Fort Wayne Continues To Delude LCMS About Walther and Voter Supremacy

By: Rev. Jack Cascione

 

The October 2003 issue of “For The Life Of the World,” published by Concordia Theological Seminary, Fort Wayne , Indiana , is nothing more than a polished distortion and misrepresentation of C. F. W. Walther’s contribution to the LCMS.

They publish 12 glowing pages about Walther’s achievements without mentioning his struggle to promote voters’ assemblies, voter supremacy, congregational self-government, congregational autonomy, the authority of the congregation, nor do they list the titles of his most significant books, “Church and Ministry,” “The True Visible Church On Earth,” and the “The Form of a Christian Congregation.”

Yes, they praise Walther for his “Law and Gospel,” but Walther was only quoting Luther.

Talking about Walther without describing the struggle for congregational self-government in America is like talking about Luther without mentioning the abuses of the Pope and the Catholic Church.

In 2001, the LCMS Convention adopted Resolution 7-17A “To Affirm Synod’s Official Position on Church and Ministry.” By a 73% majority, the Convention voted that Walther’s “Church and Ministry” continues to be the official position of the LCMS.

Why doesn’t Fort Wayne want to teach and promote what Walther taught and promoted?

Two of the four writers of articles in the Oct. 2003 issue, have earned doctorates in history but fail to mention Walther’s most significant work.  How could they, when the Fort Wayne Faculty voted not to answer if it agreed with the following quotations from Walther in April of 2000?

“Finally the congregation is represented as the SUPREME TRIBUNAL, Matt.18:15-18....” (Form of the Christian Congregation, C.F.W Walther, CPH, St. Louis, 1989, p.24)

 

“In public church affairs nothing should be concluded without the vote and consent of the congregation.” (Form of the Christian Congregation, C.F.W Walther, CPH, St. Louis, 1989, p.48)

Fort Wayne ’s magazine makes no mention of Walther’s blind submission to the tyrannical Romanist, Martin Stephan, who claimed that the pastor was the head of the congregation and the chief mediator of the Means of Grace.

There was no mention of Walther’s astonishing wakening to his error and conversion to become the most articulate proponent of congregational self-government since Luther.

There was no mention of Walther’s victory at the Altenburg , Missouri Debate on April 15 and 20, 1841.  It was there Walther convinced the German colonists that the Bible gave them the authority to form their own congregations, call and ordain their own pastors, and govern their own congregations, which led to the creation of the LCMS.

Walther considered his victory at Altenburg the most significant event in Lutheranism since 1519.  

Walther writes: “I do not hesitate to say that as important as the Leipzig Debate of 1519 was for the cause of the Reformation, so important was the Altenburg Debate for the development of the polity of the Lutheran Church of the West.” (Mundinger, “Government in Missouri” CPH, St. Louis, p. 114)

There was no mention that Walther was the first to actually lead a Lutheran Church body to adopt Luther’s revolutionary document, “That a Christian Assembly or Congregation Has the Right and Power to Judge all Teaching and to Call, Appoint, and Dismiss Teachers, Established and Proven by Scripture” as the official structure for its congregations.  (Luther’s Works Vol. 39:305-314)

Why were Walther’s most significant contributions left out of Fort Wayne ’s publication that claims to pay homage to Walther?

The answer is, that most of the faculty at Fort Wayne , including its president, are opposed to Walther’s teaching about congregational self-government and falsely believe that the pastor is equal to or is a higher authority than the Voters’ Assembly.

Left to their own desires the Fort Wayne faculty would lead the LCMS into the same kind of Episcopal Hierarchy now practiced in the ELCA.

Am I wrong?  Then let President Wenthe and the Faculty publish that they whole-heartedly agree with and teach the following quotations from Walther’s “Church and Ministry” adopted by the 2001 Convention:

“For when our Savior Christ says, ‘Tell it to the church,’ He by these words commands the church [local congregation] to be the supreme judge.  From this it follows that not only one state, namely that of the bishops, but also other pious and learned persons from all states are to be appointed as judges and have decisive votes.”  (“Church and Ministry" C.F.W. Walther, 1851, CPH 1987, page 343)

“This is to be understood in the sense not only that the church has the power to excommunicate impenitent sinners but also that the congregation has the supreme authority in all church matters such as reproof, church discipline, divisions, judging doctrine, and appointing pastors, to mention only these things” ("Church and Ministry." C.F.W. Walther, 1851, CPH 1987, page 343)

“For when a certain school principal in Brunswick held an erroneous doctrine and among other things also rejected the Formula of Concord, Chemnitz presented the matter to the whole congregation as to the final and supreme judge.” ("Church and Ministry" C.F.W. Walther, 1851, CPH 1987, Page 343)

President Wenthe will never publicly support the above statements as the correct practice for all LCMS congregations because he does not agree with Walther’s congregational polity for the LCMS.  Wenthe should resign.

While Fort Wayne continues to misrepresent Walther’s “Church and Ministry” to the LCMS, we appreciate President John Johnson’s approval for The Fifth National Free Conference on C. F. W. Walther to be held on its campus on Nov. 7-8, 2003,

WALTHER CONFERENCE INFORMATION

October  23, 2003