Thursday, 4 February 2021

Open Letter to the Bishops of the Lutheran Church of Australia (1 February 2021)

Open Letter to the Bishops of the Lutheran Church of Australia

1 February 2021

It is with genuine anguish and great sadness, that I have come to a point in my life where I have needed to write such a letter. My reason for doing so is that it seems to me that the Lutheran Church of Australia no longer seeks to be a church of the Word, which guards the apostolic faith, and which makes the Evangelical Lutheran confession.

Preamble

St Paul writes in 1 Corinthians 1:10: Now I appeal to you, brothers, by the name of the Lord Jesus Christ, that all of you agree, and that there be no divisions among you, but that you be united in the same mind and the same judgment.

St Paul teaches here that the church should be unified in its mind and judgment, and that there be no divisions. If there is to be such unity, there must be a trustworthy principle of unity. Lutherans have always believed that that principle is the Holy Scripture alone (sola scriptura), for the simple reason that it is God’s Word. All other words are merely human words.

Christians today may also look back at church history and long for a time when the church was more seemingly united. Many new Christian converts may seem perplexed as to which church is the right one, and which one they should join. However, in the early church, things were no better: there were Gnostics, Marcionites, Valentinians, Donatists, Arians, Nestorians—all kinds of groups that to our ears are but a distant memory. But your “average every-day Christian convert” in early times still had to inquire as to which church was the true one. The way in which the true faith—orthodoxy—continued was that Christians rejected heresy in their own midst, separated themselves from those who believed contrary, and therefore stood up for the truth. Unity could not be had at the expense of the truth.

Such was also the attitude of Luther and the reformers. When they recognised that the Church of Rome was against a genuine Reformation according to the Scriptures, the Lutherans had to separate, not because they were schismatic, but because the Roman Catholic church has separated itself already from the Scriptural truth. The same also happened when Lutherans refused fellowship to Calvin and Zwingli—to compromise on the truth was to bury the truth.

The same happened in the 19th century. In 1817, King Friedrich Wilhelm III of Prussia made a united church out of the Reformed and Lutheran Churches. The principle of the new union church was not preservation of the truth and purity of doctrine, but keeping the political balance between rival parties and factions, until a time when the entire church body would reject either doctrine as the one truth.

In our times too, Lutherans once again find themselves at a crossroads. However, it is not just among Lutherans, but among all Christians of the various historic confessions, where there is found a cancerous spirit which is contrary to the Christian faith—it is what we might call the liberal, progressive, modernist spirit. Such a false spirit puts itself above the Holy Scripture as its judge, and subordinates the Scripture’s contents and its declared truths to its own presuppositions, prejudices and preconceptions. Such a spirit dethrones the Scripture—and enthrones itself—as the sole principle of unity in the church, corrupting, deconstructing and destroying everything in its course. That is not to say that the church is not in need of genuine reform, but it always must be a reform which seeks to return to Christ and his Word.

It is important for people all throughout the world to be able to find the true visible church. Just as in the times of the early church, new converts needed to seek out the orthodox Christians over against the Arians, the Gnostics, etc., so too in our day, there is a need to recognise what has become an invisible denomination, as a kind of an underlying disease: the modernist false church. What we often find today are church bodies where there exists an ever-increasing syncretism between the Christian faith and the modernist false church. If we should be “eager to maintain the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace” (Ephesians 4:3), it must be the unity of the right spirit. The false church does not ask us to preserve the “unity of the Spirit”, but to preserve its syncretism. The Holy cannot be enthroned in an idolatrous pantheon of false gods. Rather, the Holy Spirit leads believers to “devote themselves to the apostles’ teaching” (Acts 2:42). St John says of himself and the apostles: “We are from God. Whoever knows God listens to us; whoever is not from God does not listen to us. By this we know the Spirit of truth and the spirit of error” (1 John 4:6). The modernist spirit listens only to itself, and cherry-picks what it likes from Scripture to cover itself with sheep’s clothing, while its nature is that of a wolf. This is not the spirit that preserves the unity of the church in the bond of peace, but an unclean spirit which destroys the church.

In light of this preamble, I state my confession of faith under various headings and topics.

A.      Holy Scripture

I.                    “I believe without reservation the Holy Scriptures of the Old and New Testaments, as a whole and in all their parts, as the divinely inspired[1], written, and inerrant[2] word of God, and as the only infallible source and norm for all matters of faith, doctrine and life.”[3] I reject “the attempts of modern religious liberalism to make man the judge of the Word of God”[4].

II.                 I believe that the Holy Scriptures are a totally unique book, unlike any other book. I believe that each of the books of the bible has human authors, who were “carried along by the Holy Spirit” (2 Peter 1:21), in such a way that the Scriptures were “breathed out” (2 Timothy 3:16) or inspired by the living God himself. Therefore, the words of the Holy Scriptures are nothing less than the very Word of God. I reject all false ways of speaking about inspiration, as if the Scripture is inspired (1) only in the same manner as artists, poets and composers, or (2) in the same manner as famous theologians, or (3) that the Holy Spirit was merely “involved” in the inspiration process, or (4) that the Scripture is inspired only because the Holy Spirit makes use of it in our lives.

III.              I believe that, just as in the incarnation, Jesus Christ, the Son of God, was a true human being, yet without sin, the Holy Scripture is a word of human authors, who were inspired by the Holy Spirit, and that therefore the Scripture is without error (Titus 1:2). The Holy Scripture is the infallible truth and is “perfectly inerrant in all of its words and in every one of its words”[5], “whether they pertain to doctrine or morals or history, chronology, topography, or nomenclature”[6]. I reject all opinions to the contrary, which treat the Scripture as an imperfect or erring book. I reject the opinion that the Scripture is only inerrant in that it does not lead into error, although it may still have factual errors. I reject the opinion that each human writer of the Scripture has his own theology which contradicts the others.

IV.              I believe that the Holy Scriptures are sufficient, clear and authoritative. They are the “only rule and norm”[7], the “pure, clear fountain of Israel”[8], and therefore are the sole principle of unity in the Christian church. If certain passages are perceived to be unclear, this is not a problem with the Scriptures themselves, but because through the passage of time some detail is unknown to us. I reject the opinion which states that Scripture is not sufficient or clear, and needs another external light to shine upon it, such as tradition, reason or church authority.

V.                I believe that the Holy Spirit, being the primary author of Scripture, is therefore its best interpreter, who “opens the intellect and the heart to understand the Scriptures and to heed the Word”[9]. I believe that the primary task of exegesis is to find the plain, literal and native sense of the Scripture and particular passages. I reject the so-called “historical-critical method” of exegesis, which seeks to deconstruct the text and undermine its objective meaning. I also reject the exegetical methods which leave the meaning of the Scripture up the subjectivity of the reader.

VI.              I believe that the entirety of the Holy Scriptures, both of the Old and New Testament, are to be divided into the Law and the Gospel. These two teachings differ fundamentally from each other, and should be rightly distinguished in teaching and preaching, as the highest art of the pastoral office. I believe therefore that the good news of Jesus Christ runs as a thread throughout the entire Scriptures, giving them an intrinsic theological unity. I reject all confusing and mixing of the Law and the Gospel, such as the rejection of the law in the life of Christians, or the preaching of the Law as Gospel, and vice-versa.

B.       The Church’s Confession of Faith

I.                    I believe without reservation that the Confessions of the Evangelical Lutheran Church as contained in the Book of Concord of 1580 are a true and faithful confession of God’s Word, and are my own confession of faith. “By God’s grace, with intrepid hearts, we are willing to appear before the judgment seat of Christ with this Confession and give an account of it.”[10]

II.                 I accept these confessions because (quia) they are a true and faithful presentation of God’s Word in the Holy Scripture. I reject the opinion which only accepts these confessions insofar as (quatenus) they are a true and faithful presentation of the Scripture.

III.              I reject any indifferentism to the Lutheran confessions as antiquated and irrelevant books. I also reject sophistic distinctions between descriptive and prescriptive statements in the Confessions, in such a way as to justify deviations from this confession. I also reject the use of synodical or ecumenical statements to dilute or taint this confession of faith.

C.       Theological Presuppositions

I.                    I believe that Jesus Christ, as the Word of God made flesh, is the Way, the Truth and the Life (John 14:6). I believe that the written Word of God in the Holy Scripture is truth, and contains nothing but truth (John 10:35). I reject the opinion that there is no objective truth and error, or that we cannot know the truth from the Scripture. I also reject the deconstruction of language, such that words mean nothing apart from the interpretation of the reader.

II.                 I believe that the Christian faith is built on the objective works of God in human history, and not on the clever use of language. I reject all rhetorical attempts to muddy this principle, including the rejection of the Virgin Birth, the miracles of Jesus, and the historical resurrection.

III.              I believe that the Holy Scripture makes definitive doctrinal and dogmatic claims, to which Christians should assent. These claims are not simply human doctrines, but the Word of God itself, in its truth and purity. I reject an indifferent attitude towards doctrine, which treats it as a dead thing. I also reject the opinion that purity of doctrine does not matter or is an impossible pursuit.

IV.              I believe that there is a supernatural realm, which includes heaven and hell, the devil, angels, demons, etc. I reject the opinion which denies the existence of these things, as if they are figments of imagination, or psychological illusions. Such opinions deny the inspiration of Scripture itself.

V.                I believe that the goal of the Christian faith is the “resurrection of the dead and life everlasting”[11], “to live under [Christ] in his kingdom, and serve Him in everlasting righteousness, innocence and blessedness, just as He is risen from the dead, lives and reigns to all eternity”[12]. I reject all attempts to make the Christian faith only a matter of this earthly life and existence.

 

D.      God and Creation

I.                    I believe that the doctrine of the Holy Trinity— “that we worship one God, the Father, Son and Holy Spirit, in three persons and three persons in one God without confusing the persons nor dividing the divine substance”[13]—is essential to the Christian faith. I reject all opinions to the contrary, as is summarised in the Augsburg Confession Article I. Also, I reject the attribution of the feminine sex or female gender to the persons of the Trinity.

II.                 I believe that the words of Genesis 1-3 are to be taken as a factual and historical, including the six days of creation, Adam and Eve, the Garden of Eden, and the fall into sin. I reject all attempts to interpret these chapters as myth, legend, or poetry, and the opinions that view humans and animals as having evolved from simple into complex beings, from one species into another.

III.              I believe that God is the creator, giver and taker of human life, from conception to death (Psalm 139:13, Job 10:10—12). I reject abortion at all stages of pregnancy, and euthanasia. However, this is not to exclude the God-given use of arms to those who have the particular vocation to use them in service of the state (Romans 13:1—7, 1 Peter 2:13—17, Luke 3:14), for example, soldiers, police, etc.

IV.              I believe that God created human beings in his image as male and female, and that marriage is only be between a man and a woman. I reject all opinions to the contrary.

V.                I believe that the true doctrine of the Holy Scripture as the inspired, inerrant and infallible Word of God, is necessary for the true doctrine of sin (Psalm 19:12—13, Jeremiah 17:9, Psalm 51:5). The Scripture (and also, the Lutheran Confessions) teaches original sin in a way that completely lays bare all human opinions, reason and philosophy (Romans 3:9—18, 2 Corinthians 10:5—6). I reject any opinions which assume that humans are essentially good, or have some good part in them which enables people to justify themselves, therefore making them think that they do not need a Saviour, Jesus Christ.

E.       Jesus Christ

I.                    I believe that Jesus Christ is both completely true man and true God in one person, according to the historic confession of the ecumenical Creeds and the Lutheran Confessions. With the whole orthodox church everywhere, I reject all denials of Christ’s true humanity, his true divinity, or the inseparability of his two natures in his person.

II.                 I believe that our Lord Jesus Christ in his suffering and death, made the one, true perfect and sufficient sacrifice for all the sin of the whole world, in such a way that his holy precious blood and his innocent suffering and death was the only atonement, payment and propitiation for sin, which has satisfied the wrath of God which we justly deserved, and which has won the victory over sin, death and the devil. I reject any attempts to lessen the importance of Christ’s vicarious atonement as the centre of the Christian faith. The vicarious atonement does not infringe upon God’s fatherhood, nor is it child abuse, but rather: “God so loved the world that he gave his only Son” (John 3:16).

III.              I believe that Jesus Christ alone is true God, together with the Father and the Holy Spirit, who called the world into existence. I reject the so-called “Word of Faith” movement, which views Jesus as essentially no different from Christians, who, like little gods, should attempt to call into existence various desires of their hearts.

IV.              I believe, because of the fact that he “ascended into heaven and sits at the right hand of God the Father”, that Jesus Christ both in his humanity and divinity is truly present in his church, physically and bodily, as he has promised (eg Matthew 18:20, 26:26, 28:20), through the proclamation of his Word and in the administration of the Holy Sacraments. I reject any theology of Christian worship which assumes that Christ is essentially absent from, or only “spiritually present” in, his church on earth.

F.       Justification

I.                    I believe that people are justified by faith, when they trust that Jesus Christ died on the cross for their sins, “not by their works, or their own doing, but as a free gift of God, so that no one can boast” (Ephesians 2:8—9). This justification is not in any shape or form whatsoever the same as universalism, which essentially denies the doctrine of sin, repentance, missions, evangelism, the church, the sacraments, the Gospel, and the whole Christian faith. I reject the opinion that mission work or evangelism or proselytism is now wrong, misplaced or unsuitable.

II.                 I believe in “one baptism for the forgiveness of sin”[14], which bestows upon people individually the gifts of salvation that Christ won on his cross and in his resurrection. I reject all opinions that see baptism as a human work, rather than a work of God.

G.      The Office of the Holy Ministry

I.                    I believe that there is one Office of the Holy Ministry which was instituted by Christ (John 20:21—23), and that Christ also established a Priesthood of all the Baptised (1 Peter 2:9), the two of which should not be confused. I reject the so-called licensing of approved laypeople to carry out the normal duties of the pastoral ministry.

II.                 I believe that in receiving a regular call through the church, a candidate for the ministry should be examined according to the criteria in the Scripture (eg 1 Timothy 3:1—13, Titus 1:5—9), approved, and ordained publicly with the laying on of hands. A person’s inward sense of call to the ministry should be tested according to the Word of God. I reject the opinion that graduate or other pastors should be “regularised” sometime after ordination, after having served a parish for a set time, as if their approval and ordination to the ministry is not already completely regular[15]. Such a process turns the pastors into people-pleasers, and interferes with the divinity of the call. I reject the opinion that a call to a certain parish can be limited in advance to a certain number of years.

III.              I believe that, “though women prophets were used by the Spirit of God in the Old as well as the New Testament, 1 Corinthians 14:34,35 and 1 Timothy 2: 11—14 prohibit a woman from being called into the office of the public ministry for the proclamation of the Word and the administration of the Sacraments. This apostolic rule is binding on all Christendom; hereby her rights as a member of the spiritual priesthood are in no way impaired.” (TA VI 11). The attitude of devout women which is praised by the apostles (see 1 Peter 3:4) is the same attitude which all Christians, both men and women, should have towards Christ and his word (Ephesians 5:23-24). Therefore, the approval of the ordination of women necessarily requires an attitude in the church, which places itself above in judgment above the Scripture[16].

IV.              I believe that the call to the Office of the Holy Ministry is for life (1 Peter 5:1—4, 1 Timothy 4:16, 1 Corinthians 4:4). I reject the creation of a sub-class of pastors, such as the so-called Special Ministry Pastors (SMPs), where their call to the ministry is limited only to one particular congregation or parish.

V.                I believe that hierarchy in the church (such as bishops, etc.) exists not by divine right, but only by human right, for the sake of peace and order. I reject the use of public vows to bind the consciences of pastors to the unqualified doctrinal and pastoral oversight of their bishops (as if such submission is divinely commanded as obedience to the fourth commandment), and vows to any teachings of a particular synod which undermine Scripture or the Lutheran Confessions. I reject the arbitrary power of bishops used to undermine the right of congregations to call their own pastors. I reject the so-called distinction between a “call to a parish” and an “assignment by bishops to a parish”. Rather, a congregation should issue a call together with the advice of bishops, and may delegate their power to call to the bishops who then assign a pastor. This process of delegating is as much a regular call, as if they had chosen a particular pastor themselves.

VI.              I believe that there may be a situation where a pastor may need to be removed from the ministry, because of false teaching or a manifestly ungodly life. However, just as the call to the ministry is through proper and orderly means, so also the removal of a pastor can only be considered legitimate if an accurate judicial examination of the case occurs, as well as the careful observance of legitimate procedure. In the judicial process, the normal rules of evidence should apply. I reject the arbitrary power of bishops to remove pastors from parishes or from the ministry without examination and proper process.

VII.           I believe, in accordance with Book of Concord, that the papacy does fulfil the marks of Antichrist also in our day, as an office which has been established against the Word of God (cf 2 Thessalonians 2:1—12). The clear and sufficient Word of God, and not the papacy, is the only source and norm of matters of doctrine and life, the only true principle of unity in the church. Of course, there many true and faithful Christians in the Roman Catholic church, who are our brothers and sisters in faith. I reject the opinion that this doctrine is simply an anti-Catholic insult resulting from Luther’s bad temper, or from mediaeval superstitions. Luther, rather, made it clear that he was not attacking the papacy for its immoral life (as Wycliffe and Hus did), but because of its false doctrine. A rejection of this doctrine of ,Antichrist by Lutherans not only means that it does not subscribe to the confessions in their entirety, but also opens the door wide for lack of vigilance to the unbiblical (and potentially totalitarian) use of authority, even in the Lutheran Church, against the clear, inerrant and infallible Word.

H.      The Holy Supper of the Lord

I.                    I believe that the Lord’s Supper is “the true body and blood of our Lord Jesus Christ, under the bread and wine, instituted by Christ himself for us Christians to eat and to drink”[17]. I reject the Calvinist and Zwinglian positions, which do not confess the bodily, fleshly presence of Christ’s true body and blood in the sacramental elements. I also reject the opinion of the Roman Catholic church that the Lord’s Supper is a propitiatory sacrifice on behalf of the living and the dead.

II.                 I believe that the entire external, visible action of the Lord’s Supper instituted by Christ comprises of the consecration, the distribution and the reception[18]. The consecration and distribution are part of the duties of the Office of the Ministry. This three-fold action of the sacrament is the institution of the Lord, and as a general principle this action should not be separated[19].

III.              I believe that the presence of Christ’s body and blood is immediately effected by Christ’s Words which are spoken and recited in the consecration, so that what the communicants receive from the altar into their hands and mouths is the true body and blood of Christ, in accordance with his words, “This is my body”, “This is my blood”. It is a clear doctrinal consequence of the Words of Institution to consume the remaining elements in the Lord’s Supper, in accordance with Christ’s words: “eat”, “drink”[20]. This practice also avoids unnecessary scruples, has good historical precedent, and was also Luther’s advice. I reject the practice in the Lord’s Supper of consecrating elements other than bread and wine. I reject the practice of treating consecrated elements no differently from that which is unconsecrated. I reject the false interpretation of some Lutheran theologians who say that the body and blood of Christ is only present in the eating and drinking.

IV.              I believe that the body and blood of Christ are distributed to and eaten by both believers and unbelievers. For those who eat and drink worthily, the Lord’s Supper is for them a medicine of immortality, where “forgiveness of sins, life and salvation”[21] are given them, but for those who eat and drink unworthily, they eat to their judgment. There is nothing wrong with the supper or its institution, such that it is unhygienic or communicates sickness to the communicants who receive it in a worthy manner. However, this does not mean that pastors should distribute the supper with dirty hands, or that Christians should not be mindful of spreading infectious diseases when attending church. The use of a common chalice is part of Christ’s institution (in accordance with the words, “He took the cup”), and need not be substituted for individual cups. The use of individual cups also interferes with the practical ability to consume the remaining elements, as described above.

V.                I believe, in accordance with the Augsburg Confession, that communicants should be admitted “after they have been examined and absolved”[22]. I reject the practice of open communion, as against Christian love and the doctrine of church fellowship. The rejection of the biblical and historic practice of closed communion is against the subscription to the Book of Concord.

I.        The Liturgy

I.                    I believe that the Lutheran Church is a liturgical church, in accordance with the statements of the Augsburg Confession: “Our churches are falsely accused of abolishing the Mass. The Mass is held among us and celebrated with the highest reverence.”[23] I reject the modern deconstruction of the liturgy and reverence in the church.

II.                 I believe that the Holy Spirit promises to speak to people through the Word of God as it is found in the Scripture. I reject the opinion that the use of the church’s historic liturgy works against the Holy Spirit. Rather, the historic liturgy of the church is saturated from top to bottom with the words of Holy Scripture.

III.              I believe that the Holy Spirit promises to call and gather the church when and where it pleases him through the Word and Sacrament. I reject the so-called “Church Growth Movement”, which seeks to abandon the liturgy or doctrine in order to increase attendance numbers. Genuine mission work should be done, and Christians should have a desire to see the church grow, but it should be because of a desire for the salvation of souls, and not for a business-like growth of an institution for its own sake.

IV.              I believe that all music and song in the church should have texts that are theological sound, that are in accordance with the Word of God and which confess the truths of the Christian faith. I reject the practice of making the purpose of church music to manipulate or illicit from people an emotional state or response, or to create a contrived religious atmosphere.

J.        Church Fellowship

I.                    I believe that the Scripture and nothing else should be taught in the church, that to “teach differently” (1 Tim 1:3) is forbidden, and that Christians are commanded to avoid those who do so (Rom 16:17, 1 Tim 6:3, 11). Where truth and error have equal rights in a particular church, that church is a heterodox church.

II.                 I believe that there are still children of God within heterodox churches, insofar as they hold to the Scriptures despite the doctrine or practice of their churches.

III.              Although patience and time is required in the church to correct those who err, where there is a partial apostasy from the Word of God, the Word of God prohibits us from having church fellowship with those who teach differently (1 Corinthians 1:10, Romans 16:17, 1 Tim 6:3, 11, 2 John 10-11), for danger of committing the sin of unionism and syncretism. This kind of separation is not schism, because it is commanded in the Word of God.

IV.              I reject the principle of “unity in diversity”, which undermines the Word of God as the unifying source of truth. I reject the kind of church unity which gives truth and error equal status. I reject the ecumenical movement, insofar as it seeks to unify church bodies without agreement in truth. Rather, Jesus says: “Sanctify them in the truth; your Word is truth” (John 17:17). “Love rejoices not in wrongdoing, but rejoices in the truth” (1 Cor 13:6).

Conclusion

In light of these things, I have come to the conclusion that the Lutheran Church of Australia is no longer an orthodox church. Truth and error have equal standing in the name of unity in diversity. No longer is the Holy Scripture the only source and norm of all matters of doctrine and life, and the only principle of unity among us. It seems to me that there is no unified intention in our church to cling to the Holy Christian, catholic and apostolic faith as it was once delivered to the saints. What we see in so many of its parishes and hear from so many of its pulpits is no longer that faith. Lutheran doctrine and practice are often conspicuous by their absence. Only God himself knows whether the Lutheran Church of Australia is reformable. But in obedience to the Lord of the Church, our Lord Jesus Christ, and his holy command to avoid false teachers, I hereby resign my membership from the Lutheran Church of Australia and as a member of her pastorate.

My intention from here on is to continue to fulfil my ordination vows, which I promised before God. However, in good conscience, I renounce before God the vow requiring submission to the doctrinal and pastoral oversight of the bishops of the LCA, and to uphold the doctrine and practice of the LCA (whatever that means!). Many pastors of the LCA, like myself, oppose these vows, and yet feel as though they have no choice in the matter.

Therefore, I pray that God would help me, by his grace, to establish at least a Lutheran congregation independent from the LCA, which I also pray would light a candle in our country and beyond, and hopefully grow into a fellowship and synod of many more confessional, Lutheran churches, with the blessing of God’s hand. Whether the Lord blesses my work with outward success and growth, I leave to him and his good and gracious will. In the meantime, it is my intention to seek to be faithful to him, whether or not my work seems “successful” by the standards of the world.

Those who read this letter may think to accuse me of self-righteousness, or that I am looking for the perfect church. That is not true. I know there are many faithful people in the Lutheran Church of Australia. Many of them don’t know or can’t see the trajectory their church has been on for many years, or may not yet be convinced that things are sufficiently bad to warrant leaving. To seek a perfect church is to deny original sin. However, when Christians have the perfect Word of God as their only guide, they have a perfect standard and norm.

To leave the church of my childhood, my youth, and my life thus far, is a very serious and painful matter for me—I have served this church as a pastor for 12 years. I assure you that I have come to this decision with the utmost seriousness. My reason for doing so is to use the pastoral office given to me by God’s mercy to preserve the faith from those who want to see it destroyed. In fact, I am not leaving the Lutheran church at all, but rather returning to her, as to my mother, while the modernist, liberal, false church continually paints their apostasy as their great work of “Christian piety”. They may label me a schismatic, a heretic, a separatist, a maverick, or whatever. They know that as long as I am with them, they can corrode my witness. My intention has been simply to act with good conscience in accordance with the Word of God, and to stand up for the truth. I commend what I have written to Almighty God, and ask for his gracious blessing.

I shall not die, but I shall live, and recount the deeds of the Lord. Psalm 118:17.

 

Yours in Christ,          

 

Pastor Stephen van der Hoek

 

 

 

Abbreviations

AC       Augsburg Confession

Ap        Apology to the Augsburg Confession

FC Ep   Formula of Concord, Epitome

FC SD  Formula of Concord, Solid Declaration

LC        Luther’s Large Catechism

SC        Luther’s Small Catechism

TA       Theses of Agreement, adopted by The United Evangelical Lutheran Church in Australia and The Evangelical Lutheran Church of Australia

 

Appendix
Quotations from Lutheran writers about leaving heterodox churches

Martin Luther: “Now it is high time for him to run and flee, who is able to flee; let everything he has behind and depart; the sooner the better; not with his feet but with his heart, in such a way that he will be rid of the abomination and enter the kingdom of Christ through faith. But to do this reason and a keen insight are needed rightly to discern the abomination. It cannot be seen in any way better than when we compare it to Christ who teaches, as stated above, that we are reconciled to God, and are saved through his blood. But the Pope ascribes this power to our works. Thus you ever see that to be saved through works and not to be saved through works (to believe on Christ as our justification before God) are contrary to each other. If you then want to remain with Christ, you must flee from the Pope and let him go.” (Church Postil, Sermon for Trinity XXV)

Philip Melanchthon (Book of Concord): “All Christians ought to beware of becoming partakers of the godless doctrine, blasphemies, and unjust cruelty of the Pope. On this account they ought to desert and execrate the Pope with his adherents as the kingdom of Antichrist; just as Christ has commanded, Matt. 7:15: Beware of false prophets. And Paul commands that godless teachers should be avoided and execrated as cursed, Gal 1:8; Tit 3:10 And 2 Cor. 6:14 he says: Be ye not unequally yoked together with unbelievers; for what communion hath light with darkness? To dissent from the agreement of so many nations and to be called schismatics is a grave matter. But divine authority commands all not to be allies and defenders of impiety and unjust cruelty. On this account our consciences are sufficiently excused; for the errors of the kingdom of the Pope are manifest.” (Tractate on the Power and Primacy of the Pope, 41—42)

Franz Pieper: “By the term “schism” we mean a division in the Church which God’s Word does not enjoin, but which is begun by men for carnal reasons and therefore is sinful, e.g., a separation because of differences in church customs, church terms, order of worship, etc. In practice it is important to distinguish between schismatics acting from spite and schismatics acting from weakness in Christian knowledge and prejudice. Such, however, as separate from a church body because it tenaciously clings to false doctrine are unjustly called schismatics, separatists, etc. This separation is commanded in Scripture (Rom. 16:17) and is the only means of restoring and maintaining the true unity in the Christian Church.” (Pieper, Christian Dogmatics, vol III, p 427)

The Lutheran Church of Australia’s Theses of Agreement say: “We believe that where differences in teaching and practice exist or arise between Churches uniting, these differences are to be removed by willingly submitting to the authority of the Word of God. Where a difference in teaching or practice is a departure from the doctrine of the Bible, such difference cannot be tolerated, but must be pointed out as an error, on the basis of clear passages of Holy Writ; and if the error is persisted in, in spite of instruction, warning, and earnest witness, it must at last lead to a separation.” (TA I 4a).

 

Bible passages: Psalm 26:4—5, Psalm 94:20, Jeremiah 15:19, Romans 16:17, 1 Corinthians 11:19, Matthew 7:15, 1 Timothy 6:3—5, 2 John 10—11, 2 Corinthians 6:14.



[1] 1 Tim 3:16, 2 Pet 1:21. FC SD XI 12.

[2] Pr 30:5, Jn 10:35, Tit 1:2. LC IV 57.

[3] Schubert, David (ed), 1994, Church Rites, prepared by the Commission on Worship, Lutheran Church of Australia, Openbook Publishers, Adelaide.

[4] TA VIII 10.

[5] Pieper, Francis, 1953, Christian Dogmatics, vol 1, p 221, Concordia, St Louis.

[6] Pieper, Francis, 1953, Christian Dogmatics, vol 1, p 223, Concordia, St Louis.

[7] FC Ep Summary 1.

[8] FC SD Comprehensive Summary 3.

[9] FC SD II 26.

[10] FC SD XII 40.

[11] Apostles’ Creed, Article II.

[12] SC II The Creed.

[13] Athanasian Creed, 3—4.

[14] Nicene Creed, Article III.

[15] See AC XIV.

[16] For a fuller presentation of my opinion concerning the ordination of women, see Women’s Ordination: Why is this issue important and what’s at stake? Stephen van der Hoek, 30 August 2018. http://owl.lca.org.au/?p=1085. (Accessed 31 December 2020)

[17] SC VI The Sacrament of the Altar.

[18] FC SD VII 86.

[19] FC SD VII 83.

[20] See Luther’s Letters to Simon Wolferinus.

[21] SD VI The Sacrament of the Altar.

[22] Ap XXIV 1.

[23] AC XXIV 1.


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