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Higher History

Who Was Martin Luther? Part 19

by Rev. Donavon Riley

Although Luther’s comments about the sales of indulgences, capped by his posting of The 95 Theses to the church door, drew plenty of attention, the young professor continued with his responsibilities as lecturer and preacher in Wittenberg. However, since he’d translated his lectures and sermons into German for laity, then back into Latin for scholars, more and more calls came to Luther requesting he expand upon or defend his theology.

One instance occurred in the spring of 1518, when Luther was invited to defend his teaching in Heidelberg. It was the annual meeting of the Augustinians, Luther’s monastic order, and he was sent as a representative of his monastery as well as handing off responsibility for his duties as district vicar to someone else. Likewise, he was chosen to be the “disputant” for the meeting, which meant he’d engage in a debate about the theology of St. Augustine, who most monks believed was the founder of their order.

Luther did not, as many expected, take up the topic of indulgences when he was given the opportunity to talk. Instead, he presented what he believed was Augustine’s theology (and his own). As Luther presented his twenty-eight theses, one after the other, those in attendance bent their ears to him, even though the first ten theses weren’t so controversial as to stir up any excitement. However, when Luther read his thirteenth thesis: “‘Free will’ after the Fall is nothing but a word, and so long as it does what is within it, it is committing deadly sin.” This was a direct attack on what everyone in the room had been taught.

Then, the sixteenth thesis caused even more excitement: “Anyone who thinks he would attain righteousness by dong what is in him is adding sin to sin, so that he becomes doubly guilty.” Luther had now twice asserted that the accepted, orthodox theology of the day led to damnation.

After he’d finished with his theses, and after business was completed, everyone returned home. And what Luther had said at Heidelberg went home with them. It was explosive stuff, the theology Luther presented, and from his Heidelberg Theses the first serious rumblings of reformation began to spread across Germany. But for as many new allies as Luther had won, in time he could as many, if not more, enemies. Now, Luther’s teaching wasn’t only threatening the sale of indulgences, but by saying that following orthodox doctrine led one to damnation, he was attacking the papacy itself.

Next week, we will examine the fallout from Luther’s Heidelberg Disputation.

Rev. Donavon Riley is the pastor of St. John’s Evangelical Lutheran Church in Webster, Minnesota.

Categories
Lectionary Meditations

Even The Dogs – A Meditation on Matthew 15:21-28

By Rev. Eric Brown

“Yes, Lord, yet even the dogs eat the crumbs that fall from their masters’ table.” (Matthew 15:21-28)

This Canaanite woman seems to be having a bad day.  To start, her daughter is demon oppressed.  Severely.  That’s a rough start to any day.  Moreover, when Jesus comes by, and she cries out to Him for mercy, He is silent.  Then the disciples want Him to send her away.

And then, when Jesus finally answers her, after she kneels in front of Him, all He says is, “It’s not right to take the children’s bread and throw it to the dogs.”  And yes, in the ancient world, calling a woman a dog is just as much of an insult as it is today.

And we’d expect that woman to be insulted.  We wouldn’t be surprised if she left in a huff, told all her friends, “Can you believe what Jesus said about me!”  But she’s not insulted.  She sees an opening.  Yes – Yes I am a dog, but good masters make sure that their dogs get fed and the crumbs – the scraps that you provide – would be more than enough for me!

This is what Jesus declares to be a great faith.

Often the Scriptures say things about us that we don’t like.  They say that we are sinners, that all our good works are as filthy rags.  That we are basically dogs.  Many get offended by this.  Rail against it.  But here is the glorious truth – though you are sinful and lowly, you belong to Christ, and He treats you far better than you could ever deserve. He pours out His love and mercy upon you and gives you life everlasting – not because of how great you are, but because of how great He is, because you are His by virtue of your Baptism.

Yes, Lord – I am a sinner and worthy of nothing, but You are gracious and give me everything!

Rev. Eric Brown is pastor of Trinity Lutheran Church in Herscher, Illinois and the co-host of the HT Gospeled Boldly Podcast.

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Catechesis

The Ashes of The Living

By Cambria Stame

“Remember, you are dust, and to dust you shall return.”

Today, your pastor will speak these words to you as he traces the sign of the holy cross in ashes upon your forehead as a reminder of your hopeless mortality. There seems to be no hope in death, only an inconsolable, desperate, miserable grief that will forever hold your soul in thrall. In death, your life is reduced to ashes. Fallen captive to the passions and pleasures of the world, you succumbed to that which strangles the souls of men. Lust, pride, envy, worry, bloodshed—these things you carried on your back as you collapsed back into the earth. Your epitaph is hardly worth reading. Your life amounts to no more than a handful of dust. You will surely die. Ashes, ashes, we all fall down.

But if Scripture has taught us anything, it has taught us that God raises dead men back to life. He breathed life into a valley of dry bones. He raised a little girl whose father was sick with grief. To the amazement of Mary and Martha, he restored Lazarus back to life after four days in the tomb. These resurrections, and all others recorded in Scripture, are woven into the fabric of the cross. For God in the flesh was lifted up, that you might be lifted up out of the ashes.

Hear how Christ has conquered death for you, “that through death he might destroy the one who has the power of death, that is, the devil, and deliver all those who through fear of death were subject to lifelong slavery.” Thus, these Lenten ashes are not so morbid as one might originally suppose. The ashen token is a memento mori, for it gives you a cause to remember death, not that you may fear its impending gloom, but that you may remember the one who caused Death to die. It is a reminder that sin surely demands your life, but that God demanded it back in your Baptism. When you were plunged into the font where Word and water collide, you died and were made alive again; you were lost, and was found. As Christ is risen, you have risen indeed.

Embrace your Lenten ashes. Fix your eyes upon these crosses that adorn the foreheads of your brothers and sisters in Christ. Rejoice and be glad, for death has no sting and hell holds you captive no longer. You, like the noble phoenix, arise from your ashy chamber. As the phoenix issues forth from the dust in a flurry of fire, you are reborn from an equally mighty act of nature: a baptismal flood. Resplendent in all his resurrection glory, the phoenix is colored crimson, and you are too, by the blood of your crucified and risen Lord.

The first time I attended a Lutheran church, I did so on Ash Wednesday twelve years ago. While the “smells and bells” of the liturgy certainly impacted me, what stood out to me the most was the way Scripture, quite literally, touched me. My pastor, like all other men of the cloth, used his hands to baptize, bless, and embrace—his hands are vessels of the life God gives us. Yet, he is equally as acquainted with death as he is with life. Pastor now dipped his hands into ashes, into filth, into grime, into death—as Christ did. He cupped my chin, looked me in the eyes, and pronounced me dead. Brushing ashes onto my forehead, he supplied the vector that pointed me back to my Baptism. Like the host of saints who had gone before me, I too was made alive again as Christ knelt down and mixed water in with the dust. Christ applied this ointment to give me seeing eyes of faith, saying as he always does, “Arise, to life be reconciled.” Dear brothers and sisters in Christ, remember that you are dust, and lend your ears to this baptismal requiem: “Awake, O sleeper, and arise from the dead, and Christ will shine on you.” A blessed Ash Wednesday to all of you.

Cambria Stame is a member of Messiah Lutheran Church in Danville, California.

Categories
Catechesis

To Dust You Shall Return

By Rev. Michael Keith

Remember that you are dust, and to dust you shall return.

These somber words come at the beginning of the Lenten Season as they are spoken to us on Ash Wednesday. They aren’t the most cheery words ever spoken to be sure, but they are true and they confront us with a truth that we so often seek to ignore, deny, and hide. We are going to die.

In our modern day we do most everything possible to hide the reality of death away. We don’t even like to hear people talk about death. It is almost as if we think, superstitiously, that if we talk about death someone might die! You are probably a little uncomfortable reading these words even now. We’re afraid of talking about death. We’re afraid of thinking about death. We’re afraid of death.

The Church, in her wisdom, doesn’t let our fears dictate what we think about or talk about. In fact, the Church brings us face to face with some of these difficult realities. Through Word and ritual the Church confronts us with our fear of death. And perhaps like no other time than on Ash Wednesday as the cross of ashes is placed upon our foreheads and we hear “Remember that you are dust, and to dust you shall return.”  We are very personally confronted with the fact that we will die. We are given the opportunity to look into one of the deepest questions of life: Death.

If you came to church on Ash Wednesday, or at any other time, and only heard the message “Remember that you are dust, and to dust you shall return” that would be pretty disheartening wouldn’t it? If the only thing you heard was—you are going to die—that’s it, that’s all folks—well, that would leave you without much hope. It might lead you to despair. It might lead you to wonder if there was any meaning to life at all if all it leads to is death.

That’s why I think so many people are afraid of talking or thinking about death. That’s why I think that there are so many people who have no meaning in their lives. They think this life is all there is and so they try to get all the meaning they can out of this life—but that will never work. You can’t get meaning out of the “stuff” of this life if ultimately it only ends in death. That’s why there are so many people who live lives of despair. They have no hope. They have no assurance that when they die they will have eternal life. So rather than wrestle with the inevitable – they in fear ignore it. They seek to distract themselves. They do everything they can to shield themselves from the fact that they will die.

As Christians we don’t hide from death. As Christians we face it head on. We even have a cross of ashes put on our foreheads. We are reminded that we will die. And our response? “Yes, some day I will die. Yes, I am a sinner and the wages of sin is death. But what of it? Jesus lives! And because He lives so shall I live. He has rescued from death and the grave and has opened for me the way to everlasting life!”

We don’t ignore the harsh reality of death because we have hope in the face of death! Jesus, our resurrected Lord and Saviour, has defeated death. And this gives us hope and assurance in the face of death. No, this does not mean that we just gloss over death and the way it hurts us and rips us apart. Death hurts those who are left behind in a most profound way. But even there—while we grieve and mourn—we have hope. Even in our sadness we have comfort. Even at the graveside we know that this is not the end. Yes, we hurt and suffer—but we know that we are not alone! We know that Jesus is with us as He promised in our baptism as we go through this loss.

On Ash Wednesday with a cross of ashes on our foreheads—we hear the Good News of Jesus Christ proclaimed to us. We hear that our sin is forgiven. We hear that our death has been defeated by Jesus’ resurrection. We hear that we have been given eternal life.

And this gives us hope. This gives us meaning in this life. We realize that there is more to life than just what we see. We realize that there is more to life than just to eat, drink, and be merry. There is a God who loves us. He loves us so that He sent His Son to die for us and to rescue us from sin and death.

Knowing that there is a God who loves us and cares for us and has prepared a place for us to live forever with Him—gives us hope. It gives us peace. We don’t have to hide from death. We don’t have to be afraid of death. For in Jesus, we have life!

Rev. Michael Keith serves as pastor at St. Matthew Lutheran Church and SML Christian Academy in Stony Plain, AB Canada.

Categories
Higher History

Who Was Martin Luther? Part 18

by Rev. Donavon Riley

John Tetzel, as one historian described him, “was a short, dumpy, stump-preacher who was very good at the business of selling indulgences.” He was so good at it that in the Fall of 1517 he was sent to Germany to announce a special plenary indulgence that, the Papacy hoped, would bring in the amount of money it needed to finish building St. Peter’s basilica in Rome.

The special indulgence Tetzel peddled to the German people was so broad in its definition that just purchasing it seemed to be the actual means of freeing people from purgatory. Not a repentant heart, true faith, or even a desire to earn God’s grace was necessary. Money talked in this case, and Tetzel used all his skills as a public speaker to bend the peoples’ ear to his message.

Tetzel would go from town to town and deliver the same stirring message: “Do you not hear the voices of your dead relatives and others, crying out to you and saying, ‘Pity us, pity us, for we are in dire punishment and torment from which you can redeem us for a pittance’? And you will not?” Then, in his concluding appeal, “Will you not then for a quarter of a florin receive these letters of indulgence through which you are able to lead a divine and immortal soul safely and securely into the homeland of paradise?” Then at the very end, Tetzel would say, “Once the coin into the coffer clings, a soul from purgatory heavenward springs!”

In every town, Tetzel’s preaching filled money boxes for the papacy. The German people, concerned for their family and loved ones’ souls, bought indulgences in record numbers. And before anyone could reconsider their decision, Tetzel and his entourage of soldiers, musicians, and actors were on to the next town.

Due to the power of his delivery and the amount of money being gathered up, Luther knew about Tetzel’s methods far in advance of the little preacher’s appearance in Wittenberg. In fact, Luther was so upset by the news he received about Tetzel that he finally spoke publicly about it, calling Tetzel’s mission, “The pious defrauding of the faithful.” And others, following Luther, referred to it as “Roman bloodsucking.”

But, Tetzel expected this push back. It was, in his experience, normal for some amongst the nobles and clergy to oppose his work for financial reasons, if not for theological ones too. This time however, it would turn out different for him. Instead of riding out of Germany with boxes of gold and silver, a very different outcome was waiting for him in Wittenberg.

Next week we will examine what happened when Luther publicly opposed not only Tetzel, but the sale of indulgences altogether.

Rev. Donavon Riley is the pastor of St. John’s Evangelical Lutheran Church in Webster, Minnesota.

Categories
Lectionary Meditations

If You are the Son of God – A Meditation on Matthew 4:6

By Rev. Eric Brown

“If You are the Son of God…”

Satan knows perfectly well who Jesus is. He’s not approaching Jesus trying to figure out who or what He is. Satan is operating with a flawed view of what it means to be God. You’re God; why would You be hungry and suffer when You don’t have to? You’re God; why wouldn’t You just have the awesome earthly glory You are entitled to? You’re God, You can do what You want – how about we sign a treaty and You can have all these sinners without a fight.

Satan knows that Jesus is God, but Satan doesn’t understand God. He never did. Satan thought being God meant power, might, glory – all the things Satan and the world still tell us to strive after. Satan thought being God meant doing whatever you wanted for yourself. 

John tells us in his epistle that God is love. That’s what Satan can’t get. God loves. Period. God serves. God always acts not in His own interests, but for the good of His creation, the people He loves. God always acts for your good. And as Jesus is true God, that is what He does even when tempted.

Because Jesus is the Son of God, He will see that you live by the Word of God who wins you life and salvation by His own death and resurrection.

Because Jesus is the Son of God, He will not put God to the test. His foot won’t hit a stone – but His heel will be bruised when He grinds Satan under His heel on the cross.

Because Jesus is the Son of God, He will serve the Father by going to the Cross to win you salvation. 

Christ doesn’t tangle with sin and temptation just to mess with Satan; He does so because He loves you and will see that you are forgiven and with Him for all eternity. That is who He is, and whom He makes you to be in your Baptism.

Rev. Eric Brown is pastor of Trinity Lutheran Church in Herscher, Illinois.

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Current Events

Does College Make It Too Challenging to Be Lutheran?

By Monica Berndt

College campuses and Christianity are not two words I would put together very often. With our society increasingly moving towards ‘post-truth’ where no one can state objective truths, Christians are often left out of the conversation. This is especially true on college campuses across the country. But, thinking that there is no such thing as truth undermines everything we believe as Lutherans. It can be frustrating to attempt conversation with someone who does not respect your point of view. It can also be difficult to find other Christians who can help balance out this thinking. However, there are still ways to remain a Confessional Lutheran on campus and not feel overwhelmed.

  1. Find a church where Christ is preached and the Sacraments properly administered. This is perhaps the single most important thing you can do while in school. Nothing else can replace physically sitting in church, hearing the Word preached, and receiving God’s forgiveness through the sacraments every single Sunday morning. Church is one of God’s greatest gifts to His people. He gives it precisely because He knows we need that time to focus on the Word. No matter what you faced during the week, whether it’s midterms, or homesickness, or difficulties with friends, Jesus is there specifically for us every Sunday offering forgiveness and grace “for you”!
  2. Make some friends at this new church. Befriend the couple who sits in front of you, or the other college kids at the church. Not only will you have someone to talk to on Sunday mornings, you’ll also have someone who will hold you accountable to coming every week. You will also get the chance to talk about struggles or grievances with someone who shares your worldview. Hopefully, you can meet someone who understands the struggles of living as a Christian on campus and who can help you if things become difficult.
  3. Read/ listen to some good theology. Don’t let the mountain of required reading drown out your need to read the Bible, Book of Concord, and Lutheran theology. If you prefer podcasts, find one and try to listen once or twice a week. Consistently exposing yourself to theology will help counterbalance the wave of progressive ideology that you will encounter on college campuses, and will also help you approach issues or discussions that come up in your day to day activities.

In one way or another, college is tough and there’s no easy way around that. However, no matter what happens you will always have the promises and the grace of Jesus Christ available to you through His Word and Sacraments. They will always be there- given for you.

Monica Berndt attends the University of Washington in Seattle where she studies history and music education.

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Lectionary Meditations

None of These Things – A Meditation on Luke 18:34

By Rev. Eric Brown

“But they understood none of these things. This saying was hidden from them, and they did not grasp what He said.”

Jesus Christ is not your fairy godmother. He’s not a genie in a bottle or a falling star to wish upon. He’s not in the business of wish fulfillment. His job, His task is to win forgiveness with His death upon the Cross. His job is to bring about the restoration of Creation with resurrection on Easter. And this is what we see Jesus doing all the time in the Gospel – forgiving people and fixing little bits of the fall, undoing little consequences of sin. His redemptive work which we see in full in the last day bubbles out early.

In Luke 18, the disciples still don’t see this. They don’t want a Jesus who dies and rises. Even when Jesus tells them flat out that this is what He will do, it makes no sense to them. It isn’t what they want. They want a glorious revolution, a new earthly kingdom, power and respect from friends and crushed enemies at their feet. The thing is, those sort of wishes are the sort of thing Lucifer would offer to fulfill (check back next week). But that’s not what Jesus does. He’s not interested in earthly glory or giving the disciples everything their sinful hearts desire. He is focused upon the Cross.

The temptation still remains for us today to try to treat Jesus as though His job is to give us what we want. We can even pout when we don’t get our way, when our vain dreams of glory or stuff or popularity or wealth don’t play out the way we want them to. But while we often get distracted by foolish things, Jesus has a single minded focus upon the Cross – and He has this focus for you, for your good. Jesus is determined to be your Lord and Savior, and so He goes to the cross and wins you salvation. And that is more joyous than anything else we could have thought to wish for.

Rev. Eric Brown is pastor of Trinity Lutheran Church in Herscher, Illinois.

Categories
Lectionary Meditations

We Don’t Know How God Will Use His Word – A Meditation on Luke 8:4-15

By Rev. Eric Brown

“Now the parable is this: The seed is the word of God.”

Farmers must cringe when they hear what we normally call the Parable of the Sower.  Seed is rather expensive (at least if you buy good seed), and in this parable so much seed gets seemingly wasted. The farmers I’ve known wouldn’t plant soil without meticulously preparing it.  They would have weeded it, plowed it, and they certainly wouldn’t have just thrown seed all over the highway. Seed is too expensive to use that way.

Jesus tells us that the parable, the main thrust of the parable is this: The seed is the Word of God.  And the Word of God is to be spoken and proclaimed to everyone—the great and good news that Christ Jesus has died for their sins. 

Now sometimes, proclaiming the Word of God doesn’t seem to do much good.  And at those times we can be tempted to start being scanty with the Word.  For example, we might decide to not tell “that sort of person” about God’s love.  But in the parable, the Word just keeps going out and out—everywhere and to every type of soil. 

Because the simple fact is, we don’t know how God will use His Word upon a person.  I don’t get to spiritually till and fertilize my neighbor first to figure out if he’s “good soil” or not.  And that’s okay, because that’s not my job.  The sower sows the seed all over; we proclaim Christ and Him crucified to all—again and again and again.  And we do so, giving thanks that God’s Word of life is spoken to US again and again, even when our sin would make us seem a bit thorny or rocky or even flat-out stubborn and hard.  Lord, keep us steadfast in Thy Word!

Rev. Eric Brown is pastor of Trinity Lutheran Church in Herscher, Illinois.

Categories
Catechesis

Pax Domini

By Rev. Michael Keith

Pax Domini. What’s that now? Does that having something to do with pizza being delivered in 30 minutes or less?

No, it’s about one of the coolest moments during Divine Service. Pax Domini: the peace of the Lord.

The Divine Service often begins with Confession and Absolution. We then join in the Kyrie and the Gloria in Excelsis, hear the Word of God read and preached, confess the Creed, join in the prayer of the Church, and all of this points us and leads us to the Service of the Sacrament.

It is in the Service of the Sacrament that we find the Pax Domini. After Jesus has spoken His Words through the office of the pastor in the Words of institution “Take eat; this is my body, which is given for you. This do in remembrance of me. Drink of it all of you; this cup is the new testament in my blood, which is shed for you for the forgiveness of sins. This do, as often as you drink it, in remembrance of me” the pastor then takes one of the consecrated hosts and the chalice and holds them up before the congregation and says “The peace of the Lord be with you always.” The congregation responds with a faith-filled “Amen.” This is the Pax Domini. And it’s so cool!

On the evening of the day Jesus rose from the dead He appeared to His disciples in the locked room. The disciples were afraid they, too, might be arrested and put to death like Jesus. The disciples’ initial reaction at Jesus appearing in the locked room may very well have been fear and terror as they had all abandoned and betrayed Him in some way. Yet, into this sinful, chaotic, and fearful place the resurrected Jesus physically appeared to the disciples and said to them “Peace be with you.”

And so Jesus does this for you today. Into your fearful, chaotic, sinful life He is physically present with His Body and Blood in the Holy Sacrament just as He promised—and He speaks a word to you. He speaks peace to you: the Pax Domini. It is in this Holy Supper that you know you have peace. It is in this Sacrament that you know that God is at peace with you despite your sin and rebellion and betrayal. It is in the Body and Blood of Jesus given and shed for you that you are forgiven, renewed, and strengthened. You respond with “Amen.” This is not a greeting between the pastor and the people. This is a proclamation. In Jesus, in this Sacrament, in the Body and Blood of Jesus now held before you, the peace of the Lord is with you always. You respond in faith and trust at the Lord’s Word. “Amen.” Yes, I believe that! I believe that through the Body and Blood of Jesus I have peace with God because of the forgiveness of sin. You sing the Agnus Dei—the Lamb of God—as you recognize that it is the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world who is present for you in the bread and the wine. You then come forward to the altar to receive the Body and Blood of Jesus. You are strengthened and preserved in body and soul to life everlasting. In the peace of Christ, you depart in peace.

That’s why the Pax Domini is so cool. It proclaims the profound truth that in the Sacrament of Holy Communion Jesus is physically among His people to speak a Word of peace. A Word of forgiveness. A Word of hope. A Word of life. The peace of the Lord is with you always. Amen.

Rev. Michael Keith serves as pastor at St. Matthew Lutheran Church and SML Christian Academy in Stony Plain, AB Canada.