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Showing posts from November, 2024

Taboo #3: Sodom wasn't about homosexual relations...

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I read Taboo, so you don't have to. "I'm not sure about Sodom, but the rest of Scripture is clear." On page 79, Mike Novotny wants to be too cool for school by attempting to disprove that the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah had anything to do with homosexual relations. Skip back a few pages and you'll find his reasoning. "Let's start with Genesis 19, the story of Sodom. Do you know it? Sodom stinks. God says its stench wafts up to heaven and turns his stomach. God send angels in disguise to investigate. A man named Lot welcomes them into his home, but that's when the men of Sodom pound on the door. "Where are those men?!" they demand. "Bring them out so we can have sex with them." When they try to break down the door, the angels step forward, strike the sex-crazed mob blind, and rush Lot's family out of Sodom just as fire falls from heaven and destroys them all. And if you grew up in church, that's all the proof you need...

Woke in the WELS: A pastoral brief on Critical Theory misses the mark.

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(Dropping this at 4PM on a Friday is rather ominous) The Conference of Presidents (COP) has finished their work on a pastoral brief addressing Critical Theory and justice . (Note: the link is to my Google drive. The WELS distributed this initially to Pastors, and it will be published online next month.) The CoP is comprised by the Presidents of the twelve WELS districts and this document was authored by them and any consultants they chose to bring on. The impetus for this document was a memorial for the 2023 Synod Convention. Here is the original memorial as published in the BORAM : During the convention there was a fair bit of conversation on the memorial and it's wording. Much of the conversation belied a poor understanding of critical theory and social justice (although a few Pastors were very on point in their comments) and how it is affecting the laity. Ultimately the memorial was revised and accepted. The revised language follows: Comparing the two, you can see the 'mista...

Taboo #2: Christians shouldn't find homosexuality gross

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I read Taboo so you don't have to. In chapter 9, Mike describes something that made him want to hide under a pew: "Our church invited a guest speaker to talk about his struggle with same-sex desires. The speaker was honest and vulnerable. He admitted that despite all the attempts, he couldn't pray the gay away. That's when an older Christian raised his hand. "Hiow can you feel that way?" he yucked. "I can't imagine feeling that way about another man."  We talked about homosexual ideation in our discussion on Video 1 when Ben told us that empathy necessitates putting ourselves in homosexual shoes and in Video 3 where Bill tells us that LGBTQ+ stories that are not in line with God's will and word are worth listening to. In both cases we appealed to Scripture - Psalm 1, where the blessed man is described as not walking in the counsel of the wicked or stands among the sinners, but his delight is in the law of the Lord, and likewise to Jude whe...

Accreditation

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  Following on the heels of the recent  post on seminary accreditation , I received a copy of Knruxate , the annual magazine of Wisconsin Lutheran Seminary, which featured an article entitled  Commendation From Outsiders  offering Presidents Treptow's perspective on accreditation. The Lord's timing is fantastic as it offers me an opportunity to critique with the groundwork already laid (also, did you notice Let the Little Children Come to Me landed on Pentecost 20, which featured Mark 10:2-16? That wasn't planned, fam, but it gave me a smile during the Gospel reading. God is good!) One of the reasons Wisconsin Lutheran Seminary (WLS) decided to pursue accreditation was a desire to have outside eyes look at its overall program. The seminary’s governing board and the faculty, desiring to improve in their synod-assigned work of preparing men for service as pastors in WELS, sought out an accrediting agency to provide an objective assessment of the seminary’s work. An ob...

Taboo #1: Found Herself Pregnant

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  I read Taboo, so you don't have to. Over the next few months I'm going to drip out midweek installments of Mike Novotny's Taboo. I do not recommend you read this book, and the posts here will help explain why. This week we'll kick it off with a softball anecdote from the last chapter of the book: "Earlier this year, I met a man who, along with his wife, worked for a pro-life ministry. He told me how they invited a young woman to stay in their guest bedroom while she got on her feet. But the girl liked to party and, one day, found herself pregnant." *record scratch* One does not go to a party and simply find herself pregnant  like catching the common cold. This soft-pedalling of sin particularly when it comes to LGBTQ and women is pervasive throughout the book. 

Outline for a post I thank God I didn't have to finish

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What follows is the skeleton for a blog post that, God be praised, I did not have to flesh out on Wednesday morning following the election. The outline shows a progression of starting with individual scriptures, using scripture to define principles, using principles to interpret biblical stories, and finally using our doctrinal statements (the least authoritative source of the four) to show the witness of the Scriptures is that a woman in authority is a sign of God's judgement. God be praised that we were spared the greater judgement by God in two of the last three election cycles.  Thesis: A vote for a woman President is a vote for God's judgment.  1. Biblical Admonitions We start with specific Biblical directives. a. God, in announcing His judgement on Judah: Isaiah 1:7 - the current immigration crisis is a sign of judgement Your country is desolate, Your cities are burned with fire; Strangers devour your land in your presence; And it is desolate, as overthrown by strang...

Turning God into a deistic teddy bear

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TGC 420 — On Cross Bearing - YouTube "A lot of Christians will turn God into in into an inactive kind of deistic teddy bear by saying 'oh well no God doesn't uh you know...' like when Hurricane Katrina happened and lots of Christians were saying 'well this is because of the Mardi Gras' then you have the other Christians who come to the rescue and the Lutherans who come to the rescue and say 'well don't be an Enthusiast it's not because of Mardi Gras' ... Why not? Are you serious? I mean why we don't believe that God punishes, is it also because of your idolatry in your heart? Maybe you should examine that. I mean I I'm not saying that we that we are able to perfectly pinpoint everything and know the ways of God: the spirit blows where he wills and you know God holds the wind in his hand right, but at the same time we shouldn't act as if God doesn't punish as if He doesn't bring disasters because of because of sin. This wasn...

Signals not to Send

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Note: images throughout (except the Galatians meme) are from Berg's presentation. The Rev. Dr. Michael Berg delivered this presentation at the 2024 National Conference on Worship, Music & the Arts, and it can be viewed online . Let's take a gander. First - it is my understanding based on the testimony of two or three witnesses that the Bergs are democrats. In which case the cover art (and the majority of art throughout) is pretty rich insofar as depicting those across the aisle as abusing the image of our Lord and Savior for political means. We all recognize the majority of the WELS leans republican (in my opinion, for legitimate reasons aligning with our theology). This bias in imagery paints a picture of a problem that in my humble opinion does not exist - can Berg point to a WELS pastor or teacher who has used this kind of imagery on social media?  Berg opens with stories from both sides of the aisle - Barbara Bush encouraging her Pastor to pray for Bill Clinton, and Oba...