I'm not going to claim that I found this originally, I did not. I am going to say that this speaks to many in the PC(USA) who are ready to do what the Book of Order says, that if we can't agree with the decisions of the 'majority' we should peaceably withdraw. If only the liberals would let us get on with it.
Anyway ... if you change
ELCA to
PC(USA) and
Lutheran to
Presbyterian, you'll see this letter speaks for many orthodox Christians in the PC(USA):
[See
following open letter (readily available on the Internet) from Lutheran
theologian Carl E. Braaten to his bishop, Mark Hanson, in July 2005,
regarding the Lutheran Church. He says, in effect, that liberal
Protestantism is not Christian.}
The Reverend Dr. Mark Hanson, Bishop
Evangelical Lutheran Church in America
8765 West Higgins Road
Chicago, Illinois 60631
Dear Bishop Mark Hanson:
Greetings! I am writing out of a concern I share with others about the
theological state of affairs within the Evangelical Lutheran Church in
America. The situation might be described as one of “brain drain.”
Theologians who have served Lutheranism for many years in various
capacities have recently left the ELCA and have entered the Roman
Catholic Church or the Orthodox Church in America.
Why?
When Jaroslav Pelikan left the ELCA and became a member of the OCA, I
felt it was not terribly surprising. After all, he had been reading and
writing about the Fathers of Eastern Orthodoxy for so many years, he
could quite naturally find himself at home in that tradition, without
much explanation. A short time before that Robert Wilken, a leading
patristics scholar teaching at the University of Virginia, left the ELCA
to become a Roman Catholic. Then other Lutheran theological colleagues
began to follow suit. Jay Rochelle, who for many years was my colleague
and the chaplain at the Lutheran School of Theology at Chicago joined
the Orthodox Church. Why? Leonard Klein, pastor of a large Lutheran
parish in York, Pennsylvania, and former editor of Lutheran Forum and
Forum Letter, last year left the ELCA to study for the Roman Catholic
priesthood. Why? This year Bruce Marshall, who taught theology for about
fifteen years at St. Olaf College and was a long-standing member of the
International Lutheran-Orthodox Dialogue, has left the ELCA to enter
the Roman Catholic Church. Why? David Fagerberg, formerly professor of
religion at Concordia College, although coming from a strong Norwegian
Lutheran family, left the ELCA for the Roman Catholic Church, and now
teaches at the University of Notre Dame. Reinhard Huetter, a German
Lutheran from Erlangen University, came to the Lutheran School of
Theology at Chicago fifteen years ago to teach theology and ethics, now
teaches at Duke Divinity School, and this year became a Roman Catholic.
Why? Mickey Mattox, a theologian who recently served at the Lutheran
Ecumenical Institute in Strasbourg and now teaches at Marquette
University, has recently begun the process of becoming a Roman Catholic.
In all these cases the transition involves spouses and children, making
it incredibly more difficult. Why are they doing this? Is there a
message in these decisions for those who have ears to hear?
All of
these colleagues have given candid explanations of their decisions to
their families, colleagues, and friends. While the individuals involved
have provided a variety of reasons, there is one thread that runs
throughout the stories they tell. It is not merely the pull of Orthodoxy
or Catholicism that enchants them, but also the push from the ELCA, as
they witness with alarm the drift of their church into the morass of
what some have called Liberal Protestantism. They are convinced that the
Evangelical Lutheran Church in America has become just another liberal
protestant denomination. Hence, they have decided that they can no
longer be a part of that. Especially, they say, they are not willing to
raise their children in a church that they believe has lost its moorings
in the great tradition of evangelical (small e) and catholic (small c)
orthodoxy (small o), which was at the heart of Luther’s reformatory
teaching and the Lutheran Confessional Writings. They are saying that
the Roman Catholic Church is now more hospitable to confessional
Lutheran teaching than the church in which they were baptized and
confirmed. Can this possibly be true?
I have decided, without
any doubt about it, that I could not re-invent myself to become
something else than I was raised to be by my Madagascar missionary
parents—an heir of the Lutheran confessing movement. Through theological
study and ecumenical engagement I thought I had learned something about
what it means to be Lutheran. I have written many books and articles,
preached and published many sermons—leaving a long paper trail—over a
period of five decades, explaining what it means to be Lutheran. There
is nothing in all of those communications that accommodates liberal
protestantism, which Karl Barth called a “heresy,” an assessment with
which I fully agree. If it is true that the ELCA has become just another
liberal protestant denomination, that is a condition tantamount to
heresy. The most damning thing in my view that can be charged against
the ELCA is that it is just another liberal protestant denomination. Are
all these theologians wrong in their assessment of the ELCA?
I
wish I could deny it. I have been looking for some convincing evidence
to the contrary, because I am not about to cut and run. There is no
place I know of where to go. I do know, however, that the kind of
Lutheranism that I learned—from Nygren, Aulén, Bring, Pinomaa, Schlink,
P. Brunner, Bonhoeffer, Pannenberg, Piepkorn, Quanbeck, Preus, and
Lindbeck, not to mention the pious missionary teachers from whom I
learned the Bible, the Catechism, and the Christian faith—and taught in a
Lutheran parish and seminary for many years is now marginalized to the
point of near extinction. In looking for evidence that could
convincingly contradict the charge that the ELCA has become just another
liberal protestant denomination, it would seem reasonable to examine
what is produced by its publishing house, theological schools,
magazines, publications, church council resolutions, commission
statements, task force recommendations, statements and actions by its
bishops. The end result is an embarrassment; there is not much there to
refute the charge. As Erik Petersen said about 19h century German
Protestantism, all that is left of the Reformation heritage is the aroma
from an empty bottle. A lot of the pious piffle remains, but then, so
was Adolf von Harnack a pious man. All the heretics of the ancient
church were pious men. Our pastors and laity are being deceived by a lot
of pietistic aroma, but the bottle is empty. Just ask these fine
theologians—all friends and colleagues of mine—who have left the ELCA.
They are not stupid people; they don’t tell lies; they don’t make rash
decisions. They are all serious Christians. What is happening is nothing
less than a tragedy. The ELCA is driving out the best and the brightest
theologians of our day, not because it is too Lutheran, but because it
has become putatively just another liberal protestant denomination. I
would think that this is a situation that ought to concern you immensely
as well as all the leadership cadres of the ELCA. But might it also be
the case that the very persons who ought to be troubled by this
phenomenon will say to themselves (perhaps not out loud), “good
riddance, we won’t be bothered by those dissenting voices anymore? We
wish more of their ilk would leave.”
I must tell you that I
read all your episcopal letters that come across my desk. But I must
also tell you that your stated convictions, punctuated by many pious
sentiments, are not significantly distinguishable from those that come
from the liberal protestant leaders of other American denominations. I
do not disagree with your political leaning to the left. I am a
life-long political liberal, unlike many of my friends. My wife and I
opposed the unjust war against Vietnam in the 60's and 70's, and we have
with equal conviction opposed the foolhardy invasion of Iraq by the
Bush administration. We also supported the ELCA in its ecumenical
actions to re-institute the episcopal office by means of passing the CCM
as well as to adopt the Joint Declaration on the Doctrine of
Justification with the Vatican. But none of that equates with
transforming Lutheranism into a liberal protestant denomination, in
terms of doctrine, worship, and morality.
When I finished my
graduate studies at Harvard and Heidelberg, I was ordained by the ELC
and served a parish in North Minneapolis, simultaneously teaching at
Luther Seminary. At that time I was instrumental in founding Dialog, a
journal of theology, together with Robert Jenson, Roy Harrisville, Kent
Knutson, James Burtness, and others, in order to draw midwest
Lutheranism into the world-wide orbit of Lutheran theology. We were not
ecumenically oriented at the start. At that time no Luther Seminary
professors were dealing with the issues posed by Bultmann, Tillich,
Bonhoeffer, Barth, Brunner, Aulén, Nygren and many others. Dialog got
the reputation of being a journal edited by young upstarts who thought
they knew better. It seemed to us then that most of our professors were
not very well informed. But they were good Lutherans, not a single
heretic among them. Heresy was not the problem at that time. The journal
that our group founded in 1961 has now become the voice of a liberal
protestant version of Lutheranism. Robert Jenson and I resigned from the
journal as its editors in1991 to found a new journal, Pro Ecclesia, a
Journal of Catholic and Evangelical Theology. In the last fourteen years
we have published the articles of theologians of all
traditions—Lutheran, Anglican, Catholic, Evangelical, and
Orthodox—exhibiting the truth that we all share common ground in the
Great Tradition.
The same cannot be said of Dialog anymore. It
has become a function of the California ethos of religion and morality,
nothing seriously Lutheran about it anymore, except the aroma of an
empty bottle. Too bad. I was its editor for twenty years and Jenson for
ten years, but now in our judgment it has become, perhaps even
unwittingly, the very opposite of what we intended. The journal now
expresses its belief that to be prophetic is to become the mouthpiece of
the denominational bureaucracy, that is, to attack the few dissenting
voices in the ELCA.
One day a church historian will write the
history of Lutheranism in America. There will be a few paragraphs trying
to explain how the self-destruction of confessional orthodox
Lutheranism came about around the turn of the millennium and how it
underwent a metamorphosis into a liberal protestant denomination.
Recently in an issue of the Lutheran Magazine you expressed your hope
that Lutherans could some day soon celebrate Holy Communion with Roman
Catholics. My instant reaction was: it is becoming less and less likely,
as the ELCA is being taken hostage by forces alien to the solid
traditions Lutherans share with Roman Catholics. The confessional chasm
is actually becoming wider. So much for the JDDJ! The agreement becomes
meaningless when Lutheranism embarks on a trajectory that leads to rank
antinomianism.
Where do we go from here? I am going nowhere.
Meanwhile, I am hearing rumors about a possible schism or something
about the formation of a dissenting synod. None of that will redound to
the benefit of the one, holy, catholic and apostolic church we confess
in the Creed. Each person and congregation will do what they deem
fitting and appropriate in view of the apostasy that looms on the
horizon of our beloved Lutheran Church. My friend Wolfhart Pannenberg
has stated that a church that cannot take the Scriptures seriously is no
longer a church that belongs to Jesus Christ. That is not an original
statement of his or mine, but one said by every orthodox theologian in
the Great Tradition, including Athanasius and Augustine, as well as
Martin Luther and John Calvin. Does the ELCA take the Scriptures
seriously? We will soon find out. Whoever passes the issue off as simply
a hermeneutical squabble is not being honest—“we have our
interpretation and you have yours.” Who is to judge who is right? The
upshot is ecclesiastical anarchy, sometimes called pluralism. To each
his own. Chacun son gout!
I am extremely sorry it has come to
this doctrinally unstable situation in the church I was ordained to
serve almost half a century ago. My father and two of his brothers
served this church in Madagascar and China. My brother and sister served
this church in the Cameroons and Madagascar. My cousins have served
this church as ordained ministers in this country and abroad for
decades. Knowing them as well as I do, I am confident in stating their
belief that this church in some of its expressions is not remaining
truly faithful to the kind of promises they made upon their ordination
to the Christian ministry.
Can the situation which I have
described in stark terms be remedied? Have we reached the point of no
return? Are we now hopelessly mired in what Karl Barth identified as
“Kulturprotestantismus?” I know of about half a dozen Lutheran renewal
groups desperately trying to call the ELCA back to its foundational
texts and traditions. Would they exist if there were no problem that
needs to be addressed? How many congregations and pastors have left or
are leaving the ELCA for other associations?
One day we will
have to answer before the judgment seat of God as to what we have done
for and against the Church of Jesus Christ. There will be no one by our
side to help us find the words to use in response. All of us will have
many things for which to repent and to implore God’s forgiveness. And we
will all cry out, “Lord, have mercy!”
Sincerely in Christ our Lord,
Carl E. Braaten
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