The title of this article is a direct quotation from the synod
announcement concerning the three churches and their pastors who have
entered a state of confessional protest. See earlier posts for a
description of this protest, and an analysis of the initial response.
I'm going to present the sequence of relevant events in a brief form,
as I saw them occurring from my own point of view. I believe my point
of view is the truth, or else it wouldn't be my point of view. You may
certainly disagree about that.
The first event relevant to this announcement was when Pastor Rolf Preus
was given an ultimatum by the synod president: either
recant/retract/withdraw your paper "Clarifying the Issues," or
you will be expelled from the synod. The showdown meeting began with
the president asking that Pastor Preus retract his entire paper, as the
only acceptable sign that he is not charging the synod with false
doctrine. The request/demand was repeated throughout the meeting.
Preus' response was to ask for biblical proof that what he had written
was wrong, for without such proof, he believed that his paper was
correct and to retract it would be a sin. The meeting ended with no
retraction, and no serious attempt to show from the Bible that the paper
was wrong.
On January 26, 2006, the announcement went out that Pastor Preus was
henceforth suspended for unintentionally charging the synod with false
doctrine. This decision was apparently questioned, because another
document appeared to justify the action. There we learn that retraction
of the paper was absolutely necessary because it "was inflammatory and caused many in the synod to assume he was making the charge of false doctrine." Apparently, the reason for
the suspension was not set in stone, because it seemed to shift slightly over
time.
This is where the problem began that led to the "'selective fellowship'
protest" and what has ensued. Even in January, 2006, it seemed obvious
to me that a state of selective fellowship had already been declared.
The action responsible for selective fellowship was removing Pastor
Preus from the synod without a doctrinal reason. Most of the synod's
pastors were accustomed to thinking of Pastor Preus as being in our
doctrinal fellowship. Many pastors actually agreed with most of what
he wrote in his paper, and they still do. There has indeed been
criticism of Preus, even from some close friends, but it was not
cricitism of his doctrine so much as the confrontational way he
sometimes presented it.
The adopted ELS doctrinal statement says at the very
beginning of the article on fellowship:
We confess that Scripture requires that church fellowship be
recognized and practiced where there is a mutual confession of and
commitment to the pure Marks of the Church, the Word and Sacraments.
Even on January 26, 2006, a great many people in the ELS were still
convinced that we shared with Pastor Preus "a mutual confession of and
commitment to the pure Marks of the Church," the president's judgment
call notwithstanding. Next, it says:
Jesus Christ is the Head of His Church, and He governs and teaches it
by His Word, but deviation from the teaching of God's Word is not to
be tolerated in the church.
This casts into doubt the authority of one individual by himself to
declare a break in fellowship, especially where there is still a mutual
confession of and commitment to the pure Marks of the Church. Note that
it says "deviation from the teaching of God's Word," not "deviation from
our attempts to summarize that doctrine." So it's more important to
defend our doctrinal statements with scripture (if we can) than to
defend them with administrative acts of dubious authority. If we can't
successfully defend them with scripture alone, then something's wrong
with them. Next, it says:
We therefore reject unionism, that is, church fellowship with
adherents of false doctrine, and ecumenical endeavors which compromise
the pure doctrine of God's Word.
What, exactly, was the false doctrine that Preus was charged with
teaching? He wasn't charged at all. Rather, he was
supposed to be unintentionally charging the synod with teaching false
doctrine. But what did he really intend to do? He intended to
question the doctrinal accuracy of our brand spanking new doctrinal
statement, the PMW, because he is committed to the pure Marks
of the Church. Later, it says:
At the same time we also condemn separatism, i.e., the refusal to
acknowledge and practice fellowship when there is agreement in
doctrine.
The above sentence from our adopted ELS doctrinal statement is our
first premise.
Second premise: Pastor Preus had not filed a charge of false doctrine
against the synod. He intentionally avoided saying that the PMW
document is an unscriptural or "unconfessional" document, but wrote that
it teaches some things as articles of faith without scriptural proof.
He denied that such claims carry the authority of God's Word.
Third premise: Pastor Preus has not been charged with adhering to false
doctrine. Instead, he was charged with unintentionally charging the
synod with false doctrine. He was also accused later of sowing seeds of
discord among the brethren, which is not the same as disagreement in
doctrine.
Inevitable conclusion: refusal of the synod to acknowledge and practice
fellowship with Pastor Preus is separatism, which we condemn.
For the sake of completeness, here are the Bible passages provided in
support of our adopted ELS doctrinal statement quoted above:
See John 8:31-32, 1 Cor. 1:10, Eph. 2:19-20, Matt. 7:15-20, Rom.
16:17, Gal. 1:6-9, 2 John 9-11, Matt. 23:8, 1 Pet. 4:11, 2 Cor.
6:14-18.
So what really happened a year ago, according to our adopted ELS
doctrinal statement, was separatism. We could just as easily call it
"Selective Fellowship" because a part of our synod declared itself to be
not in doctrinal fellowship with another "specified portion of our
synod."
Why am I pointing this out? Why dig up old bones? Maybe it's because
I'm in a "'selective fellowship' protest." That is, I protest against
selective fellowship. Since I'm a member of the synod, I automatically
participate in its actions, by association at least. I don't want to be
a part of selective fellowship. Instead, I want to recognize and
practice church fellowship "where there is a mutual confession of and
commitment to the pure Marks of the Church, the Word and Sacraments."
I want to recognize God's Word as the governing force in the Church, not
administrative decisions about fellowship.
At the same time, I want to acknowledge that Pastor Preus is just as
sinful as our synod president, and as myself. There were many steps
leading us all into selective fellowship a year ago, and a different
approach by either Pastor Preus or the synod president at any point
might have forestalled or avoided the present deplorable situation.
Sometimes our sinful nature is not as visible in what we do as in
how we do it.
Though he certainly helped to escalate things, it doesn't seem to me
that Pastor Preus, in substance alone, wrote anything that should have
resulted in a severance of fellowship. You can disagree with me, but
then you must somehow explain what we are supposed to do, according to
God's Word, when we notice that a freshly adopted doctrinal statement
makes claims without scriptural support. What has greater authority:
God's Word, or some majority vote at a synod convention?
I do not envy the president his responsibilities, because as a servant
of the whole synod, more is expected from him than from the rest of us.
A bad decision on his part can cause greater harm to God's Church than a
bad decision by Pastor Preus or myself. Still, he has the same sinful
flesh that I have, and that Pastor Preus has. That makes it hard for
him to be "pastoral" to all of his "flock," including equally sinful
pastors.
Thank God that Jesus Christ has obtained forgiveness! He suffered for
all of our decisions and actions that contradict His Word, including
those of synod presidents. He died for the times when we speak the
truth without the tact and consideration that love would demand from us,
including such transgressions on weblogs like this and in the writings
of Pastor Preus. He died for our tendency to pass judgment in our
hearts when it's not our place. Jesus gave His life for sinners who
become guilty of separatism through their own pride and obstinance,
cutting off fellowship rather than repenting of their own sins against
God's Word. God's Son was nailed to a tree also for sinners guilty of
unionism because they are so tired of the battle that they will agree to
read a doctrinal statement in conflicting ways. Jesus died for all of
us, and His precious blood upon the cross has bought our redemption.
May we receive His grace with penitent hearts.
Hey Ole! Go and get da' matches from da' cubberd, we got us a heretic on da' web-thingie! Don' argue wit' me, Ole, jus' go! While you're doin' dat, I'll start pilin' paper and whatnot under da' compuder desk!
Thanks for this info. The 'fellowship' issue seems to be a recently invented doctrine. Norman Teigen
What a bunch of freeking lunatics. [Name deleted to avoid personal vitriol -J.J.] and the rest of the higher ups in Mankato are oblivious to the power of the internet and the network of people who are FED UP, many of whom are beginning to quietly donate their money, time and talents elsewhere. Look at last years financials for Pete's sake; and the educated idiots can't wait to remove a few more churches from the synod!
They seem clueless as to the large numbers of good people who are under the radar, afraid to even engage in a public discussion for fear their congregation will be the next to have to be disparaged and removed for no reason.
There are many of us out here who have HAD IT.
Response from J.J.
I know what you mean. However, if so many are afraid even to engage in public discussion, we can't expect any improvements to come of their own accord.
Though it may be exceedingly hard, we should also carefully do our best to speak in a respectful, "gentlemanly" manner. Wherever there are errorists, or even those merely misled into sin and an erring conscience, such people don't deserve our scorn. Rather, they need such love that would rebuke the sin clearly and gently enough to encourage repentance. (Galatians 6:1) That's what all the fed up people should be trying to do.
Thanks for your comment.