

November 2000
Page 1 - If the Ship is Sinking... By Paul Anderson
Page 2 - Give Me the Desires of My
Heart! By Mary Ann Herzan
- Page 3 - Restoring
the True Stronghold - Is God Your Mighty Fortress?
By Dr. Joe Johnson
Page 4
- Association of Renewal Churches
(ARC)
Page
5 - Director's Note
If the Ship is Sinking...
By Paul Anderson
My dad was a pastor in the Lutheran Church for
forty-eight years. I'm going on thirty years as a pastor. My roots go deep and far back. I
have observed with much grief some distressing signals that make me wonder if the Lutheran
ship (ELCA) may be sinking. What are some of the signs?
It has lost its direction.
Without the compass of the Scriptures, the ship is sailing into strange waters, like
universalism, for instance (the teaching that all will be saved). "Inclusive" is
the opposite of "exclusive," and saying that Jesus is the only way sounds too
exclusive to some. The Gospel is the message of salvation through Jesus Christ by His
death on the cross, but that word has been blurred. "Grace" has come to mean
doing as you please because God is loving and forgiving and certainly wouldn't judge
anyone. "Theological diversity" means that anything goes-and it is going fast.
The theology of the cross strangely does not focus, as it did for Luther, on the shedding
of Christ's blood. It rather sentimentalizes sorrow and makes pain an end in itself.
"Spirituality" is whatever turns you on in this "religious community,"
which isn't a community at all because there's little that people have in common.
"The Gospel" is any good news that blows our way. This ship is adrift, tossed by
contrary theological waves, and it has no anchor.
When the message becomes relative, methods tend to become absolute, like liturgical
accuracy, for example. Technique replaces passion, which is held suspect. It is easier to
talk about Romans 7 than Romans 8 on board this boat (the inner conflict rather than
conquest through the Spirit), because one needs to avoid any hints at a theology of glory.
One of the mandates on the ship is "Thou shalt not commit obedience" (for fear
of works righteousness). Justice and peace are in; anything close to glory is out.
"Liberating the oppressed" is the new gospel for some crew members. The message
has moved from a Christ-centered message to a Creator-centered (not Father) and
Spirit-centered message, not in the New Testament sense of Spirit but in the sense of the
Great Spirit, undefined and unoffensive. Fearing the subject of sanctification, passengers
are limited to a meager diet of baby food.
While the ship is going down, the captain is reminding people to "walk
wet" (i.e., remember their baptism), which isn't hard on a sinking ship. The new hymn
is "My hope is built on nothing less than baptism." It is our eternal security,
which keeps many passengers on board from thinking that the ship is going down. Baptism is
separated from a life of faith because of the fear of human response, thereby reducing
faith to fatalism and baptism to a mystery rite. When out of proportion, baptism, a vital
New Testament doctrine, becomes as grotesque as a circus mirror.
It has sprung a leak. One can
without embarrassment speak about saving the whales but not about saving the lost. The
lost aren't lost, so don't try to save them (which may be the reason that more
missionaries are coming home than are being sent out). Other cultures are said to have as
much going for them as the Christian culture. Imperialism has no place on this ship. What
are we-pirates?
This theological tolerance is matched by moral permissiveness. We have redefined
homosexuality and waffled in regard to protecting the unborn.
Though the ship seems to be in serious trouble, the captain and deck hands don't
appear alarmed. At least, they are not doing anything to keep the ship from sinking. If
anything, they are accelerating it. This is nothing new; the ship has been leaking for
forty years, impacting all on board, especially Lutheran colleges and seminaries, most of
which have also lost their direction. If the ship were a business, it would have filed
Chapter Eleven long ago, but it is a non-profit organization, which defines its existence
more all the time.
So what will happen in the future? Loyalty to
the captain and his officers (those in leadership who serve the same agenda) will continue
to diminish. The gap between them and many on board will widen. Vital movements on the
ship, those reflecting the fresh breeze of the Spirit, will consider the captain's
activity increasingly irrelevant. This feeling will alienate the staff toward those who
are suspected of disloyalty, and they will be further marginalized, including some
evangelicals and charismatics, who use ten-letter words like experience and commitment and
whose values are different from many crew members. As things get worse, some officers see
danger ahead and become even more controlling, more nervous. Meanwhile, others think the
ship is incapable of going under.
If you think that the ship isn't sinking-pray
for those at the helm to change and do what you can to keep the ship afloat. If you fear
that the ship is sinking---don't pray for it not to sink; it is probably too late. Pray
for a good lifeboat. And see that everyone dear to you is wearing a life-jacket. Don't get
swallowed up by a religious system with a political agenda rather than a salvation
message. And don't vote to be aligned with another sinking ship.
(The S.S. Missouri has also sprung a serious leak, but for the opposite reason. Many of
its passengers are in theological straightjackets.)
What should you do to maintain your sanity in
the face of potential disaster?
Mind your own business. Don't tangle with the
officers; mutiny is a poor solution. Don't write resolutions on how to keep the ship
afloat; it's too late for that. Be like Noah who just did what he was told as an option to
getting wet. Build something strong enough to handle the biggest storm. Focus on your
primary mission. Care for the people who are under your charge instead of trying to change
those who aren't.
Fight if you must, but only if God tells you
to. Crusades and causes are not equal with the kingdom, so don't major in fighting,
especially if you're the pastor, unless you have plenty of grace to do it. Otherwise, you
will turn your whole congregation into fighters. Many of the prophets were fighters, and
they needed mega-grace for their difficult task. Draw on the same grace and continually
ask, "Is my cause Christ's cause?" And for God's sake, don't be distracted from
your primary task, which is usually positive, not negative in nature.
Let go of your expectation to change the
system. It only makes your heart sick, like a deferred hope. People in a bad marriage may
hope for years that things will change. Maybe they won't. One option: lower your
expectations and be the best mate you can. Changing yourself may be more important than
changing your partner. God can always do new things in you. Redirecting your expectations
may convert you from a whiner to a winner. And God doesn't waste anything. He uses
everything for His own purpose, even struggles in a religious system.
Pray like you are part of the problem.
Otherwise, you have no solution. Daniel identified with the problem, and God used him as a
voice. Avoid the self-righteousness of Elijah, who wrongfully assumed, "It's just you
and me, God." Prayer is for people who are grievously sad about the ship's
condition-but not bitter. Bitter people don't pray; they just complain, and all that does
is demoralize those who are going down. If your "thing" is to complain about the
ELCA, I have one bit of advice for you-change your outlook. The strongest action people
can take toward those who have disenfranchised them is to bless them. And the clearest
action moving into an unknown future as we wait for the vision to unfold is to pray.
Desperation, as one pastor says, is God's hammer. Divine opportunity stands behind human
impossibility.
Be bold, not passive. Review your own values.
Know where you stand and why, so you don't feel condemned when you go against the
prevailing current. Hold up the standard of truth, the unfailing Word of God. Building the
ark was a difficult task, one misunderstood by all who watched it happen. Expect
criticism, but don't let it diminish your confidence. Pay the price to do whatever God
tells you to do. Realize that your very presence is a judgment on those who disagree, as
it was with Noah.
Stay positive. Live in hope; there is plenty
to be positive about. Chicago does not equal Church. Christ is building His Church,
against which the gates of hell will not prevail. You can have significance. As has been
said before, the ark was built by amateurs-the Titanic by professionals. It is easy to get
side-tracked and to neglect your vision. The ship was sinking when Jesus came on the
scene. He addressed a sick religious system, but only incidentally to His primary vision.
He came to die, not to bash the Pharisees. They were terminally ill and would soon leave
the picture completely. Jesus didn't back down in confrontation, but neither did He waste
His time with them. He didn't even appear to them after He rose in order to prove His
point. When His plans intersected their program, Jesus spoke the truth into their lies.
But they weren't on center-stage-He was. He knew what He was called to do, and He
accomplished it. May we do the same-in the spirit of Christ! It is a great day to be
alive. Carry on, Mates!
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