This continues from Part AG6 (Table of Contents in Part AG1a) in a series presenting Walther's essays to the Western District that supported his theme "That Only Through the Doctrine of the Lutheran Church is All Glory Given to God Alone". — This essay concludes Walther's 3-part teaching on this doctrine. Walther shows us how Election of Grace corroborates the doctrine of Justification. He also was the strongest opponent of any form of Synergism:
Notable Quotes:
20-1 (328): "the vast majority …have never heard of election by grace. They think that one must be most fearful of this doctrine, for many thousands have already fallen into great distress of soul… it is therefore best not to speak of it at all. But this is a great error."
21 (329): "the Savior … says: 'You have not chosen me, but I have chosen you'"
22 (330): "In the first place, the doctrine of justification is confirmed and placed in the right light precisely by the correct presentation of the doctrine of election by grace"
23 (330): "…because the main thing for us has always been the doctrine of justification. …justification will be the sun that shines before us on our path; it will remain the golden thread that runs through all our sermons. But when opponents attack a doctrine, then of course we must defend ourselves, then we must stand up for God's Word and God's honor." [i.e. "All Glory to God"]
23 (330): Opponents "say that the way we present it [Election] is not Lutheran, but Calvinistic…accuse us of being crypto-Calvinists".
24 (331): "if he does not know that he has been pardoned forever, he will always lie there in fear and terror."
25 (332): Calvin "wants to bring them to faith through an irresistible grace, so that no matter how much they resist, He will still force them to believe …but those who are not elect are not meant by the gospel; God does not call them seriously"
26 (333): "Why are we accused of Calvinism?… because we teach that the election of grace is a cause of our salvation [and] because we teach that the cause of election to grace is only twofold, namely, the mercy of God and the most holy merit of Christ"
29 (335): "but He said: I want all men to go to heaven; therefore I will send my Son to die for all, I will call all without exception"
30 (335): "unbelievers do not come to faith as a result of their persistent resistance, not because God did not want to give them faith"
33 (338): "Thus repentance, conversion, faith, justification, sanctification, patience in the cross, perseverance to the end is a realization of election, and not the other way around. [See this 2013 blog.]… rationalistic peddlers [say] 'I have been converted to Christ, I do all kinds of good works, and therefore God has elected me'"
36 (340): "In the seventeenth century the doctrine became established in the Lutheran Church that God did not choose for the sake of faith, but nevertheless in view of faith" [I.e. the erroneous "intuitu fidei"]
37 (342): "If anyone asks: Why are certain persons damned? The answer is: Because of their own fault."
40 (344): Predestination "confirms the article very powerfully, that we are justified and saved without all our works and merits, purely by grace, for Christ's sake alone"
40 (344): "The election of grace is not a general one, like justification, but a particular one, …for the Savior says: 'Many are called, but few are chosen.'"
42 (345): "It is therefore no small thing, but something very important, to make faith the cause of election; for our church calls this a terrible and blasphemous doctrine."
43 (346): "The Formula of Concord speaks of an election of grace in the narrower or proper sense of the word, and not of an election of grace which comprehends in itself the general order of salvation and grace. [This is the talking point in the “Pastoral Conferences” of 1879 and 1880 - see the next 2 blog posts.] … when the Formula of Concord says that the election of grace of which it speaks concerns only the pious, it testifies that it speaks of an election of grace in the proper sense."
48 (350): "to remove the offense which reason takes at this doctrine": "what God has seen in man" (Synergists) or "making God the cause of reprobation" (Calvinists)
49 (351): "the first to teach synergism was Melanchthon." [See 1879 Western, p. 116; Bente, Introduction, p. 129]
50 (352): "…the word: "by grace you have been saved". Every other religion refers man to his goodness, to his good works"
53 (355): Small Catechism: "I cannot believe in Christ Jesus my Lord or come to him by my own reason or strength."
57 (359): "But I should not do as the Turks [Muslims] do, … they think: If I am not to die, I will not die; but if I am to die, I may do as I please, I must die. Their priests tell them: Everything is predestined by God, and everything will happen as God has ordained; therefore, do what you want, nothing can harm you. That is why these people go to war so calmly, because they think: If my hour has come, I must die, I may be in battle or sitting at home; if it has not come, all the cannons in the world may be pointed at me, but I will not die."
60 (361): "we are in no way minded to make God the cause of condemnation (which is not really in God, but in sin)"
Now I present my English translation of the full complete essay, with missing portions restored, all emphasized wording retained, and with hyperlinks for reference and navigation:
The 1877, 1879, and now the 1880, Western District essays largely closed the book on the Doctrine of Election. There was much controversy from opposing parties over these essays, even within the Synod. But Walther pointed out the scriptural teaching as opposed to an intrusion of rationalism.
For those that want to dig even deeper into this explosive controversy, we present 3 publications that preceded and followed these Western District essays. Two Pastoral Conferences, held in 1880 (Part AG7a) and 1881 (Part AG7b), were limited to the controversy within the old Missouri Synod, leading to the departure of some professors and pastors to opposition synods. Then we present a short extract from the 1868 Northern District report (Part AG7c) that several LC-MS historians ridiculed, but this was almost certainly Walther's teaching! Lastly (Part AG7d) we call out Prof. Mackenzie's so-called "second error in Walther's citing of Luther".
After all of these in which the subject of Election had been covered, Walther could now return to his original sequence of topics, in the next Part AG8, on the Invocation and Worship of God, or about Prayer.
[See other blog draft for Pastoral Conferences]
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