Posted on 07/14/2008 7:43:51 AM PDT by SJackson
Officials of the declining 4.9 million Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA) have revealed what Gods priorities are in the U.S. presidential campaign. And remarkably, the divine priorities was very akin to the Democratic Partys priorities, if not further to the left.
Presiding Bishop Mark Hanson, with three other ELCA officials generously wrote both presidential candidates a public letter with the divine guidance. Although famed Protestant Reformer Martin Luther championed the Bible as Gods exclusive revelation, modern ELCA activists have located more useful counsel in the secular welfare state and environmental agenda.
The Scriptures are clear about God's concern for and solidarity with people living in poverty and on the margins of society, the Lutherans portentously intoned in the letter. They are equally clear that God calls us to be stewards of creation. We bring into the public square a commitment to service for the well-being of all of God's children and a faith conviction that government is an important catalyst in God's work of restoring peace, achieving economic justice and protecting the environment.
Observe that the Lutherans cite government as an important catalyst in Gods work. In fact, their agenda implies that government is virtually Gods only instrument. The Lutherans want government to abolish poverty, prohibit war, cleanse the environment, engineer egalitarian justice globally, and seemingly usher in The Millennium through additional regulation and taxation. If government can achieve so much, who needs God, much less the church?
Traditionally, Christians have seen the universal church as Gods primary instrument for revealing Himself in the world. Christians have also traditionally attached great importance to marriage, the family, private charity, and a vast array of mediating institutions that sustain human relations and mitigate against injustice and despair. The New Testament describes the state as primarily Gods instrument for temporally punishing or deterring criminality and aggression. But the Religious Left, including the Lutheran prelates, attach messianic importance and powers to the state. Perhaps Caesar is Lord after all?
Just as revealingly, the ELCA officials, duty bound at least briefly to reference the Bible, claim the Scriptures are clear about how to reduce poverty and protect the environment. In fact, the Scriptures offer broad principles, not specific political prescriptions. On issues about which the Scriptures are genuinely clear, such as marriage and human life, the left-wing Lutherans prefer to be silent. They are more comfortable in identifying Divine Providence with the endless expansion of state power.
The persistent poverty in America is a moral scandal and an affront to our nation, the Lutherans bewail. They grimly paint a bleak tableau of scarcity and struggle in America, claiming historically high degrees of economic inequality between the rich and poor, while upward economic mobility is a reality for only one-third of Americans. Indeed, poverty is far higher than in many other developed countries. Working against all this misery requires sustained commitment from our political leaders.
How likely would the Apostles, or Luther, have viewed modern Americas lower income people, most of whom are armed with air conditioned homes, automobiles, cable television and high tech gadgetry, along with modern health care, record life spans and food stuffs from a global market, as desperately poor? Poverty is often a relative term. And by the standards of history, or most of todays world, few in America are genuinely impoverished. Many of Americas lower income people are indeed trapped in a cycle of relative subsistence, thanks partly to government programs that punish initiative, and social pathologies that inhibit advance. Avoiding poverty in America mostly entails finishing high school, shunning drug and alcohol addictions, not having illegitimate children, and avoiding divorce. But the Religious Left, contrary to its own religious traditions, is not interested in shaping personal choices. It prefers the compulsion of state regulation and taxation.
Predictably, the Lutherans want the U.S. government to guarantee a 50 percent reduction in U.S. poverty in 10 years, provide comprehensive health care, i.e. socialized medicine, and create more federally subsidized low income housing. In essence, Gods plan for America is simply expanding the Great Society programs of the 1960s, despite their 40 year track record of locking in rather than reducing poverty.
And naturally, the Lutherans discern that global warming presents a terrible and growing threat to the future of God's creation. They want an 80 percent reduction of greenhouse gas emissions by 2050. The Lutherans prefer not to address how shutting down industry and restricting economic growth will affect the poor. The Lutherans also want to redirect valuable research dollars away from clean coal technology towards the more mythically appealing wind, sun and water energy sources. In other words, the less plausible an energy source, the more funding it deserves.
The God of the Lutherans wants liberalized immigration policies to accommodate all the millions who, unaware of how impoverished and unjust America actually is, still desire to immigrate here. And the divine plan also demands that the U.S. government expend at least $140 billion a year in foreign aid, cancel all foreign debt, increase funding for the United Nations, and advocate fair trade rather than free trade. Coercively redistributing old wealth, rather than encouraging creation of new wealth, is always a supreme moral imperative for unimaginative left-wing clergy.
As to war, the Lutherans confirm that marginalization and desperation, often perpetuated by poverty and hunger, are at the root of most conflicts. If only the U.S. Government would mail more checks to all the worlds aggrieved parties, global peace might be achieved. The ELCA prelates want more U.S. diplomatic pressure on the Iraqi government, increased robust diplomacy to create a viable contiguous Palestinian state, and urgent diplomatic efforts to establish peace in Sudan. Again, U.S. dollars are the key to success. The Lutherans do not offer specific concern about human rights or even religious liberty.
Loving and serving our neighbors -- Lutherans make a difference, the ELCA officials modestly conclude in their letter to John McCain and Barak Obama. Cain. But their manifesto implies that the only love that Lutherans are exhibiting is lobbying for expanded state powers, taxation and spending, with confidence that dollars are the solution to all the worlds ills. Ostensibly, Christians traditionally understand that Mammon ultimately can solve few of mankinds miseries, most of which are spiritual rather than material.
But officials of the shrinking ELCA, in their demands to the presidential candidates, imply they have less confidence in the Gospel than they do in the healing, wonder-working powers of Big Government.
No.
I can’t imagine God as a big fan of Abortion.
The answer is someone’s tagline
God may not be a Republican, but Satan is a Democrat
“I cant imagine God as a big fan of Abortion.”
Ditto. Nor can I imagine God a big fan of gay marriage.
I emailed the Bishop and told him that I was very disappointed in this direction of liberalism. He or someone in the office replied that I would most likely be happier going to the LCMC or WELS... Basically told me to leave if I didn’t like it.
LOL!
Hence their declining membership...
God is a royalist.
Satan is a machine Democrat.
Jer 17:5 (NIV) - This is what the LORD says: “Cursed is the one who trusts in man, who depends on flesh for his strength and whose heart turns away from the LORD.”
So, God is most likely NOT a liberal democrat.
My belief is this: Jesus was concerned about man’s possessions inhibiting his relationship with the Father. I think that He was mostly concerned with a person’s spiritual status, not so much whether they had clothes on their back or not. Now, are we to give? YES, most assuredly so! But, if we forget that man is an eternal being with an eternal destiny, then all we’ve done is make it a little more comfortable until he stumbles into Hell. No favor done there.
The ELCA is more interested in being politically relevant than biblically relevant.
contiguous: Connecting without a break as in "the 48 contiguous states".
Unless I am reading this incorrectly, they are calling for the same thing that Hamas wants. One Palestine from Ocean to River. Islamatization I think.
God doesn’t believe in himself?
If I had to guess, I’d say that God is most likely non-partisan.
I wonder what the ELCA doctrines are about Israel? Probably to a great extent compatible with the writings of Martin Luther:
“Martin Luther’s main works on the Jews were his 60,000-word treatise Von den Juden und Ihren Lügen (On the Jews and Their Lies), and Vom Schem Hamphoras und vom Geschlecht Christi (On the Holy Name and the Lineage of Christ) reprinted five times within his lifetime both written in 1543, three years before his death.
He argued that the Jews were no longer the chosen people, but were “the devil’s people.” They were “base, whoring people, that is, no people of God, and their boast of lineage, circumcision, and law must be accounted as filth.”
The synagogue was a “defiled bride, yes, an incorrigible whore and an evil slut ...” and Jews were full of the “devil’s feces ... which they wallow in like swine.”
He advocated setting synagogues on fire, destroying Jewish prayer books, forbidding rabbis from preaching, seizing Jews’ property and money, smashing up their homes, and ensuring that these “poisonous envenomed worms” be forced into labor or expelled “for all time.”
He also seemed to sanction their murder, writing “We are at fault in not slaying them.”
His contemporary followers, and much later, the Nazis, cited his works in expelling, persecuting, and murdering Jews.
Last August:
“The Simon Wiesenthal Center deplores a resolution passed this weekend at the 10th biennial Assembly of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA) to study the feasibility of a boycott against goods produced in Israeli settlements. This marks the first time a mainline American Protestant church has moved toward a possible boycott of Israel, said Rabbi Abraham Cooper, Associate Dean of the leading Jewish human rights group.”
ping
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.