Ps. 91:11; 103:1
Ps. 91:11; 103:1
This BBC headline is shocking! What is even more shocking is the list of nations that are becoming irreligious: Australia, Austria, Canada, the Czech Republic, Finland, Ireland, the Netherlands, New Zealand and Switzerland. You can see from this list that these are all historically Christian nations. Three are English speaking countries. Some are historically Catholic; some are historically Reformed; and one is historically Lutheran. You can read the article at: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-12811197
How can this be happening? What are the causes? How can the religion of the martyrs waste away to extinction???
How can those who once sang: The Word they still shall let remain Nor any thanks have for it; He’s by our side upon the plain With His good gifts and Spirit. And take they our life, Goods, fame, child, and wife, Though these all be gone, Our vict’ry has been won; The Kingdom ours remaineth, abandon the faith?
The decline of Christianity in these nations did not happen overnight. It began with complacency. It began when people took their Christian heritage for granted. It began when parents and grandparents thought little of passing the faith on to their children.
As a communicator, Rob Bell is a genius. He is the master of the pungent question, the turn-the-picture-upside-down story, and the personal anecdote. Like Harry Emerson Fosdick, the paladin of pulpit liberalism, Rob Bell is a master communicator. Had he set out to defend the biblical doctrine of hell, he could have done so marvelously. He would have done the church a great service. But that is not what he set out to do.
Like Fosdick, Rob Bell cares deeply for people. It comes through in his writings. There is no reason to doubt that Bell wrote this book out of his own personal concern for people who are put off by the doctrine of hell. Had that concern been turned toward a presentation of how the biblical doctrine of hell fits within the larger context of God’s love and justice and the Gospel of Jesus Christ, that would have been a help to untold thousands of Christians and others seeking to understand the Christian faith. But that is not what Bell does in this new book.
Instead, Rob Bell uses his incredible power of literary skill and communication to unravel the Bible’s message and to cast doubt on its teachings."
3. For this very reason, when we follow evangelical practice, we do not discard the Law or make its edges dull through bringing in the Gospel, but we rather preach it with all the more seriousness in its full severity, however, in evangelical fashion.
4. The Law is used in an evangelical way if it is employed solely for the purpose of preparing the soil for the evangelical message (the Gospel) and of submitting a divine norm for the manifestations of the new life that spontaneously arises through the evangelical message.
Relying on the Gospel does not mean that we reject the law. In fact it means that we preach it with earnestness. The Gospel lesson ( Matthew 5:21–37) for this week is a prime example. In his Preface to his Commentary on the Sermon on the Mount, Luther points out that his opponents say, “Christian teaching would have much too hard a time of it if it were loaded down with things like this.” But we understand that Jesus meant exactly what He said in His Sermon on the Mount, “But I say to you that everyone who is angry with his brother will be liable to judgment; whoever insults his brother will be liable to the council; and whoever says, ‘You fool!’ will be liable to the hell of fire."
We along with the Pharisees must come to understand that the mountain of keeping the Law is too great even for those who have the best intentions. We must rely solely and completely on the work of Christ for Salvation. The only solution to the deadliness of Sin is faith in Christ. Without a full and complete proclamation of the Law, we will always be tempted to also avoid the foolishness of the cross.
However When we believe and trust in the sweet message of forgiveness, life and salvation through faith in Christ, we are more than willing to live the new life that has been born anew in us by the working of the Holy Spirit through Word and Sacraments.
Schwan's Propositions on Unevangelical Practice - 1862