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Um, I thought this thread was about WELS and LCMS and if they would ever merge. My thought is they would not. As has been said, there are just enough differences that neither are willing to move on.
Personally, I would prefer to see us talking with WELS than ELCA.
Oh, I find there are plenty of moderates in the LCMS. They may lean toward conservative, but there are many there.
President Keischnick is considered a "moderate."
What do you consider a moderate? I've seen moderate, conservative, liberal and traditional bantered around so much that the designations are getting blurred.Um, I thought this thread was about WELS and LCMS and if they would ever merge. My thought is they would not. As has been said, there are just enough differences that neither are willing to move on.
Personally, I would prefer to see us talking with WELS than ELCA.
Oh, I find there are plenty of moderates in the LCMS. They may lean toward conservative, but there are many there.
I agree that the terms are getting blurred or changed. I am waiting for DaRev to come back and hear how he defines them as he said above that the moderates lean towards the liberal side.
To me, a moderate is in the middle. Some leaning liberal and some leaning conservative. Apparently, we have more terms to describe those in the middle. That is probably a good thing as it would describe those in the middle better.
I agree that there is polarization, yet I see many more who are somewhere in the middle. Maybe that is because of where I live and have lived.
And there is a difference in the synod between "confessional" and "conservative."
One of the problems in the LCMS over the past 20 years is that the referent for "confessional" has changed. Now some claim that to be "confessional" it is not enough to adhere to the BoC as the correct exposition of Scripture; now there are things like "no women voters", no one assists the pastor at any time, no lay readers", absolute adherence to the hymnal order of service, etc., which may be good, but may go beyond the scope of confessional subscription.
Hmmm. I consider myself confessional.And I would define those who fit what you listed above as "conservatives". Those who hold to the extreme of those things would be "ultra-conservatives" or even reactionaries to an extent.
Oh, two other things.
Lay readers are not normally used because they were not called to proclaim God's Word in worship.
It is just my opinion, but it is like being an electrician and telling the house owner that he can help do the electricians job so that he may feel more apart of the experience.
You hire a pastor to conduct the service, not to have others do some of it for him.
And one thing that just makes me different from probably 99% of those here on the board, I do not believe that men or women have the right to vote on doctrine. No one votes on what God says or doesn't say. Either he said it, and it is practiced, or he didn't say it and the congregation doesn't practice it.
Let the voters decide on non-doctrinal things and let them judge their pastor by how much he submits to God's word.
I would want the pastor to take control over worship.Elders in my church have been reading the lessons for as long as I can remember, but recently, teenagers (male & female) of a member family read the lessons (at the request of their parents) and there was quite the backlash from some of our members.
What say you?
I would want the pastor to take control over worship.
He is in charge of the worship, not the elders or the other congregants.
[FONT="Book Antiqua"][FONT="Book Antiqua"]Another interesting point in what we are learning from Luther's writting was that Pastors were selected from the ELDERS. The elders were educated in the faith and were then selected to become pastors. Today, we have it in place where if you feel called into the ministry, then you take it upon yourself to become a pastor.
Not so in Luther's day. A man had to prove himself blameless and worthy of the call.
The typical self proclaiming "confessional" does not support contemporary worship, desires the Sacrament every Sunday, has a high view of Baptism (in that delaying baptism is looked down upon), has a liturgical worship, finds a pastor with a strong law/gospel message, believes in private c&a .... and ... um .... thats all I can think of.
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