“I will sing my Maker’s praises And in Him most joyful be For in all things I see traces Of His tender love to me.”
– Evangelical Lutheran Hymn-Book #65, I Will Sing My Maker’s Praises
The Christian in all things is called not to walk as the nations, “in the vanity of their mind” (Ephesians 4:17), but to be “unspotted from the world” (James 1:27). In this age of plenty and carnal indulgence, the songs of the world have only grown in the depravity they reflect. Music, the proper and noble maid of theology and a gift of God for man’s edification, has become a subservient tool of the flesh, the devil, and the world. By devils and demoniacs, it has been a weapon against piety and good order. As the idols of Jacob, such music must be buried and left forgotten (Genesis 35:1-4).
Some, shielding themselves under a banner of Christian liberty, exhort themselves, crying, “Am I not free? May I not do as I please? Shall not what I do be the extent of the law? Saint Paul answers such men, “All things are lawful unto me, but all things are not expedient… I will not be brought under the power of any” (1 Corinthians 6:12). Christian liberty is not a license for self-gratification but the freedom to be a slave of Christ without hindrance (Galatians 5:13).
Moreover, man is more than a mere spirit. He dwells in this life, he answers to neighbor and brother, father and mother, kinsman and sojourner, believer and heathen. He must discipline the body to adhere to the spirit (Romans 7:22-23), keeping it true to the faith (1 Corinthians 9:27), crucifying the flesh (Galatians 5:24), and ensuring he can run the race of endurance to the peace of righteousness (Hebrews 12:1-11). For Christ came to fulfill the law, not abolish it (Matthew 5:17). Indeed, he establishes that the law shall be taught forever in the church (Matthew 22:34-41; That Man May Find Counsel and Help to Come to a Perfect Life: Martin Luther’s Sermon for Trinity 18). Through good works and striving in his vocation, he keeps his body under control (Hebrews 12:11). Though one errs when he believes works justify, one errs likewise when he turns faith into an occasion for the delight of the flesh. Thus, we see that the discipline of our flesh includes every aspect of our lives, including what we allow to shape our heart, mind, and soul.
If then, the Christian must keep watch over his body and soul in all respects, he must also be vigilant regarding what enters through the ear. For music is not idle, but a teacher and a master of the affections. What one permits in the heart through melody soon becomes habit, and what becomes habit shapes the course of life. Therefore, as we bridle the tongue (Psalm 39:1; James 3:2) and restrain the eye (Psalm 101:3; Job 31:1; Luke 6:42), so too must we guard the ear, lest it delight in what God condemns and lead the heart astray. For the discipline of the senses is the marrow of the Christian life The Christian life has never been only about being forgiven and living on. It includes mortifying the flesh, obeying the commandments (John 14:15), ceasing to sin willfully (Kretzmann Rogate Sunday 1956), loving the law (The Disastrous Results of Despising God’s Law”: C. F. W. Walther’s Sermon for Trinity 18), and being doers of the word (James 1:22-27). The doing of the word mixed with the reality of the flesh demonstrates Christ’s command to follow Him and pick up your cross (Matthew 10:38). Such command concerns itself with all things, even our playlists.
Against Worldly Music
“Who improvise to the sound of the harp, and like David have composed songs for themselves… I loathe the arrogance of Jacob, and detest his citadels; Therefore I will deliver up the city and all it contains.”
Here, the Lord, through the prophet Amos, rebukes the corruption of music in Israel. Their prosperity bred the worms of arrogance, and their songs no longer lifted praise to God but glorified their own sensuality. Unlike David, whose psalms magnified the Lord, they composed songs for themselves and their own baseness (Popular Commentary Book 2 Kretzmann, Amos 6:5). Thus, they had turned the gift of music inward, debasing its purpose of glorifying the Lord to the indulgence of the flesh.
This rebuke, proclaimed by a humble herdsman and grower of Sycamore figs (Amos 7:14), remains timely in our day. The instruction is eternal: a day is coming when all our songs of boast will be turned into dirges and lamentation (Amos 8:11). Nations that revel in their prosperity spurn the fear of God and set themselves forth for calamity (Amos 6:6-8). Better then, to tend our ears to the rebuke of the wise, rather than revel in the songs of the fool (Ecclesiastes 7:5).
But what is worldly music? What is music composed for oneself? It is nothing less than music shaped by the spirit of the age (Ephesians 2:2): music that stirs the passions of the flesh, encourages rebellion against divine order, and divorces itself from the fear of God. It mocks chastity, belittles authority, praises self-indulgence, and fills the imagination with images of vanity and idolatry. It is music that “abideth not in the house of the Lord,” but rather sings with the harlot from the streets (Proverbs 7:10–21). Like Satan himself, such music does not create but perverts what God has made good.
For this reason, St. Paul exhorts us, “Have no fellowship with the unfruitful works of darkness, but rather reprove them” (Ephesians 5:11). Can we, in good conscience, flood our minds with melodies that glorify what God condemns? Can we delight in that which grieves the Holy Spirit (Ephesians 4:30)? Can one feast on what God abhors and remain without defilement? As the old Latin maxim warns, corruptio optimi pessima: “the corruption of the best is the worst.” Therefore, we must not only avoid singing such songs ourselves but also cease from listening to them. As Luther is ascribed to say, “We are what we sing.”
And yet such danger is subtle. Satan needs only to slip his head into the tent; soon the whole snake follows. The devil prowls as a roaring lion ready to devour whom he may (1 Peter 5:8). Such pursuit begins not with outright heresy, but melody. What is welcomed lightly to our ears and heart soon pierces and strikes our convictions. Thus, the Christian must always guard his ears from such harm, as he guards his eye and tongue.
The devil is cunning: he clothes his poison in sweets and dissuades our worry with melody. Much like the theater, which parades itself as art, worldly music masks itself as a harmless pleasure. But its aim is singular, to please. It does not serve as recreation, which renews and prepares the man, but rather amuses him.[3] It pulls man away from contrition and the acknowledgment of sin, gratifying the flesh and distracting him from faith. Thus, even the pretty melodies, pleasant to our ears from artistic musicians, serve as the funeral march to our ruin.
We must therefore weep. We must weep for our youth, who are catechized more by their Spotify playlist than by the Catechism. We must weep for our families, who entertain demons with the music that plays over the dinner table. We must mourn for our land, which no longer sings the praises of God but howls with the wolves of Babylon, drunk upon the songs of pride.
For Godly Music
“Sing to the Lord a new song: his praise is in the assembly of the saints.”
– Psalm 149:1 (Brenton)
Here, the Holy Spirit, through David, ordains what the object and purpose of our songs ought to be. Not the service of the flesh, world, and devil, but the praise in the assembly of His people. Song, rightly ordered, is the possession not of vanity but the body of believers, not to lust but love, not to pride but praise. As St. Basil declares, the Psalms are “a compendium of all theology” (Homiliae in Psalmos) where pure doctrine, praise, and prayer are joined in a harmonious whole.
Moreover, in Ephesians 5:19 and Colossians 3:16, the Apostle Paul commends the singing of spiritual songs as part of being dear children of Christ (Ephesians 5:1), as one risen by Christ (Colossians 3:1). The Apostle does not treat music as ornamental, but as an essential discipline of the renewed life. Indeed, in Colossians 3:18-22 and Ephesians 5:22-33, we are given instructions on how, chiefly in the marriage estate, and all other estates, should be ordered. That spiritual songs are listed alongside such grave matter shows, dear reader, that this too is no small thing. Therefore, let us put off the old flesh, be renewed in the spirit, and put on the new flesh (Ephesians 4:22-24).
Thus, godly music is, first and foremost, doxological. It directs the soul away from the self and toward the Triune God. In Isaiah’s beatific vision, heaven itself is filled with song: “Holy, Holy, Holy is the Lord of hosts; the whole earth is full of His glory” (Isaiah 6:3). What heaven sings eternally, the church on Earth should echo temporally. For in the divine service, the angels and the church militant themselves join us in worship (1 Corinthians 11:10).[4] As Chemnitz notes in the Examen Concilii Tridentini, in the divine service, music is not an idol ornament but a vehicle of the Word, serving to steer the heart in faith, hope, and love. When the Church sings, she is joined in a heavenly liturgy, confessing her doctrine in melody.
Second, godly music is didactic, that is, for instruction. St. Paul instructs that psalms, hymns, and spiritual songs are one teaching and admonition (Colossians 3:16). Melanchthon and others note that the psalms are the Church’s catechesis. In this way, sacred song is pure doctrine to melody. Luther is right to say in the preface to the Wittenberg Hymnal of 1524 that “next to the Word of God, music deserves the highest praise” (Luther’s Preface to the Wittenberg Hymnal), for it makes the Word to live in the soul and drives away even the power of the devil (1 Samuel 16:23).
As Scripture demonstrates, music finds its proper place when joined to the true worship of the Lord and the instruction of His people. For when the great reformer King Hezekiah restored the worship of the unleavened bread, scripture notes, “the Levites and the priests praised the Lord day by day, singing with loud instruments unto the Lord. And Hezekiah spake comfortably unto all the Levites that taught the good knowledge of the Lord” (2 Chronicles 30:21-22). Thus, music is joined directly to worship and instruction, serving not as a distraction toward the flesh, but binding itself to teaching and confession before the living God.
Third, godly music is consolatory. Such consolation finds its basis not in sentimental ditties, worldly laments, or drivelous repetition but in songs that bring Christ to heart. Consider Paul and Silas in jail; at midnight, in an act of worship, they prayed and sang hymns to God (Acts 16:25). Such chains did not bind their praises, nor did their wounds overcome their joy. Thus, such a Christian burdened by sorrow or sin finds strength in songs that preach Christ crucified and risen again.
Fourth, godly music is communal. It serves not the vanity of a singular performer or to exalt the part over the whole but rather edifies the body. Again, turning to the example provided by King Hezekiah (2 Chronicles 30:21-22), music was bound to teaching, sacrifice, and the public confession. It served as the common song of the redeemed rather than any exaltation of the talented. For such reason, in the Apology of the Augsburg Confession (XXIV.3-4), we rightly defend the use of music and liturgy as fitting and profitable for this purpose, that, “the people also may have something to learn, and by which faith and fear may be called forth.”
Fifth, godly music is sanctifying. Godly music trains the heart to love the good, true, and beautiful in Christ and detest all evil. As the Formula of Concord Epitome (VI.5) declares, the regenerate act not idly, but “live in the Law and walk according to the Law of God.” Sacred song is such a part of the daily regenerate life (Ephesians 5:19; Colossians 3:16). Such songs bend man’s natural affections from ungodliness toward godliness, aid in subduing the flesh, and cultivate a desire for heavenly things. Just as worldly music hardens the heart and habituates the soul to sin, so sacred song accustoms the soul to righteousness, making obedience not a grievous thing requiring lashings and punishment, but a joyful thing, flowing from a joyful will (Formula of Concord Epitome VI.6).
Last, godly music is eschatological. It anticipates and prefigures the song of the Lamb, where every nation and tongue shall cry out, “Worthy is the Lamb who was slain” (Revelation 5:12). For this reason, each godly hymn sung is a rehearsal for eternity. As Augustine is credited with saying, “He who sings prays twice.” Yet, in Christ, such songs of the Church are more than prayer; it is the participation of the eternal liturgy our High Priest, the Christ, leads (Hebrews 2:12).
Therefore, we see what we are to turn toward as we turn from the howls of Babylon to the Hymns of Zion. Let us sing songs that make melody in our ears and hearts to the Lord. In such music, right doctrine is confessed, the weak are comforted, the young are catechized, the old are encouraged, and the whole Church is knitted together in worship. This is godly music: not the harlot’s song of the streets, but the bride’s eager song for her Bridegroom, the Christ.
As demonstrated by the scriptures, there is a clear demand against worldly music and a stern call for godly music. I now present, from clear reason and nature,[5] why one must be careful to avoid worldly music.
From Nature
“A double minded man is unstable in all his ways.”
– James 1:8 (KJV)
A rule of nature is that which has been set to tune is easy to recall and often comes to mind, no matter whether we have any desire to think of it or not. This presents a great blessing when what we listen to is blessed and true, but in our day, it presents great strife. Often, the tongue we use to sing praises to God also blasphemes and utters great curses in the guise of worldly songs. We know these things ought not to be so (James 3:9-10), but though we wrestle with this, we go all the while happily listening to that which causes sin. Examine yourself and find that this is true. I know it is true for me. Know then, that like the theatre or Colosseum, one cannot go to it in temperance but must cut out sinful songs entirely. Our liberty is not free to enter into sin nor even to come near it. Walther notes on 1 Corinthians 6:18, “For thus, first of all, the holy apostle Paul, in his first epistle to the Corinthians, 6:18, writes, ‘Flee fornication.’ He does not only say: Do not commit fornication! Nor does he merely say: fight against fornication! But he says: ‘Flee it!’” (C.F.W. Walther, Second Lesson on Dance, delivered 10.19.1884, Immanuel Church, Saint Louis, Missouri). Similarly, in Titus 3:22, we are to flee the lusts of youth, that is, we are to afford ourselves no occasion to sin, as the desire to sin is itself sin.
It ought to be noted that Arius sought to grow his heresy with music. He designed hymns and songs that denied the divinity of Christ to strengthen his error. The children of his day proclaimed, “There was a time when the son was naught,” and today equal blasphemies find themselves in music. Today we see this with the false Christian music of companies like Bethel and Hillsong of contemporary fame, of hymns from differing denominations, and those of the Mormon heathenry on their hie to Kolob.
Moreover, even where the music is not blasphemous, being free of curses, slander, devoid of heresy, and sin, we should be selective among this music. The Lord blesses man with the capacity to remember, and how great it is when we recall His word as it is set to song. Music serves as a way to teach the word and meditate on the Lord’s precepts. Contemporary music lacks the edifying lyrics of old, while non-religious music lacks the right focus. Let the reader understand that I am not saying all songs must go, but if he feels so convicted, I commend him for his effort. Forsake the music that causes sin and glorify God in that which attests to Him.
Now, there is obvious music that condemns Christ, which should be the first to go. Music that curses and is vulgar should likewise follow quickly. Then, you must examine for false doctrines: Lies of humanism,[6] judaizing, paganism, revolutionaryism, feminism, et cetera.
Even music that maintains a masquerade as harmless, neutral, or mere entertainment is not exempt from scrutiny. Nature teaches that affections are molded by what delights and frequents the ear. Such delights destroy our will by removing God’s law as the frontlet of our eyes and replacing it with a memory of vapor. A melody that pleases the senses, yet is void of truth, is a sure tutor of error. By repetition, the heart inclines toward vanity, sensualities, pleasure, or idleness, and the soul drifts away from vigilance toward God. This is the horrible and destructive tyranny of ungodly music: it masquerades as harmless recreation, while bending the soul toward the flesh and directing the senses toward the self.
Reason and piety demand the Christian make a choice: either enslave the ear to the world or sanctify it toward the Lord. One cannot sit idly in Satan’s brothel of sin and claim immunity; one cannot incline the heart through the ear toward unrighteousness and proclaim freedom. To permit sin by melody is to invite sin in; it is to invite sin that lieth at the door to our hearts (Genesis 4:7). If the ear is allowed impurity to dine with corruption, the mind shall follow, the heart consent, the flesh will act, and the soul will perish. Christian liberty does not incline itself toward sin, but demands the vigilance to flee wickedness, even in song.
Conclusion
Therefore, let the Christian act decisively. Remove every song that glorifies what God abhors. Destroy that which celebrates pride, lust, rebellion, and blasphemy. Examine your playlists, background music, and even hymns that you allow to enter your home, car, workplace, church; yes, even your very mind. Let no voice sing but the voice of God; let no sound echo but the sound of piety; let not tune play but that which plays for God. Fill the newfound silence once occupied with vanity at best, and outright wickedness at worst, with psalms, hymns, spiritual songs, prayerful meditation, the reading of the word, and the mutual consolation of the brethren. Teach those entrusted to you to sing only that which glorifies God. Instruct your families, your congregation, your neighbors, in discernment and obedience.
Such decisive action finds accord with Luther in his preface to the Wittenberg Hymnal. Luther declares that hymns are necessary so that there would be something “to give the young–who should at any rate be trained in music and other fine arts–something to wean them away from love ballads and carnal songs and to teach them something of value in their place” (Luther’s Preface to the Wittenberg Hymnal). If the Reformer labored to replace the corrupt songs of his age with Christian hymnody, then we, faced with far greater corruption, ought to follow the example of our fathers in far greater zeal. Let every believer cast out the songs of the flesh and put on the songs of Christ, that the law may crush the haughty of heart and the gospel may be heard in the melody that passes our lips.
Do not contend yourself with partial reform or timid avoidance. The ear, like your eye, is a battleground of the soul, and each note advances the kingdom of Christ or of the flesh. Let every house be sanctified by holy sound, every choir a host of the faithful, every ear a willing and ready recipient of the Spirit. Let Zion’s song resounds boldly, teaching the true doctrine, comforting the weary, exhorting the young, encouraging the old, and strengthening the whole Church in holy living.
Let nothing short of vigilance, decisiveness, and an unwavering commitment to the Lord be your task. For obedience in sound, as in all things, glorifies God and is for the nourishment of your soul. Let your ears, memory, and heart fight the battle of the holy war against the attacks of sin, death, and the devil. May every song you hear, sing, and recall be a witness to the glory of Christ, the Lord of music, the Lord of Life, the Lord of your salvation.
Endnotes:
[1] Translation chosen for clarity of point made in this piece.
[2] The recording in Brenton’s Septuagint reads: “who excel in the sound of musical instruments; they have regarded them as abiding, not as fleeting pleasures;… For the Lord has sworn by himself, saying, Because I abhor all the pride of Jacob, I do also hate his countries, and I will cut off his city with all who inhabit it.” Brenton’s rendering provides further notes that while there is joy in music it does not abideth.
[4] For such reason, though man grow cold or tired of the Lord’s ordinances, even the angels and Church militant weep in agony and are affronted by wickedness when women worship uncovered.
[5] See Job 38-42 and 1 Corinthians 11 for natural law explanations. Moreover, consider how the Christ regularly uses parables, which are without comprehension for those that do not reason.
For he who seeks that which he knows will provoke him to unchastity has already committed this sin before God. This is irrefutably evident from the clear sayings of Holy Scripture. For thus, first of all, the holy apostle Paul, in his first epistle to the Corinthians, 6:18, writes, “Flee fornication.” He does not only say: do not commit fornication! Nor does he merely say: fight against fornication! but he says: “Flee”it! But why does he speak thus? Precisely to tell us not only not to commit this sin grossly, but also to avoid it everywhere, to keep away from it, to avoid every opportunity for it; in short, to flee it, flee it! So we are not to think: I will go here and there, where I shall certainly be provoked to unchastity; but I will do it with the intention of fighting against it. No, says the apostle, you should rather act in such a way that you do not need to fight against it at all because of your guilt. Rather, you should flee from it like a poisonous snake. No one enters into a fight with it without necessity.1 One does not seek it out, but flees it. One takes up the fight against it only when one encounters it without one’s will. For then, of course, the rule is: either fight, or die! — Hence the godly Johann Gerhard also writes in his incomparable “Sacred Meditations”: “While the apostle held that all vices must be resisted, he calls against fornication not to a duel, but to flight, saying: ‘Flee fornication!’” — Hence also, on the other hand, the holy apostle Paul, in his second epistle to Timothy, cries out to him, who was then a young man, “Flee the lusts of youth!” (3:22.) So he says not only, Take no part in the lusts of youth; but, “Flee, flee the lusts of youth!” Do not come too near to them, but go far away from where you might be seduced, enticed, provoked to such lusts.
C.F.W. Walther, Second Lesson on Dance, delivered 10.19.1884 Immanuel Church, Saint Louis, Missouri
Allow me first, kind reader, to offer the lecture of concern itself here for you to view if you see so fit to do. Undoubtedly in these contested forms of public criticism one must field the immediate pleasantries – he quoted out of context!; did you even read, listen, ingest the whole media?; well certainly that’s not what he really meant! – and so in my winsomest efforts I shall make it known that I am trying to conceal no such context, nor skimp the whole, nor in the slightest misconstrue. If you must, watch, listen to LCMS Reverend Billy Brath’s “LGBTQ” Breakout Session from the 2019 Michigan District All Pastor’s Conference and then continue reading the truth of the scandal as I descry.
As you may have surmised by the title, the focus of this response will be centered upon Reverend Brath’s definitions of the concepts gay, queer, and cultural identity. Ultimately, it is his false division of sexual activity from its daily, cultural expression that shall be refuted on both counts, insofar as (1) they are not to be tolerated in their artificial separation nor (2) their actual, inseperable manifestation. While his false division appears to be a clever trick by which one makes an excuse for dining with tax collectors, sinners and sodomi-, err, I mean, just more sinners like you and me who just happen to talk, dress and act funny, as Reverend Brath would have us believe!-, in the end even this artificially contrived dichotomy fails under the true application of Scripture.
The straw-man first appears within the first twelve minutes of his lecture. Reverend Brath complains of other fellow pastors in the LCMS having their gaydars pinged by his dress, self comportment, et cetera, upon which opportunity he rhetorically flips the accusation of the interaction upon them: “so you mean, in our interaction that we have just had, you started thinking about who I want to have sex with? How stupid is that?”
The Biblical matter of fact is that it is indeed rather quite intuitive. Know ye not that the unrighteous shall not inherit the kingdom of God? Be not deceived: neither fornicators, nor idolaters, nor adulterers, nor effeminate, nor abusers of themselves with mankind, nor thieves, nor covetous, nor drunkards, nor revilers, nor extortioners, shall inherit thekingdom of God.And such were some of you: but ye are washed, but ye are sanctified, but ye are justified in the name of the Lord Jesus, and by the Spirit of our God. The association between men who are effeminate and those who abuse themselves with mankind was indeed so intuitive for Saint Paul for him to have listed them side by side in the list of unrighteous. How stupid of Reverend Brath to not be concerned whatsoever with his perceived effeminacy!
This close association given by Saint Paul undoes the whole of Reverend Brath’s argument as he proceeds to make in his lecture. Effeminacy is part and parcel with self-abuse with mankind and the original Greek of verse 1Cor6:9 intricately ties the apostle’s writing back to that which he wrote to the saints in Rome, 1:272. Both verses deliberately use the Greek word for male, arsen: ἀρσενοκοῖται & ᾰ̓́ρσενες. While Paul had the word aner, andres meaning “man” available to him, he deliberately chose in both instances to emphasize the male, arsen, sex to stress the very corporeal offense being done. Indeed the Sainted Paul Kretzmann wrote in the second volume of his New Testament Popular Commentary as regards this section of Romans 1, “The heinousness of their transgression is marked by the words referring to the sex of the transgressors.”
Many in recent years have tried to defend the term μαλακοὶ, effeminate, as not referring to active homosexuals but merely people who trip gaydars in their mannerisms and dress. Whether or not one may abuse this term by appearing to successfully argue so is of no import here however. Even if we concede this effeminacy to be, as today’s parlance would have it, a type of gender expression separate from sexual activity itself (as Reverend Brath says, “queer theory- research it”), it still falls within the apostle’s list of condemnation, and that within immediate collocation.3 Moreover such effeminates of antiquity were, among others, actors of theatre, whose sort of behavior and company Saint Walther had this to say:
Now every kingdom has its peculiar customs. The customs of the world, therefore, are not to be followed by any Christian, even if it seems that he can do so without defiling himself. If he sees that the customs are really those of the wicked, ungodly world, he should not go along with them. This is the way the apostle wants it when he writes that those who want to be Christians should not conform to this world. Oh, beloved brothers and sisters in the Lord, how much, how much must be reformed among us, if we want to be reformed according to this word of the apostle! How much conformity with the world one notices when one enters into the families among us, and especially when one looks closely at our youth who are growing out of their parents! Our trial fits in very well with the Reformation feast we have just celebrated; for merely reforming ourselves in doctrine is not enough, it must also be followed by a holy life, or God will take away the pure doctrine from us again.
C.F.W. Walther, First Lesson on Theater, delivered 11.2.1884 Trinity Church, Saint Louis, Missouri
No, rather than fleeing sin, rather than reforming his life, Reverend Brath maintains he must continue to attend gay bars for the ministry. Which, by the way, as he misses no opportunity to whatabout: have you seen just how terrible straight clubs are in contrast? (25-26 minute mark for those following along in the video linked above) It is here that the great atheology of sin-leveling begins its parade out of Reverend Brath’s cursed maw: all sexuality is broken, we are told! Never mind that the very Confessions to which our esteemed Reverend has vowed fidelity explicitly rule that sodomy is even worse than fornication.4 No, we must be reminded of the hetero logs in our eyes when taking exception with the homo specks in that neighbor’s. How at home Reverend Brath must find himself in the LCACA Misery Synod.
The next atheological maneuver made is to deny regeneration by the invocation of the iustus et peccator. We are told that an impenitent heterosexual adulterer can be rightly excommunicated while a lesbian (one must now strain to understand if the term refers to an active homosexual or merely a performative one; yet as shown above it is a distinction without a difference!) cannot: for she does not know she is sinning as a fish does not know it swims in water. Rather than approaching this issue with a Scriptural standard by applying proof texts of how those without eyes to see nor ears to hear are to be dealt with, Reverend Brath makes a major concession: “the majority of gay folk in America are never going to be convinced that homosexuality is a sin.” (we’re at 35 minutes in, refill your popcorn buckets now if you haven’t already…) Better yet, he states that one of the reasons for this is Scriptural – not before coyly looking upward as if to soliloquize to God, saying “no offense, You wrote it perfectly…”. All of this simply denies regeneration, that by the claim that we are all simultaneously righteous and sinner, there is no need to get caught up in the sexual sin of homosexuals (whether performative or active) contra Johann Danhauer in his Theologia Conscientiariae:
regeneration is commanded.5 A different constitution of the kingdom requires different customs; but Christ’s kingdom is not of this world; therefore it does not permit the customs of the world.
But rather than have his eyes set on Christ’s kingdom, Reverend Brath conflates His with the world. This is nowhere clearer than when he plainly states that he works with nonprofit organizations that give material aid to gay people who come to the Orlando, Florida area to seek the extra-familial LGBTQ network. He claims he does this because he wants everyone in heaven, and that this desire motivates him to stick his head out and be the gay pastor in the Missouri Synod. (we’re at minutes 40-44 in case you were wondering) In Reverend Brath’s kingdom, a stiff-necked straight adulterer is barred from entry while a culturally oblivious gay is granted infinite patience and mercy; God’s Law is completely overturned for the Social Gospel of fundraising and grooming those lost souls who have ran away from their families and churches; “stop sleeping around” and “slow down on the drug use” (his words, 40 minutes) are the closest you will get to hearing any sort of enjoinder for the wellbeing of sinners.
Don’t get me wrong: those suffering under the spiritual malaise of the LGBTQ movement need to be ministered to. Christ died for their sins and they too can be saved. But don’t tell me my sin stinks worse than theirs when our Confessions clearly deny it and in fact state the opposite; don’t deny regeneration as the proof of necessary good works flowing from saving faith; don’t artificially divorce the active act of homosexuality with its mere outward cultural expression as a sleight of hand.
For an in depth review of the particular topic of focus of Saint Paul’s Roman epistle in its first chapter, read On Sodomites Axioi Thanatou↩︎
One must also note the strictly expressive nature of Saint Paul’s instruction on headcovering in 1 Corinthians. By appealing to nature and not sexual acts themselves when arguing that women should cover their heads, Saint Paul implicitly acknowledges there is no bifurcation between the common public and intimate private expressions of rightly ordered natures. Womanhood is therefore defined equally in being man’s veiled glory in both the public and private senses. Cognoverit lector.↩︎
In the doctrine of the antinomians there was this statement: “If somebody were an adulterer, provided only that he believed, he would have a gracious God.” But what kind of church will it be, I ask, in which so awful a statement is heard? A distinction is necessary, and it should be taught that adulterers or sinners are of two kinds: some who become aware of their adultery or sin to such an extent that they shudder with their whole heart and begin to repent earnestly, and not only feel sorry for what they have done but also sincerely desire and endeavor never again to commit anything like it. These are not smug in their sin; they are thoroughly frightened, and they dread God’s wrath. If they take hold of the Word of the Gospel and trust in the mercy of God for Christ’s sake, they are saved and have forgiveness of sins through faith in Christ.
Even though the others, whether adulterers or sinners, are unable to excuse their sin, they nevertheless feel no sorrow about it. On the contrary, they are glad that they have achieved their desire. They look for opportunities to commit sins and smugly indulge in them. Because these people do not have the Holy Spirit, they cannot believe; and he who preaches to such people about faith deceives them.
This sickness demands a different medicine, namely, that you say with Paul: “God will judge the adulterous” (Heb. 13:4); “They will not see the kingdom of God” (cf. 1 Cor. 6:9–10); and “Without chastity no one can please God” (Rom. 8:8). Hence they are defiled and under the wrath of God.
Such sledges are needed to crush these rocks. Abraham does not indulge in sins, but long before this he was truly humbled in spirit. Therefore the Lord comforts him, for He takes pleasure in a smoking flax. Therefore He tends it carefully, in order that it may burst into flames.
But the people of Sodom are like crags and very hard rocks. In their case brimstone, lightning from heaven, and thunder are needed. Those foolish and lying prophets who maintain that the Law should not be taught in the church and that, in general, no one should be rebuked too severely or burdened in his conscience are not aware of this.
If this is true, however, why does the Lord want the example of Sodom preserved in His very church and taught by Abraham? Moreover, in view of the fact that He adds “in order that they may fear the Lord,” do not those who want only the promises to be taught exclude the doctrine of the fear of the Lord entirely from the church? Hence the fanatical spirits who confound the entire system of heavenly doctrine in a pernicious manner must be shunned.
But this doctrine of the Law is profitable not only for teaching the fear of the Lord; but, as the Lord adds, it also produces this fruit, that those who are frightened in this way by the judgment and wrath of God practice justice and discernment.
If you divide all Scripture, it contains two topics: promises and threats or benefits and punishments. And, as Bernard states, hearts that are neither softened by kindnesses nor improved by blows are properly called hard. Thus the works of God are also twofold. Works of mercy are those which Paul mentions in Acts 14:17: “He gives rain from heaven, fruitfulness,” etc. He does works of wrath when He also sends a plague, war, and famine in order to frighten and humble the obdurate. Thus in Christ salvation is promised to all who are baptized and believe. On the other hand, judgment and eternal death are threatened to those who do not believe in Christ.
In these circumstances how can or should the preaching of the Law be excluded from the church? Do you not at the same time exclude the fear of God and the majority of the works of God? God certainly does not perform these in order that they may remain hidden, but He wants us to see them and in this way to be led to fear Him. If there were no perils of fire and water, no sudden death and similar evils, I myself would surely not say anything about them and would speak only of God’s kindness and of His benefits. But experience teaches otherwise. Hence to declare that the Law should not be taught in the church is characteristic of men who do not know Christ and are blinded by their pride and wickedness. Previously Moses has set forth many examples of God’s graciousness: when God promised Abraham the Blessed Seed, when He honored him with an outstanding victory, and when He came to him as a guest and ate bread at his home. These events are related by Moses, and nothing else is added to them; but in this passage there is added the command to preach: “He will relate them,” says God, “to his children”; that is: “I want the destruction of Sodom by fire preached in the church.” What is the reason for this? Because the church is never altogether pure; the greater part is always wicked, as the parable of the seed teaches (Matt. 13:3 ff). In fact, the true saints themselves, who are righteous through faith in the Son of God, have the sinful flesh, which must be mortified by constant chastening, as Paul says (1 Cor. 11:31): “If we would judge ourselves, we would not be chastened by the Lord.” Therefore keep this passage in mind. It is adequate by itself to refute the antinomians.
— Bl. Dr. Martin Luther, Lectures on Genesis (18:19), LW 3:224-225
In 1540, Luther wrote 91 sentences on the often misinterpreted saying of Christ: “Sell all that thou hast, and distribute unto the poor, and thou shalt have treasure in heaven.” Luke 18:22. The papists understood this saying as if, according to it, true perfection consisted in putting away all earthly goods and becoming a monk. The Anabaptists, however, sought to prove from this that it was sinful to possess earthly goods. In the propositions which Luther wrote against this perversion of the word of Christ, he also speaks of self defense. We would therefore like to share the propositions relating to this here. They are as follows:
In teaching that one should sell and leave everything, the Lord has permitted, or rather commanded, that everything should be lawfully sought and possessed; for you cannot sell or leave anything that you have not lawfully acquired and possessed; otherwise it would have had to be said that everything must be given back and restored to God, its rightful Lord, as plundered, stolen, and unrighteously posessed things. It is also evident from the second table of the holy commandments that therein it is commanded to seek everything in lawful ways when it is commanded: Thou shalt not steal; that is, what thou hast shall be thine, and not another man’s; or, as Paul exhorts, “Let every man labour, working with his hands the thing which is good, that he may have to give to him that needeth.” Eph. 4:28.
Now it is certain that Christ did not come to abolish the binding force of the commandments of the second table of the law, but rather to confirm them, Matthew 5:17. Yes, he also confirms the authorities and police laws, since he says before Pilate: “It is given thee from above,” John 19:11. Christ speaks of the sale and forsaking of all things with regard to the first table of the holy ten commandments, that is, with regard to the public profession of faith. For when it comes to the duties of the first table of the holy commandments and the purchase of the precious pearl of the kingdom of heaven, the field must be sold for its sake and everything must be abandoned. Then that which is rightly possessed according to the second table must be joyfully forsaken for the sake of the first table, that is, for the sake of eternal life. Except in this case, however, and if it does not depend on a public confession, one can acquire, preserve, administer and protect something in the world. For we are also obliged to follow the second table of the law, that is, we must provide, nourish and protect our lives according to divine and human law.
Apart from the fact that one must confess one’s faith by denying earthly things, every true Christian is a citizen of this world and must both do and share with others what the duties of the second table require. Therefore, if a murderer would do violence to you or a thief would take what is yours because you are a Christian,[2] you must resist such evil if you otherwise wish to be a righteous citizen in the world; for just as the secular authorities, of which you are a member and subject, themselves resist in such a case, so they also command you to resist by virtue of the second table when violence is done to you, and you are bound to obey. So if a murderer attacks you in the street and wants to kill you because you are a Christian, you must resist him, even if it costs him his life. For you know that the authorities have commanded that a murderer should be resisted and that the citizens should be protected. In such a case, you will fulfill the requirements of the first and second table. –
On the same subject the old godly and conscientious theologian Martin Chemnitz writes the following, translated into the vernacular:
The question of self-defense is a difficult one; namely, when someone in an unavoidable emergency, because he cannot otherwise escape, nor otherwise expel the violence, nor otherwise defend his life, kills the attacker. The civil rights in regard to this case are known; but the question is, whether this applies according to heavenly law and before the judgment seat of conscience, since Christ says: “I say unto you, That ye resist not evil: but whosoever shall smite thee on thy right cheek, turn to him the other also.” Matthew 5:39. Some reject the proof from the law of nature that it is lawful to drive out violence with violence, as ungodly and contrary to the gospel. Some, however, extend this saying so far that they maintain that private revenge is perfectly lawful, thus setting aside the precepts of Christ (Matthew 5:39).
The true grounds of this contention must therefore be carefully considered. For not all natural principles, especially in the teaching of the law, are to be rejected and condemned. For this is also a principle of the law of nature: “Whatsoever ye would that men should do to you, do ye even so to them.” Matthew 7:12. But neither are all without exception to be accepted and approved, because “the natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God: for they are foolishness unto him.” 1 Cor. 2:14. Therefore two useful rules are taught: 1. The gospel does not abolish the law of nature, because it is the truth of God, which was written on the hearts by God himself at creation, (Rom. 1:18, 2:14). 2. But because what is known of the law in this darkness of corrupt nature is obscure, and the stubbornness of the passions in the heart also corrupts right knowledge in the mind, the Word of God adds the interpretation to the law of nature and punishes and abolishes the falsifications of it that have been added from the corrupt inheritance.
But in order to see what the right principle is and how this natural knowledge is put in order, it must be noted that opposition to violence takes place in three cases: 1. In lawful dominions and in the office of authority. For the latter rightly expels violence with violence when it averts highway robberies with an armed hand and by war. There is no dispute about this case. 2. In the defense of those who are entrusted to our care, e.g. when a father of a family expels violence by force when his house is attacked and defends his own. 3. in defending his own body against an unjust, sudden and openly violent attack. With regard to these last two cases there is a dispute.
The question is to be presented in such a way that defense with the removal of all unjust desires is lawful and necessary. But the following factors also belong to such defense: 1. That the violent attack which one suffers is a sudden one that one cannot escape in any way by giving way, fleeing, or suffering a (lesser) injustice. 2. That the violent attack is an obvious one, that one cannot save life and limb by any other means of defense than by striking back and killing. 3. That the authorities are so absent that they cannot come to the rescue, and that delay and waiting are clearly dangerous to life. 4. That restrictions be kept on innocent self-protection; to which, as the jurists teach, the following belong: (1) That self-defense be done immediately on the act. For if it occurs some time after the wrong has been done, it is evident that it is not done to repel the attack, but out of a desire for revenge. (2) That it is not done with the intention of revenge, not out of pain at the injustice experienced, but only to abort the violence and to protect life. If one could escape in any other way, one would rather not defend oneself or at least not kill, but is forced to defend oneself if one does not want to neglect one’s own life and that of one’s own.[3] (3) They also say that a uniformity of offensive and defensive weapons is required, so that if someone attacks you unarmed or with a stick, you will not immediately shoot him with a firearm if he hits you with it.
The question is therefore this: since in such a case the law and the authorities permit self-defense, whether this is in conflict with the teaching of the Gospel and with the commandment to love one’s enemies. Although this question is the subject of many disputations, the following simple and true reasons should be noted. 1. Christ did not come into the world to abolish, by his teaching and preaching, the law of nature and the laws which accord with common sense, and to establish a new political order; but he mainly delivers the spiritual doctrine of the kingdom of heaven, and he declares that the doctrine of the law is to be used for this, because the knowledge of it has been darkened and corrupted by the darkness of original sin. We have already said what evil desires and sinful passions corrupt natural knowledge in this case. These excluded, the work of the law is written in our hearts, that, as we ought to harm no one, likewise we ought to protect our own bodies against unjust violence, either by the ordinary powers of the authorities, or by self-defense, if the authorities cannot come to our aid. For thus says (the pagan philosopher) Cicero, when he describes the first principles of natural law: “In the beginning the whole race of living beings was ordained by nature to protect itself, its body and its life, and to ward off from itself that which seems to want to harm it.” This judgment, because it in truth contains that of the right of nature, is not annulled by the teaching of the Gospel, but only the explanation is added that no sinful desires may be mixed into it and that it may not be done without or against the authority of the laws and the authorities in personal outrage. This is the first reason.
2. The laws themselves, which are consistent with common sense, permit and approve such a case of self-defense. It has been established by the authority of the magistracy that in the case of sudden and openly violent attacks, when the judge is absent and cannot come to the rescue, everyone may justly protect himself and his own by self-defense. But it has been shown above that public punishment includes everything that is done according to the law or by order or authorization of a lawful authority, even by private persons.
3. More clear and certain are the proofs which are taken from the testimonies of Holy Scripture. For there is a case of self-defense of a private person explained in the Law of Moses Ex 22, 2, 3: “If a thief be found breaking up (with an instrument for breaking in), and be smitten that he die, there shall no blood be shed for him. If the sun be risen upon him, there shall be blood shed for him.” Consider how carefully God has indicated the circumstances of self-defense and restricted it by the definite limits of blameless protection. If someone is seized at night with a weapon during a burglary, it is assumed that he came with the intention of committing murder, and therefore defense is permitted. After the sun has risen, however, the owner of the house can protect himself and his property in other ways; therefore, if he then kills the thief under the pretext of defense, he is guilty because he did not observe the limits of innocent protection. It is true that the judicial laws of Moses do not bind us, but it is right to judge from them which political laws agree with the law of nature and with the eternal law that is in God’s heart. For God has not established anything that conflicts with his word and will.
Even before the Mosaic Law, there is an example of self-defense by a private person in the story of Abraham (Gen. 14:14), for he was a stranger in the land of Canaan, held no office of authority, and especially had no lawful power in Salem, and yet he armed his family to defend his nephew, pursued and killed the enemy, and freed not only Lot but also the other captives. And far from disapproving of this defense, Melchizedech, the priest of God Most High, blesses the victor: “Blessed be Abram of the most high God, and blessed be the most high God, which hath delivered thine enemies into thy hand.” But note the circumstances of blameless protection in this story. Firstly, his help is requested, for one who had escaped reports to Abraham. Secondly, the authorities at Salem were so overwhelmed that they could not come to his aid. Third, he is in league with Mamre, Escol and Aner, who were the rightful rulers in their place, but had no power in the land of Sodom; and yet they take up arms with Abraham to defend their neighbors.
John 18:36 also belongs here: “If my kingdom were of this world, then would my servants fight, that I should not be delivered to the Jews.” Thus in civil life, if the lawful authorities command and permit it, private individuals may justly resort to self-defense. And Proverbs 24:11 says: “Save those who would be killed, and do not withdraw from those who would be strangled.” However, he (Solomon) speaks here mainly of the office of authority; but he adds the general conclusion: “He rewards a man according to his work.” Hence Ambrose (the Church Father) writes: “He who does not remove injustice from his companion, if he can, is as much in the wrong as he who inflicts it.” Likewise: “If one can help and does not do so, this is nothing other than being favorable to wickedness.”
4. But, says one, these examples prove only the defense of one’s neighbor, not of one’s own body and life. Answer: The law says: Love thy neighbor as thyself. If, therefore, I act rightly when I defend my neighbor in an openly violent attack, it follows that the defense of one’s own body also belongs to the commandment of love. And the case of Ex 22:2-3 also includes the defense of one’s own body. Furthermore, Exodus 21:13 reads: “But if he did not lie in wait for him, but God let him fall into his hand,” i.e. as in Genesis 14:15. Some would counter this with Matthew 5:39: “Do not resist the one who is evil. But if anyone slaps you,” etc.,[4] and also by Matthew 26:52: “All who take the sword will perish by the sword.” But these sayings are also explained above. They distinguish between the offices of the authorities and the ministry of the gospel and instruct the pious, when the authorities either persecute them or deprive them of their protection and reputation, that they should not resist the evil in personal passion and iniquity. – Resistance also seems to conflict with the commandment to love one’s enemies. But then Abraham would also have sinned against this commandment (Gen 14:15), as would the law (Ex 22:2), as would the authorities when they punish evildoers.
We are sharing some testimonies on this subject at the request of several who are in such circumstances that they are in great need of clarity from God’s Word for conscientious conduct. Hopefully these testimonies will also be read with pleasure and not without benefit by those who are not exactly in such circumstances. –Editors of Der Lutheraner. ↑
Luther places here the case where a citizen is attacked because he is a Christian, since the occurrence of this case was to be particularly expected in his time and actually occurred a few years later, in the Schmalkaldic War. It goes without saying, however, that self-defense is all the more justified when the attack of a robber or murderer happens for other worldly reasons. ↑
This restriction, that self-defense is not done out of vindictiveness and hatred, is especially important, since many Christians are now so inflamed by abolitionist fanaticism that they seem to have stripped off not only the Christian, but even the human being. Not only every spark of love against their enemies, but even every spark of the meanest sense of justice against their opponents seems to have been extinguished. A truly diabolical hatred and a hellish joy at the misfortune and misery of the enemy has driven all Christian, even human feeling out of them. And this bestiality is glossed over with the name of patriotism and obedience to the authorities. ↑
Concerning this saying, see Luther’s Folk Library (Volksbibliothek), combined volume 9 and 10, pages 167-182 (i.e. Luther’s 1530 homilies on the Sermon on the Mount). ↑
Indeed, to address the matter is to twist open a veritable matryoshka doll. This was not a woman off on her own in the theological weeds. This was a woman who had pastors and theologians grooming her argument for the equality of all sins at every step along the way. From her ordained husband, to her pastor, to the Commission on Theology and Church Relations (CTCR), to the seminary professor editor, to the Synod President — every one of them signed off on this passage, and each has only doubled and tripled down since her theological categories and articulation were called into question.
I’ve elected to take a long quote, to include the sections which precede the relevant passage, for reasons which will become clear.
Luther faced a different reality [than the Israelites whose sexual sin most commonly manifested in adultery qua adultery]: “But among us there is such a shameful mess and the very dregs of all vice and lewdness.” He then addresses the common unchastity of his day, motivated in part by the “shameful mess,” namely, the irony of monastics who esteemed virginity far above marriage yet failed miserably at it. Much like doctors who “cure” genetic disorders by aborting babies, the “popish rabble” cloistered themselves away from “vice and lewdness” and devoted themselves to “chastity,” hoping to avoid adultery by rejecting marriage. But God honors marriage in the Sixth Commandment, and the monastic rejection led only to individuals who “indulge in open and shameless prostitution or secretly do even worse, so that one dare not speak of it. . . . Their hearts are so full of unchaste thoughts and evil lusts that there is a continual burning and secret suffering.” Marriage is therefore not only honorable but also beneficial to curb temptation.
Like Luther, we also must address the most common unchastity among ourselves: that in the name of “sexual freedom” we feed our continual burning and honor neither virginity nor marriage. Our sin isn’t even secret: we speak of our lusts through crude joking and foolish talk, often naming ourselves by our sexual sin as no murderer or liar ever does.
However, though some of us are burdened with homosexual lust, pornographic addiction, transgenderism, pedophilia, and polyamory, more often they are the speck in our neighbor’s eye rather than the log in our own (cf. Matthew 7:3–5). For decades, if we didn’t wink at fornication we certainly turned our eyes from it, as long as the acts performed outside of marriage were heterosexual ones. We shudder in disgust when it suits us, forgetting that we, too, follow our hearts, that organ which produces every evil thought and sexual immorality (Mark 7:21–22). We are in love, so we live as though married; we are out of love, so we break our marriage oaths before death has ended them.
Andrea Schmeling, “The Sixth Commandment: Sexual Purity,” Luther’s Large Catechism with Annotations and Contemporary Applications, Published by Concordia Publishing House, 2022, emphasis is the contested passage
It should be noted that a full examination of the so-named “sin leveling” which Mrs. Schmeling promotes above is beyond the scope of this piece; however, one may be found in this article, from which the present piece has been taken and adapted. For our purposes here, it is sufficient to demonstrate how Mrs. Schmeling’s essay in LCACA overtly denies the Lutheran Confessions, and should thusly be summarily retracted from the LCMS’s canon if the organization wishes to continue to claim “quia” subscription to the Book of Concord.
Denial of the Lutheran Confessions
Yes, Mrs. Schmeling’s piece denies the Lutheran Confessions. Ironically enough, it denies the Large Catechism (LC). More ironically, it denies the explanation to the Sixth Commandment. And, in the ultimate irony, it denies the section of the LC that Mrs. Schmeling quotes just two paragraphs above the contested “log” and “speck” line — included in the quote above.
To reproduce the quote from Luther’s Large Catechism in full:
From this you see how this popish rabble, priests, monks, and nuns, resist God’s order and commandment, inasmuch as they despise and forbid matrimony, and presume and vow to maintain perpetual chastity, and, besides, deceive the simple-minded with lying words and appearances.
For no one has so little love and inclination to chastity as just those who because of great sanctity avoid marriage, and either indulge in open and shameless prostitution, or secretly do even worse, so that one dare not speak of it, as has, alas! been learned too fully.
In this passage of the Large Catechism (and hence, in our Confessions), Martin Luther states that there is a worse sexual sin than fornication with prostitutes. Though he tactfully declines to name it (for reasons he alludes to in his commentary on Genesis 19), we know exactly what Luther was referring to, because he spoke about it explicitly elsewhere: it is sodomy. Significantly, this includes, but is not limited to, pederasty. In point of fact, it especially denotes pederasty — the rape of boys. If sodomy is the abomination of abominations, pederasty is the abomination^3. And while a full exposition of the data on the topic is beyond the scope of this piece, it is worth mentioning that when you plot for time, the Venn Diagram for sodomy and pederasty is just…a circle.
And on that score, there really is nothing new under the sun. Thus, Luther:
I am not lying to you. Whoever has been in Rome knows that conditions are unfortunately worse there than anyone can say or believe. When the last Lateran council was to be concluded in Rome under Pope Leo, among other articles it was decreed that one must believe the soul to be immortal. From this one may gather that they make eternal life an object of sheer mockery and contempt. In this way they confess that it is a common belief among them that there is no eternal life, but that they now wish to proclaim this by means of a bull.
More remarkable yet, in the same bull they decided that a cardinal should not keep as many boys in the future. However, Pope Leo commanded that this be deleted; otherwise it would have been spread throughout the whole world how openly and shamelessly the pope and the cardinals in Rome practice sodomy. I do not wish to mention the pope, but since the knaves will not repent, but condemn the gospel, blaspheme and revile God’s word, and excuse their vices, they, in turn, will have to take a whiff of their own terrible filth. This vice is so prevalent among them that recently a pope caused his own death by means of this sin and vice. In fact, he died on the spot. All right now, you popes, cardinals, papists, spiritual lords, keep on persecuting God’s word and defending your doctrine and your churches!
No pope, cardinal, bishop, doctor, priest, monk, or nun will condemn such an obviously disgraceful life; rather they laugh about it, excuse it, and gloss over it. They incite kings, princes, country, and people to defend such knaves with life and property, with land and people, and faithfully to protect them so that such vices might not be repented of and reformed, but rather strengthened, sanctioned, and approved. Now you are to hazard blood, body, and life just for the sake of saddling your neck and conscience with this.
I could easily mention more examples of such abominations, but it is too shameful; I fear that our German soil would have to tremble before it. But if an impudent popish ass should come along and dispute this, he will find me ready to do him battle, and it will be quite a battle!”
Luther’s Works Volume 47, p.38, emphases not original
Through the papists Satan so defiled [natural affection] that in his little book on the celibacy of priests Cyprian wrote, ‘If you hear a woman speak, flee from her as if she were a hissing snake.’ That’s the way it is. When one is afraid of whores one must fall into sodomite depravity, as almost happened to St. Jerome.
Table Talk: “There Is Danger in Avoiding Marriage,” 29 May, 1539, Luther’s Works Volume 54, p.357
But that’s not all. Luther also said,
The vice of the Sodomites is an unparalleled enormity. It departs from the natural passion and desire, planted into nature by God, according to which the male has a passionate desire for the female. Sodomy craves what is entirely contrary to nature. Whence comes this perversion? Without a doubt it comes from the devil. After a man has once turned aside from the fear of God, the devil puts such great pressure upon his nature that he extinguishes the fire of natural desire and stirs up another, which is contrary to nature.
Quote as found in What Luther Says: An Anthology, ed. by Ewald Martin Plass, emphasis mine. Pick up your copy from Concordia Publishing House today, before they discontinue it for badthink!
But let us return to the statement in the LC: “For no one has so little love and inclination to chastity as just those who because of great sanctity avoid marriage, and either indulge in open and shameless prostitution, or secretly do even worse, so that one dare not speak of it, as has, alas! been learned too fully.”
To perhaps restate: it is here the clear and explicit ruling of the Lutheran Confessions that sodomy, especially pederasty, is even worse (a greater sin) than fornication (with a prostitute no less).
To say otherwise is no simple and innocuous theological difference of opinion.
To say otherwise is to depart from and contradict the Confessions. To maintain that fornication and sodomy are equal sins is by the Missouri Synod’s definition false doctrine.
This is not LCMS rules-lawyering. The Confessions faithfully expound the soul-saving doctrine of the Scriptures (1 Timothy 4:16). And to the present point: Lutheran ministers vow before Almighty God that they believe this. To contradict the doctrinal standard is a double lie. First, it defames the name of God Himself by putting lies in His mouth, effectively forging His signature on a fraudulent letter. Second, it is oath-breaking. Both are evil. The first is worse. “The Lord will not hold him guiltless that takes His name in vain” (Exodus 20:7). False doctrine is an enormity, not a quibble.
When Mrs. Schmeling espouses that some guy’s child-raping is a speck in his eye, while your fornication is a log in your own, that is false doctrine — taught by a woman. Verily, it is named as such by the very quotation she used two paragraphs before making her claim.
Fr. Brock Schmeling signed off on this. Mrs. Schmeling’s pastor signed off on it. The entire CTCR signed off on it. CTSFW Professor John Pless signed off on it. LCMS President Matthew Harrison signed off on it. And when it was exposed, they all doubled down.
The CTCR forthrightly asserts that this volume does not change, question or supplant any doctrinal position of the LCMS, including any Synod teaching on contemporary cultural issues such as race or sexuality. The CTCR furthermore categorically rejects any assertions to the contrary. …
[T]he text of the Large Catechism itself remains entirely unchanged in this volume, using the English translation found in Concordia: The Lutheran Confessions—A Reader’s Edition of the Book of Concord. It is the same text to which our Synod has always subscribed as part of our unqualified commitment to the 16th-century Lutheran Confessions. …
[T]he text of each introduction, annotation and excursive essay underwent thorough review and subsequent approval by the CTCR, as well as Synod doctrinal review. These reviews were undertaken to ensure that all material was in accord with Scripture and the Lutheran Confessions and the Constitution, bylaws and doctrinal statements of the Synod. Numerous suggestions for improvement were offered during this process and were ultimately addressed satisfactorily.
[T]here is nothing in the content of the volume promoting critical race theory (CRT), confusion of sexuality issues, or any theological position at odds with biblical and confessional Lutheranism. The Lutheran Church—Missouri Synod’s doctrine is established only by the Scriptures and confessed in the Book of Concord. By God’s grace we remain steadfast in this eternal truth and confession as we await the return of our blessed Savior Jesus Christ.
Frankly, I think each reader will be astounded at the content and quality of the volume.
With their own mouths, they have said it. I urge them to reconsider, while it is yet day.
Thus, Ryan Turnipseed’s original criticism of the passage stands against all the slander leveled at him.
[W]e have an equivocation of homosexuality, pornography, sodomy, pedophilia, whorishness, and transgenderism with heterosexual fornication outside of marriage.
That is, the LCMS can’t say “sodomy is evil” without softening it with “but so is straight sex before marriage”.
If your pastor defends this passage in the LCACA, inform him that our Confessions call sodomy worse than sex with a prostitute. He will either repent, or he will become ipso facto a quatenus subscriber to the Confessions.
He has the option of joining the LCMS in its new, false confession.
The following quotation appears in the literary section of Concordia Publishing House’s American Calendar for German Lutherans, 1920, pp. 35-36, edited by Pastor H. Weseloh.
Today’s Women’s Work and the Future of Humanity.
Speaking on this topic Mrs. Martin told the National League of Women: “The future shall lie in the womb of women. As long as women are in business, in the factory, and at the voting booth, the womb is empty and the future is in danger. Women’s suffrage is only an appendage to women’s commercial activity and means the downfall of the race. Because it is precisely the strongest and most powerful women who go out to earn money instead of having and bringing up children, future generations decline. Every independent woman who accepts a high salary as a substitute for a passel of children is a murderess of posterity. The strong, physically and mentally healthy children that could be born are sacrificed for Parisian clothes and automobiles. The cradle is emptied to fill expensive restaurants, the home abandoned so that girls’ rooms are overcrowded with lavish furnishings. A high salary for men means early marriage. High wages for women means postponed marriage, feminist politics, empty homes and race suicide.”–God keep us Christians, old and young, open-eyed to these serious truths that are bright as the sun’s light! The world that loves darkness cannot be helped; it does not even respect the natural order of creation on which everything rests.
“The time has come,” the walrus said, “to talk of many things. Of Jews, of Gyps, of temple tax, of sodomitic flings! And why hellfire is burning hot, and whence went the church bell’s rings.”
He also said it was time to talk about part 3 of this series (Part 1 here, Part 2 here). And when the walrus says so, Lutherans hop-to. So without further ado, here we stand… and here we go.
Jeff: Aaron resides in Falls Church, Virginia. He writes,
“Pastor Wilken, I was having trouble squaring what your response was on the listener comment line about civil punishment and homosexuality with what Doctor Mike Middendorf said on the original episode on God commanding the killing of homosexuals in Romans1:32.
“I understand you to say having civil punishment was something Western civilization had seen for millennia as reasonable to one degree or another. Doctor Middendorf seemed to rule out civil punishment altogether, saying he didn’t think that would be applicable to the sin of homosexual behavior in any case, just as the government shouldn’t be perhaps punishing greed or for disobeying parents or anything like that. Am I misunderstanding something here?
“Furthermore: stipulating that the Bible doesn’t command civil laws mandating the death penalty for homosexuality… does it forbid them?”
Thanks for the email, thanks for listening in Virginia, Aaron.
Todd: Doctor Middendorf and I were speaking to two kinds of subtly different points. Mine was simply a recognition that the laws of Western civilization have included criminal penalties for homosexuality and for adultery and for fathering children out of wedlock, and for all sorts of things that we no longer punish civilly. That’s just an observation of history.
Whereas Doctor Middendorf was dealing with the question, “was St. Paul advocating that the Roman government should be executing homosexuals when he says that homosexuality, among all these other sins, is worthy of death before God?” And he said, that’s not what Paul’s doing. Otherwise, he would have called for the Roman government to punish greed and disobedience to parents and all all sorts of things like that.
So he was making a different observation than I was, because Paul, living in that Roman context, simply could have said, “these things should be punished by death by the government.” But he doesn’t. He acknowledges that all these sins, not simply homosexuality, but all these sins before God, are worthy of death. And again, in the course of Paul’s long argument from Romans chapter one, in Romans chapter two, he goes from kind of the hypothetical to the “you” of Romans chapter two. That where we can find everyone else guilty of all these sins, ultimately comes down to where we stand, where I stand before God. And I too, along with the homosexual and the extortioners, all the other things that he lists there, I too stand worthy of death before God.
Retconning the Narrative
The first and most pressing matter to address is Wilken’s attempt at rewriting history.
If only that segment had been merely answering the question “was St. Paul advocating that the Roman government should be executing homosexuals”! There is a simple and honest answer to that query, and it goes like this:
Not as such.
Paul wrote a theological treatise on the coming of the Gospel of Jesus Christ to an audience of believers in Rome. Paul’s purpose in writing was not to — in the fashion of Machiavelli — assume the role of advisor and counselor to the emperor. Rather, he sent this letter ahead of himself as a herald of the Gospel.
However, we may not derive from this lack of address to the ruling authorities that Paul was opposed to a civil death penalty for sodomitic acts. Such would be worse than an argument from silence, for in this text Paul does indeed give clear indication as to his convictions on this matter when he says that “[sodomites], knowing the righteous judgment of God, that those who practice such things are deserving of death, not only do the same but also approve of those who practice them.”
The objection may come: “Aha! But Paul is not here giving a command, to say that we ourselves, or the government which rules us, must do this.”
It is quite true that Paul here speaks in the indicative sense, and not the imperative sense, but this is proof itself in his subscription to such a command, given by Another. In the same way, I might say “what goes up, must come down”. I say this not as the author of such a law, but as an observer of the law which was given apart from me, and to which I bear witness with testimonies of words.
Again, when Paul spoke about death being the proper penalty for sodomitic acts, he was arguing from this as an established and accepted fact, not arguing forit as a prescriptive conclusion. For Paul, it was a foregone conclusion that this penalty was the salutary civil punishment for sodomy and, moreover, his argument from this fact rests on the assumption that his hearers are likewise disposed.
Therefore, while Paul did not undertake in this letter to advocate for the Roman government to execute sodomites, he did in this letter acknowledge the continuing meetness of the law God spoke to the Israelite nation through Moses. Nothing in Paul’s statement should cause us to doubt that a judgement of earthly death remains an appropriate punishment for sodomitic acts, as also for murder, even as through Paul’s appeal to this law he is working to turn our faces toward the judgement of eternal death for all manner of the unrighteous works for which man is guilty.
Is that what we got? No.
We got:
Told that capital punishment for sodomy was an antiquated practice of ancient Israel that was unique to its place and time
Told that the penalty was analogous to Israel-specific ceremonial laws, such as those regulating sacrifice and dietary restrictions
Told that the penalty was analogous to the practice of slavery — the obvious cue for the audience to “boo”
Told that this law was fulfilled and done away with in Christ
Told that this law was merely typological, only to show God’s judgement on sin
Told that this law was simply to show us how sinful we are, to cause us to despair and drive us to Christ and the Gospel
Told that Christians are to love all, not selectively choose certain sins to carry out justice upon in the civil realm
Told point-blank that the government should not punish “homosexual behavior” (which is undefined, so we are left to wonder if Middendorf is against sodomy laws, or simply against the censuring of “gay pride” parades)
Read that list again. This repeated pattern of argument over the years is exactly how the ELCA got a transgender bishop.
Civil Punishments for Civil Crimes
It bears repeating in discussions like these, where civil penalties are in view, that we need to ever and always be careful to mark a distinction between the internal proclivities (concupiscence) of Original Sin, and externally consummated acts (actual sin). The clergy class marinates in Second Use (the Mirror), which is focused on the Moral Law written on our hearts, so much that they entirely forget the First Use (the Curb), which is chiefly focused on external manifestations of lawlessness. As such, they fall easily into the antinomian shuck and jive, asserting:
If we had civil penalties for manifest adulterers, then we would have to punish everyone as all have at times had lust in our hearts!
This is of course a patently absurd assertion. It is incoherent to contend that, because a civil law has an underlying moral component that is violated in concupiscence (without breaking the civil law itself), it means that the civil law is per se absurd and should not be enforced. So, it will suffice here to simply remind of the necessity of marking this distinction.
As an aside, Wilken’s earlier point that civil punishments for adultery were abolished in the United States prior to the abolition of sodomy laws — to the country’s lamentable detriment — is worth recognizing. It accomplished the steepening of the gradient of the slippery slope that has brought us to this moment in history.
Not My Heckin Daughterino!
One of the reasons any discussion of capital punishment for sodomites is fraught with peril, even within the believing community, is that so many of our brothers have had sons and daughters taken captive by this corrosive ideology. Everyone with a sodomite son or daughter understandably shrinks from the concept of putting them to death, were such laws in place. Doubtless this very strain has caused not but a few to renounce “the God of the Old Testament,” and try to find a way to incorporate celebrating perverse acts into the practice of their (now so-called) faith. These need our prayers and compassion, even as we stand firm in God’s revealed will.
What is additionally lamentable in such cases is that only very few ever consider that if the sodomite(s) that got to Joanna had been put to death aforehand, she wouldn’t have become “Joey”. A social contagion plague ends when the vectors are brought down to the dust. You want this to be before it finds your house, and a Godly society will invest in this.
A Prayer and A Noose
Over a century ago we understood the difference between God’s mercy and civil judgement. Someone found guilty of a hanging offense would be spiritually ministered to in the days leading up to the execution, and once they took their place on the gallows the charges would be read, followed by the sentence, which was ultimately capped with: “May God have mercy on your soul.”
That is, we understood that, in this life, clemency for the perpetrator is often cruelty for the victim(s), and we do what we must, while hoping in the Lord for the deliverance of the condemned’s soul.
Indeed, sparing the wicked from lesser punishments now is to hate them, for without the rod of correction their iniquities will only grow more vile and bold. As Luther put it:
Just as it is a great mercy not to allow young people to have their will and way, whether it be accomplished by threats or by the rod; it will still cost trouble and labor enough to oppose and prevent evil, even though we punish severely. If punishment were altogether omitted and mercy took the place of office, the country would be full of rogues, and the world become a mere den of murderers. Then one would say to another: If you steal from me, I will rob you; if you go with my wife, I will go with yours. No, this would never do; therefore the executioner is a very beneficial and even a merciful man, for he prevents the rogue from repeating his crime, and restrains others from committing crimes. He executes the one and thus threatens others that would do the like, that they may fear the sword and keep the peace. This is a magnificent grace and pure mercy.
But contra Luther, the LCMS insists that you are always the greater sinner. They bid men be sorrowful for getting out of bed in the morning, for as they are sinners every temporal act of any kind must be shot through with the evil nestled in their hearts. And since they are such great sinners who desire clemency, when they hear of obscene acts committed against others they can only muster the Golden Rule: “I must do unto others as I would have them do unto me; I would have forgiveness for my wickedness, therefore I must ask them not to do it again and let them go free.”
“Two monks were walking, and they passed by a guy who was molesting a boy. And one monk says to the other, “Abba, aren’t you going to stop him?” And he said “I have my sins as well. Who am I to judge?” Mark Preus on The Gottesdeinst Crowd 263 In this life, clemency for the perpetrator is often cruelty for the victim(s).
This is exactly what happens when you say that your own trifling sins are logs in your eye, whereas even the grossest most depraved and destructive sins of your neighbor are but specks in theirs — as I previously covered extensively. You would bid Hans the executioner to find other work and pat yourself on the back for your great mercy; and hence the world would be overrun with rogues.
Has this pastor been brought up on false doctrine charges yet? Of course not. If a layman says to randos on social media that the civil magistrate should perform capital punishment on those who murder infants in their mothers’ wombs and on sodomites, the synod president will use his agents to excommunicate him from his congregation. If a pastor says to the synod president’s face from the televised LCMS convention floor that the synod should adopt an anti-capital punishment platform (against the Confessions), he will be sent back to shepherd his congregation with nary a slap on the wrist.
Game Theory for Christians
When it comes to the question of what is to be done with the perpetrator of a wrong, there are three main ways a society can get it wrong and result in utter collapse of civil trust and cooperation.
Failure of the civil magistrate to enact retribution on wrong with fair and sufficient punishment to avert repeat offense (Lex Talionis, cf. Ex 21:23-25, Lev 24:19-20)
Men becoming so litigious that the courts are overwhelmed with petty disputes and can no longer function to uphold just laws
Men resorting to vigilantism to settle personal disputes in a dog-eat-dog feeding frenzy
When Christ said,
You have heard that it was said, ‘An eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth.’ But I tell you not to resist an evil person. But whoever slaps you on your right cheek, turn the other to him also. If anyone wants to sue you and take away your tunic, let him have your cloak also. And whoever compels you to go one mile, go with him two.
Matthew 5:38-41, NKJV
… he was not thus abolishing civil courts or civil punishments, nor was he forbidding Christians to file charges against and seek recompense from someone who has wronged them (as some LCMS pastors teach). This would have been to collapse society according to point 1 above. In the Gospels, Jesus repeatedly speaks of civil courts as one who expects them to continue in their role of adjudication, and that’s before you even get to Romans 13. In this, the predominant 21st century Lutheran interpretation — that Christ came to abolish the law (cf. Matt 5:17) by revoking for believers Moses’s grant of appeal to civil authorities — is dead wrong. Contra Joel Biermann, when Jesus says not to resist an evil person, he is not here contradicting Proverbs 25:26.
Rather, Christ was preaching against the Jewish custom of practicing points 2 and 3 above.
Regarding point 2, this hyper-litigiousness (generally with regard to money, cf. Matt 5:25-26, 18:21-35) is inferred in verse 40 above, where the lender is suing the debtor over his cloak — the very thing which Moses forbade.
When you make your neighbor a loan of any sort, you shall not go into his house to collect his pledge. You shall stand outside, and the man to whom you make the loan shall bring the pledge out to you. And if he is a poor man, you shall not sleep in his pledge. You shall restore to him the pledge as the sun sets, that he may sleep in his cloak and bless you. And it shall be righteousness for you before the LORD your God.
Deuteronomy 24:10-13, NKJV
Regarding point 3, you see such taking matters into their own hands each and every time they tried to stone Christ or cast him off a cliff.
Instead, Jesus shows his first hearers a better way.
Rather than taking one another to court and clogging up the system over pennies, forgive one another’s debts.
Rather than striving with one another as Cain against Abel, going back and forth in escalating eye-for-eye tit-for-tat Hatfeld versus McCoystein feuds over what started as trifles and insults, forgive one another’s trespasses.
Christ shows his first hearers, and everyone who has come after, how to avoid the social death-spiral of hard-heartedly refusing to forgive.
Nothing in that necessitates against turning to the civil magistrate to punish intractable bad actors, guilty of gross violations of the law, common decency, and social peace and safety.
In Conclusion
We’ve covered a lot of ground in this total of four essays. My prayer is that this has given you deeper insight into the purpose and beauty of God’s Law, and that this has given you firm footing to withstand neo-Lutheran gaslighting regarding same.
As at the end of the first piece in this cycle, I will end with a warning and a charge.
The warning is that, if those trends in speaking about sodomy, personal sin, et cetera (which I have waged war against in these essays) continue to find purchase in the LCMS, then the saga of this denomination as a Christian one is de facto finished. No other denomination has survived saying the things that now ring from our seminaries, publishing house, and pulpits. To a one they have all become skin-suits stuffed to bursting with necroses.
Therefore my charge is that the LCMS attending among you the readership share these essays with your pastors. Talk about these subjects openly at Bible study and in your homes. Read Leviticus and Deuteronomy, along with a good commentary if need be (volume III of this project should do well, if you can wait 2 years). Meditate on the nature of the law for the governance of society, and how that is similar and how that is different to the moral law.
Pray for Wilken to understand these matters. And if he cannot or will not, then pray for him to retire quickly so that he does not bring shame on the great good he has done with his broadcast over the years. Die a hero, or live long enough to see yourself become a villain, and all that.
God gave Solomon the wisdom to administer over His people because Solomon requested it. Do the same in petition for the wisdom to understand the times we are in, and for the truth of God to stand as a bulwark in your mind against the derangement of the age.
In this part, I take up Wilken’s answer to the second critique heard on his July 26th, 2023 comment line broadcast.
A caveat: This post by necessity contains references to dirty deeds done in the dark, and is not intended for children.
Transcript:
Jeff: Here’s some more feedback on your interview with Doctor Middendorf, “Does God command the killing of homosexuals in Romans Chapter one?”:
“With regard to this segment with Doctor Middendorf, does the word abomination have any meaning in the Bible when it applies that word to some things and not others? Why was the word not mentioned in the segment? Did Middendorf cover this in his commentary?
“Furthermore, does the state have any legitimate interests in considering the execution of rapists, pedophiles and men who murder children, as well as men who mutilate the genitals of children? What is the point of a state sword if it is forbidden from executing those citizens who practice the most heinous destruction, or is sodomy a victimless crime?
“Finally, if a state is not required by God to execute sodomites, is it allowed to? On what basis? The basis that sodomy is just a speck in our neighbor’s eye, while pirating a Disney movie is a plank in ours? Would you feel better if Hollywood pirates were executed too? Or if that’s too silly, just substitute shoplifting instead. I hope you at least agree that it is normal and wholesome for the state to execute murderers, even though that’s just a speck in those people’s eyes.”
Todd: Well, again, the the state has decided, in terms of capital punishment, that there are crimes that rise sufficiently to a level of harm or danger, in the case of, say, treason, danger to the nation, the entire nation, that these things should be capital crimes. And really, it’s a legal question, rather than a theological question.
As to whether or not, why we didn’t use the word abomination, did we read through the entire thing? I think at one point, doctor Middendorf read through the entire first chapter of Romans and on to the second.
Jeff: I don’t recall it. I usually tell you to make sure we read the entire text for our listeners because they’re listening and don’t have their Bibles with them.
Todd: And I think he did. And I— well I don’t recall him commenting on “abomination,” I think we could call any sin an abomination before the Lord. How do we get off saying my sins… I’m not tempted toward homosexuality, but I am tempted toward heterosexual lust. Is it less an abomination? Of course not.
And then just a comment on the thrice mentioned “speck in the neighbor’s eye,” a not too clever reference to one of the essays in the recent Large Catechism from Concordia Publishing House.
It’s an uncharitable reading of that particular essay to say that the essayist was simply referring to the crimes the sins of homosexuality and other sins as mere specks of sins. They were talking about— referencing Jesus’ own words. You gotta do something with Jesus’ words. You can’t throw them out. The attempt to say that we can’t call our neighbor’s sins specks flies in the face of Jesus’ own words. All sins are planks, as far as God is concerned. All of them. But Jesus speaks those words, and you cannot throw them out. They mean something. And he simply says, you cannot attend to what appears to be a speck in your neighbor’s eye while you still have the plank in your own. Remove the plank so that then you can deal with the speck in your neighbor’s eye.
It’s not about the relative size of sins. I really hope that there are Bible commentaries that deal with this. It’s not about the relative size of sins. It’s about whose sin gets dealt with first. If you can’t read Jesus’ words and draw that conclusion, then I don’t know what to tell you.
As Long As It’s Legal
Wilken states here that the matter of what the ruling authorities will deem worthy of the death penalty is a legal question, not a theological question. One wonders: by what standard will the authorities legislate, litigate, prosecute, and judge on this matter? If the authorities decided that espousing faith in Christ warrants the death penalty, would that simply be a legal question, too? At what point would Todd concede that Scripture must weigh in on these questions?
In keeping with a consequentialist reduction of the law (as mentioned in part 1), this reeks of the old “as long as it’s legal, bro” punting of the TV generation having to grapple with the place of God’s law in jurisprudence.
Abomination of Abominations
Wilken also seems to miss the rebuke’s reference to the use of the term “abomination” for sodomy in Leviticus chapters 18 and 20. He then dismisses the relevance of the term, saying:
I think we could call any sin an abomination before the Lord. [chuckle] How do we get off saying that my sins…I’m not tempted toward homosexuality. But I am tempted toward heterosexual lust. Is it less of an abomination? Of course not!
Considering that God Himself does not call just any sin “an abomination before the Lord,” but limits this to gross sexual perversion (see my original article for a longer discussion on this), idol worship (Deuteronomy 7:25), and cult prostitution (Deuteronomy 23:17-18), to call just any sin by this term demands resorting to an equivocal sense of the word. Here again, as in part 1, Wilken insists on a false equivalence between sins.
That said, because heterosexual adultery is indeed listed among the ‘abominable’ sexual sins in Leviticus 18, more should be said about that specific example.
Moreover you shall not lie carnally with your neighbor’s wife, to defile yourself with her.
…
‘Do not defile yourselves with any of these things; for by all these the nations are defiled, which I am casting out before you.For the land is defiled; therefore I visit the punishment of its iniquity upon it, and the land vomits out its inhabitants.You shall therefore keep My statutes and My judgments, and shall not commit any of these abominations, either any of your own nation or any stranger who dwells among you (for all these abominations the men of the land have done, who were before you, and thus the land is defiled),lest the land vomit you out also when you defile it, as it vomited out the nations that were before you.For whoever commits any of these abominations, the persons who commit them shall be cut off from among their people.
Therefore you shall keep My ordinance, so that you do not commit any of these abominable customs which were committed before you, and that you do not defile yourselves by them: I am the Lord your God.’
Leviticus 18:20, 24-30, NKJV
Wilken’s statement here deals with internal proclivities (concupiscence), not externally consummated acts — this distinction will be discussed more fully below. Since only internal desires are in view here, which strips away consideration of external consequences for sins that would serve as confounding variables, let’s run a thought experiment. Wilken’s assertion here is that there is no spectrum, no scale when it comes to varying species of desire for what will be the source of one’s venereal pleasure. As a man, lust for a man is no more a sin than is lust for a married woman.
What about lust for a goat? And let’s even make it a male goat. A man who sees one of these and turns his head as he pictures lewd acts with the creature… and Wilken’s temptation to lust after a human woman is no less abominable?
The intact moral compass recoils. The non-cauterized conscience is revolted. And why is this so?
Because nature itself testifies to the depth of the depravity of such inclinations, which descend far deeper than the otherwise natural desire of a man for a woman. This is why, though God calls all sexual sins abominations before Him, He testifies additionally (and not just one time) that sodomy is an abomination.
You shall not lie with a male as with a woman; it is an abomination.
Leviticus 18:22, NKJV
If a man lies with a male as with a woman, both of them have committed an abomination; they shall surely be put to death; their blood is upon them.
Leviticus 20:13, NKJV
Therefore sodomy is literally the abomination of abominations.
But don’t take my word for it, take the word of the fathers of the Church, from the inspired St. Paul in the 1st Century:
Therefore God gave them up in the lusts of their hearts to impurity, to the dishonoring of their bodies among themselves, because they exchanged the truth about God for a lie and worshiped and served the creature rather than the Creator, who is blessed forever! Amen.
For this reason God gave them up to dishonorable passions. For their women exchanged natural relations for those that are contrary to nature; and the men likewise gave up natural relations with women and were consumed with passion for one another, men committing shameless acts with men and receiving in themselves the due penalty for their error. And since they did not see fit to acknowledge God, God gave them up to a debased mind to do what ought not to be done.
Romans 1:24-26, NKJV
To St. John Chrysostom in the 4th Century:
For these [catamites] are treated in the same way as women that play the whore. Or rather their plight is more miserable. For in the case of the one the intercourse, even if lawless, is yet according to nature: but this is contrary both to law and nature. For even if there were no hell, and no punishment had been threatened, this were worse than any punishment. Yet if you say they found pleasure in it, you tell me what adds to the vengeance. For suppose I were to see a person running naked, with his body all besmeared with mire, and yet not covering himself, but exulting in it, I should not rejoice with him, but should rather bewail that he did not even perceive that he was doing shamefully. But that I may show the atrocity in a yet clearer light, bear with me in one more example. Now if any one condemned a virgin to live in close dens, and to have intercourse with unreasoning brutes, and then she was pleased with such intercourse, would she not for this be especially a worthy object of tears, as being unable to be freed from this misery owing to her not even perceiving the misery? It is plain surely to every one. But if that were a grievous thing, neither is this less so than that. For to be insulted by one’s own kinsmen is more piteous than to be so by strangers: these I say are even worse than murderers: since to die even is better than to live under such insolency. For the murderer dissevers the soul from the body, but this man ruins the soul with the body.
And name what sin you will, none will you mention equal to this lawlessness. And if they that suffer such things perceived them, they would accept ten thousand deaths so they might not suffer this evil. For there is not, there surely is not, a more grievous evil than this insolent dealing. For if when discoursing about fornication Paul said, that “Every sin which a man does is without the body, but he that commits fornication sins against his own body,” what shall we say of this madness, which is so much worse than fornication as cannot even be expressed?
To his 4th and 5th Century contemporary, St. Augustine:
Can it at any time or place be an unrighteous thing for a man to love God with all his heart, with all his soul, and with all his mind, and his neighbor as himself? Therefore those offenses which be contrary to nature are everywhere and at all times to be held in detestation and punished; such were those of the Sodomites, which should all nations commit, they should all be held guilty of the same crime by the divine law, which has not so made men that they should in that way abuse one another. For even that fellowship which should be between God and us is violated, when that same nature of which He is author is polluted by the perversity of lust.
The Confessions, St. Augustine, Book III, Chapter 8, emphasis mine
To St. Thomas Aquinas in the 13th Century:
In every genus, worst of all is the corruption of the principle on which the rest depend. Now the principles of reason are those things that are according to nature, because reason presupposes things as determined by nature, before disposing of other things according as it is fitting. This may be observed both in speculative and in practical matters. Wherefore just as in speculative matters the most grievous and shameful error is that which is about things the knowledge of which is naturally bestowed on man, so in matters of action it is most grave and shameful to act against things as determined by nature. Therefore, since by the unnatural vices man transgresses that which has been determined by nature with regard to the use of venereal actions, it follows that in this matter this sin is gravest of all. After it comes incest, which, as stated above, is contrary to the natural respect which we owe persons related to us.
With regard to the other species of lust they imply a transgression merely of that which is determined by right reason, on the presupposition, however, of natural principles. Now it is more against reason to make use of the venereal act not only with prejudice to the future offspring, but also so as to injure another person besides. Wherefore simple fornication, which is committed without injustice to another person, is the least grave among the species of lust. Then, it is a greater injustice to have intercourse with a woman who is subject to another’s authority as regards the act of generation, than as regards merely her guardianship. Wherefore adultery is more grievous than seduction. And both of these are aggravated by the use of violence. Hence rape of a virgin is graver than seduction, and rape of a wife than adultery. And all these are aggravated by coming under the head of sacrilege, as stated above.
Just as the ordering of right reason proceeds from man, so the order of nature is from God Himself: wherefore in sins contrary to nature, whereby the very order of nature is violated, an injury is done to God, the Author of nature. …
Vices against nature are also against God, as stated above, and are so much more grievous than the depravity of sacrilege, as the order impressed on human nature is prior to and more firm than any subsequently established order.
The nature of the species is more intimately united to each individual, than any other individual is. Wherefore sins against the specific nature are more grievous.
Gravity of a sin depends more on the abuse of a thing than on the omission of the right use. Wherefore among sins against nature, the lowest place belongs to the sin of uncleanness, which consists in the mere omission of copulation with another. While the most grievous is the sin of bestiality, because use of the due species is not observed. Hence a gloss on Genesis 37:2, “He accused his brethren of a most wicked crime,” says that “they copulated with cattle.” After this comes the sin of sodomy, because use of the right sex is not observed. Lastly comes the sin of not observing the right manner of copulation, which is more grievous if the abuse regards the “vas” than if it affects the manner of copulation in respect of other circumstances.
St. Thomas Aquinas, Summa Theologiae, Second Part of the Second Part, Question 154, Article 12
In conclusion, the modern desire to flee from God’s clear words on the gravity of sodomy is just that: modern.
Of Logs and Specks
Now we turn to the matter of logs and specks in all of this. Where Wilken sees flippant casuistry on the part of the commenter, I see genuine concern for the question of how we address what are (in many cases) criminal acts taking place within our society when our clergy class insists that all sins are equal.
Since it was brought up, permit me a digression into what Mrs. Fr. Brock Schmeling wrote in her essay on the Sixth Commandment in the new Large Catechism with Annotations and Contemporary Applications. Actually, permit me several digressions, because to address this matter is to twist open a veritable matryoshka doll. This was not a woman off on her own in the theological weeds. This was a woman who had pastors and theologians grooming her and her takes at every step along the way. From her ordained husband, to her pastor, to the Commission on Theology and Church Relations (CTCR), to the seminary professor editor, to the Synod President — every one of them signed off on this, and each has only doubled and tripled down since her theological categories and articulation were called into question.
I’ve elected to take a long quote, to provide a sense of the context which is often asserted to be missing in critiques of same.
Luther faced a different reality [than the Israelites whose sexual sin most commonly manifested in adultery qua adultery]: “But among us there is such a shameful mess and the very dregs of all vice and lewdness.” He then addresses the common unchastity of his day, motivated in part by the “shameful mess,” namely, the irony of monastics who esteemed virginity far above marriage yet failed miserably at it. Much like doctors who “cure” genetic disorders by aborting babies, the “popish rabble” cloistered themselves away from “vice and lewdness” and devoted themselves to “chastity,” hoping to avoid adultery by rejecting marriage. But God honors marriage in the Sixth Commandment, and the monastic rejection led only to individuals who “indulge in open and shameless prostitution or secretly do even worse, so that one dare not speak of it. . . . Their hearts are so full of unchaste thoughts and evil lusts that there is a continual burning and secret suffering.” Marriage is therefore not only honorable but also beneficial to curb temptation.
Like Luther, we also must address the most common unchastity among ourselves: that in the name of “sexual freedom” we feed our continual burning and honor neither virginity nor marriage. Our sin isn’t even secret: we speak of our lusts through crude joking and foolish talk, often naming ourselves by our sexual sin as no murderer or liar ever does.
However, though some of us are burdened with homosexual lust, pornographic addiction, transgenderism, pedophilia, and polyamory, more often they are the speck in our neighbor’s eye rather than the log in our own (cf. Matthew 7:3–5). For decades, if we didn’t wink at fornication we certainly turned our eyes from it, as long as the acts performed outside of marriage were heterosexual ones. We shudder in disgust when it suits us, forgetting that we, too, follow our hearts, that organ which produces every evil thought and sexual immorality (Mark 7:21–22). We are in love, so we live as though married; we are out of love, so we break our marriage oaths before death has ended them. …
We may be tempted to see as sin only those most brazen acts of rebellion. But each of us must begin by removing the log from our own eye, for “if your eye is bad, your whole body will be full of darkness” (Matthew 6:23). Confess and receive absolution: “But if we walk in the light, as He is in the light, we have fellowship with one another, and the blood of Jesus His Son cleanses us from all sin” (1 John 1:7).
Andrea Schmeling, “The Sixth Commandment: Sexual Purity,” Luther’s Large Catechism with Annotations and Contemporary Applications, Published by Concordia Publishing House, 2022, emphasis is the contested passage
Let’s take a stab at what Mrs. Schmeling is perhaps trying to say here (setting aside, for the moment, the fact that she has no business saying anything in this context). The final quoted paragraph above, taken from five paragraphs below the contested passage, gives the key.
Commenting upon the relative gravity of the sexual sins named does not seem to have been the intent of Mrs. Schmeling’s words. Rather, she seems to seek to call out the willful blindness of her Christian audience, who through studied inattention have ignored or even excused the rampant fornication practiced by our sons and daughters — and, in some cases, even ourselves. Indeed, she seeks to direct the reader’s attention inward, to abate any incipient pride. To remember that fornication, also, is a sin to be repented of, same as any other. She acknowledges that some in this list may even be more “brazen acts of rebellion,” and seems to say (rightly) that appeals to the existence of more extreme sin “out there” does not serve to absolve our own hearts before God.
For my part, if I had wanted to get this sort of point across after her fashion of writing, I might have said:
In our day we find ourselves surrounded by all manner of “out and proud” sexual licentiousness too abominable to recount. We, like righteous Lot, have cause to be “greatly distressed by the sensual conduct of the wicked” (2 Peter 2:7b). Nevertheless, we are called to remain vigilant lest, like Lot himself, we ourselves give way to sexual perversion of other kinds. Many of us have shed tears over lives formerly given over to fornication, or continually struggle with the besetting sin of lust. When we are tormented with guilt for these, we remember our Baptism and that “the old Adam in us should, by daily contrition and repentance, be drowned and die with all sins and evil lusts, and, again, a new man daily come forth and arise; who shall live before God in righteousness and purity forever.”
And we remember as well that God offers this same Baptism to the wicked who walk about us, and to the most exalted of vile men, for He names among the saints men who left their former venereal vices behind when He says, “such [sexually immoral, adulterers, and sodomites] were some of you. But you were washed, you were sanctified, you were justified in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ and by the Spirit of our God” (1 Corinthians 6:11). Therefore, even as in the Kingdom of the Left Hand we oppose such lawless deeds and those who practice them, in the Kingdom of the Right Hand we confess and proclaim to those presently lost that “Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners” (1 Timothy 1:15).
Now, the above paragraph explaining what I take to be Mrs. Schmeling’s position used fewer words than she took to state it originally. Favoring poetic turns of phrase and meandering over clarity is a flaw with a number of these essays, and spritzing Biblical phrases and reformer quotes every couple of lines has all the same energy of the dorm monitor spraying Febreze while walking down the jock hall. It’s no cover for the stink of poorly conceived and poorly articulated theology. It should go without saying that indeed yes these ideas could have been expressed “more clearly.”
Therefore, now that we have done our due diligence to suss out the praiseworthy — though abysmally executed — intentions of this piece, let us proceed with what is intractably wrong with it. After all, though Mrs. Schmeling’s intention may not have been to comment on the relative gravity of specific sins (and maybe it was, as per her pastor’s defense of the piece, which we shall come to in time), that is the clear effect of her words. We will begin our examination of this fact with the most aggravatingly ironic element of the entire matter: the text’s overt denial of the Lutheran Confessions.
Denial of the Lutheran Confessions
Yes, Mrs. Schmeling’s piece denies the Lutheran Confessions. Ironically, it denies the Large Catechism (LC). Ironically ironically, it denies the explanation to the Sixth Commandment. Ironically ironically ironically, it denies the section of the LC Mrs. Schmeling quotes just two paragraphs above the contested “log” and “speck” line — included in the quote above.
To reproduce the quote in full:
From this you see how this popish rabble, priests, monks, and nuns, resist God’s order and commandment, inasmuch as they despise and forbid matrimony, and presume and vow to maintain perpetual chastity, and, besides, deceive the simple-minded with lying words and appearances.
For no one has so little love and inclination to chastity as just those who because of great sanctity avoid marriage, and either indulge in open and shameless prostitution, or secretly do even worse, so that one dare not speak of it, as has, alas! been learned too fully.
Read that last line again. In this passage of the Large Catechism (and hence, in our Confessions), Martin Luther states that there is a worse sexual sin than fornication with prostitutes. Though he tactfully declines to name it (as he alludes to in his commentary on Genesis 19) in this book meant for teaching families with small children, Luther spoke about it explicitly elsewhere: it is sodomy. Significantly, this includes, but is not limited to, pederasty. In point of fact, it especially denotes pederasty—the rape of boys. If sodomy is the abomination of abominations, pederasty is the abomination^3. And while a full exposition of the data on the topic is beyond the scope of this piece, it is worth mentioning that when you plot for time, the Venn Diagram for sodomy and pederasty is just…a circle.
And on that score, there really is nothing new under the sun. Luther:
I am not lying to you. Whoever has been in Rome knows that conditions are unfortunately worse there than anyone can say or believe. When the last Lateran council was to be concluded in Rome under Pope Leo, among other articles it was decreed that one must believe the soul to be immortal. From this one may gather that they make eternal life an object of sheer mockery and contempt. In this way they confess that it is a common belief among them that there is no eternal life, but that they now wish to proclaim this by means of a bull.
More remarkable yet, in the same bull they decided that a cardinal should not keep as many boys in the future. However, Pope Leo commanded that this be deleted; otherwise it would have been spread throughout the whole world how openly and shamelessly the pope and the cardinals in Rome practice sodomy. I do not wish to mention the pope, but since the knaves will not repent, but condemn the gospel, blaspheme and revile God’s word, and excuse their vices, they, in turn, will have to take a whiff of their own terrible filth. This vice is so prevalent among them that recently a pope caused his own death by means of this sin and vice. In fact, he died on the spot. All right now, you popes, cardinals, papists, spiritual lords, keep on persecuting God’s word and defending your doctrine and your churches!
No pope, cardinal, bishop, doctor, priest, monk, or nun will condemn such an obviously disgraceful life; rather they laugh about it, excuse it, and gloss over it. They incite kings, princes, country, and people to defend such knaves with life and property, with land and people, and faithfully to protect them so that such vices might not be repented of and reformed, but rather strengthened, sanctioned, and approved. Now you are to hazard blood, body, and life just for the sake of saddling your neck and conscience with this.
I could easily mention more examples of such abominations, but it is too shameful; I fear that our German soil would have to tremble before it. But if an impudent popish ass should come along and dispute this, he will find me ready to do him battle, and it will be quite a battle!”
Luther’s Works Volume 47, p.38, emphases not original
Through the papists Satan so defiled [natural affection] that in his little book on the celibacy of priests Cyprian wrote, ‘If you hear a woman speak, flee from her as if she were a hissing snake.’ That’s the way it is. When one is afraid of whores one must fall into sodomite depravity, as almost happened to St. Jerome.
Table Talk: “There Is Danger in Avoiding Marriage,” 29 May, 1539, Luther’s Works Volume 54, p.357
In a quote worthy of being placed in the list above featuring Paul, Chrysostom, Augustine, and Aquinas, Luther said,
The vice of the Sodomites is an unparalleled enormity. It departs from the natural passion and desire, planted into nature by God, according to which the male has a passionate desire for the female. Sodomy craves what is entirely contrary to nature. Whence comes this perversion? Without a doubt it comes from the devil. After a man has once turned aside from the fear of God, the devil puts such great pressure upon his nature that he extinguishes the fire of natural desire and stirs up another, which is contrary to nature.
Quote as found in What Luther Says: An Anthology, ed. by Ewald Martin Plass, emphasis mine. Pick up your copy from Concordia Publishing House today, before they discontinue it for badthink!
But let us return to the statement in the LC: “For no one has so little love and inclination to chastity as just those who because of great sanctity avoid marriage, and either indulge in open and shameless prostitution, or secretly do even worse, so that one dare not speak of it, as has, alas! been learned too fully.”
To perhaps restate: it is the clear and explicit ruling of the Lutheran Confessions that sodomy, especially pederasty, is even worse (a greater sin) than fornication (with a prostitute no less). To say otherwise is no simple and innocuous theological difference of opinion. To say otherwise is to depart from and contradict the Confessions. To maintain that fornication and sodomy are equal sins is by the Missouri Synod’s definition false doctrine.
This is not LCMS rules-lawyering. The Confessions faithfully expound the soul-saving doctrine of the Scriptures (1 Timothy 4:16). And to the present point: Lutheran ministers vow before Almighty God that they believe this. To contradict the doctrinal standard is a double lie. First, it defames the name of God Himself by putting lies in His mouth, effectively forging His signature on a fraudulent letter. Second, it is oath-breaking. Both are evil. The first is worse. “The Lord will not hold him guiltless that takes His name in vain” (Exodus 20:7). False doctrine is an enormity, not a quibble. And when Todd Wilken says that fornication and sodomy are equal in the sight of God, that is false doctrine.
When Mrs. Schmeling espouses that some guy’s child-raping is a speck in his eye, while your fornication is a log in your own, that is false doctrine — taught by a woman. Verily, it is named as such by the very quotation she used two paragraphs before.
Fr. Brock Schmeling signed off on it. Mrs. Schmeling’s pastor signed off on it (as we shall see). The entire CTCR signed off on it. CTSFW Professor John Pless signed off on it. LCMS President Matthew Harrison signed off on it. And when it was exposed, they all doubled down.
The CTCR forthrightly asserts that this volume does not change, question or supplant any doctrinal position of the LCMS, including any Synod teaching on contemporary cultural issues such as race or sexuality. The CTCR furthermore categorically rejects any assertions to the contrary. …
[T]he text of the Large Catechism itself remains entirely unchanged in this volume, using the English translation found in Concordia: The Lutheran Confessions—A Reader’s Edition of the Book of Concord. It is the same text to which our Synod has always subscribed as part of our unqualified commitment to the 16th-century Lutheran Confessions. …
[T]he text of each introduction, annotation and excursive essay underwent thorough review and subsequent approval by the CTCR, as well as Synod doctrinal review. These reviews were undertaken to ensure that all material was in accord with Scripture and the Lutheran Confessions and the Constitution, bylaws and doctrinal statements of the Synod. Numerous suggestions for improvement were offered during this process and were ultimately addressed satisfactorily.
[T]here is nothing in the content of the volume promoting critical race theory (CRT), confusion of sexuality issues, or any theological position at odds with biblical and confessional Lutheranism. The Lutheran Church—Missouri Synod’s doctrine is established only by the Scriptures and confessed in the Book of Concord. By God’s grace we remain steadfast in this eternal truth and confession as we await the return of our blessed Savior Jesus Christ.
Frankly, I think each reader will be astounded at the content and quality of the volume.
With their own mouths, they have said it. I urge them to reconsider, while it is yet day.
Thus, Ryan Turnipseed’s original criticism of the passage stands against all the slander leveled at him.
[W]e have an equivocation of homosexuality, pornography, sodomy, pedophilia, whorishness, and transgenderism with heterosexual fornication outside of sex.
That is, the LCMS can’t say “sodomy is evil” without softening it with “but so is straight sex before marriage”.
If your pastor is effectively demanding that you stand down over so-called “LGBT+” issues and focus on the log of your own heterosexual lusts, inform them that our confessions call sodomy worse than sex with a prostitute. He will either repent, or he will become ipso facto a quatenus subscriber to the Confessions.
With that, we turn to one such pastor and author of a screed which is emblematic of a subtle antinomian drift within Synod. As has been hinted, it is Mrs. Schmeling’s own pastor.
The Incoherence of “Your Sin Is Always Worse” Theology
Back in April, Mrs. Schmeling’s pastor, Charlie Lehmann, realized that it was the theology he had inculcated in the young lady which was being expressed in the contested passage. In a Facebook post on April 18, 2023, he wrote:
In her essay in the Annotated Large Catechism, Andrea Schmeling wrote, “Though some of us are burdened with homosexual lust, pornographic addiction, transgenderism, pedophilia, and polyamory, more often they are the speck in our neighbor’s eye rather than the log in our own (cf. Matthew 7:3-5).”
She’s being attacked for this because she’s a woman and, of course, laity and because some think it minimizes the sin of pedophilia.
It struck me this morning that she probably wrote this because one of her pastors taught this to her for about 7 years. I know this pastor rather well. He’s me.
I frequently preach that we should take Matthew 7 and 1st Timothy together. We are the chief of sinners. Whatever sin another person might commit, our sin is worse. That’s a categorical statement. It is absolute. Whenever we address the sin of another, we must address it as one sinner to another.
So don’t go after Andrea. Go after me. Go after the other pastors who may have taught her the same thing. In her essay she’s actually doing what some critics say that women should do exclusively: Listen to their pastors.
LCMS pastors love to put women forward as theology teachers to men and the equal of men. Then, when men find occasion to sternly criticize the woman’s theology, just as they would a man’s erroneous theology (see everything I’ve written about Wilken and Middendorf), LCMS pastors put on the white armor (which is kind of funny, since at most any other time they are pretty embarrassed of the pale shade). Therefore, in order for this piece not to become the windmill at the end of a cavalry charge, I will now shift my address to Lehmann instead.
Now, we saw in the last essay that — pace the neo-Lutheran claim to the contrary — not all sins are equal. We looked at three standards by which one sin might be deemed worse than another. But here is the next phase in the devolution of neo-Lutheran hamartiology. It’s not enough that your sins be equal with sodomy, etc. Rather, your sins must be worse.
This is incredible. But rather than just lambasting it in passing and moving on, let’s drill down a bit.
Firstly, what does “whatever sin another person might commit, our sin is worse” even mean? How does one actually parse this?
To harken back to the previous essay, is the claim being made that another’s sin is always venial, and ours always mortal, and hence worse? No, that can’t work. The other might be a non-Christian, and we are Christians.
Is the claim being made that our sin is always greater than anyone else’s with regard to negative consequences in the world? That’s self-evidently absurd for anyone not sitting on a prison block.
Is the claim being made that our sin is always greater when it comes to God’s hierarchy for such things? A read of the previous essay should easily disabuse this notion.
Then what? What is Lehmann comparing to arrive at this verdict? We will come to this answer in due time.
Secondly, to the claim that “some think [the essay] minimizes the sin of pedophilia.” Surely it is at least fair to ask, “Well, why would they think this?” To get at an answer, let’s take the statement and make some substitutions.
Though some of us are burdened with bestiality and necrophilia, more often they are the speck in our neighbor’s eye rather than the log in our own.
Would it be reasonable for someone to come away thinking this minimizes bestiality and necrophilia? Would it have passed doctrinal review? Why or why not?
I mean it: why or why not? Take a break from this long article and ponder that.
What if we change things up some more?
Though some of us are burdened with racism, antisemitism, white supremacy, and Nazism, more often they are the speck in our neighbor’s eye rather than the log in our own.
Would this have passed doctrinal review?
Would the sitting LCMS president dare to say without qualification that his own heart has more abomination in it than the acts of white supremacist racist Nazis? Because Harrison did… except instead of Nazis he used child-groomers as his point of reference.
There’s not a single person in this room who deserves the grace of God.
I might know a few sins of somebody who does drag shows at the library, which is abominable.
But I know my own heart. And there’s much more abomination than that in it.
Of course Harrison’s statement that “there is not a single one of us who deserves the grace of God” is true. As Martin Chemnitz says in his Enchiridion:
206 Is, Then, Original Sin, Which Still Remains in the Reborn in This Life, in Itself Such a Light Little Sin, or, So to Say, Peccadillo, that God Neither Can Nor Wants to Be Angry Against It?
All sins are not equal; some are more grievous and greater than others (Jn 19:11; Mt 11:22; Lk 12:47–48); yet if one judges according to the sense of the divine law, no sin per se and by its own nature deserves forgiveness; that is, none is so small and insignificant, but that it makes [one] subject to divine wrath and worthy of eternal damnation if God enters into judgment with him. (Dt 27:26; Gl 3:10; Ja 2:10)
Martin Chemnitz , Enchiridion
Note well the gloss whereby Chemnitz againclaims that “all sins are not equal” and “some are more grievous and greater than others,” even as he says that nevertheless all sins deserve damnation apart from forgiveness in Christ. I recommend you read the entire selection on this page, it will help you further think on these issues under discussion.
Of course I also recognize that Harrison is attempting to put his own spin on Paul’s “I am the chief of sinners,” just as Lehmann says we should do above.
However, Paul’s formula differs greatly from Harrison’s.
And I thank Christ Jesus our Lord who has enabled me, because He counted me faithful, putting me into the ministry, although I was formerly a blasphemer, a persecutor, and an insolent man; but I obtained mercy because I did it ignorantly in unbelief. And the grace of our Lord was exceedingly abundant, with faith and love which are in Christ Jesus. This is a faithful saying and worthy of all acceptance, that Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners, of whom I am chief. However, for this reason I obtained mercy, that in me first Jesus Christ might show all longsuffering, as a pattern to those who are going to believe on Him for everlasting life.
1 Timothy 1:12-16
Paul enumerates his personal, actual sins, for which he has built a life around repentance — you might even say a form of meager restitution. He claims that for these sins, specifically, he is to be counted as the chief of sinners. He uses this as a proof, then, that Christ is willing and able to save to the uttermost those who come to God through Him; and that no one is excluded, as he confesses this applies to even the foremost of sinners.
Comparison with Harrison’s stumbling formulation falls flat, for although he is certainly in step with Paul insofar as both are working to show that God’s mercy is unearned and available to all, Harrison cites no specific personal sin(s) from which he is grateful to give a testimony of salvation. He rather cites another person’s specific actual sin (a classical Lutheran term denoting sins of commission), and then applies Lehmann’s own formula from above: “Whatever sin another person might commit, our sin is worse. That is a categorical statement. It is absolute.”
And yet I wonder why Paul phrased his testimony as he did, rather than saying, “I might know a man who unrepentantly cavorts with his mother-in-law, which is abominable; but I also know my own heart, and there’s much more abomination than that in it.” Likely because he was not being sloppy.
Indeed, in saying this, Harrison has engaged in the typical 21st Century Lutheran sloppiness of speaking about sin. Namely, he has conflated the categories of concupiscence (the errant desire of the flesh which inheres to our nature by virtue of Original Sin), and actual sin (consummated acts which flow from our sinful nature). Now of course concupiscence is itself damning sin, as the reformers confessed. And these desires remain after Baptism as the sinful flesh clings on for the duration of our earthly life, necessitating that we struggle daily to drown the Old Adam in the waters of Baptism, as the reformers confessed.
That said, Saint James himself testified to the distinction between concupiscence and actual sin:
Let no one say when he is tempted, “I am tempted by God”; for God cannot be tempted by evil, nor does He Himself tempt anyone. But each one is tempted when he is drawn away by his own desires and enticed. Then, when desire has conceived, it gives birth to sin; and sin, when it is full-grown, brings forth death.
James 1:13-15, NKJV
Again, both concupiscence and actual sins are sinful, but they are distinct from one another — and a great subject of contention between the papists and the Reformers. Believe it or not, though both are species of adultery, there is a difference between the sin of lust (which takes place in the heart) and the sin of climbing into bed with another man’s wife (which takes place in the outward members). If it were not so then Paul could not say:
Therefore do not let sin reign in your mortal body, that you should obey it in its lusts. And do not present your members as instruments of unrighteousness to sin, but present yourselves to God as being alive from the dead, and your members as instruments of righteousness to God.
Romans 6:12-13, NKJV
In the words of Lutheran father Martin Chemnitz:
The Scripture, however, distinguishes these two things, to commit sin (1 John 2:4), or to walk in sins (Eph. 2:3), and to have sin (1 John 1:8), which is called indwelling sin (Rom. 7:17,20), sin that is present (Rom. 7:21), sin which besets us on all sides and takes possession of all powers in man (Heb. 12:1), the ignorance that is in them. (Eph. 4:18)
Martin Chemnitz, Examination of the Council of Trent, Volume I, Third Topic: Section 2: Subsection 5
Thus, Harrison is not making an apples to apples comparison when he states “I might know a few sins of someone who does drag shows at the library (actual sin), which is abominable; but I know my own heart, and there’s much more abomination than that in it (concupiscence).”
Again, in the spirit of charity, Harrison is clearly driving at the point that he himself deserves grace no more than does the pedophile. This point — however poorly articulated — is meet, right, and salutary for, apart from Christ, both are damned sinners. In this, he sounds rather like the Solid Declaration when it calls Original Sin “a horrible, deep, inexpressible corruption of the [body and soul of man].”
However, would Harrison make the following claim?
“I might know a few sins of a man who gassed six million innocents, which is abominable; but I know my own heart, and there’s much more abomination than that in it.”
The fact that he would not proves out the category error being made. A technical foul, you might call it. And it is the identical error that Lehmann makes, as is proven by filling in the blanks of his statement above and solving for X.
Whatever sin another person might commit, our sin is worse.
“Might commit” is the language of commission — that is, of actual sin. Therefore let us replace this with a reference to a specific sin.
Whatever [genocide of 6 million by gas chambers] another person might commit, our sin is worse.
What is “our sin” here? Does Lehmann just expect us to fill in the blank with any given thing we’ve done wrong?
Whatever [genocide of 6 million by gas chambers] another person might commit, our [cussing when we stub our toe] is worse.
This is immediately morally incoherent, so let’s give Lehmann the benefit of the doubt and say, as I did above, that he like Harrison is playing a sloppy switcheroo instead.
Whatever [genocide of 6 million by gas chambers] another person might commit, our [sinful heart’s desire] is worse.
This is also incoherent, though we hear Lutherans speak this way so often that is has become a mantra for us. A shibboleth, of sorts. To set an actual sin up for comparison with concupiscent sin is apples and oranges. Both are sins, but in other respects a failure to rightly discern what makes them different (as SS. Paul and James show us how to do) will only lead to confusion.
The neo-Lutherans make use of the confusion brought about by this equivocation toward two ends.
Thwarting Pride
The first end is to snuff out pride. These men want to ensure that you do not attempt to self-justify, thinking that your sins are so light compared to the sins of others that you may escape notice altogether (a notion which Chemnitz disproves above). This is the essence of Middendorf’s repeated “scorekeeper God” phrase — he does not want you to think that life is a game of golf where scoring under par keeps you off the hook. Rather, as has been repeatedly said, concupiscence on its own is damnable sin, and we all have this in spades.
One can somewhat appreciate this goal. Indeed, Christ Himself showed in Matthew 5 that what proceeds from the heart is at enmity with the will of God, even if you never reach out your hand to carry out the corresponding actual sin. Certainly our concupiscence alone should cause us to cast ourselves on the mercy of Christ. However, it should not require the mental gymnastics of making ourselves out to be worse that pederasts to accomplish our own humbling before the Lord. Christ was not asking that the Pharisee blurt out like a Tourette’s sufferer that he was worse than the tax collector in order to be justified — rather, He was insisting that, when it comes to justification, comparison has no purchase before the throne of God at all.
That said, for all the good intentions of practitioners, when it comes to acting justly in our lives, this confusion is a hindrance. If we do not mark a distinction between the evil of our concupiscence and the acts of the pederast, then indeed what standing do we have to oppose those acts? This is to make of concupiscence an irremovable plank — as we will return to momentarily.
As Matthew Cochran aptly writes on this subject:
So do not fall into the false pride of superiority because you think your sins are milder than your neighbor’s. But as you avoid false pride, do not plunge yourself into a false humility that scares you away from proclaiming what is right to those who are doing wrong.
One need not — indeed, must not — resort to confusion and subterfuge in one’s attempts to thwart pride in another.
Sins the World Loves
The second end the neo-Lutherans turn this confusion toward is that of dodging accusations of bigotry.
It’s a simple enough tactic. Call sodomy a sin (“See God? I did the thing!”), then, before anyone can accuse you of bigotry, rush to “but I’m a sinner too, of course!” And of course, since the neo-Lutherans have chumps like you in the boat with them, they have to get you talking the same way, lest you embarrass them with a naked declaration of the sin of sodomy such as found in the mouths of faithful Christians throughout the centuries (see above again).
But it’s worse than that, because as we have seen above, it’s not enough for the neo-Lutheran regime that your sins be equal with sodomy. Rather, your sins must be worse.
Sins the world loves? Hurry, eject the I’m-a-bigger-sinner chaff! “Sure, it’s bad. But not as bad as my sin. I’m no bigot, after all!” (Psst! Quick, you fool, get down on your knees and supplicate! Supplicate!)
Once you see it, you see it everywhere, all the time, because being respectable to the world while still holding a plausibly Christian confession is the neo-Lutheran’s material principle.
Returning to Issues, Etc.
Wilken, alongside Lehmann and Harrison, deals in this same confusion about sin, so we now return to examining his words.
It’s an uncharitable reading of that particular essay to say that the essayist was simply referring to the crimes the sins of homosexuality and other sins as mere specks of sins. They were talking about— referencing Jesus’ own words. You gotta do something with Jesus’ words. You can’t throw them out. The attempt to say that we can’t call our neighbor’s sins specks flies in the face of Jesus’ own words. All sins are planks, as far as God is concerned. All of them. But Jesus speaks those words, and you cannot throw them out. They mean something. And he simply says, you cannot attend to what appears to be a speck in your neighbor’s eye while you still have the plank in your own. Remove the plank so that then you can deal with the speck in your neighbor’s eye.
It’s not about the relative size of sins. I really hope that there are Bible commentaries that deal with this. It’s not about the relative size of sins. It’s about whose sin gets dealt with first. If you can’t read Jesus’ words and draw that conclusion, then I don’t know what to tell you.
Todd is interpolating the concept of all sins being planks to God into this passage. Yes, all sin separates man from God. Yes, all sins are grievous to God. But as discussed at length above and in the last essay, not all sins are intrinsically as grievous as one another.
However, Wilken is very correct when he says that this passage is about whose sin gets dealt with first — an order of operations, if you will. First step: hypocrisy check; do not skip. Importantly, Jesus then assumes that there is a time after a man has removed a plank, at which point he will regain the clarity of vision required to perform spiritual eye surgery.
And this is where the confusion of concupiscence and actual sins can do harm. When Wilken, like Lehmann speaking for Mrs. Schmeling, demands that all of your sins are planks, and all of your neighbor’s sins are specks, he condemns us to never having the standing to address our neighbor’s sin. After all, as our confessions state: although the guilt of Original Sin is removed in Baptism, its effects upon our desires (as concupiscence) presently remains. As the presently intractable concupiscent desire to sin is itself sin, within Wilken and Lehmann’s framework it thus constitutes an irremovable plank. According to this reading, you will never have standing to address another man’s actual sin, because your concupiscence constitutes an even bigger sin; “That’s a categorical statement. It is absolute.”
But this cannot be correct as, again, Christ describes a stage in the sequence at which time we have standing to address our neighbor’s sin. Wilken and Lehmann are simply wrong here when they dispute the presence of the dimension of degrees of sin in Jesus’ words. While they correctly note that reckoning one’s own sin (actual or concupiscent) takes priority in the order of operations, their dismissal of the place of the relative weight of the sins in the equation leads them to gainsay Christ.
Lehmann preaches that 1 Timothy 1:15 is the proper cross reference for Matthew 7:3-5. But I would like to suggest that Matthew 23:23-24 (cf. Romans 2:17-24) — with its nod to hypocrisy concerning the relatively weightier matters of the law — is the true and intended parallel.
Woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! For you pay tithe of mint and anise and cumin, and have neglected the weightier matters of the law: justice and mercy and faith. These you ought to have done, without leaving the others undone. Blind guides, who strain out a gnat and swallow a camel!
Matthew 23:23-24 NKJV
To mix Jesus’ metaphors, you could say, “And why do you look at the gnat in your brother’s eye, but do not consider the camel in your own eye? Or how can you say to your brother, ‘Let me remove the gnat from your eye’; and look, a camel is in your own eye? Hypocrite! First remove the camel from your own eye, and then you will see clearly to remove the gnat from your brother’s eye.”
The point of the Matthew 7:4 check is not to make you realize that you are always guilty of a greater sin, in each and every situation, a la Wilken and Lehmann. The point is to avoid the gross hypocrisy of the pharisees. And, yes, when you take this step with the sins that vex you in others, at times you may indeed find that you are suddenly cognizant of previously unexamined sins in your life. Praise God for the tool by which He revealed this knowledge, allowing you to repent, and you will be more forgiving of your neighbor’s debts with the refreshed knowledge that your own debts have been cancelled.
To insist that Christians walk around blinded by irremovable logs in our eyes (always seeing, but never perceiving, you might say) in every endeavor is an absolute abuse of this text.
Concluding Remarks
As Wilken concludes by hoping there are commentaries which teach his reading of Matthew 7 that all of your neighbor’s sins are specks, it seems fitting for me to conclude with selections from one of the oldest extant commentaries on the text: the sermons of John Chrysostom.
What then can the saying[, “judge not, lest ye be judged,”] be? Let us carefully attend, lest the medicines of salvation, and the laws of peace, be accounted by any man laws of overthrow and confusion. First of all, then, even by what follows, He has pointed out to them that have understanding the excellency of this law, saying, Why do you behold the mote that is in your brother’s eye, but considerest not the beam that is in your own eye? Matthew 7:3
But if to many of the less attentive, it seem yet rather obscure, I will endeavor to explain it from the beginning. In this place, then, as it seems at least to me, He does not simply command us not to judge any of men’s sins, neither does He simply forbid the doing of such a thing, but to them that are full of innumerable ills, and are trampling upon other men for trifles. And I think that certain Jews too are here hinted at, for that while they were bitter accusing their neighbors for small faults, and such as came to nothing, they were themselves insensibly committing deadly sins. Herewith towards the end also He was upbraiding them, when He said, You bind heavy burdens, and grievous to be borne, but you will not move them with your finger, Matthew 23:4 and, ye pay tithe of mint and anise, and have omitted the weightier matters of the law, judgment, mercy, and faith. Matthew 23:23
Well then, I think that these are comprehended in His invective; that He is checking them beforehand as to those things, wherein they were hereafter to accuse His disciples. For although His disciples had been guilty of no such sin, yet in them were supposed to be offenses; as, for instance, not keeping the sabbath, eating with unwashen hands, sitting at meat with publicans; of which He says also in another place, You which strain at the gnat, and swallow the camel. But yet it is also a general law that He is laying down on these matters.
…
What then! say you: if one commit fornication, may I not say that fornication is a bad thing, nor at all correct him that is playing the wanton? Nay, correct him, but not as a foe, nor as an adversary exacting a penalty, but as a physician providing medicines. For neither did Christ say, stay not him that is sinning, but judge not; that is, be not bitter in pronouncing sentence.
And besides, it is not of great things (as I have already observed), nor of things prohibited, that this is said, but of those which are not even counted offenses. Wherefore He said also.
Why do you behold the mote that is in your brother’s eye? Matthew 7:3
Yea, for many now do this; if they see but a monk wearing an unnecessary garment, they produce against him the law of our Lord, Matthew 10:10 while they themselves are extorting without end, and defrauding men every day. If they see him but partaking rather largely of food, they become bitter accusers, while they themselves are daily drinking to excess and surfeiting: not knowing, that besides their own sins, they do hereby gather up for themselves a greater flame, and deprive themselves of every plea. For on this point, that your own doings must be strictly inquired into, you yourself hast first made the law, by thus sentencing those of your neighbor. Account it not then to be a grievous thing, if you are also yourself to undergo the same kind of trial.
Let’s face facts. In the post-Christian West, sodomy advocacy is the chief persecutor of the Church. Missouri Synod affiliated congregations have for the last decade been amending their bylaws to ward against lawsuits from sodomite couples who might seek to be “married” in such a venue. News outlets are publishing hit pieces on LCMS pastors who commit the crime of denigrating sodomy before too large of an audience. LCMS seminary presidents are losing their children to gender transitioning. The television is evangelizing for sodomy to children in the impotent presence of the highest paid official in the Synod.
Sodomy is no trifling thing that Christians should be made to keep silence over. It is an abomination, contrary both to law and nature, a form of lawlessness which has no equal.Yet synod officials bow and scrape to their lobby while conducting doxing campaigns for so-called “alt-right” personalities and “condemning them in the name of Christ” explicitly for — I repeat, explicitly for — agreeing with the Ugandan government’s legal measures (which just so happen to mirror God’s prescription to ancient Israel) to deal with the matter.
With thanks to our readers, the essay Issues with Sodomy, Etc. has been one of our most popular posts to date. It is clear that there is an unfilled hunger for clear and unflinching testimony about God’s Law, and His word on the unnatural vice. We hope the post is helpful even to audiences which have never even heard of Issues, Etc., as it is likely that most Christians are hearing the same message in their respective circles that was preached in that broadcast segment. Critiquing a podcast is not the point. Critiquing the ways in which Satan has nudged out of joint the Christian conceptualization of and vernacular about God’s Law and about sodomy is the point. And this issue of the unnatural vice is emblematic of the overall slide into unwitting antinomianism which has affected the whole Church, and few more slyly and successfully than the Lutherans, who now stand on sinking sand while boasting that we are planted on bedrock.
On that note, a fox-eared reader has brought to my attention a few follow-up statements from Todd Wilken, made during comment-line segments of the show. In the spirit of charity toward the man himself (which some incorrectly dismissed the previous piece as lacking), and of further revealing the ways the modern Lutheran church tries to contort itself to avoid being perceived as speaking too harshly on the matter, I would like to make brief comments on them. There are three in all, and I will take them up in turns in three separate essays.
The first two statements come as responses to rebukes read for the mic from the July 26, 2023 airing of Issues, Etc. Coincidentally, that is the date of the posting of the final draft of my own commentary (link above). It seems that several listeners independently found their own, er, issues with the segment, and put in their own rebukes more directly.
Here is the first rebuke, with the response by Wilken, which I will be responding to in this essay.
Transcript:
Jeff: Alright, let’s begin with Joe. He said,
“I have a lot of disagreements with Mike Middendorf’s mild opposition to the death penalty for homosexuals. But instead of listing them, I pose this question:
“Can Issues, Etc. examine whether some sins are worse than others, and what those sins are? I think this is the foundational question.”
Thanks for listening. Thanks for the email, Joe.
Todd: Well, I think we have. We did an interview sometime back with Pastor Will Weedon, and in the course of some other series where we ended up talking about two categories that theologians use to describe, really, the state of faith with respect to individual sins. And that’s the category of Mortal Vin and Venial Sin. It’s a long established category. It’s one that, while we can define a mortal sin as one that robs someone of faith and a venial sin as a sin that does not rob one of faith, we have to maintain that all sins deserve eternal death and punishment were they not atoned for by the blood of Christ.
But we’re really talking here in these cases of sins, not the sins themselves, like what you did, but the nature of faith, with respect to that sin. Does a sin rob one of saving faith, or can one remain ever repentant? Now, the way the old theologians, especially the Lutherans, have said, they’ve said, well, you know, venial sins are the ones that are unintentional. Not accidental, but unintentional. They are sins of weakness, whereas mortal sins are ones that are done with the full knowledge that this sin is a sin.
Well, if you stop and think about the sins you commit on a daily basis, Christians’ consciences are always testifying against them. And there are times when our conscience says, no, no, no, don’t do that. Don’t say that. Don’t think that. And you just go ahead and do it, don’t you? Am I unique in that respect where I know that something I’m about to say is wrong, and I say it anyway?
These categories really serve more as a constant warning to the Christian that they should avoid sin and struggle against sin at all costs. But we do have to recognize that there are sins Christians commit. Let’s think about this, the sins Christians commit, without even being aware that they’re committing a sin. We can safely say those are the kind of sins that the Christian, being unaware of them, does not rob them of faith necessarily. But these categories are intended to serve as a stern warning against simply taking sin lightly.
Now, that’s the category of mortal and venial, long established. It’s found in the Lutheran confessions. It’s found in the Lutheran Dogmaticians. There’s very little question about that. There are categories that we wholeheartedly accept.
Then there is the question of whether certain sins have greater consequences, both to the neighbor or in one’s own life — and one of those consequences might be to rob someone of saving faith — but temporal consequences. So someone thinks a bad thought in the privacy of their mind about their neighbor. That certainly is a sin. It’s condemned by God’s law. Does it have the same temporal con… it may have grave consequences in the life of that Christian. If that becomes a harbored anger, resentment, a grudge, it can rob one of faith. But the temporal consequences of the private thought — an evil, private thought against your neighbor — not that big. Your neighbor may not even know you’re thinking that they may not even be personally harmed by it. Although in God’s eyes, it is the same as if you were to have murdered your neighbor.
The temporal consequences are insignificant if it’s simply a private thought, no less a sin, no less dangerous to the faith of the Christian committing that sin. But in terms of temporal consequences, not so much. And I think that’s one of the things that we confuse when we talk about sins that have consequences and sins that seem to have no consequence. For a man to go out and physically murder someone has tremendous consequences in both his life and the life of the person he has harmed and their family and everyone else. It does more harm. And that chain of harm is longer and greater and more powerful than if a man just says, “I just hate that guy,” in God’s eyes.
Same thing in terms of temporal consequences; a vast difference. One of those things we punish civilly when someone commits actual murder because of that chain of harm that is done to everyone involved, including the greater society. The other one, we don’t punish civilly. I can stand on the street corner and say, “I hate that guy,” all day long. Guess what? I’m not gonna get arrested. That guy may never know.
And this is the question we were trying to answer when it came to the civil punishment of homosexuals: “Does scripture require a civil punishment for homosexuality?”
I think in a sane world, we would say that there — apart from scripture, even just dealing with natural law — there should be some kind of consequence there. That’s really actually how Western civilization understood this for centuries; for millennia. But it’s a question of prudence, of judgment, of reasonability. Does it rise to the level of… that’s why they will talk about victimless crimes in order to remove the legal stigma from homosexuality. The legal arguments were, “there are no victims, so we should not be punishing them.” They were making the argument from “the chain of harm is really insignificant,” or “they’re only hurting themselves. As long as this is consensual, they’re only hurting themselves. Why should it be a crime?” Those are the actual arguments that were made in my home state of Texas when they overturned sodomy laws.
From God’s perspective, are such sins deserving death? Yes. Are those sins true mortal sins? Absolutely. In the same way that intentionally committing adultery is a true mortal sin. One cannot say, “well, I’m just going to commit adultery, but I’m still Christian. I’m retaining faith.” No.
And in the same way, turning from homosexual to heterosexual sins: it used to be a crime to commit adultery, too, and we dropped that one long before we dropped the sodomy laws. Why was it considered a crime? Why was it punishable in Western civilization? Because it harmed everyone involved. There were consequences that went far beyond the individual acts or the consenting adults.
So I don’t think Doctor Middendorf took a soft opposition to the killing of homosexuals. He was simply answering the question: “does Romans 1:32 single out homosexuality before God as deserving death?” And the answer to that question is: no. If you listen to his argument, it’s very clear that all those sins listed, including homosexual acts, before God are deserving of death. That does not make the case that, in terms of how we civilly punish people, we should be meting out the death penalty.
Jeff: I would encourage our listener to listen to the introduction of our series with Pastor Will Weedon on the Seven Deadly Sins. You guys covered this whole issue in part one of that series.
Todd: Yes, he lost his faith and drove away the Holy Spirit. And he fell from faith and had to be restored by the prophet Nathan. And in that case, they say, look, here’s a really clear example of what… David couldn’t have been doing all this stuff and still retain the Holy Spirit. And that’s the stated conclusion of the Lutheran Confessions.
Todd: And I’m not saying that the mortal and venial sin is a cut and dried category, like, “these sins fall into the mortal category, these sins fall into venial.” Because the categories exist, as I said before, to speak to the state of faith of the person committing that sin, rather than to say, “certain sins fit into the mortal, certain sins fit into the venial.”
Jeff: Don’t they lose their professions? State that David lost his faith…
Todd: Absolutely.
Jeff: …when he had an affair with Bathsheba?
Todd: Yes, he lost his faith and drove away the Holy Spirit. And he fell from faith and had to be restored by the prophet Nathan. And in that case, they say, look, here’s a really clear example of what David couldn’t have been doing all this stuff and still retain the Holy Spirit. That’s the that’s the stated conclusion of the Lutheran Confessions.
This rebuke goes to the heart of a different matter than the one I addressed in my own critique. I dealt with the matter of the rank confusion of different kinds of Law (moral, ceremonial, and civil) and the results of these category errors employed by both Wilken and Middendorf in terms of doctrine and practice. I also addressed the place of sodomy laws within a nation’s jurisprudence, as informed by proper Biblical exegesis, which Wilken and Middendorf skirted with the aforementioned confusion of civil and ceremonial law.
But this rebuke seeks a cross examination on a separate, though related, issue: is Wilken (and Middendorf) willing to look deeper than the sin/not-sin binary and grant that some sins are worse than others?
Of course, “worse than” is comparative language. Answering this question requires assuming a standard by which A can be judged worse than B. Wilken does very well to answer in the affirmative according to two different classical standards.
First, there is the Mortal vs. Venial distinction, which in the Lutheran parlance essentially means high-handed sin which accomplishes the driving out of the Holy Spirit and the ceasing of His war with the flesh (Mortal) vs. a sin which is one lost battle in the believer’s lifelong, ongoing war with the flesh (Venial). The difference here is simply and solely in how a given sin stands in relation to one’s salvation. Wilken rightly notes that, according to this standard, the mortal sin is the “worse” sin.
Second, Wilken notes well that various sins manifest a wide range of temporal consequences. According to this standard, the sins that come with greater negative ramifications, and affect a greater number of people, are “worse” sins. As Wilken notes, this consequentialism is the basis for contemporary American jurisprudence. I was grateful to hear Wilken affirm the salutary nature of sodomy laws, even though his appeal was strictly to consequentialism and he continues to maintain that God’s Law does not factor into the equation (more on this in part 2). I agree with him that laws against adultery are needful also.
However, despite these salutary examples of standards for identifying which are “worse” sins, Wilken misses what I take to be the intent of the rebuker’s challenge. Let me rephrase the question to be more clear:
“Acknowledging that all sins damn apart from Christ, are there some sins which are worse than others in the eyes of God?”
We will get this sense more with his answer to the next rebuke (which will be taken up in a subsequent essay), but Wilken seems to be very committed to the idea that God sees (and, hence, judges) sin in only one dimension: sin is either there, or it is not. It goes without saying that of course this dimension is truly present: all men go in the sinner column, unless their sins are taken away in Christ, allowing them to be placed in the not-sinner column. No right-believing Christian disputes this dimension.
However, in restricting God’s view of sin to only this dimension, Wilken sets up a paradigm wherein, as far as God is concerned, within the sinner column there is no differentiation or distinction in either quantity or quality from one instance to the next. That is, man may mark a difference between a child predator and a paperclip thief strictly for temporal consequence purposes. God on the other hand, being colorblind and lacking depth perception, only sees identical shades of damnable sin, and deems the one as no worse than the other.
However, Scripture testifies that God does indeed see some sins as worse than others, damning though they all may be. As Martin Luther himself notes,
From [the Fourth] Commandment we learn that after the excellent works of the first three Commandments there are no better works than to obey and serve all those who are set over us as superiors. For this reason also disobedience is a greater sin than murder, unchastity, theft and dishonesty, and all that these may include. For we can in no better way learn how to distinguish between greater and lesser sins than by noting the order of the Commandments of God, although there are distinctions also within the works of each Commandment. For who does not know that to curse is a greater sin than to be angry, to strike than to curse, to strike father and mother more than to strike any one else?
Luther again references this concept of greater sin in his Small Catechism, which I remind that we are confessionally bound to affirm:
But if any one does not find himself burdened with such [sins as have been mentioned] or greater sins, he should not trouble himself or search for or invent other sins, and thereby make confession a torture, but mention one or two that he knows.
Against the idea that God is not regardful of the dimension of quantity when it comes to the sins a man commits, we have the words of Christ:
And Jesus answered and said to him, “Simon, I have something to say to you.”
So he said, “Teacher, say it.”
“There was a certain creditor who had two debtors. One owed five hundred denarii, and the other fifty.And when they had nothing with which to repay, he freely forgave them both. Tell Me, therefore, which of them will love him more?”
Simon answered and said, “I suppose the one whom he forgave more.”
And He said to him, “You have rightly judged.” Then He turned to the woman and said to Simon, “Do you see this woman? I entered your house; you gave Me no water for My feet, but she has washed My feet with her tears and wiped them with the hair of her head.You gave Me no kiss, but this woman has not ceased to kiss My feet since the time I came in.You did not anoint My head with oil, but this woman has anointed My feet with fragrant oil.Therefore I say to you, her sins, which are many, are forgiven, for she loved much. But to whom little is forgiven, the same loves little.”
Luke 7:40-48 NKJV
Against the idea that God is not regardful of the dimension of quality when it comes to the sins a man commits, we have the words of Christ:
Jesus answered, “You could have no power at all against Me unless it had been given you from above. Therefore the one who delivered Me to you has the greater sin.”
John 19:11 NKJV
Hence, according to God, within the “sinner” column there is still very much a spectrum of sin, with some cases being markedly worse than others.
But, if it is true that God marks some sins as worse than others, then why do we not see God treating damned sinners — whose sins are still upon them and not on Christ — differently from one another in their damnation, according to the scope and scale of their sins?
According to the Lutheran Church — Missouri Synod’s (LCMS) own much vaunted Commission on Theology and Church Relations (CTCR), this is in fact exactly what we see.
In both “body and soul” unbelievers will suffer eternal separation and condemnation in hell (Matt. 18:8 and 25:46; Mark 9:43; John 3:36; 2 Thess. 1:9; Jude 13; Rev. 14:11). Indescribable torment will be experienced consciously, the degree determined by the nature of the sins to be punished (Matt. 11:20-24 and 23:15; Luke 12:47-48).
In so saying, the CTCR argues the same position of St. Jerome, who contended against Jovinianus in the Fourth Century when the latter claimed that: as all sins are equal in the sight of God, there are no degrees of rewards or punishment in eternity. Indeed, from the premise that all sins are equal in the sight of God, such a conclusion must follow. But St. Jerome wrote these sayings (and many others) against the doctrine of Jovinianus:
If we may not depart a hair’s breadth from virtue, and all sins are equal, and a man who in a fit of hunger steals a piece of bread is no less guilty than he who slays a man: you must, in your turn, be held guilty of the greatest crimes. …
But what are we to think of your assertion, that because there is a division into good and bad, the good, or the bad it may be, are not distinguished one from another, and that it makes no difference whether one is a ram in the flock or a poor little sheep? Whether the sheep have the first or the second fleece? Whether the flock is diseased and covered with the scab, or full of life and vigour? especially when by the authoritative utterances of His own prophet Ezekiel God clearly points out the difference between flock and flock of His rational sheep, saying, Behold I judge between cattle and cattle, and between the rams and the he-goats, and between the fat cattle and the lean. Because you have thrust with side and with shoulder, and pushed all the diseased with your horns, until they were scattered abroad. And that we might know what the cattle were, He immediately added: Ezekiel 34:31 You my flock, the flock of my pasture, are men. Will Paul and that penitent who had lain with his father’s wife be on an equality, because the latter repented and was received into the Church: and shall the offender because he is with him on the right hand shine with the same glory as the Apostle? …
For you admit no difference between sins, and the gratitude of those whom you raise from the mire and set on high will not equal the rage against you of those whom for the trifling offenses of daily life you have thrust into utter darkness.
St. Jerome, Against Jovinianus (Book II); I recommend it for further reading from part 18 onward as Jerome absolutely savages Jovinianus’s arguments for a reductionistic sin/not-sin binary such as is advanced by modern Lutherans and critiqued in the present essay
What’s more, the very concept of the 3rd Use of the Law (the guide) is incoherent if all sins are equal before God. Growing in sanctification by virtue of seeking to obey God’s law is predicated upon the notion that a believer will progressively reduce both the scope and the scale of their sinning, replacing such with the fruit of the Spirit. It goes without saying that a Christian’s sinning will not utterly cease this side of eternity; however, if we say that all sinning is equivalent, then it is impossible to maintain that the life of a believer will produce less sin (either in quantity or quality) than that of an unbeliever — and hence Christ’s exhortations would be rendered absurd. Either Wilken affirms a difference in the nature and scale of sins Coram Deo (even while granting that all sins damn apart from Christ), or he has not been truthful when he has claimed that he has left Third Use denialism behind.
The Westminster Larger Catechism, while decidedly not among Lutheran confessional documents, makes a salutary confession on these matters, which can be instructive for us.
Q. 150. Are all transgressions of the law of God equally heinous in themselves, and in the sight of God? A. All transgressions of the law are not equally heinous; but some sins in themselves, and by reason of several aggravations, are more heinous in the sight of God than others.
Q. 151. What are those aggravations that make some sins more heinous than others? A. Sins receive their aggravations, 1. From the persons offending; if they be of riper age, greater experience or grace, eminent for profession, gifts, place, office, guides to others, and whose example is likely to be followed by others. 2. From the parties offended: if immediately against God, his attributes, and worship; against Christ, and his grace; the Holy Spirit, his witness, and workings; against superiors, men of eminency, and such as we stand especially related and engaged unto; against any of the saints, particularly weak brethren, the souls of them, or any other, and the common good of all or many. 3. From the nature and quality of the offence: if it be against the express letter of the law, break many commandments, contain in it many sins: if not only conceived in the heart, but breaks forth in words and actions, scandalize others, and admit of no reparation: if against means, mercies, judgments, light of nature, conviction of conscience, public or private admonition, censures of the church, civil punishments; and our prayers, purposes, promises, vows, covenants, and engagements to God or men: if done deliberately, willfully, presumptuously, impudently, boastingly, maliciously, frequently, obstinately, with delight, continuance, or relapsing after repentance. 4. From circumstances of time, and place: if on the Lord’s day, or other times of divine worship; or immediately before or after these, or other helps to prevent or remedy such miscarriages: if in public, or in the presence of others, who are thereby likely to be provoked or defiled.
Q. 152. What doth every sin deserve at the hands of God? A. Every sin, even the least, being against the sovereignty, goodness, and holiness of God, and against his righteous law, deserveth his wrath and curse, both in this life, and that which is to come; and cannot be expiated but by the blood of Christ.
Yet I know that many will scoff because, after all, nothing good can come from without the Lutheran tradition. Therefore, I point you back to Luther above. And, to prove that it is possible for a Lutheran to speak on the subject of mortal and venial sin (as Wilken adroitly did above) while also rightly acknowledging that not all sins are the same before God (as Wilken did not do above, and as he explicitly denies in the segment I will take up in the next installment), see the following from Lutheranism’s Second Martin, Martin Chemnitz:
Next we must consider the definition of this matter. What is mortal sin? What is venial sin in the regenerate? The usual definition is that mortal sin is those kinds of actions which cut off those who permit them from the grace of God and thus they cease to be righteous, and as a result they are condemned unless they change their minds. But venial sins are not of this nature, since out of the pure grace and mercy of God they are forgiven for the sake of the Son of God our Mediator to those who repent, and in the case of these sins, their sins are covered.
In another place we have shown that in setting up correct definitions we must keep our eye on two things. The first is that in the main parts of a definition we must include those elements necessary for an understanding of the subject. The second is that they must have the foundations for each part of the definition drawn from the testimonies of Scripture.
Therefore in defining mortal sin we must indicate the chief aspect of this kind of sin, in order to understand it. These are:
I. The difference between mortal and venial sin is derived not from the subject of sin as it is considered in itself in keeping with the Law. For although one kind of sin may be greater or less than another kind, cf. John 19:11, “He who betrays Me has the greater sin”; Luke 12:47–48, “The servant who knew the will of his master and did not prepare himself and did not act in keeping with his will, will be beaten with many stripes, but he who did not know and did commit things worthy of stripes, he shall be beaten with few”; Matt. 11:24, “I say to you that it shall be more tolerable in the day of judgment for the land of Sodom than for Capernaum”; yet according to the Law, if God should enter into judgment with sin, all sins in themselves are mortal, guilty of or subject to the wrath of God and worthy of the curse and eternal death.
That is to say, there is no sin, even if it seems to be insignificant, which in itself according to the Law and outside of Christ, if God should enter into judgment with it, that is not worthy of eternal death. Deut. 27:26 and Gal. 3:10, “Cursed is every one who does not continue in all the words of this law, to do them; and all the people shall say, ‘Amen.’” Therefore in the definition we must include the concept that “all sins in the unregenerate are mortal.” For “he who does not believe in the Son shall not see life, but the wrath of God remains over him,” John 3:36.
This is what Luther is saying on Galatians 5 [Amer. Ed., 26.76], “Mortal sin and venial sin are distinguished from each other not on the basis of the substance of the deed involved or according to some difference in the sin committed, but on the basis of the person or because of the difference of those who commit the sins.”
We must note this aspect of the matter thoroughly. For the error of the Pharisees in the time of Christ pertained to the matter of big and little sins. This idea, however, is refuted at length in Matthew 5.
On the other side, Jovinian contended that “all sins are equal,” something which Jerome refuted. Likewise in our own day Sebastian Frank, an unlearned and arrogant man, has asserted the same thing. But Luther is correct when he says, “As far as guilt is concerned, all sins are equal unless reconciliation takes place.” Thus those people are in error and need to be corrected who think that certain sins do not deserve death. But it is a certainty that all sins, even those which in our eyes seem minor, are worthy of the eternal curse.
Augustine uses this simile: It is insufficient to make this comparison between these two kinds of sin and simply say that whether a person is on the shore or sinking in the depths of the sea, they are both dead. There will be some difference among those who are saved, just as there is a difference among stars in their brilliance, 1 Cor. 15:41, and there are also degrees among the damned because of the difference in their sins. Yet all are in damnation.
Martin Chemnitz, Loci Theologici vol II, part 17 (Locus XVI) “The Difference Between Mortal and Venial Sin,” chapter III “Definition of the Matter”; translated by J.A.O. Preus
Because this subject can be fraught with the terror of the knowledge of guilt, I will end by reminding you that, as great as your sins may be, Jesus Christ is able to save to the uttermost those who come to God through Him. And as small as your sins may be, nothing can make you right with God apart from Him. Do not despair, but rather call on his name and receive the atonement He made with God on your behalf.
In the introduction to Theonomy in Christian Ethics, first published in 1977, Dr. Greg Bahnsen sets his sights on a particular stream of unLutheran thought beguiling modern-day Lutherans. This stream (amber colored, it is to be assumed) has, in the almost 50 years since, cut an antinomian tributary to the river Acheron, and swept up many LCMS clergy in its current.
One need look no further for evidence than the regularity with which the LCMS brain trust thrusts Steven Paulson, disciple of Gerhard Forde (himself disciple of Werner Elert, named by Bahnsen below) in the faces of those seeking theological training from our institutions.
Nor should I neglect to mention Paulson’s contributing essays to the following Concordia Publishing House volumes:
The Necessary Distinction — edited by Albert B. Collver III, James Arne Nestingen, and John T. Pless
Efforts to identify a common demoninator (the typo shall stand) have, of course, failed.
You’ll never guess who Jack Kilcrease’s doctor father was.The one with the actual earned doctorate.
But enough digression. Read on for Bahnsen’s critique of the stream of unLutheran lufran thought from 46 years ago which has continued to ferment in the generation since, and the mast of which some prominent men wish to lash the Lutheran Church — Missouri Synod to as they sail past Scripture and the Confessions.
Theonomy in Christian Ethics Introduction Dr. Greg Bahnsen, 1977 Emphases original; new paragraph breaks added for ease of reading
Modern day Lutheranism propounds a view of God’s law which is as unsatisfactory as that of dispensationalism. The late Werner Elert (formerly professor of systematic theology at the University of Erlangan), writing on Law and Gospel, declares that they are in dialectical opposition to one another; indeed, “they are as opposed to one another as death and life.” While long ago the Lutherans officially recognized the law of God as providing a functional theological ethic which was authoritative, corrective, and relevant to personal and social morality, Elert dashes any hope for such a project in the current day:
And here once more it becomes irrefutably clear that law and promise… are irreconcilably opposed to one another…. In this new order, however, the law no longer has any voice whatsoever… The disciple of Jesus… no longer has any need whatsoever for the law’s threats or its promises of reward. The Holy Spirit’s entry into the world marks the beginning of the Christian church. Since that time the church lives no longer under law. That means it lives in freedom… When we look to Christ, the law has absolutely no validity… The irreconcilable opposition of law and gospel remains also for the Christian.
The law serves only in the destruction of the old man, says Elert, but cannot serve in the construction of the new man (i.e., traditionally termed “the third use of the law”). Another Lutheran theologian, Martin Scharlemann (professor of exegetical theology at Concordia Seminary), tells us that “there are two elements in Scripture: Law and Gospel. Each has its own kind of authority, which must be carefully distinguished from the other.” The Christian is to live under one, and not the other. Yet another Lutheran theologian, John Warwick Montgomery (professor of church history at Trinity Evangelical Divinity School), claims that the law primarily drives us to Christ so that we can (as contrite) be picked up by grace; certainly law and grace should not be merged or confused (e.g, seeing Christ as a new Moses or preaching law to those already convicted of sin).
It is most important that the gospel predominate over the law. However, neither systematics, exegesis, nor the history of Christian thought point to the appropriateness of this restriction of the law’s function and disparagement of its positive application today.
Paul Althaus, recognizing that the Bible clearly purports to direct Christian living, attempts to remain true to the Lutheran dichotomy of law and gospel by distinguishing “command” (God’s will for us) from “law” (a special form of that will). The “commands” of God are actually the summons to life and love, God’s offer to be man’s God, a challenge to accept freedom and permission to live in Gods love. Law, by contrast, is what became of God’s command through the fall: it distorts the command, always accuses man, demands greater purity than the command (indeed, an impossible purity), and applies always and only to the sinner before acceptance of the gospel. The gospel puts an end to the law, and through the gospel the law again becomes command; this command has a place in the Christian life, not as making works follow causally upon faith, but as showing the work in which faith finds Iiving expression.
The arbitrariness and tendentious character of this scheme should be obvious; indeed, it should be obvious to Althaus himself, for he admits that: the distinction between law and command cannot be derived from the terms themselves as used in Scripture (or the Lutheran confessions!), the law is interchangeable with command and applied to the Christian life at points in Scripture, the actual contents of law and command are identical, the law cannot be distinguished from command by the law’s negative form since gospel commands take negative form also, and the command (with its life and love) is still heard in the law. Althaus’ distinction, then, has been qualified so extensively that it virtually vanishes. However, the problem with the ethical scheme suggested by Althaus is not simply that he refuses to apply the term “law’” to the Christian life, but that in fact there is no absolutely authoritative law (or call it “command”) for the Christian life. While the believer is “well advised” to consider the biblical illustrations of God’s will, just as he might also consider the lives of the saints, these ethical admonitions (e.g., the Decalogue) are “aids and correctives” or teaching examples, but never “legal prescriptions.”
The threat of relativism or autonomy is clear when Althaus declares:
The Christian ethic is an ethic of the Spirit… This guidance by the Holy Spirit implies that (God’s concrete commanding cannot be read off from a written document, an inherited scheme of law. I must learn afresh every day what God wants of me. For God’s commanding has a special character for each individual: it is always contemporary, always new. God commands me (and each person) in a particular way, in a different way than he commands others. And his command is spoken afresh in each situation… The living and spiritual character of the knowledge of what God requires of the present moment must not be destroyed by rules and regulations.
While in actual practice the modern day Lutheran may wish to avoid concrete sins (e.g, murder, stealing, adultery) as much as in classic Reformed theology, nevertheless an ethical system such as that propounded by Althaus shows that in principle there is nothing to which appeal can be made in order to prevent these concrete sins in any unqualified and pre-established fashion. The general Lutheran disclaimer of any ”third use” of the law of God has regrettable implications for their “first use” of the law (i.e., the political use). A contemporary proponent of Luther’s doctrine of two kingdoms, the “kingdom of the right hand” (redemption) and the “kingdom of the left hand” (creation), is Helmut Thielicke. He seems ready to admit that those dangers which men like Troeltsch, Wunsch, Barth, and Deutelmoser have seen in Luther’s doctrine (e.g., a double morality—one for each kingdom—as well as the secularization of the state so that it is ethically autonomous) are “theological possibilities”; however, Thielicke thinks that, outside of Luther’s unguarded expressions, Luther has two safeguards against abuse: the office holders of the state should remember that their purpose is to preserve peace (so that men can have the opportunity to accept the gospel) and that they should be motivated by love. Yet Thielicke suspects that this is not quite enough, for the commandments are not used to call into question the activities of the kingdom of the left (only their motivation); “there is still the possibility that in Luther the temporal kingdom is understood to be too isolated, too insulated, vis-a-vis the Law of God.”
Thielicke then offers his own social proposal, and it is a proposal that parallels Althaus’ suggestion for the use of God’s commandments in the Christian’s personal life (viz., that they are not positive legal prescriptions but only corrective illustrations that advise us). Thielicke holds that, just as God’s commandments necessarily suffer refraction when entering the order of this age, so the laws of jurisprudence and politics are alien so far as the kingdom of God is concerned. Relying heavily upon the negative form of the Decalogue, Thielicke says that the Law does not show us what is right but only what is naturally wrong. Thus the Decalogue can point out political wrong for a Christian (it illustrates the natural decadence and dehumanization to which the state is prone) but gives no specific program; Christianity cannot solve our political problems. While there are non-Christian forms of politics, there can be no such thing as “Christian politics’”; the Christian can only commend such concrete structures or orders as may befit the time and occasion. The commandment of God has no abiding affinity either to a specific economic order or to a specific political order.” Therefore, we are left with the same rejection of the positive and guiding function of God’s law as we were in the life of the individual believer. There are no unqualified and pre-established rules for the kingdom of the left, and the authority of God’s revealed law is reduced to that of a corrective illustration—resulting in the odd asymmetry that politics is subject to one value predicate (“non-Christian”) but not its opposite.
One wonders if there is any sense in which a biblical and concrete guideline can be suggested by the Christian to modern society under the terms specified by modern Lutherans; private and public morality are not, but vaguely, called back from the dangers of autonomy.
Issues Etc. was once the official Lutheran Church – Missouri Synod (LCMS) mouthpiece on the airwaves. Following the spontaneous cancellation of the show by then-president Gerald Kieschnick, Issues led a successful coup against the incumbent. In 2010 this culminated in the election of Matthew Harrison to the highest office in the Synod. Since that time, Issues, Etc. has carried water for Harrison, and most recently endorsed him for election to his fifth term — an election he handily won.
Apropos of this close relationship, listeners who pay careful attention will at times find glimpses of the not-so-invisible hand of Harrison at work in Issues, Etc. programming. Indeed, notwithstanding the officially independent status of Issues, Etc. with regard to Synod control, the broadcast evidently functions as Kirkwood Road Pravda when called upon — as we shall see.
On February 21, 2023, President Harrison issued a condemnation of his avowed enemies. In it he enumerated a list of “teachings” that he characterized as “alt-right” (a favorite, though dated, epithet of Harrison advisor Jack Kilcrease), to wit:
white supremacy
Nazism
pro-slavery
anti-interracial marriage
women as property
fascism
death for homosexuals
even genocide
Since Harrison’s encyclical dropped, Issues Poobah Todd Wilken has periodically featured programming that is curiously and minutely aligned with Harrison’s talking points. On March 2, Wilken broadcast an interview on the Christian resistance to Adolf Hitler. Several weeks later Issues listeners were given a segment on white nationalism in which guest Chris Rosebrough named the names of two of Harrison’s most prominent targets. Most recently, this past week (July 17) Issues aired an interview with Dr. Mike Middendorf entitled “Does God Command the Killing of Homosexuals in Romans 1?”
Beyond obviously drawing inspiration from the above list, the segment is without question a response to the bourgeoning Christian Nationalism movement — Harrison’s true target, whether he knows it or not. For those not familiar with the contemporary iteration of this term, proponents of Christian Nationalism advocate for the return of obscenity laws, a class of legislation which has only recently been done away with in the West. Sodomy laws (e.g. the sort overturned by Lawrence v. Texas) epitomize the genre.
In point of fact, and on that note, the Middendorf interview is an unsubtle rebuke of the African nation of Uganda, which recently passed strict sodomy laws with punishments up to and inclusive of the death penalty. Ironically, the LCMS 2023 Convention will bring fellowship with the Lutheran Church of Uganda (LCU) to a vote. One wonders what sort of censure the Ugandan Lutherans might receive from enlightened white Christians like Harrison, Wilken, Middendorf, et al if their delegates voice support for their rulers and the law of their land.
This July 17 Issues segment is such a confused mess of straw-manning, category errors, and outright falsehoods that it deserves careful attention. Hindsight will prove all the more what a telling entry it is in the saga of the decline of the LCMS. The level of ELCA-esque antinomianism on display would be astounding, had it not been presaged in so many ways already.
Dr. Mike Middendorf is on the faculty at Concordia University Irvine, the synodical organ which most reliably and prolifically produces and nurtures antinomian malignancies. Sadly but truly, this gives up the plot of the interview from the outset.
Whatever happened to Dan?Whatever happened to Jeff?
It’s possible that Middendorf is in all reality far from being a West Coast Radical Lutheran (a “wackerel,” as they have been called for millennia). Wilken himself has admitted his own past as a so-called “soft antinomian” but says he has repented of this and learned to see the place of the Law as the proper guide for the Christian life, i.e. the Law’s “third use.” In this interview, however, both clergypersons verge on a practical denial of the Law’s first use, that is to say, its function as a curb and restraint of evildoers in the civil realm. This is in keeping with the evident trend in Missouri (the International Center, Concordia St. Louis, etc.) to disavow the divinely ordained civil code of ancient Israel and, well, avow the laws of this present age (e.g. hate crime laws, specifically those pertaining to racism, sexism, “homophobia,” etc) as more just and humane.
Wilken and Middendorf misunderstand Christian Nationalist support for the restoration of some form of sodomy laws. They speak as though, somewhere, the argument is being sincerely made that Christians should take up stones in a vigilante quest to execute sodomites. To my knowledge, this has never been seriously proposed, with the possible (yet still unknown to me) exception of isolated schizophrenics (who may or may not have been influenced by three-letter agencies in search of probable cause).
Rather, in Christian Nationalist circles, the discussion of “killing homosexuals” has only ever been part of a larger theoretical discussion on policy. In an explicitly Christian nation, what should the position of the state be with regard to sodomy? And what are the ideal parameters of just civil laws and penalties in serving the interests of the people of such a nation? Of course, various states within the USA have historically had such laws, back before Hollywood, the government, and Lutheran pastors turned against them. They still remain on the books in some form in twelve states.
[Source: “Sodomy laws in the United States”; Wikipedia] Which side is the LCMS on? Maintain/strengthen or repeal? There are no other options.
And, once again, one wonders what the Lutheran Church of Uganda — whose nation has moved beyond theoreticals and has adopted strict policies on sodomy into law — is in for once it officially partners with the LCMS.
In the second place, and very much related, Wilken and Middendorf fall into the typical antinomian error when it comes to the Law: failing to observe distinctions between moral, civil, and ceremonial laws. There is an unwillingness to explore the import of sexual sin in the “before God” sense, contrasted with the “before the world” sense, after the antinomian way: “coram Deo all are sinners, so how dare you judge coram mundo with regard to sins, you hypocrite?!” Indeed, throughout this conversation they conflate these categories at every convenient opportunity, as it suits their argument.
For the modern antinomian, all Law is collapsed into the moral dimension, and then the moral dimension itself is flattened into a binary of sinner/not-sinner. The fact that all men have sinned and fallen short (true) and all men deserve God’s condemnation outside of Christ’s atoning sacrifice (true) places all men into the sinner column (true). These truths are then used by antinomians to deny scope and scale of sin (in regards to both coram mundo and coram Deo, in point of fact). All are sinners, you see, so no man is more deserving of punishment than any other — including suffering temporal consequences…when convenient for the antinomian, at least.
In this way, and in this spirit, I will be referring to Wilken and Middendorf as “antinomians” throughout my commentary on their interview. The full segment, minus fluff, is reproduced in transcript form below for examination. I’ll interject some comments of my own below, but those with discerning, theologically/morally/logically functional minds will readily recognize the issues, etc., for themselves.
WILKEN: So here is the passage in question. It is the first chapter of Romans, verse 32, Paul is smack dab in the middle of a very long argument/very long statement. He’s working in stages. And here at verse 32, he says, “Though they know God’s righteous decree that those who practice such things deserve to die, they not only do them, but give approval to those who practice them.” Now, somewhere in the previous verses, Paul has mentioned homosexuality. He describes it in rather graphic terms, in fact. So does this apply to homosexuality and homosexuality alone? What about the other sins that Paul mentions there? And how do we take this if those other sins include sins that we do remember, the words say, those who do these things deserve to die.
Notice the thrust of Todd’s argument at the outset: lots of things deserve death, so nothing actually deserves death. By the end of the segment this will come full circle as they effectively declare: you do things that deserve the second death in hell (but for Christ’s atoning sacrifice on your behalf), so no judging the sins of another in such a way that condemns them to their first death here on earth. (Again, see my discussion on antinomian habits above the transcript.)
With this same argument, Todd and Middendorf may as well abolish death row. One wonders if they would be willing to make an identical case for going easy on bestiality — provided, of course, that the goats, chickens, dogs, and monkeys were consenting and fully grown.
WILKEN: Welcome back to Issues, etc. I’m Todd Wilken. Joining us to answer the question “Does God command the killing of homosexuals in Romans 1:32?” [is] Doctor Mike Middendorf, professor of theology at Concordia University, Irvine, California. Author of the Concordia Commentaries on Romans. Mike, welcome back.
MIDDENDORF: Thank you. Good to be here, Todd.
WILKEN: Why did God command the death penalty for homosexual acts in ancient Israel?
MIDDENDORF: Thanks. That’s a tough question to ask — “Why” of God, generally. We’ll get to this later in Romans, but I think, on the one hand, those are contrary to God’s design, specifically for sexual conduct, which leads to procreation.
An “abomination”, you might say more simply — and more Biblically. But that would be homophobic.
MIDDENDORF: So male-female produces offspring. Genesis one, be fruitful, multiply, fill the Earth. Same-sex sexual acts do not. So I think that’s kind of what’s driving this if you’re asking me a “why” of God. But if you look at Leviticus 20, there’s a whole number of other things there that are worthy of death there as well, including just cursing father or mother.
Ah yes, “just” cursing father and mother. He forgot to mention that later in the chapter God tells Israel to put to death those who are “just” necromancers. Childish peccadillos of all kinds get the rope.
To return to seriousness: we in 2023 America have had our consciences malformed to such a degree that most everyone is as casual and dismissive as Middendorf about something God considers so serious that He says it needs a death penalty attached to it in the civil code.
Living in Hollywood’s backyard as he does, Middendorf no doubt has the storyteller class to thank for the fact that he, as a professor of theology, can at most muster a hand-waving “meh” for the serious pronouncements of God. Why, the children in these sitcoms I love curse their parents in every episode! And the parents deserve it, by George, and justly apologize to their children for their foolish and backward ways by the end of 30 minutes! A depiction of repentance means this must be Christianity!
This seems like a good time to point out something else that it seems no one in the TV and air-conditioned culture of the modern West has the imagination to consider:
No one in ancient Israel was being executed for lispy uptalk and weak wrists. When Wilken and Middendorf talk about “killing homosexuals,” most people’s minds picture cartoonish and wanton slaughter of those with faggy comportment. To Wilken’s credit, he at least phrased his opening question appropriately: “Why did God command the death penalty for homosexual acts in ancient Israel?”
The death penalty was for acts, not attitudes. Who can police the human heart but God alone? Inward proclivities to sin are either checked against becoming outward acts by the indwelling of the Holy Spirit, or they are checked (hopefully) by known and applied consequences: this is the First Use of the Law, the curb. Disincentives to sin keep external human society from being as Lawless as the internal heart of the Old Adam.
And let’s talk about enforcement. Under such a regime, before modern surveillance (Alexa, street cams, cell phone data, social media posting, DNA testing, and the like), how exactly were sodomites convicted of the crime? Only on the testimony of two or three witnesses, for acts that are capable of being conducted relatively discreetly, if they need to be. Hence, only the most careless and open sodomite escapades had even a chance of being brought to conviction.
Civil laws are civil deterrents — simple as. How far would modern groomers have gotten with Gen Z in terms of turning them to manifest sexual perversion under Uganda’s anti-sodomy laws? Under Israel’s? Even under the former US statutes, now overturned?
Aggressive punishments for the convicted keep social cancers checked against growth. To take a modern example: the legalization of marijuana in several states at this point has utterly removed the former stigma associated with consumption of the drug. In these states, one can now smell cannabis at any given gas station while filling up, and see people openly flaunting their membership in high culture where bongs and stylized marijuana leafs are common decorations. Passing by cars where employees of various establishments are taking their lunch or smoke breaks in their cars, one frequently smells the Devil’s Lettuce. What was once taboo due to civil penalties (and common sense) has become an accepted, even celebrated, part of life in these lands.
Again, aggressive punishments might not eradicate such things, but they drive them underground and check the spread. Again again, disincentives to sin keep external human society from being as Lawless as the internal heart of the Old Adam.
And this is applicable to cursing father and mother as well. If you know that you are liable to death for losing it at your parents and striking them with your tongue, a significant step toward Patricide, how will that direct the behavior and expectations of society? Disrespect and disregard for one’s parents, breaking the Fourth Commandment, might take on other, less open and more strictly internal forms — and those are for God to address — but this form is one that can be policed, with the nation better off for it.
Middendorf’s treatment of this subject indicates that he has never given serious thought to these considerations.
MIDDENDORF: So, on the one hand, yes, this is there in Scripture, but we can’t simplistically equate those cultural norms, penalties, practices of ancient Israel in their context, certainly with the Christian Church today.
Here we get to the contextualizing that the LCMS rightly castigates the ELCA for practicing when it comes to women’s ordination. To simply replace a few words:
“So, on the one hand, yes, this is there in Scripture, but we can’t simplistically equate those cultural norms, penalties, practices of [the early Church in Ephesus and Corinth] in their context, certainly with the Christian Church today.”
MIDDENDORF: Or e.g. we couldn’t eat any pork, lobster, bacon, shrimp. We would have to be worshipping Friday sunset to Saturday sunset. For sinning, we would have to kill a goat or a sheep.
Here is where Middendorf confuses the issue by mixing in Israel’s ceremonial laws into the civil and moral stew. This is, incidentally, an identical argument to that which is made by “gay and Christian” advocates: “The Old Testament calls eating shellfish an abomination, you see, just as it calls sodomy an abomination. The fact that eating shellfish is not an abomination for the New Testament Church demonstrates that neither is sodomy an abomination. You can’t call one a sin and not the other.”
But this argument lies by omission, and in two ways:
In the first place, there are two different Hebrew words for “abomination” between Lev 11:12 and Lev 20:13. The former being “sheqets”, and the latter “toebah”. The Septuagint does use “bdelugma” for both, in fairness, and the King James Version likewise uses the same word (“abomination”) in both places. The linguists can debate the importance of this.
In the second place, and more importantly, the nature of the abomination is tied up in whom the command was for.
Read through Leviticus 11, and note how often the prepositional phrase “for you” appears. Why, with that many “for you’s” you’d think it was a Higher Things brochure.
God took pains to spell out to the Israelites when that which was unclean, was unclean for them. When that which was abominable, was abominable for them.
The ceremonial laws of Israel were never universal laws for the nations, any more than the laws regulating the priests of Israel were universal laws for the nation of Israel. Nor were the ceremonial laws regulating the High Priest universal laws for all priests.
For instance, the ceremonial law held that priests were not allowed to become ceremonially unclean with regard to the dead for any but their immediate family, whereas the generic Israelite was not prohibited from doing so. Ceremonial law held that the High Priest was not allowed to become ceremonially unclean with regard to the dead for anyone at all (not even to enter the building where his son’s body lay in repose), whereas generic priests could do so for immediate family (Leviticus 21).
The ceremonial laws became more and more strict the closer one got to God’s presence in the Most Holy Place, just as the quality of materials in the Tabernacle and the Temple became more and more refined the closer they were to the Most Holy Place, just as the adorning metals of the Temple went from bronze to silver to gold moving inward:
The nations were not under ceremonial laws.
The Israelites, God’s portion from among the nations, were under generic ceremonial laws.
The priests, God’s portion from among Israel, were under both generic and priestly ceremonial laws.
The High Priests, God’s portion from among the priests, were under generic, priestly, and chief priestly ceremonial laws.
As Leviticus 21 tells us, these ceremonial laws were given in order to set certain groups of people apart in their service to God. As I’ve indicated above, this was done in stages, just as the quality of the materials set apart in service to God in the Tabernacle/Temple was laid out in stages.
Because the ceremonial laws were never for the other nations, when the Gospel went to those nations, to include them in the people of God upon the coming of the Kingdom of God, those trappings that caused Israel to be a separate people went the way of the temple curtain (and, shortly thereafter, the temple itself). This is the entire, explicit point of Peter’s vision in Acts 10. This is the entire, explicit conclusion of the Jerusalem Council in Acts 15.
Having belabored that point, let us consider the issue of the abomination of sodomy. Is this a ceremonial law, which was compulsory for Israel, but does not bind the nations? Or is this a civil law with an underlying moral law (as in the case of “thou shalt not murder” and “thou shalt not commit adultery”)?
The answer is obvious. We are talking about Sodom-y. The sin for which Sodom was condemned by fire from heaven, apart from the ceremonial laws of Israel (which was as-yet unfounded).
Or consider that, in warning Israel against sexual sins, God is specific to note that these practices were the very things He condemned the pagans for, sentencing them to death at the hands of the Israelites:
“Do not make yourselves unclean by any of these things, for by all these the nations I am driving out before you have become unclean, and the land became unclean, so that I punished its iniquity, and the land vomited out its inhabitants. But you shall keep my statutes and my rules and do none of these abominations, either the native or the stranger who sojourns among you (for the people of the land, who were before you, did all of these abominations, so that the land became unclean), lest the land vomit you out when you make it unclean, as it vomited out the nation that was before you. For everyone who does any of these abominations, the persons who do them shall be cut off from among their people. So keep my charge never to practice any of these abominable customs that were practiced before you, and never to make yourselves unclean by them: I am the LORD your God.”
— Leviticus 18:24-30
A short time later, God restates His rules for sexuality, inclusive of prohibitions for sodomy with associated punishment:
“If a man lies with a male as with a woman, both of them have committed an abomination; they shall surely be put to death; their blood is upon them.”
op. cit., 20:13
God then moves into His summation of all the points discussed above:
“You shall therefore keep all my statutes and all my rules and do them, that the land where I am bringing you to live may not vomit you out. And you shall not walk in the customs of the nation that I am driving out before you, for they did all these things, and therefore I detested them. But I have said to you, ‘You shall inherit their land, and I will give it to you to possess, a land flowing with milk and honey.’ I am the LORD your God, who has separated you from the peoples. You shall therefore separate the clean beast from the unclean, and the unclean bird from the clean. You shall not make yourselves detestable by beast or by bird or by anything with which the ground crawls, which I have set apart for you to hold unclean. You shall be holy to me, for I the LORD am holy and have separated you from the peoples, that you should be mine.”
loc. cit., 22-26
This passage in and of itself makes it clear that sodomy (and the other sexual sins named) is an affront to God whether it is perpetrated by the nations or by His portion Israel. It is not “an abomination just to/for/unto you, Israel”; no, it is simply an abomination. Full stop. By way of contrast, note the bolded “for you.” This makes clear that the reiterated dietary law (“You shall not make yourselves detestable by beast or by bird or by anything with which the ground crawls”) is given specifically to Israel because of their status as God’s portion from among the nations.
The moral law is set against sodomy, and God mandated that Israel legislate that morality through civil penalties for convicted sodomites. The ceremonial law is to mark Israel as God’s own portion. Two very different things.
For Middendorf to conflate the two and dismiss them both as “just, you know, Old Testament stuff that doesn’t concern us” is appalling. It is, dare I say, abominable.
MIDDENDORF: Or even slavery is allowed in ancient Israel. But I would like to point out that the cultural norms in Israel are at least raised above many of those in their context, in their surrounding cultures. So that’s kind of the simple answer I would give to that.
And here we have the obligatory implied apology for the terribly embarrassing and offensive portions of Israelite law, as given by God.
“Oh yes,” the liberal theologian grovels before modern sensibilities, “God allowed his people to practice slavery, that terrible evil, but can we at least agree that God’s law was at least more moral in a relative sense?”
To shrug off his embarrassment at God’s condemnation of sodomy, Middendorf portrays God’s law given to Israel as outdated and backward. But we certainly don’t think that way. We know better now!
MIDDENDORF: And then again, since Christ has come in and through Christ who fulfilled the laws for us, we just can’t simplistically equate those to the age now of the Church.
Simplistically? No. But there is a proper and responsible way to do this, but instead Middendorf prefers to dissemble.
Christ’s fulfillment of God’s Holy Law, through which He reached beyond Israel and drew all nations to Himself, abolishing the wall of separation between Israel and the nations (which was the ceremonial law), did not then abolish all law, or what are we to do with Romans 13?
Therefore remember that at one time you Gentiles in the flesh, called “the uncircumcision” by what is called the circumcision, which is made in the flesh by hands—remember that you were at that time separated from Christ, alienated from the commonwealth of Israel and strangers to the covenants of promise, having no hope and without God in the world. But now in Christ Jesus you who once were far off have been brought near by the blood of Christ. For he himself is our peace, who has made us both one and has broken down in his flesh the dividing wall of hostility by abolishing the law of commandments expressed in ordinances, that he might create in himself one new man in place of the two, so making peace, and might reconcile us both to God in one body through the cross, thereby killing the hostility. And he came and preached peace to you who were far off and peace to those who were near. For through him we both have access in one Spirit to the Father. So then you are no longer strangers and aliens, but you are fellow citizens with the saints and members of the household of God, built on the foundation of the apostles and prophets, Christ Jesus himself being the cornerstone, in whom the whole structure, being joined together, grows into a holy temple in the Lord.
— Ephesians 2:11-21 [emphasis mine]
When Paul wrote the words emphasized above, he did not mean that there was no longer any law in effect. When he spoke of the law of commandments expressed in ordinances, which acted as a dividing wall between Jews and Gentiles (Israelites and the nations), he spoke specifically of that same ceremonial law we have been discussing. This is absolutely plain from the above text.
Paul did not by saying this declare the abolition of governments ruling the people with righteous laws based upon God’s eternal, unchanging will.
For rulers are not a terror to good conduct, but to bad. Would you have no fear of the one who is in authority? Then do what is good, and you will receive his approval, for he is God’s servant for your good. But if you do wrong, be afraid, for he does not bear the sword in vain. For he is the servant of God, an avenger who carries out God’s wrath on the wrongdoer.
— Romans 13:3-4
Therefore laws that govern human affairs remain. Sodomy laws, where enacted, are such laws. And we know from the Biblical witness that such laws comport with God’s eternal moral law.
WILKEN: So do the death penalties enforced in ancient Israel—and there were many of them—do they apply today?
Only in nations where the rulers have ratified such laws and presently enforce them, Todd. That’s how civil laws informed by God’s moral law work — for instance laws about what to do with a murderer.
This isn’t hard, but Wilken and Middendorf make it seem hard because they are emotional and ideological captives to the spirit of the age. They are seemingly unable to agree with submit to Almighty God when He says that tried and convicted sodomites deserve death in the civil realm. Instead, like the antinomians they are, they pivot to the moral law, collapse all law into a binary within that framework, assert (correctly, as far as it goes) that we have all broken the moral law and deserve death, and then deduce from the fact that Jesus died on the cross to take away the sins of the world that no one actually deserves the death penalty in the civil realm.
Let’s call this ploy “antinomian sleight-of-hand.”
MIDDENDORF: No, again, in and through Christ… I love Matthew five, where he says, I have not come to abolish the Law and the Prophets, I have come to fulfill them. So, yes, the soul that sins will die—also in the Old Testament, Ezekiel 18. And if all sin, no one is righteous, not even one (Ecclesiastes), then everybody ought to die, right? So I would take all those as pointing ahead to Christ’s death. He then suffers the penalty for all of those.
You see? Textbook antinomian sleight-of-hand.
MIDDENDORF: So while, yes, those were enforced, probably not consistently in ancient Israel, we can’t deny they’re there. But ultimately, I think they point ahead to the coming of Christ. That his death for all sin takes those away.
The death penalty for sodomites—and murderers, adulterers, necromancers, and those who burn their children alive on altars to Molech—was merely typological, y’all!
This reading of Scripture and justification is categorically incoherent. With this argument, you abolish all civil penalties for all crimes forever.
MIDDENDORF: And then in and through Christ, those specific cultural dimensions, or restrictions, or whatever you wanna call it, of God’s people in the Old Testament are transformed in and through Him. So all of the cultural, political, military, judicial practices of Israel come together in and through Christ.
This is not a serious conversation. These are not serious theologians. They would never treat a discussion about capital punishment for murderers this way, regardless of whether either one personally believes in the continued relevance of Genesis 9:6, because our culture does not have a month of celebration dedicated to murderers. But they’ll strap on for this discussion, and the reason why is clear and bears repeating: the only reason Wilken and Middendorf are dissembling this aggressively about the issue of sodomy is that they seek to be inoffensive to the world. They seek “respectability.” They are embarrassed by God.
MIDDENDORF: And now, of course, in the New Testament, neither Jew nor Greek, slave nor free, that Christ and the Gospel permeate all cultures on Earth and so, in a sense, are not simplistically taking Old Testament culture of Israel and applying them on the other side of the coming of Christ.
Wilken and Middendorf are in full “it’s just cultural bro” spin mode, as fully as any ELCA priestitute demands that male-only clergy is also “just cultural.” It implies contempt for God’s word.
WILKEN: I would also note that even in ancient Israel, these laws were intended only for Israel and not for Gentiles. Is that significant?
Todd’s lie has already been rebuked above, but let’s return to Scripture and do it again. With emphasis this time:
Do not make yourselves unclean by any of these things, for by all these the nations I am driving out before you have become unclean, and the land became unclean, so that I punished its iniquity, and the land vomited out its inhabitants. But you shall keep my statutes and my rules and do none of these abominations, either the native or the stranger who sojourns among you (for the people of the land, who were before you, did all of these abominations, so that the land became unclean), lest the land vomit you out when you make it unclean, as it vomited out the nation that was before you. For everyone who does any of these abominations, the persons who do them shall be cut off from among their people. So keep my charge never to practice any of these abominable customs that were practiced before you, and never to make yourselves unclean by them: I am the LORD your God.
— Leviticus 18:24-30
“You shall therefore keep all my statutes and all my rules and do them, that the land where I am bringing you to live may not vomit you out. And you shall not walk in the customs of the nation that I am driving out before you, for they did all these things, and therefore I detested them.
— op. cit. 20:22-23
God made it abundantly clear that He judged the nations which preceded Israel in Canaan for their sexual depravity, inclusive of sodomy. He made it abundantly clear that these are universal prohibitions, even if not all nations keep a law against them on the books and enforce it with capital punishment (as the Amorites no doubt wished they had, when their inquity was in full flower and Israel was carrying out God’s judgment against them).
Wilken’s contention that “these [anti-sodomy] laws were intended only for Israel and not for Gentiles” is patently false. Laws against the consumption of shellfish were intended only for Israel, as shown above. But were laws against murder intended only for Israel, Todd? Or is that rather how righteous nations which fear God handle man-slaying? What about bestiality? Not verboten outside of Israel, no civil penalties needed today? What about child sacrifice? Just a “peculiar people” thing? As soon as you try to run this program with a sin that lacks social approbation in the Year of Our Lord, 2023, the computer crashes.
MIDDENDORF: Sure. And again, Israel is this… primarily the worshipping community of God, right? His chosen people, through whom the Christ will come. And that chosen worshipping people of God we can connect in some ways to the Church, but we don’t then also take the political, military, cultural dimensions of those people. And, as you said, Israel doesn’t go and impose those on the Canaanites, Amorites, Girgashites, and so on. This is how the people of God, as a united, theological, worshipping, religious, but also judicial, military, political community, lived out their culture in that day in a way that was to be distinct from the nations around them.
This is a subtle swipe at Christian Nationalism. Christians don’t get to be policymakers, you see, much less in pursuit of God-pleasing laws that would squash the ability of sodomites to groom our children. We are to be passive, ruled by whosoever steps into the vacuum that we create by ceding whatever civil and political power we would otherwise have.
Maybe we can have a March for Life™ so that we can look impressive and hold court, and maybe even get photo ops with Jewish celebrities, but that’s as close to the halls of power as Christians are permitted to come. The “horrors” of the Holy Roman Empire and the conversion and civilization of third-world nations through colonialism must never again be allowed to occur.
This is how “Christians” speak now. No wonder red-blooded men, distraught at the state of the world, want nothing to do with the false Christ of niceness, the false Christ of deference to evildoers—evildoers whom Wilken and Middendorf seem pleased as punch to run interference for.
The rest of the interview has some true and commendable points, including ones about how all have sinned and deserve damnation, as well as the perils of hypocrisy. This is something modern antinomians are very good at. If nothing else, they certainly recognize that all men are dead in their trespasses and sins, absent Christ. They are very diligent to remark on God’s radical grace toward sinners.
However, seeking to be more merciful than God, they consistently step beyond the warrant of grace to absolve not just coram Deo, but also to abolish the law’s just penalties coram mundo vis-à-vis temporal consequences, which is to say the First Use of the Law.
And that is what you’ll see in the remainder of this interview. I’ve said most of what I had to say already, so I’ll only make sparse interjections from here.
WILKEN: What is the context, turning to Romans chapter one, of Paul’s condemnations?
MIDDENDORF: Right, so there, of course, the great theme of Romans is the righteousness of God. But beginning at verse 18, God’s wrath is coming upon all un-righteousness. So when we get to the Gospel, of course, the righteousness of God is given to us in Christ, but we’re not there from Romans 1:18 all the way through 3:20.
And so when Paul begins in verse 18, talking about God’s wrath on Unrighteousness, he starts without quoting the Old Testament laws and, I think, just looks at creation, and then does kind of this tiered step of: people exchange what is evident to them in creation, and then God gave them over, or let them go down the path they have chosen. Sort of His tolerant will.
So the first one, though, is that a creator should be obvious, Paul says. His invisible qualities and eternal power should be clearly seen in what’s been made. So people should worship, glorify, give thanks to Him. Instead, the first exchange, is they turn to worship created things instead.
Now, we [unintelligible] I think, of idolatry, but our culture is pretty immersed in worshipping, created things instead of the Creator as well. Then the second exchange is what we’re focused on here: that God gave them over to dishonorable passions. The females exchanged the natural use of a male, and males likewise exchanged the sexual interaction with female for male-in-male, it’s quite explicit there. And again, I go back to sort of what I started with. Paul, I think, asserts you don’t need the revealed word of God to recognize a creator. You don’t need the revealed word of God in Leviticus 20 or somewhere else to realize that male-female sexual activity is the way God designed it.
So people usually translate that “contrary to nature” there in verse 26 of Romans 1. I wish I had translated that “contrary to design”. So again, just looking at anatomy male-female is… kind of seems the way things were put together. And again, with the human species procreation should tell us that male-female produces offspring, therefore, that is how the Designer, the Creator, intended. So to engage in sexual conduct contrary to that is contrary to the design God put into His creation.
So what might seem “natural” to some people—that’s a tricky word in our culture—is not the natural way that God intends for sexual activity to take place. And again, God allows people to do that. You got this kind of permissive will of God. But we got one more step to go, which we’ll get to in a minute.
WILKEN: Does Paul single out homosexuality among the other sins? He’s listed there in Romans one versus 26 and 27.
MIDDENDORF: In a sense, I think he’s pretty explicit about it. But on the other hand, this is all kind of a setup. So when you get to Romans 1:28 to 32, the third people exchanged/God gave them over, we get, you know, a list of sins that I would think anybody looking at those would have to admit they’ve done any number of them, right? You get things like greed, gossiping, slandering, being puffed up, boastful, disobeying parents. So as he kind of engages in this tiered three-part structure, he’s actually heading toward a recognition that all of these are contrary to God’s decree. All of them deserve death. And the clearest example of that is when he gets into what we call our chapter two, he’s “let’s stop talking about they and them. Let’s start talking about you singular. And you’ve done some of those things too, so you likewise are under the same punishment from God that idolaters and those who engage in homosexual activity also deserve.”
WILKEN: How should we understand in particular verses 28 through 32, where this list is assembled, and then it is capped off with that? They know these are contrary to God’s will. They do them. They approve of them. They deserve death.
MIDDENDORF: And again, I would come to that “DOING” these things. So this is engaging in the activity. Particularly there are many different interpretations of Romans 1:26 to 27, but what Paul is talking about is the activity of same sex sexual activity. But then he’s also talking about all these activities, that these actions are contrary to the will of God. And he is using idolatry and same-sex sexual activity to get to this point where he really wants all of us to realize what he started with in Romans 1:18: God’s wrath is coming against every ungodliness and unrighteousness. And eventually he’s gonna want us to conclude, using the Old Testament: no one’s righteous, not even one.
So this is just a great leveler. He might be trying to set up us to be condemning other people, but as he’ll get into chapter two, when we do that, and we get to this list, we realize that we too have acted contrary to the Creator’s will and design for our lives in so many different ways that mistreat each other and even ourselves. And so that if we’re gonna want a scorekeeper God, we’re all under His wrath that is coming, and we all then deserve death equally.
And yet while Christians can agree that Paul argues that we all deserve death from God, we also should recognize that Paul argues that there is a place for death as meted out by governing authorities. Same book of Romans, chapter 13.
WILKEN: So just to summarize at this point, if we view the context of Romans chapter one, and understand it as an argument that Paul is building or, you said, a setup that he is building in order to bring everyone under the condemnation and wrath of God altogether, without excuse, then the citation of homosexuality—likewise condemned with all these other sins—does not single it out as some sort of sin, SPECIALLY deserving death.
The matter of a sodomite’s standing before God (coram Deo, again) and the question of a sodomite’s standing before a just civil magistrate (coram mundo, again) are related but distinct questions. In this interview, Wilken and Middendorf do nothing to distinguish those matters, and in fact obfuscate that distinction repeatedly.
Amongst sinners before God, it’s hard to argue that a man who murdered his brother in cold blood because he knew he could get away with it is especially deserving of death, compared to a man who hated his brother to the core of his being, but knew he could not get away with it and so held back his hand because the law acted as a curb. In the coram Deo sense, sure, Wilken is essentially correct.
But amongst sinners before the magistrate, the one man in the lineup who did in fact and in deed murder his brother is especially deserving of death compared to the six brother-haters who have never raised a fist against anyone and are just there for identification. In the coram mundo sense, Wilken is dead wrong.
But again, no attempt is made in this entire interview to mark that distinction. The distinction is not even assumed. It seems conflated and muddled in the mind of host and guest alike.
MIDDENDORF: Exactly. So he is pointing it out, but not in that sense. You said it well. By the end of Romans 1:32, and again, if you start reading into chapter two versus one to five, his point is he wants you singular, that is, every “you” to realize we’ve all acted contrary. And whenever we start judging others (and I think this is what he’s doing rhetorically) “yeah we can judge those idolaters, they carve statues and worship created things. Yeah we could condemn those who engage in same-sex sexual activity. Yeah…” Oh boy, this list, this starts to hit closer to home. And then in chapter two, verse one to five, I think every individual is to recognize if we’re gonna play scorekeeper God and start condemning others, we actually are judging and condemning ourselves, because we have done many of those things in the list that he has in verses 28 through 31.
WILKEN: Where else does the New Testament address homosexuality, Doctor Middendorf?
MIDDENDORF: The usual place you’d go is 1st Corinthians 6, where he has, again, more disputed terms of exactly what they mean.
“Disputed terms”? Unreal. Yes, these terms are disputed—by those who want to Christianize sodomy.
Otherwise, it’s pretty well established that arsenokoitai (rendered “abusers of themselves with mankind” in the AV; i.e., sodomites) and malakoi (“effeminate” in the AV; “catamites”) are terms which are differentiated in accordance with what actually goes on in a homosexual tryst—it need not be spelled out further. In the ESV these distinct terms are combined and rendered as “men who practice homosexuality.”
MIDDENDORF: Again, this is why I think in addressing this issue, we should NOT use the Old Testament. There’s all sorts of difficulties in simplistically applying what applied to ancient Israel to us.
“We should NOT use the Old Testament” has to be the most antinomian phrase of all time. Marcion laughs from Hell.
MIDDENDORF: And again, 1 Corinthians 6, the terms in Greek are a little more complicated. It seems like he there too is condemning homosexual offenders, is the way the one Greek word is sometimes translated.
I’m not sure what Middendorf is referring to here, but there is the school of thought that only aggravated sodomy (that is, sodomitic rape) is condemned in Scripture, which is argued from arsenokoitai if I recall correctly. I’m guessing that’s not Middendorf’s stance, but his phrasing of this (“homosexual offenders”) makes me wonder if that’s what he has in mind. Perhaps he has in mind the offense of sodomy generally though.
MIDDENDORF: But again, in that context, if you read 1st Corinthians 9 and 10, his argument is much like Romans 1:18 to 3:20, but much more brief, that the unrighteous are out of the Kingdom of God. And if we’re gonna apply that standard, we’re ALL out. Because, again, no one righteous, not even one. But then, in verse eleven, God “righteouses” you. God sanctifies, or “holies” you in and through Christ and by His Spirit. So in much briefer form, 1 Corinthians 6, 9, and 10, are excluding all of us. Again, greed, and other “less serious” sins—in our view, perhaps—are included, but in a way that tend to get us all to turn away from any idea of self-righteousness and realize that on our own, we’re out of God’s kingdom so that we can again receive the grace that “righteouses” us in and through Christ. And positively, again, I think you can go to Matthew 19. I often get “Jesus didn’t say anything about homosexuality.” Fair enough, in a direct way, that’s true. But there He, again, is quoting Genesis one and two, and that’s where you get the Creator’s design for sexual activity. And Jesus, you know, at the beginning, He made a male and female and joined them together. The two become one flesh. They produce offspring. They’re fruitful, multiply, fill the Earth. So that, in a positive way, is Jesus reinforcing Genesis one and two. And this is the way the Creator designs sexual activity to take place for procreation, for fulfilling His will for husband and wife in marriage.
WILKEN: So when Paul teaches that homosexuality and many other sins deserve death, in Romans, one, how should this be applied?
MIDDENDORF: A recognition, Romans 3:19-20, that through the law, we become conscious and recognize our own sin. So I mean, Romans 6:23, the wages of sin is death. No one is righteous, not even one. Ezekiel 18, “the soul that sins will die.” It doesn’t say the soul that does “bad” sins or “sexual” sins or “idolatrous” sins. So what Paul is doing in Romans 1:18 to 3:20, is again trying to strive for all of us to recognize that if we’re gonna stand before God based on our conduct in thought, word, and deed, we’re all gonna get death from God. Now, you could say again, this is the death that came into the world when Adam and Eve ate the fruit. On the day you eat of it, you will die. So there’s a spiritual death, separation from God. But I think Paul is, is ultimately heading toward standing before God. And there he wants to say that every mouth is silence. The whole world is held accountable. And he wants us to recognize our sin, our unrighteousness, so that we can all realize we equally need the Gospel that he begins to unpack in chapters three, verse 21, and following, that this righteousness of God, that we need to stand before him can be given to us apart from any of our works and deeds which all deserve death, separation from God.
WILKEN: Finally, how should we respond when someone says that God commanded the killing of homosexuals in the Bible?
We should respond by explaining, much as Middendorf did actually do in this interview, that God created the woman for the man. “Adam and Eve, not Adam and Steve” is good theology.
We should go further and explain that it is an affront to the Creator-of-all-that-is to abuse our generative organs, through which come our procreative gifts of actual new life, by twisting them to abominable ends at the encouragement of demons.
We should explain that sodomy is a socially corrosive agent, and one of the strongest on record. It mars and defaces what is a blessing to man, and dissolves social bonds into a cannibalistic orgy of meat. It causes man to view men as demons view men: vessels to be used for carnal pleasure and then disposed of in as grotesque a fashion possible, all for spectacle.
We should explain that Hell is real, and that the power of sodomy to twist men toward hatred of their Creator (see, hey look at that, Romans 1) is unparalleled and drags men to eternal death.
We should explain that the duty of a just magistrate is to banish such anti-Christ practices (which also include sorcery, bestiality, child sacrifice, and others given the same death penalty by God in Israel) from society for the temporal and eternal sake of his people.
If we believe the Scriptures, sodomy literally pollutes the land, and brings curses up to and including a people’s removal from the face of the earth by God’s chosen instruments (whether a cosmic airburst or an invading army). Any just magistrate wants to prevent such calamities for his people. The problem is that modern semi-Marcionites don’t believe the Scriptures.
MIDDENDORF: Why would we take into hand that single one? So I think that’s totally selectively pulling something out of the Old Testament, which is not to be, again, simplistically equated with our New Testament era.
Say it with me: “The problem is that modern semi-Marcionites…”
MIDDENDORF: But similarly, as you have to read the whole argument, read Romans 1:18, at least through the end of the chapter. Get into chapter two, and realize that this is not for humans to take into our hands, but this is what’s coming from God on Judgment Day.
Romans 13 says there is a context in which humans should take things into their hands.
MIDDENDORF: Or, I suppose, if we die and stand before Him, this is what is on its way apart from the righteousness that’s ours through faith. So I would like to move up to Chapter twelve, where Paul quotes Deuteronomy, that “vengeance is mine, says the Lord, I will repay.” So He doesn’t call us to take this into our own hands in the New Testament era.
In “the New Testament Era” we still have human government. That government is given the sword by God to be a terror to bad conduct. What conduct is bad enough to merit the sword?
This is the question wise rulers must grapple with. And wise rulers grapple with this question with a Bible in hand.
MIDDENDORF: Instead, in chapter twelve, He calls Christians to live at peace with everyone, to overcome evil with good, and strive then to be a witness to God. Let our light shine before others, that they would see our good works. Give glory to our Father in Heaven, that we would strive to live out Romans twelve in our culture, as the first century Roman Christians were called to do as well, amidst the idolatry and the rampant immoral sexual activity, and the other evil deeds going on in their culture, that strive to again live at peace, to overcome evil with good, and to let that witness permeate the culture in a positive way.
Not in selectively pulling out certain sins and taking into hand to carry out God’s judgment on my behalf.
No one is remotely advocating vigilantism. That’s a straw man.
MIDDENDORF: If anyone’s doing that, in Romans 13 it would be the government, but I don’t think that would be applicable to the sin of homosexual behavior in any case, as the government shouldn’t be, perhaps, punishing greed or disobeying parents or anything like that. So it’s just a selective pulling out of context and not understanding where Paul’s argument is going throughout that section of Romans.
Funny that Middendorf should give the example of disobeying one’s parents when listing things the government shouldn’t be punishing. Is not all government derived from the 4th Commandment? Is not the house-father the original governor?
Luther recognizes the 4th Commandment as being the source of all temporal authority and civil government as proceeding from disparate fathers as they cooperate and delegate in the governance of their households. In other words, civil government’s sword is delegated from fathers specifically and God ultimately.
As Luther points out in the Large Catechism, the civil government does in fact punish disobedient children, as when they have outgrown their parents and their evil spills out from the home, the magistrate must intervene:
Whence come so many knaves that must daily be hanged, beheaded, broken upon the wheel, but from disobedience [to parents], because they will not submit to discipline in kindness, so that, by the punishment of God, they bring it about that we behold their misfortune and grief? For it seldom happens that such perverse people die a natural or timely death.
So, too, the government does punish greed. While it may not send in the goon squad, Minority Report-style, for someone with a greed problem in the heart, when greed conceives and bears the fruit of theft, the just magistrate is obligated to step in.
In the same way, a man’s disordered lust for another man is beyond the scope of the civil authorities. But actual sodomy, in view of two or three witnesses? That certainly is within the purview of a just ruler to charge, try, and convict — to whatever lawful end.
If this interview is emblematic of the theology of the 2023 LCMS, then the denomination is finished, absent a firm and decisive movement from laity and clergy alike to change course. Members of Synod and members of LCMS congregations must take every opportunity to ask President Harrison pointed questions. Here is a starter pack:
Is your LCMS embarrassed by God’s laws as given in the Pentateuch? What are we doing to ensure that our students at the Concordias are taught rightly about the Law? The complaints of pastors emerging from seminary as soft antinomians must have reached your ears. What is Synod doing to ensure that the First and Third Uses are rightly and comprehensively taught alongside the Second? Will your LCMS undermine the sodomy laws of the nation of Uganda in the eyes of its people as Synod assists in catechesis for the LCU?
With lawlessness on an exponential uptick, portending developments both international and domestic which disrupt the lives of the flock in ways even more significant than COVID, there is precious little time for the LCMS to get this right.
May God have mercy on our people. May He have mercy on His people. Amen.
When PTM was right, he was really right. God bless him for being a watchman on the wall at a critical time. And He has. Requiescas in pace, Paule.
Don’t go believing the latecomers who tell you that JBC started the Great Sanctification Debate of 2012-2016 (or has it ended yet?); PTM was waaaaaay ahead on that. And so was HRC—Master Stewardship, not Madam Secretary. Few know this.
I was just in a conversation with two younger men who were seriously saying that listening to the audio pornography and vile filth of Eminem is appropriate for Christians. One suggested that because only what comes out of a man is what makes him sinful that it matters not what he sees, or hears, as a Christian. These two young men are sadly typical of a poorly formed understanding of the life of good works to which we are called as Christians that seems pandemic in the Christian Church, where apparently some can wax eloquent about how they are striving to be faithful to God’s Word, but then turn right around and wallow in the mire and squalor of sin. This all the more underscores for me the point that we have a serious lack of emphasis on sanctification in our beloved Lutheran church. There is much teaching that is not being done, that must done. Simply repeating formulas and phrases about justification is not teaching and preaching the whole counsel of God. Comforting people with the Gospel when there is no genuine repentance for sin is doing them a disservice. There is a serious “short circuit” here that we need to be mindful of. Let this be clear. Listening to the “music” of swine such as Eminem is sinful and willfully choosing to listen to it is sin that drives out the Holy Spirit. This is deadly serious business. Deadly. Serious.
Pastors who wash their hands of this responsibility claiming that they want to avoid interjecting law into their sermons when they have preached the Gospel are simply shirking their duty as preachers and are being unfaithful to God’s Word.
We have done such a fine job explaining that we are not saved by works that we have, I fear, neglected to urge the faithful to lives of good works as faithfully and clearly as we should. This should not be so among us brethren.
I’m growing increasingly concerned that with the necessary distinction between faith and works that we must always maintain, we Lutherans are tempted to speak of good works and the life of sanctification in such a way as to either minimize it, or worse yet, neglect it. I read sermons and hear comments that give me the impression that some Lutherans think that good works are something that “just happen” on some sort of a spiritual auto-pilot. Concern over a person believing their works are meritorious has led to what borders on paranoia to the point that good works are simply not taught or discussed as they should be. It seems some have forgotten that in fact we do confess three uses of the law, not just a first or second use.
The Apostle, St. Paul, never ceases to urge good works on his listeners and readers. I recall a conversation once with a person who should know better telling me that the exhortations to good works and lengthy discussions of sanctification we find in the New Testament are not a model at all for preaching, since Paul is not “preaching” but rather writing a letter. This is not a good thing.
Two years ago an article appeared that put matters well and sounded a very important word of warning and caution. It is by Professor Kurt E. Marquart of Concordia Theological Seminary in Fort Wayne, Indiana. I strongly encourage you to give it your most serious attention.
Antinomian Aversion to Sanctification?
An emerited brother writes that he is disturbed by a kind of preaching that avoids sanctification and “seemingly questions the Formula of Concord . . . about the Third Use of the Law.” The odd thing is that this attitude, he writes, is found among would-be confessional pastors, even though it is really akin to the antinomianism of “Seminex”! He asks, “How can one read the Scriptures over and over and not see how much and how often our Lord (in the Gospels) and the Apostles (in the Epistles) call for Christian sanctification, crucifying the flesh, putting down the old man and putting on the new man, abounding in the work of the Lord, provoking to love and good works, being fruitful . . . ?”
I really have no idea where the anti-sanctification bias comes from. Perhaps it is a knee-jerk over-reaction to “Evangelicalism”: since they stress practical guidance for daily living, we should not! Should we not rather give even more and better practical guidance, just because we distinguish clearly between Law and Gospel? Especially given our anti-sacramental environment, it is of course highly necessary to stress the holy means of grace in our preaching. But we must beware of creating a kind of clericalist caricature that gives the impression that the whole point of the Christian life is to be constantly taking in preaching, absolution and Holy Communion-while ordinary daily life and callings are just humdrum time-fillers in between! That would be like saying that we live to eat, rather than eating to live. The real point of our constant feeding by faith, on the Bread of Life, is that we might gain an ever-firmer hold of Heaven-and meanwhile become ever more useful on earth! We have, after all, been “created in Christ Jesus unto good works, which God hath before ordained that we should walk in them” (Eph. 2:10). Cars, too, are not made to be fueled and oiled forever at service-stations. Rather, they are serviced in order that they might yield useful mileage in getting us where we need to go. Real good works before God are not showy, sanctimonious pomp and circumstance, or liturgical falderal in church, but, for example, “when a poor servant girl takes care of a little child or faithfully does what she is told” (Large Catechism, Ten Commandments, par. 314, Kolb-Wengert, pg. 428).
The royal priesthood of believers needs to recover their sense of joy and high privilege in their daily service to God (1 Pet. 2:9). The “living sacrifice” of bodies, according to their various callings, is the Christian’s “reasonable service” or God-pleasing worship, to which St. Paul exhorts the Romans “by the mercies of God” (Rom. 12:1), which he had set out so forcefully in the preceding eleven chapters! Or, as St. James puts it: “Pure religion and undefiled before God and the Father is this, to visit the fatherless and widows in their affliction, and to keep himself unspotted from the world” (1:27). Liberal churches tend to stress the one, and conservatives one the other, but the Lord would have us do both!
Antinomianism appeals particularly to the Lutheran flesh. But it cannot claim the great Reformer as patron. On the contrary, he writes:
“That is what my Antinomians, too, are doing today, who are preaching beautifully and (as I cannot but think) with real sincerity about Christ’s grace, about the forgiveness of sin and whatever else can be said about the doctrine of redemption. But they flee s if t were the very devil the consequence that they should tell the people about the third article, of sanctification, that is, of new life in Christ. They think one should not frighten or trouble the people, but rather always preach comfortingly about grace and the forgiveness of sins in Christ, and under no circumstance use these or similar words, “Listen! You want to be a Christian and at the same time remain an adulterer, a whoremonger, a drunken swine, arrogant, covetous, a usurer, envious, vindictive, malicious, etc.!” Instead they say, “Listen! Though you are an adultery, a wordmonger, a miser, or other kind of sinner, if you but believe, you are saved, and you need not fear the law. Christ has fulfilled it all! . . . They may be fine Easter preachers, but they are very poor Pentecost preachers, for they do not preach… “about the sanctification by the Holy Spirit,” but solely about the redemption of Jesus Christ, although Christ (whom they extol so highly, and rightly so) is Christ, that is, He has purchased redemption from sin and death so that the Holy Spirit might transform us out of the old Adam into new men . . . Christ did not earn only gratia, grace, for us, but also donum, “the gift of the Holy Spirit,” so that we might have not only forgiveness of, but also cessation of, sin. Now he who does not abstain fro sin, but persists in his evil life, must have a different Christ, that of the Antinomians; the real Christ is not there, even if all the angels would cry, “Christ! Christ!” He must be damned with this, his new Christ (On the Council and the Church, Luther’s Works, 41:113-114).
Where are the “practical and clear sermons,” which according to the Apology “hold an audience” (XXIV, 50, p. 267). Apology XV, 42-44 (p. 229) explains:
“The chief worship of God is to preach the Gospel…in our churches all the sermons deal with topics like these: repentance, fear of God, faith in Christ, the righteousness of faith, prayer . . . the cross, respect for the magistrates and all civil orders, the distinction between the kingdom of Christ (the spiritual kingdom) and political affairs, marriage, the education and instruction of children, chastity, and all the works of love.”
Grant, we beseech Thee, Almighty God, unto Thy Church Thy Holy Spirit, and the wisdom which cometh down from above, that Thy Word, as becometh it, may not be bound, but have free course and be preached to the joy and edifying of Christ’s holy people, that I steadfast faith we may serve Thee, and in the confession of Thy Name abide unto the end: through Jesus Christ, Thy Son, our Lord. Amen.