The Teacher of Conscience

We close this chapter with Luther’s oft-repeated admonition never to substitute a human interpretation for the “text,” i.e., for the words of Scripture themselves. He says: “With the text and from the foundation of the Holy Scriptures I have silenced and slain all my opponents. For whoever is well founded and practiced in the text will become a good and fine theologian, since a passage, or text, from the Bible has more weight than many commentators and glosses, which are not strong and round and do not help in the controversy.” (Erl. 57, p. 7) Again: “When the fathers teach anything, they do not trust their teaching, fearing it to be too obscure and uncertain, but they go to the Scriptures and take a clear passage out of it to shed light on their teaching. How should they have overcome the heretics if they had fought with their own glosses? They would have been regarded as fools and madmen; but when they brought forward clear texts which needed no glosses, so that reason was brought into captivity, the evil spirit himself with all his heresies was completely routed.” (St. L. XVIII: 1293.) And so Luther further admonishes: “It must be the prime concern of a theologian to be well versed in the text, a bonus textualis, as it is called” (St. L. V:456). He complains about the many “commentaries and books,” through which “the dear Bible is being buried and covered up so that no one takes note of the text.” He refers to his own experience: “When I was young, I familiarized myself with the Bible, read it often, and became well acquainted with the text; so well acquainted that I knew where every passage that was mentioned was to be found; thus I became a good textualis. Not till then did I read the commentators. But finally I had to disregard them all and put them away because the use of them did not satisfy my conscience, and I had to take my stand again on the Bible; for it is much better to see with your own eyes than with another’s.” (St. L. XXII:54 f.) Thus Luther and his conscience stood on the bare text of Scripture, excluding all human interpretation. Pieper’s Dogmatics, volume 1, p. 366-367.

One of the troubling things about some doctrinal statements — indeed, even some with official standing in the ELS — is when they cite scripture passages that don’t quite demonstrate the doctrinal point. It’s as though we are building our doctrinal expressions upon the glosses or commentaries of such passages, and then citing only the passages themselves, as though they obviously teach what was in the gloss. But often, they don’t.

Can I in good conscience claim that scripture teaches the perpetual virginity of Mary? Scripture doesn’t necessarily contradict that pious belief. But what if I made such a claim and cited Isaiah 7:14? It doesn’t quite prove the claim, does it? That’s what I’m talking about. The citation, by its very presence, claims scriptural support. But when you go look it up, something’s still missing. In fact, you could on that basis say that such a teaching is unscriptural.

Luther was wise to let his conscience be trained only by the Bible itself. Otherwise we run the risk of erring gravely with a clear conscience. That would still be sin, and all the more tragic.

To accept a commentary or interpretation as the basis for an article of faith, instead of what the scriptural passage obviously says on its own, could also become a trap into what Jesus described as “teaching as doctrines the commandments of men.” Every Christian should be wary of this, not just pastors or teachers of the church.

What did Jesus institute?

There have been some disappointing posts recently on the ELS ministry discussion list. In some cases it has actually degenerated to name calling. What I have seen too infrequently is the kind of spirit that seeks to understand the argument of the other side, making a careful presentation of its own position.

Some would blame the medium, email. I don’t think that’s the problem. The problem is our impatient, prideful human nature. Email just facilitates our sin, like pen and ink or photocopiers, only much faster.

One of the participants recently took a break for a whole week. He may have been composing his responses during that time, because they certainly show more forethought than usual. I won’t reveal his name, to protect the innocent. However, I will quote a paragraph from his post that shows the reasoning behind his position.

His position is this (and I am willing to be corrected, if this summary is inaccurate): Jesus did not instituted an office to be filled by incumbents. Instead, He instituted freedom, so that the Church may create as many different kinds of offices as she may need. He also instituted the use of the Means of Grace. For example, it was His idea that someone should be there to baptize other people from time to time, and that someone (not necessarily the same person) should be there to administer the Lord’s Supper from time to time. Likewise, it was His idea that someone should be tapped to teach the Gospel, and (perhaps another person) to preach it on some regular basis. This free public use of the Means of Grace is called “the Ministry.” The writer supposes that this is the sum total of what the PMW teaches.

It is not, but maybe I’ll demonstrate that another time. For now, see Pastor Jay Webber’s Parsing of the PMW for a fair, “unbiased” understanding of the document.

Here is the writer’s carefully-worded defense of his position. Note that he is arguing against the notion that Jesus only instituted the position of “Pastor,” whether that means parish pastor or something more generalized.

I have in previous emails mentioned other public servants of Christ
that are mentioned in scripture. We are nowhere told that the lists
given is intended to be exhaustive, nor are the various lists
consistent, nor unchanging. We do read of deacons, which were not
the same as pastors, but were specifically mentioned in 1 Timothy. I
have also mentioned evangelists as part of the list in Ephesians 4.
We are not told in scripture that evangelist was a form of pastor. I
have mentioned that St. Paul was not called to baptize (1 Corinthians
1). Though he did baptize a few people, as he mentions, this does
not undo what Paul wrote (that he was not called to baptize). Any
one of these should be sufficient, but just as the early church had
freedom to select seven to serve the church, and these seven were not
pastors (though descriptions of their service included ministry of
the Word, and this may have been part of their call), the church has
freedom to call people into various forms of public ministry; even
those that had not previously existed. This doesn’t make their
service into public ministry any less divinely instituted, just
because scripture doesn’t provide all of the details and specify all
of the forms that public ministry may take.

As I see it, the reasoning is as follows. First, he claims that any one of the following points is sufficient proof for his argument:

  1. The Bible mentions titles of public servants other than the title “pastor.” The Bible is silent about whether lists of such titles is exhaustive.

  2. Deacons are mentioned in 1 Timothy, and are shown to be distinct from pastors.

  3. Evangelists are mentioned in Ephesians 4:11, and scripture does not say that Evangelist = Pastor.

  4. St. Paul in 1 Cor. 1 says he was not called (sent) to baptize.

In addition to those “proofs,” the following argument is offered.

Premise
The early church had freedom to select 7 to serve the church (Acts 6)
Premise
The 7 were not pastors.
Premise
Ministry of the Word may have been part of their call.
Conclusion
The church has freedom to call people into various forms of public ministry; even those that had not previously existed.

Finally, the following claim is asserted (in my words):

Though scripture doesn’t provide all the details and specify all the forms that public ministry may take, this does not mean that the service of offices created by the church is any less divinely instituted.

OK, there are a few things here, and careful readers of The Plucked Chicken may already have identified a few problems. But that hasn’t stopped me before, so away we go.

Continue reading “What did Jesus institute?”

Explaining the PMW Statement: Response to Circuit 8

I’ve pointed out already that while there is a valid, subservient role for human reason in the household of theology, we must be careful how we use it to support our claims about scriptural doctrine. Another word for “reason” is logic. In general, there are two ways to construct a logical proposition. One can use inductive logic, which takes a collection of observations and concludes that there are certain trends or probabilities in the context of those observations. One can also use deductive logic, which can provide conclusions aimed at truth and falsehood (a binary concept) rather than at probabilities and trends.

Deductive logic follows the pattern: “Since A, B, C, … and D are true, therefore E must inevitably also be true.”

Inductive logic may follow the pattern: “In cases A, B, C, … and D, we have noticed that proposition E generally applies. Therefore E must also apply for cases F, G, H, etc.”

A related, but different, process is the “scientific method,” in which someone makes a hypothesis out of pure conjecture, which then may (or may not) be tested to see if it can be disproven. If it can not be tested, the hypothesis doesn’t have much value for the scientific method. If it is tested and disproven, then we know it doesn’t match reality. If it is tested and not disproven, then we know that it may match reality. Nothing is ever proven by the scientific method, but some things are eventually accepted as useful. The scientific method is completely inappropriate for theology, because as Martin Luther wrote to Erasmus, “The Holy Ghost is not a skeptic.” God deals only in truth, and is not subject to a human standard of usefulness.

The purpose of theology is to repeat what God has revealed in His Word. It ought to be a somewhat boring discipline for those who wish to invent things on their own. The nature of theology is truth, not probability, likelihood, trends, or usefulness.

If you can understand and accept the summary above, then let’s apply this to A Response from the ELS Presidium to Circuit #8 Concerning the Circuit’s Memorial to the 2005 Convention, published on October 11, 2005. This document illustrates the reasoning used in the PMW document, showing how it arrives at its conclusions from the scripture passages it cites. Note that I don’t necessarily agree with the main conclusions as summarized in this Response, as I have also explained previously.

Continue reading “Explaining the PMW Statement: Response to Circuit 8”