian Evangelical Church Mekane Yesus are “deeply troubling.”
“Our own statement on human sexuality acknowledges that the position held by the Ethiopian Evangelical Church Mekane Yesus is also held by members of the ELCA. We are not of one mind, but we are one in Christ, in faith and in baptism,” said Hanson, adding that the relationships between Lutherans in North America and in Ethiopia “has been sustained through periods of oppression, divisions within the Ethiopian church and in times of turmoil among Lutherans in North America. The action of the Ethiopian Evangelical Church Mekane Yesus church diminishes our capacity together to proclaim the good news of Jesus Christ, to serve our neighbors and to care for the creation.
“As the ELCA, we are always standing ready to open the door of conversation for the sake of reconciliation and our shared commitment to proclamation and service,” Hanson said. “Reconciliation is not an option. It is given in Christ, and we stand ready to engage with the Ethiopian Evangelical Church Mekane Yesus on what this gift of reconciliation might mean for us now.”
- - -
About the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America:
The ELCA is one of the largest Christian denominations in the United States, with more than 4 million members in nearly 10,000 congregations across the 50 states and in the Caribbean region. Known as the church of “God's work. Our hands,” the ELCA emphasizes the saving grace of God through faith in Jesus Christ, unity among Christians and service in the world. The ELCA's roots are in the writings of the German church reformer, Martin Luther.
For information contact:
Melissa Ramirez Cooper
773-380-2956 or Melissa.RamirezCooper@ELCA.org
http://www.ELCA.org/news
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/Lutherans
Living Lutheran: http://www.livinglutheran.com
http://www.elca.org/Who-We-Are/Our-Three-Expressions/Churchwide-Organization/Communication-Services/News/Releases.aspx?a=5276
ELCA NEWS SERVICE
February 7, 2013
Lutheran church in Ethiopia severs relationship with ELCA
13-8-MRC
CHICAGO (ELCA) -- The Ethiopian Evangelical Church Mekane Yesus is severing its relationship with the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA), the Church of Sweden and “those churches who have openly accepted same-sex marriage.”
The action for “all Ethiopian Evangelical Church Mekane Yesus departments and institutions (at every level) to implement this decision” was ratified at the denomination’s general assembly, which met Jan. 27-Feb. 2 in Addis Ababa. The denomination’s church council took action at its July 2012 meeting to initially sever these relationships.
“The ELCA is very saddened by this decision,” said the Rev. Rafael Malpica Padilla, executive director for ELCA Global Mission. “The ELCA and its predecessor church bodies have been walking with the people of Ethiopia for more than 50 years, and our sister church, the Church of Sweden, for more than 150 years. In this journey, we have learned from one another, we have deepened and extended the bonds of fellowship and partnership in the gospel.” Malpica Padilla was in Addis Ababa for meetings with program and ministry partners of the Ethiopian Evangelical Church Mekane Yesus.
To ensure that the decisions by the Ethiopian Evangelical Church Mekane Yesus are implemented, members of the denomination “will not receive Holy Communion from the leadership and pastors of the (ELCA and the Church of Sweden). The Ethiopian Evangelical Church Mekane Yesus will not distribute communion to these churches,” as stated in the minutes of the denomination’s July 2012 council meeting.
“Representatives of these churches at national level or leaders at every level would not be invited to preach or speak at the Ethiopian Evangelical Church Mekane Yesus congregations or other gatherings. They should not be invited for any spiritual ministries of this church,” stated the minutes, which also reflects that leaders and pastors of the Ethiopian Evangelical Church Mekane Yesus “at every level will not visit the synods, dioceses, congregations and national offices of churches that have accepted this practice without proper permission from the head office of the Ethiopian Evangelical Church Mekane Yesus.”
While the Ethiopian Evangelical Church Mekane Yesus is “closing the door to this partnership,” Malpica Padilla said that the ELCA and the Church of Sweden “are not locking the doors from our side. It is open for when you decide it is time to resume this journey together. It is my hope that in the near future, we will again walk together in Christian love. We will do this not because of doctrinal agreements or consensus, but because the gospel compels us to do so.”
The ELCA has consistently kept its Lutheran companion churches informed about the ELCA’s process that led to the 2009 ELCA Churchwide Assembly decisions, which included the adoption of a social statement on human sexuality, said Malpica Padilla.
“We shared the study documents and invited their input,” he said. “When decisions were made, we wrote to (leaders of the Ethiopian Evangelical Church Mekane Yesus) expressing our commitment to not impose our actions and to respect the policy and practice of the Ethiopian Evangelical Church Mekane Yesus in the assignment of mission personnel,” he said.
The Rev. Mark S. Hanson, ELCA presiding bishop, said the actions of the Ethiopian Evangelical Church Mekane Yesus are “deeply troubling.”
“Our own statement on human sexuality acknowledges that the position held by the Ethiopian Evangelical Church Mekane Yesus is also held by members of the ELCA. We are not of one mind, but we are one in Christ, in faith and in baptism,” said Hanson, adding that the relationships between Lutherans in North America and in Ethiopia “has been sustained through periods of oppression, divisions within the Ethiopian church and in times of turmoil among Lutherans in North America. The action of the Ethiopian Evangelical Church Mekane Yesus church diminishes our capacity together to proclaim the good news of Jesus Christ, to serve our neighbors and to care for the creation.
“As the ELCA, we are always standing ready to open the door of conversation for the sake of reconciliation and our shared commitment to proclamation and service,” Hanson said. “Reconciliation is not an option. It is given in Christ, and we stand ready to engage with the Ethiopian Evangelical Church Mekane Yesus on what this gift of reconciliation might mean for us now.”
- - -
About the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America:
The ELCA is one of the largest Christian denominations in the United States, with more than 4 million members in nearly 10,000 congregations across the 50 states and in the Caribbean region. Known as the church of “God's work. Our hands,” the ELCA emphasizes the saving grace of God through faith in Jesus Christ, unity among Christians and service in the world. The ELCA's roots are in the writings of the German church reformer, Martin Luther.
For information contact:
Melissa Ramirez Cooper
773-380-2956 or Melissa.RamirezCooper@ELCA.org
http://www.ELCA.org/news
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/Lutherans
Living Lutheran: http://www.livinglutheran.com
Wednesday, October 31, 2012
Ecclesia Semper Reformanda est – Reformation Sermon 2012
Ecclesia Semper Reformanda est – Reformation Sermon 2012
{The Rev. Dr. Lawrence Rast, president of Concordia Theological Seminary, Fort Wayne, Ind., preached the following sermon at this morning’s Matins service, held at the opening of the International Conference on Confessional Leadership taking place in Peachtree City, Ga.}

Dr. Lawrence Rast, president of Concordia Theological Seminary, Fort Wayne, Ind., shakes hands with the Rev. President Jon Ehlers, Evangelical Lutheran Church of England.
As we gather together in Christ’s name to celebrate the 495th anniversary of Luther’s posting of the 95 Theses, it is good, first of all, to hear the Word of God and reflect on the Lord’s mercy in giving His gifts of life and salvation to us.
For that purpose, I can think of no better texts than Acts 10, which is a Reformational text if there ever was one! In it, Peter personally experiences two reformations. The first is, of course, the vision of all things being clean, where a hungry Peter keeps the law and resists unclean food. His first reformation is to learn that “What God has made clean do not call common.” The result, Peter witnesses to his colleagues, “Truly I understand”—a reformational phrase—“truly I understand that God shows no partiality.”
But does he understand? Reformation 2.0 comes quickly upon him. The balance of our text proper shows that Peter actually does not yet understand that God really shows no partiality. Yes, he realizes that Christ has made all things clean; what he is now learning is that in making all things clean Christ has made all people clean through the very things that Peter is preaching—the life, suffering, death, and, especially in this text, resurrection of Jesus Christ, the One who has conquered death.

Dr. Lawrence Rast preaches at the opening service of the International Conference on Confessional Lutheranism.
Peter’s witness is a powerful testimony to the power of the Gospel, for through it, as verse 44 immediately following our text tells us, “While Peter was still saying these things, the Holy Spirit fell on all who heard the word. And the believers from among the circumcised who had come with Peter were amazed, because the gift of the Holy Spirit was poured out even on the Gentiles” (Acts 10:44-45 ESV).
Not one, but two reformations! In the space of a short chapter, we see the church reformed. And that reformation is always shaped by the Gospel; where man would legalize, God comes in with His Gospel, the powerful Word of Christ that always re-establishes the promise of life and salvation. Ecclesia Semper Reformanda est—the church is always being reformed—is the old and familiar saying. It is a good saying, for it captures the passivity of Christ’s bride as God continually works to form and reform His church through the faithful witness of the Gospel.

LWML President Kay Kreklau speaks with Dr. Cyndy Lumley of Concordia Theological Seminary, Fort Wayne.
Luther’s Witness
The application of this is clear as we both celebrate today, the 495th anniversary of the Reformation and as we gather together as witnesses who are being reformed for this international conference on confessional leadership. We are here to remind one another of our shared commitment to the Gospel and to strengthen one another for the reforming task ahead.
In that effort, it is good to hear from the mature Luther as he preaches on Acts 10. In a sermon published in 1540, he speaks to the heart and soul of this text when he writes:
This power and work in us is called by Peter “remission of sins.” This is the blessing, the possession, conferred through the preaching of the doctrine of Christ, or the articles of faith, particularly the articles of the resurrection. The meaning of the new message of comfort, the new declaration of peace, is that Christ, through his resurrection, has in himself conquered our sin and death, has turned away the wrath of God and procured grace and salvation; that he has commanded forgiveness to be preached unto us, desiring us to believe he gives it and confidently to receive it through faith.
For Luther, his witness is not an innovation, not something new that he has dreamed up, but something the church has always confessed. As he says it:
He who inquires, who would know exactly, what the Christian Church ever holds and teaches, especially concerning the all-important article of justification before God, or the forgiveness of sins, over which there has always been contention, has it here plainly and exactly in this text. Here is the unwavering testimony of the entire Church from the beginning. It is not necessary, then, to dispute about the doctrine any more.
In this text we see that the reliability of the article of faith has long ago been proven, even in ancient time, by the Church of the primitive fathers, of the prophets and the apostles. A solid foundation is established, one all men are bound to believe and maintain at the risk of their eternal salvation, whatever councils may establish, or the world advance and determine, to the contrary.
This is Luther’s firm witness to the centrality of the Gospel, the faith once delivered to the saints. And in, with, and under such faithful witness the Lord worked to reform his church.

(L-R) Dr. Lawrence Rast, preident of Concordia Theological Seminary, Fort Wayne; the Rev. William Weedon, LCMS director of Worship; and Bishop Wilhelm Weber, Lutheran Church South Africa, prepare for Matins.
The 19th-Century Witness
The church is always being reformed—but not all reforms are from the Lord. In the 19th century, some American Lutherans argued that the essence of Luther’s reform was radicalism, or reformation as rejection of past doctrines and practices. In this way of thinking, one might be most Lutheran by rejecting Luther and the Lutheran Confessions! One of the most outspoken advocates of this new Lutheranism was Benjamin Kurtz (1795-1865). Writing on the fathers of the church, he said:
The Fathers—who are the ‘Fathers’? They are the children; they lived in the infancy of the Church, in the early dawn of the Gospel day . . . Even the apostle Peter, after all the personal instructions of Christ, could not expand his views sufficiently to learn that the Gospel was to be preached to the Gentiles, and that the Church of Christ was to compass the whole world. A special miracle was wrought to remove his prejudices and convince him of his folly. Every well-instructed Sunday-school child understands this thing without a miracle, better than Peter did.
Such arrogance can only result in the following conclusion.
Who, then, are the “Fathers”? They have become the Children; they were the Fathers, but, compared with the present and advanced age, they are the Children, and the learned and pious of the nineteenth century are the Fathers. We are three hundred years older than Luther and his noble coadjutors, and eighteen hundred years older than the primitives; theirs was the age of infancy and adolescence, and ours that of full-grown manhood. They were the children; we are the fathers; the tables are turned.
In fact, Kurtz’s church can no longer be reformed. It can only progress into new and radical expressions that may have no organic connection to the source of life—the branch cuts itself off from the vine and briefly carries on a life of its own—briefly before it dies. Such a perspective is fundamentally destructive, for it encourages us to orphan ourselves from those who have given to us what was first given to them, namely, the faith once delivered to the saints.
In contrast to Kurtz, other American Lutherans strove to uphold the faithful witness of their fathers. Charles Porterfield Krauth (1823-1883) articulated the principle of the conservative reformation, instructing a confused Lutheranism that the overthrow of error does not in itself establish truth. Because of this it is more important to know what the Lutheran Reformation retained than what it overthrew. Knowing personally how easily the church can fall into faith-threatening error, C. F. W. Walther (1811-1887), simply urged that “heterodox companies are not to be dissolved, but reformed” (and please note that is reformed with a small “r”).
The Witness God Calls Us to Today
Peter’s conclusion is clear: “And he commanded us to preach to the people and to testify that he is the one appointed by God to be judge of the living and the dead.”
That call to faithful witness remains before us today. The next several days will help us better understand our confession and our context so that we may, with all possible vigor and haste, witness to the mercy of God in Christ to a world in need. In closing, perhaps it is appropriate on this day to give Luther the last word. Writing in his typically blunt and pointed way, Luther challenges you and me to a life of witness.
If I earnestly believe that Christ is true God and that He became our Savior, I will never deny this but will proclaim it publicly against the Turks, the world, the pope, the Jews, and all the sects. I will confess that it is true. I would rather forfeit my life or jeopardize my property and honor than disavow this. Wherever faith is genuine, it cannot hold its tongue. (AE 22:392-93)
May our tongues be loosed in confession and praise of the Christ who has died and risen again that we might have eternal life.
In the name of the Father and of the + Son and of the Holy Spirit.
Monday, July 09, 2012
Time Lapse of the NS Heritage Event
Last week Norfolk Southern held its 30th anniversary celebration featuring its heritage locomotives. Here's a time lapse of the event.
Monday, July 02, 2012
Sunday, July 01, 2012
Saturday, June 30, 2012
Friday, June 29, 2012
Thursday, June 28, 2012
Friday, June 01, 2012
Midwestern Muslims
I grew up in the cornfields of Northern Illinois. During my youth ethnic diversity still tended to be defined in terms of different Western European language groups (we had lots of Scandinavians and Germans in our area) and religious diversity was largely limited to varieties of Christianity.
Lots of folks seem to think that's still the case. Things are so different here in __________ (fill in with West Coast, East Coast, South, etc.), you Midwesterners wouldn't understand.
That's why the following from ENI caught my eye.
Chicago (ENInews)--Mohammed Labadi had a lot at stake when the DeKalb City Council voted 29 May on a request from the Islamic Society of Northern Illinois University to build a two-story mosque. Labadi, a businessman and Islamic Society board member, said a bigger mosque was needed to replace the small house where local Muslims now worship. He also was hoping for affirmation that his neighbors and city officials have no fear of the Muslim community, Religion News Service reports via USA Today. "Don't look at me just as a Muslim, look at me as an American," Labadi said. The City Council unanimously approved the plan. However, in the decade since the 11 September 2001 terrorist attacks, animosity toward Muslims sometimes has taken the form of opposition to construction of mosques and other Islamic facilities. National debate erupted over plans for an Islamic community center that became known as the "Ground Zero mosque" in Lower Manhattan. [766 words, ENI-12-0315]
Chicago (ENInews)--Mohammed Labadi had a lot at stake when the DeKalb City Council voted 29 May on a request from the Islamic Society of Northern Illinois University to build a two-story mosque. Labadi, a businessman and Islamic Society board member, said a bigger mosque was needed to replace the small house where local Muslims now worship. He also was hoping for affirmation that his neighbors and city officials have no fear of the Muslim community, Religion News Service reports via USA Today. "Don't look at me just as a Muslim, look at me as an American," Labadi said. The City Council unanimously approved the plan. However, in the decade since the 11 September 2001 terrorist attacks, animosity toward Muslims sometimes has taken the form of opposition to construction of mosques and other Islamic facilities. National debate erupted over plans for an Islamic community center that became known as the "Ground Zero mosque" in Lower Manhattan. [766 words, ENI-12-0315]
Searching for the Ultimate Sermon
Good preaching was certainly central to the Reformation and has remained so in Protestantism. However, one hears increasing complaints about contemporary sermonizing, leading some to claim that there is a crisis in preaching. Here is a take on that particular issue, from the Wall Street Journal. http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702303674004577434773260323812.html?fbresult=add#&mg=id-wsj
*************************
The Hunt for the Good Sermon
*************************
The Hunt for the Good Sermon
Are American churches really suffering a crisis of bad preaching?
By John Wilson
Is
preaching in America in a particularly bad state?
Several
commentators have recently raised the question, yet it has a long history. “It
has become an impertinent Vein among People of all Sorts,” wrote Jonathan Swift
in the 1720s, “to hunt after what they call a good Sermon, as if it were a
Matter of Pastime or Diversion.”
And
often those on the hunt declare their disappointment, as when Britain’s Lord
Hugh Cecil said in the mid-20th century that “the two dangers which beset the
Church of England are good music and bad preaching.”
Today’s
complainers include Ross Douthat, whose recently published “Bad Religion: How
We Became a Nation of Heretics” describes churches whose preachers promise
prosperity to the faithful or dispense the gospel of narcissism. Others wonder
about a pulpit presence so charismatic that it draws more attention to the
preacher than to his message.
And
yet, on the basis of a lifetime of churchgoing, I have to report that week
after week, year after year, I have heard the Word of God faithfully preached.
And I am particularly skeptical of sweeping claims, as by the Barna Group’s
David Kinnaman, that the upcoming generation of churchgoers has tastes and
needs radically different from those of any previous generation in human
history.
So
what explains the recently announced million-dollar grant from the Lilly
Foundation “to cultivate excellence in preaching” at Calvin College’s Institute
of Christian Worship? Does this eye-catching grant suggest that worship is on
perilous ground?
It
doesn’t. Preaching—and worship—is in need of renewal because it is always in
need of renewal. No pastor, congregation or denomination will ever get it right
once and for all.
At
the Lilly-funded program, pastors—men and women from various denominational
backgrounds—will study together in “Micah Groups,” named for the biblical
passage that has become a touchstone for many Christians of this generation: “He
has shown you, O mortal, what is good. And what does the Lord require of you?
To act justly and to love mercy and to walk humbly with your God” (Micah 6:8).
The goal of the program, says director Mark Labberton, is “the convergence of
worship, preaching, and justice.”
“Justice”
(a notoriously elusive concept) wouldn’t have defined a comparable program in
the 1950s, especially not in evangelical circles, where the accent would have
been on saving souls. To put “preaching” and “justice” together doesn’t imply
indifference to the eternal fate of our souls, but it does propose a
corrective—a stress on realizing the Kingdom of God here and now. The history
of the church is made up of moves like this.
Consider the alleged exodus of young people
from the church. “We won’t lose students because we didn’t entertain them,”
said the dreadlocked Philadelphia activist and preacher Shane Claiborne on
Twitter. “We will lose them because we haven’t given the FULL gospel.” Mr.
Claiborne’s comment made me think of another gifted preacher, Jesus, who also
met with a mixed reception. “From that moment,” we read in the sixth chapter of
John’s gospel—after Jesus said that “Unless you eat the flesh of the Son of Man
and drink his blood, you have no life in you”—”many of his disciples drew back
and no longer went about with him.”
Why
did some disciples draw back while others continued to follow Jesus? Why does
the church surge to life here or there, while at the same moment, across the
street or across the ocean, it seems to be increasingly moribund? Can’t we find
a method—underwritten by neuroscience and evolutionary psychology—to guarantee
successful preaching? To ask the question is to answer it.
In his memoir “The Pastor” (2011), Eugene Peterson
identifies one of the most serious threats to biblical preaching—a “pragmatic
vocational embrace of American technology and consumerism that promised to
rescue congregations from ineffective obscurity” but that “violated
everything—scriptural, theological, experiential—that had formed my identity as
a follower of Jesus and a pastor.”
The
obsession with measurable “results,” the rebranded promise of some technique or
strategy: Preachers are bombarded with this stuff every day (four keys to
success, six marks of a healthy church, seven principles of growth). Many
ignore it and get on with their work in “scripture, sermon, and sacrament.”
Praise God for that.
Mr.
Wilson is the editor of Books & Culture, a bimonthly review.
A
version of this article appeared June 1, 2012, on page A11 in the U.S. edition
of The Wall Street Journal, with the headline: The Hunt for the Good Sermon.
- HOUSES OF WORSHIP
- May 31, 2012, 7:06 p.m. ET
Thursday, May 31, 2012
Soccer Evangelism
Things are goofy all over. From ENI.
Polish churches seek to win fans at June soccer tournamentWarsaw, Poland (ENInews)--Poland's churches are hoping to win fans for God as they launched a welcoming program for June's Union of European Football Associations (UEFA) championship. "Let's show nobility of heart, a Polish hospitality shaped by the Gospel and an example of Christian openness to visitors," the Roman Catholic Bishops Conference said on 28 May. Poland's predominant church has unveiled a series of pastoral initiatives for the championship, which is being co-hosted with neighboring Ukraine. The 8 June-1 July tournament is the first major international football event to be hosted by post-Communist countries. [418 words, ENI-12-0311]
Thursday, May 24, 2012
AMPS!
I've played electric guitar for many, many years. I chased particular guitars for many years in search of a particular tone. I only found it when I finally realized that whatever amplifier I was using was as important as the guitar.
So, axes aside, here's what my son, Karl, and I were working with today. My AB 763 Showman will rejoin the rest of the crew very soon. Karl's Blackstar is AWESOME--beautiful tone shaping character. But nothing--NOTHING--beats the cathode-biased sound of my little blackface Princeton Reverb.
n.b. the red "Divine Noise" cable. It is very nice. Thanks to Grant Knepper for putting me on to Pro Guitar in Portland for it. http://proguitarshop.com/about-pro-guitar-shop
So, axes aside, here's what my son, Karl, and I were working with today. My AB 763 Showman will rejoin the rest of the crew very soon. Karl's Blackstar is AWESOME--beautiful tone shaping character. But nothing--NOTHING--beats the cathode-biased sound of my little blackface Princeton Reverb.
n.b. the red "Divine Noise" cable. It is very nice. Thanks to Grant Knepper for putting me on to Pro Guitar in Portland for it. http://proguitarshop.com/about-pro-guitar-shop
Amtrak at Steamer's Cafe in Tacoma Narrows, Washington
A quick little video I shot today on the way out of Steamer's Cafe in Tacoma Narrows, Washington.
Tuesday, May 15, 2012
Ελληνική Ευαγγελική Εκκλησία
From Ecumenical News International:
Here is a link to the church's website (all in Greek): http://www.gec.gr/index.php/en
"Greek churches 'face disaster' as crisis
deepens"
(ENInews)--A senior Greek Protestant has warned that minority denominations "face disaster" due to the country's worsening economic crisis. "Heavy taxation, high unemployment and all our other difficulties are fast-forwarding us to collapse," said Dimitrios Boukis, general secretary of the Greek Evangelical church, which has 29 congregations in two regional synods in Greece and other communities abroad. "We receive no state support and are fully dependent on our members, and we're already short of pastors because we can't afford them. The pastors we have are having to handle everything because we can't employ staff, so some congregations will end up without any spiritual care," he said. [463 words, ENI-12-0275]
(ENInews)--A senior Greek Protestant has warned that minority denominations "face disaster" due to the country's worsening economic crisis. "Heavy taxation, high unemployment and all our other difficulties are fast-forwarding us to collapse," said Dimitrios Boukis, general secretary of the Greek Evangelical church, which has 29 congregations in two regional synods in Greece and other communities abroad. "We receive no state support and are fully dependent on our members, and we're already short of pastors because we can't afford them. The pastors we have are having to handle everything because we can't employ staff, so some congregations will end up without any spiritual care," he said. [463 words, ENI-12-0275]
Here is a link to the church's website (all in Greek): http://www.gec.gr/index.php/en
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