An Announcement from the Evangelical Lutheran Diocese of North America
   [Please feel free to forward to anyone you wish.]

Over the past several weeks, Internet speculation has increased over the 
publication of the Evangelical Lutheran Diocese of North America’s 
(http://eldona.org) recently adopted “Theses on the Article of Justification.” 
Very simply, the Theses were unanimously adopted by the diocese on August 29, 
2013, but, as is only fitting, we chose to postpone their publication until 
such time as we received an official response to the approved form of the 
document from the Association of Confessional Lutheran Churches (with which the 
diocese has been in fellowship for the past several years). It was also hoped 
to have a total web site overhaul completed by the date of release but, having 
now received a formal response from the ACLC (which does not approve these 
theses as written and will continue in their discussion of them with us), the 
diocese has chosen to publish the theses before the web site redesign is 
completed. Thus, the URL given for the document will change, but be assured 
that it will be featured prominently along with previous statements, The Niles 
Theses and The Malone Theses on our redesigned web site.

A few comments are in order before we get to the details of acquiring these new 
ELDoNA theses.

We realize that, sadly, some people have already begun to react to a document 
they haven’t read, based on their preexisting feelings toward the diocese or 
their own assumptions about the meaning(s) of “Objective Justification.” We 
will not even attempt to engage those who refuse to allow their opinions to be 
governed by the facts and regulated by the Holy Scriptures. But for those of a 
more humble and pious bent, we will make a few observations:

        •       It is false to say that the rejection of a Waltherian/Pieperian 
formulation of “Objective Justification” makes man a contributor to his own 
salvation, as if all that needed to be done were not accomplished through the 
work of Christ. Those who reject “Objective Justification” as defined by 
Walther and Pieper do not hold to any sort of Calvinistic “Limited Atonement.” 
The pastors of the ELDoNA confess that Christ is the atoning sacrifice not only 
for our sins, but for the sins of the whole world, even those who are 
ultimately in Hell for all eternity.

        •       Similarly, it is false to assert that holding such a position 
requires one to have his own faith as the object of his faith. Indeed, this 
same thing has also been asserted against “Objective Justification,” since the 
final difference between those in Heaven and those in Hell (for either 
position) is a matter of whether or not the benefit of Christ’s sacrifice has 
been received through faith. While someone might demonstrate that some 
individual with either position has held such a thing, this is merely a straw 
man used to distract from the substance of either position.

        •       When one says things like, “if this is not true objectively, it 
cannot be applied subjectively,” or “something must exist for it to be given,” 
there are two answers that must be given. The first is that such thinking is 
what led to the development of a “limbo of the fathers,” because anyone who 
died before the crucifixion would have “no objective substance to be applied.” 
The second is that the way Lutherans used to speak actually made it clear that 
there was something “objective” and “substantive” that was the case because of 
Christ’s atonement, but that it was not what Walther and his followers and 
Synodical Conference counterparts taught that it was (and now demand that it 
be). This is addressed in the theses, both with regard to what the atonement 
provided and to how one is to regard a promise made by God (as opposed to one 
made by Man).

        •       Thus, saying that those who hold that Waltherian “Objective 
Justification” is a bad formulation hold to a concept of faith that makes it 
the “trigger” (or “button,” or what have you) to make God justify an 
individual, is absolutely false. A pre-existing word from God (which is not, by 
the way, found anywhere in the Bible, but only supposed by Man, an 
extrapolation from the events of either the crucifixion or resurrection by a 
philosophically driven eisegesis)—declaring all men righteous is by no means 
necessary, as God’s promise connected to the work of Christ is more than 
enough. Faith does not drive justification, but is driven by (given 
through/created by) the atonement and the promise, so that it is exactly what 
Lutherans have always held it to be: the medium through which God’s grace unto 
justification is received.

        •       Some have expressed disappointment that the ELDoNA would have a 
statement of its own as a condition of membership in the diocese. Since not 
everyone who claims Scripture and the Confessions actually holds to them, 
statements have to be adopted from time to time to clarify issues. When such 
statements are accepted, the ELDoNA has been very careful to note that these 
are not new confessions, but the application of Scripture and the Confessions 
to contemporary issues and, thus, subject to modification if a better way to 
say something is found. Indeed, it is for this reason that the 2005 Niles 
Theses were modified at the founding of the diocese in 2006; the substance did 
not change, but a clearer wording was desired.

        •       Note that such a principle is not a matter of having a 
“quatenus subscription” to the statements or theses issued by the diocese, as 
some will claim; there is no matter of viewing these as accepted “insofar as 
they agree with Scripture (or the Confessions),” but they are adopted because 
they are seen as being in full agreement with God’s Word and the Confessions of 
His Church. While the Confessions are subscribed as an unchangeable whole, the 
statements of a particular body are its own possession and, unless adopted by 
wider Christendom, may be clarified by the unanimous agreement of said body. 
The ELDoNA speaks to the issues of the day, but does not intend to write or 
hold “new confessions.”

        •       Some falsely accuse the ELDoNA with a hatred of C. F. W. 
Walther, even postulating that this has driven the diocese to its conclusions 
in this matter. The fact is that the pastors of the ELDoNA have a great 
appreciation for Walther; they simply consider him to have been in error on 
various points. Just as Luther must not be made into some sort of infallible 
demigod, so must Walther not be so treated. Walther accomplished amazing things 
considering both his background in Pietism and his having to try to restore a 
shattered group of immigrants to whom the accusations against their bishop of 
living a scandalous life were the least scandalous part of the deposing of said 
bishop: Walther had to demonstrate to them that they were still a legitimate 
church. Yet, places where he erred or compromised also served to set in motion 
the things that have left the LCMS (and the rest of the old Synodical 
Conference) where it is today—not that such was his intent, nor that he even 
could reasonably be expected to foresee this, but it is what it is.

        •       Thus, too, the ELDoNA has no vendetta against the LCMS, WELS, 
or anyone else. From the outset, the diocese has set itself to be anything but 
a “micro-synod,” that is, a body that considers itself the “legitimate heirs” 
of the body from which it came. While other bodies may live to show themselves 
“right” and live in the shadow of their former affiliations, the ELDoNA has no 
desire to do so. Any speaking to the realities of the theology and practice of 
other bodies is done for the education of the parishioners of ELDoNA pastors 
and the exhortation of those in such bodies who would be faithful. (To date, 
the only document officially speaking to any particular church body’s errors 
was written with regard to the ELCA.)

        •       What the diocese has set forth in this document is exactly what 
was confessed by Lutherans from the very beginning. What is declared in the 
Theses and is demonstrated further in the essay referenced therein, “The 
Forensic Appeal to the Throne of Grace,” is that some have taken up the hay and 
stubble that some Synodical Conference theologians built upon the Scriptural 
teaching concerning Justification and have, thereby, taught a doctrine other 
than that of Scripture and the Confessions.

Concerning the Rev. Paul Rydecki’s Colloquy and the Composition of These Theses:

Some have suggested that these theses were written to facilitate the colloquy 
of the Rev. Paul Rydecki. The diocese exists to proclaim the name of Christ 
Jesus, and to do so in accord with the pattern of sound words we have learned 
from the holy apostles, as expressed in the Christian Book of Concord. The 
diocese was certainly not motivated by a need to prove Rev. Rydecki to be right 
about anything, even as the diocese is not motivated by a need to prove Walther 
wrong about anything. We are motivated, in all things, by the “one thing” that 
is needed, namely, Christ and His Word.

More than this, however, there was no predetermined outcome when the theses 
were assigned for composition: it may well have ended that the one first 
drafting them would end up alienating himself from the diocese or causing a 
division within its membership. While our desire is always to walk in full 
accord with Scripture and the Confessions and, thus, with one another, Bishop 
Heiser does not micromanage those carrying out such assignments. Scholarship is 
to be engaged in in such a way that the truth may prevail, and those called 
upon to present anything to the diocese are to submit their writings with the 
full expectation that correction and admonishment will take place if they are 
in error. (Such has happened in the past, and the rejection of fraternal 
admonishment has led to the termination of membership in the diocese.)

That being the case, it was a joyous occasion when the theses were found to be 
the unanimous teaching of the diocese. It was also a telling occasion because, 
with the pastors involved coming from different backgrounds and attending 
different seminaries at different times, such unanimity would seem unlikely. 
Yet, its existence speaks to what the education is like in the various 
seminaries and what the professors there did or did not stress. Clearly, what 
these theses contain is a reflection both of such emphases and of the 
independent study of the pastors of the diocese during their time in the Office 
of the Holy Ministry before their colloquy.

With no further ado, we supply you with the links both to the “Theses on the 
Article of Justification” and to the essay referenced therein, “The Forensic 
Appeal to the Throne of Grace,” which will provide you with an excellent 
sampling of the evidence from the orthodox Lutheran fathers regarding this 
article of doctrine (especially from the period termed “The Golden Age of 
Lutheran Orthodoxy” by Robert Preus, including the theologian he listed as the 
‘most important’ after Luther and Chemnitz, namely, Johann Gerhard). This 
essay, the theses, and other essays from the continuing discussion of this 
topic will be released in print by Repristination Press 
(http://repristinationpress.com) at a later date.

Link to the Theses: http://tinyurl.com/lwykame

Link to the Essay: http://tinyurl.com/pv29jek



  ________________________________________________________________________
                        The Rev. Eric J. Stefanski
       Member of The Evangelical Lutheran Diocese of North America
      Holy Trinity Ev.-Luth. Church (Unaltered Augsburg Confession)   
               P.O. Box 2612  -  Harrison, Arkansas 72602

  http://HolyTrinityLC.com                               http://ELDoNA.org
  http://AugustanaMinisterium.org                         http://cat41.org
 
               Your confession is not just what you teach,
                    but what you allow to be taught.
  ________________________________________________________________________



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