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- THIS WE BELIEVE
-
- A Statement of Belief
- of the
- Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod
-
- Copyright (c) 1967 Northwestern Publishing House
-
- Used by permission of Northwestern Publishing House, Milwaukee, WI
-
-
-
-
-
- I. GOD AND HIS REVELATION
-
- 1. We believe that there is only one true God (John 17:3). He has
- made himself known as the Triune God, one God in three persons.
- This is evident from Jesus' command to his disciples to baptize
- "in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy
- Spirit" (Matt. 28:19). Whoever does not worship this God
- worships a false god, a god who does not exist, for Jesus said,
- "He who does not honor the Son does not honor the Father, who
- sent him" (John 5:23).
-
- 2. We believe that God has revealed himself in nature, for "the
- heavens declare the glory of God; the skies proclaim the work
- of his hands" (Ps. 19:1). "For since the creation of the world
- God's invisible qualities--his eternal power and divine
- nature--have been clearly seen, being understood from what has
- been made" (Rom. 1:20). So there is no excuse for the atheist.
- However, we have in nature only a partial revelation of God and
- one that is wholly insufficient for salvation.
-
- 3. We believe that God has given us the full revelation of himself
- in his Son, our Lord Jesus Christ. "No one has ever seen God,
- but God the only Son, who is at the Father's side, has made him
- known" (John 1:18). Particularly has God revealed himself in
- Jesus as the Savior God, who "so loved the world that he gave
- his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not
- perish but have eternal life" (John 3:16).
-
- 4. We believe that God has given the Holy Scriptures to proclaim
- his grace in Christ to man. In the Old Testament God
- repeatedly promised his people a divine Deliverer from sin,
- death and hell. The New Testament proclaims that this promised
- Deliverer has come in the person of Jesus of Nazareth. The
- Scriptures testify of Christ. Jesus himself says of the
- Scriptures that they "testify about me" (John 5:39).
-
- 5. We believe that God gave us the Scriptures through men whom he
- chose, using the language they knew and the style of writing
- they had. He used Moses and the prophets to write the Old
- Testament in Hebrew (some portions in Aramaic) and the
- evangelists and apostles to write the New Testament in Greek.
-
- 6. We believe that in a miraculous way that goes beyond all human
- investigation God the Holy Spirit inspired these men to write
- his Word. These "men spoke from God as they were carried along
- by the Holy Spirit" (2 Pet. 1:21). What they said, was spoken
- "not in words taught us by human wisdom but in words taught by
- the Spirit" (1 Cor. 2:13). Every thought they expressed, every
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- 2
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- word they used was given them by the Holy Spirit by
- inspiration. St. Paul wrote to Timothy: "All Scripture is
- God-breathed" (2 Tim. 3:16). We therefore believe in the
- verbal inspiration of the Scriptures, that is, a word-for-word
- inspiration. This, however, is not to be equated with
- mechanical dictation.
-
- 7. We believe that Scripture is a unified whole, true and without
- error in everything it says, for our Savior said: "The
- scripture cannot be broken" (John 10:35). We believe that it,
- therefore, is the infallible authority and guide for everything
- we believe and do. We believe that it is fully sufficient,
- clearly teaching us all we need to know for salvation, making
- us "wise for salvation through faith in Christ Jesus" (2 Tim.
- 3:15), equipping us for every good work (2 Tim. 3:17). No
- other revelations are to be expected.
-
- 8. We believe and accept Scripture on its own terms, accepting as
- factual history what it presents as history, recognizing a
- metaphor where Scripture itself indicates one, and reading as
- poetry what is evident as such. We believe that Scripture must
- interpret Scripture, clear passages throwing light on those
- less easily understood. We believe that no authority, be it
- man's reason, science or scholarship, may stand in judgment
- over Scripture. Sound scholarship will faithfully search out
- the true meaning of Scripture without presuming to pass
- judgment on it.
-
- 9. We believe that the three ecumenical creeds, the Apostles', the
- Nicene and the Athanasian, as well as the Lutheran Confessions
- as contained in the Book of Concord of 1580 give expression to
- the true doctrine of Scripture. Since the doctrines they
- confess are drawn from Scripture alone, we feel ourselves bound
- to them in our faith and life. Therefore all preaching and
- teaching in our churches and schools must be in harmony with
- these confessions.
-
- 10. We reject any thought that makes only part of Scripture God's
- Word, that allows for the possibility of factual error in
- Scripture, also in so-called nonreligious matters (for example,
- historical, geographical).
-
- 11. We reject all views that fail to acknowledge the Holy
- Scriptures as God's revelation and Word. We likewise reject
- all views that see in them merely a human record of God's
- revelation as he encounters man in history apart from the
- Scriptures, and so a record subject to human imperfections.
-
- 12. We reject the emphasis upon Jesus as the Word of God (John 1:1)
- to the exclusion of the Scriptures as God's Word.
-
- 13. We reject every effort to reduce the confessions contained in
- the Book of concord to historical documents that have only
- relative confessional significance for the church today. We
- likewise reject any claim that the church is bound only to
- those doctrines in Scripture that have found expression in
- these confessions.
-
- This is what Scripture teaches about God and his revelation. This we
- believe, teach and confess.
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-
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- 3
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- II. CREATION, MAN AND SIN
-
- 1. We believe that the universe, the world and man came into
- existence in the beginning when God created heaven and earth
- and all creatures (Gen. 1 and 2). Further testimony of this
- event is found in other passages of the Old and New Testaments
- (for example, Exod. 20:11; Heb. 11:3). All this happened in
- the course of six normal days by the power of God's almighty
- word when he said, "Let there be."
-
- 2. We believe that the Bible presents a true and historical
- account of Creation.
-
- 3. We believe that God created man in his own image (Gen. 1:26),
- that is, holy and righteous. Man's thoughts, desires and will
- were in full harmony with God (Col. 3:10; Eph. 4:24), and he
- was given the capacity to "subdue" God's Creation (Gen. 1:28).
-
- 4. We believe that man lost this divine image when he yielded to
- the temptation of Satan and disobeyed God's command. This
- brought upon him the judgment of God: "You will surely die"
- (Gen. 2:17). Since that time mankind is conceived and born in
- sin (Ps. 51:5), is inclined to all evil (Gen. 8:21), and as
- "flesh gives birth to flesh" (John 3:6). Being dead in sin
- (Eph. 2:1), man is unable to reconcile himself to God by his
- own efforts and deeds.
-
- 5. We reject the theories of evolution as an explanation of the
- origin of the universe and man, and all attempts to interpret
- the scriptural account of Creation so as to harmonize it with
- such theories.
-
- 6. We reject interpretations that reduce the first chapters of
- Genesis to a narration of myths or parables or poetic accounts
- that are not factual history.
-
- 7. We reject all views that see inherent goodness in man, that
- consider his natural bent only a weakness which is not sinful,
- and that fail to recognize his total spiritual depravity (Rom.
- 3:9-18).
-
- This what Scripture teaches about Creation, man and sin. This we
- believe, teach and confess.
-
- III. CHRIST AND REDEMPTION
-
- 1. We believe that Jesus Christ is the eternal Son of God, who was
- with the Father from all eternity (John 1:1,2). In the
- fullness of time he took a true and complete, yet sinless,
- human nature to himself (Gal. 4:4) when he was conceived as a
- holy child in the Virgin Mary through a miracle of the Holy
- Spirit (Luke 1:35). The angel testified, "What is conceived in
- her is from the Holy Spirit" (Matt. 1:20). Jesus Christ is
- that unique person in whom the true God and a true human nature
- are inseparably united in one, the holy God-man, Immanuel.
-
- 2. We believe that he at all times possessed the fullness of the
- Deity, all divine power, wisdom and glory (Co. 2:9). This was
- evident at times when he performed miracles (John 2:11). But
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- 4
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- while he lived on earth, he took on the form of a servant,
- humbling himself by laying aside the continuous and full
- display and use of his divine characteristics. During this
- time we see him living as a man among men, enduring suffering,
- and humbling himself to the shameful death on the cross (Phil.
- 2:7,8). We believe that he rose again from the grave with a
- glorified body, ascended and is exalted on high to rule with
- power over the world, with grace in his church, with glory in
- eternity (Phil. 2:9-11).
-
- 3. We believe that Jesus Christ, the God-man, was sent by the
- Father to humble himself for the redemption of mankind and that
- he was exalted as evidence that his mission was accomplished.
- Jesus came to fulfill the Law (Matt. 5:17), so that by his
- perfect obedience all men should be accounted righteous (Rom.
- 5:18,19). He came to bear "the iniquity of us all" (Isa.
- 53:6), ransoming us by his sacrifice for sin on the altar of
- the cross (Matt. 20:28). We believe that he is the
- God-appointed substitute for man in all of this: his
- righteousness is accepted by the Father as our righteousness,
- his death for sin as our death for sin (2 Cor. 5:21). We
- believe that his resurrection gives full assurance that God has
- accepted this atonement for all (Rom. 4:25).
-
- 4. We believe that in Christ God reconciled the "world to himself"
- (2 Cor. 5:19), that Jesus is "the Lamb of God, who takes away
- the sin of the world" (John 1:29). The mercy and grace of God
- are all-embracing; the reconciliation through Christ is
- universal; the forgiveness of sins has been gained as an
- accomplished fact for all men. Because of the substitutionary
- work of Christ, God has justified, that is, declared the
- verdict of "not guilty" upon all mankind. This forms the firm,
- objective basis for the sinner's assurance of salvation.
-
- 5. We reject any teaching that limits the work of Christ as to
- either its scope or its completeness, thereby failing to
- recognize the universality of redemption or the full payment of
- the ransom.
-
- 6. We reject the views which see in the Gospel accounts the
- church's proclamation and interpretation of Jesus Christ rather
- than a true account of what actually happened in history. We
- reject the attempts to make the historicity of events in
- Christ's life, such as his virgin birth, his miracles or his
- bodily resurrection, appear unimportant or even doubtful. We
- reject the attempts to stress a "present encounter with the
- living Christ" in such a way that Jesus' redemptive work in the
- fullness of time, as recorded in Scripture, would lose its
- importance.
-
- This is what Scripture teaches about Christ and redemption. This we
- believe, teach and confess.
-
- IV. JUSTIFICATION BY FAITH
-
- 1. We believe that God has justified, that is, declared all
- sinners righteous in his eyes for the sake of Christ. This is
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- the central message of Scripture upon which the very existence
- of the church depends. It is a message relevant to people of
- all times and places, of all races and social strata, for "the
- result of one trespass was condemnation for all men" (Rom.
- 5:18). All need justification before God, and Scripture
- proclaims that all are justified, for "the result of one act of
- righteousness was justification that brings life for all men"
- (Rom. 5:18).
-
- 2. We believe that the individual receives this free gift of
- forgiveness through Christ, not by works, but only by faith
- (Eph. 2:8,9). Justifying faith is trust in Christ and his
- redemptive work. This faith justifies, not because of any
- inherent virtue, but only because of the salvation prepared by
- God in Christ, which it embraces (Rom. 3:28; 4:5). On the
- other hand, although Jesus died for all, Scripture tells us
- that "whoever does not believe will be condemned" (Mark
- 16:16). The unbeliever loses the forgiveness won for him by
- Christ.
-
- 3. We believe that man cannot work this justifying faith, or
- trust, in his own heart, because "the man without the Spirit
- does not accept the things that come from the Spirit of God,
- for they are foolishness to him" (1 Cor. 2:14). In fact "the
- sinful mind is hostile to God" (Rom. 8:7). It is the Holy
- Spirit who moves the heart trustingly to recognize that "Jesus
- is Lord" (1 Cor 12:3). This the Holy Spirit works by means of
- the gospel (Rom. 10:17). We believe, therefore, that man's
- conversion is entirely the work of God's grace. Rejection of
- the gospel is, however, wholly man's fault.
-
- 4. We believe that already in eternity God chose those individuals
- whom he would in time convert through the gospel of Christ and
- preserve in the faith to eternal life (Eph. 1:4-6; Rom.
- 8:29,30). This election to faith and salvation in no way was
- caused by anything in man, but shows how completely salvation
- is ours by grace alone (Rom. 11:5,6).
-
- 5. We reject every teaching that man in any way contributes to his
- salvation. We reject all efforts to present faith as a
- condition man must fulfill to complete his justification. We
- likewise reject any teaching which says that it does not matter
- what one believes so long as one has faith.
-
- 6. We reject any suggestion that the doctrine of justification by
- faith can no longer be meaningful to modern man, together with
- all attempts of man to justify himself or his existence before
- God.
-
- 7. We reject the false and blasphemous conclusion that those who
- are lost were elected by God to damnation, for God "wants all
- men to be saved" (1 Tim. 2:4).
-
- This is what Scripture teaches about justification by faith. This we
- believe, teach and confess.
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- 6
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- V. GOOD WORKS AND PRAYER
-
- 1. We believe that faith in Jesus Christ is a living force within
- the Christian that will invariably produce works which are
- pleasing to God. "Faith by itself, if it is not accompanied by
- action, is dead" (Jas. 2:17). A Christian as a branch in Christ
- the Vine brings forth good fruit (John 15:5).
-
- 2. We believe that faith does not set up its own standards to
- determine what is pleasing to God (Matt. 15:9). True faith,
- instructed by the Word of God, delights to do only that which
- conforms to the holy will of God. It recognizes that God's
- will finds its fulfillment in perfect love, for "love is the
- fulfillment of the law" (Rom. 13:10).
-
- 3. We believe that these works which are fruits of faith must be
- distinguished from works of civic righteousness performed by
- unbelievers. When unbelievers perform works that outwardly
- appear as good and upright before men, these works are not good
- in God's sight, for "without faith it is impossible to please
- God" (Heb. 11:6). While we recognize the value of mere civic
- righteousness for human society, we know that the unbeliever
- through his works of civic righteousness cannot even begin to
- do his duty to God.
-
- 4. We believe that in this world even the best works of a
- Christian are still tainted with sin. The flesh, the old Adam,
- still afflicts the Christian so that he fails to do the good he
- wants to do, and does the evil he does not want to do (Rom.
- 7:19). He must confess that all his righteousnesses are like
- filthy rags (Isa. 64:6). For the sake of Christ, however,
- these imperfect efforts of Christians are graciously considered
- holy and acceptable by our heavenly Father.
-
- 5. We believe that also a life of prayer is a fruit of faith.
- Confidently, through faith in their Savior, Christians address
- the heavenly Father in petition and praise, presenting their
- needs and giving thanks. Such prayers are a delight to our
- God, and he will grant our petitions according to his wisdom.
-
- 6. We reject every thought that the good works of Christians
- contribute toward gaining salvation.
-
- 7. We reject every attempt to abolish the unchanging law of God as
- an absolute standard by which to measure man's conduct.
-
- 8. We reject the view that man himself in every situation must
- determine what "love" demands. We recognize this as a device
- of Satan to destroy the knowledge of God's holy will and to
- undermine the consciousness of sin.
-
- 9. We reject any view that considers prayer a means of grace or
- that looks upon it as helpful simply because of its
- psychological effect upon the one who prays.
-
- 10. We reject the view that all prayers are acceptable to God, and
- we hold the prayers of all who do not know Christ to be vain
- babblings addressed to false gods.
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- This is what Scripture teaches about good works and prayer. This we
- believe, teach and confess.
-
- VI. THE MEANS OF GRACE
-
- 1. We believe that God bestows all spiritual blessings upon
- sinners by special means, ordained by him. These are the means
- of grace, the gospel in word and sacrament.
-
- 2. We believe that through the gospel of Christ's atoning
- sacrifice for sinners the Holy Spirit works faith in the heart
- of man, whose heart by nature is enmity against God. Scripture
- teaches that "faith comes from hearing the message, and the
- message is heard through the word of Christ" (Rom. 10:17).
- This Spirit-wrought faith, or regeneration, brings about a
- renewal in man and makes of him an heir of eternal salvation.
-
- 3. We believe that also through baptism the Holy Spirit applies
- the gospel to sinful man, regenerating him (Titus 3:5) and
- cleansing him from all iniquity (Acts 2:38). The Lord points
- to the blessing of baptism when he promises, "Whoever believes
- and is baptized will be saved" (Mark 16:16). We believe that
- the blessing of baptism is meant for all people (Matt. 28:19),
- including infants, who are sinful (John 3:6) and therefore need
- the regeneration effected through baptism (John 3:5).
-
- 4. We believe that all who partake of the sacrament of the Lord's
- Supper receive the true body and blood of Christ "in, with and
- under" the bread and wine. This is true because, when the Lord
- instituted this sacrament, he said, "This is my body given for
- you.... This cup is the new covenant in my blood, which is
- poured out for you" (Luke 22:19,20). As we partake of his body
- and blood, given and shed for us, we by faith receive the
- comfort and assurance that our sins are indeed forgiven and
- that we are truly his own.
-
- 5. We believe that the Lord gave his word and the sacraments to
- his disciples for a purpose. He commanded them, "Therefore go
- and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name
- of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit" (Matt.
- 28:19). It is by these means that he preserves and extends the
- holy Christian church throughout the world. We should
- therefore be diligent and faithful in the use of these divinely
- ordained means of grace in our own midst and in our mission
- efforts. These are the only means through which immortal souls
- are brought to faith and to salvation.
-
- 6. We reject any views that look for the revelation of the grace
- of God and salvation apart from the gospel as found in the
- Scriptures. We likewise reject the view that the law is a
- means of grace.
-
- 7. We reject all teachings that see in the Sacrament of the Altar
- nothing more than signs and symbols for faith, thereby denying
- that Christ's true body and blood are received in the Lord's
- Supper.
-
- 8. We reject the claim that unbelievers and hypocrites do not
- receive the true body and blood of Jesus in the sacrament, as
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- 8
-
-
- well as the view that to eat the body of Christ in the
- sacrament is nothing else than to receive Christ spiritually by
- faith. We reject the view that the body and blood of Christ
- are present in the sacrament through the act of consecration as
- such, apart from the reception of the elements.
-
- 9. We reject the teaching that the real presence of Jesus' body
- and blood in the sacrament means merely that the person of
- Christ is present in his supper even as he is present in the
- gospel.
-
- This is what Scripture teaches about the means of grace. This we
- believe, teach and confess.
-
- VII. THE CHURCH AND ITS MINISTRY
-
- 1. We believe that there is one holy Christian church, which is
- the temple of God (1 Cor. 3:16), the body of Christ (Eph. 1:23;
- 4:12). The members of this one church are all those who are
- "the sons of God through faith in Christ Jesus" (Gal. 3:26).
- Whoever believes that Jesus died for his sin and rose again for
- his justification (Rom. 4:25) belongs to Christ's church. The
- church, then, consists only of believers, or saints, whom God
- accepts as holy for the sake of Jesus' imputed righteousness (2
- Cor. 5:21). These saints are scattered throughout the world.
- Every true believer, regardless of the nation or race or church
- body to which he belongs, is a member of the holy Christian
- church.
-
- 2. We believe that the holy Christian church is a reality,
- although it is not an external, visible organization. Because
- "man looks at the outward appearance, but the Lord looks at the
- heart" (1 Sam. 16:7), only the Lord knows "those who are his"
- (2 Tim. 2:19). The members of the holy Christian church are
- known only to God; we cannot distinguish between true believers
- and hypocrites. The holy Christian church is therefore
- invisible and cannot be identified with any one church body or
- the sum total of all church bodies.
-
- 3. We believe that the presence of the holy Christian church
- nevertheless can be recognized. Wherever the gospel is
- preached and the sacraments are administered, the holy
- Christian church is present, for through the means of grace
- true faith is produced and preserved (Isa. 55:10,11).
- Moreover, where these means are in use, we are confident that
- the church is present, for the Lord has entrusted them only to
- his church of believers (Matt. 28:19,20). The means of grace
- are therefore called the marks of the church.
-
- 4. We believe that it is the Lord's will that Christians gather
- together for mutual edification and spiritual growth (Heb.
- 10:24,25) and for carrying out the whole of the Lord's
- commission (Mark 16:15). Since these visible gatherings (for
- example, congregations, synods) confess themselves to be marks
- of the church and make use of them, they are called churches.
- They bear this name, however, only because of the true
- believers present in them (1 Cor. 1:2).
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- 9
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- 5. We believe that the holy Christian church is one, united by a
- common faith, for all true believers have "one Lord, one faith,
- one baptism, one God and Father of all" (Eph. 4:5,6). Since
- this is a unity of faith in the heart, it is seen only by God.
-
- 6. We believe that God bids us on our part to acknowledge oneness
- in faith among God's saints on earth only as they by word and
- deed reveal (confess) the faith of their hearts. Their unity
- becomes evident when they agree in their confession to the
- doctrine revealed in Scripture. We believe, furthermore, that
- the individual through his membership in a church body
- confesses himself to the doctrine and practice of that body.
- To assert that unity exists where there is no agreement in
- confession is to presume to look into man's heart. This only
- God can do. It is not necessary that all agree on matters of
- church ritual or organization. About these the New Testament
- gives no commands.
-
- 7. We believe that those who have become evident as united in
- faith will give recognition to their fellowship in Christ and
- seek to express it as occasion permits. They may express their
- fellowship by joint worship, by joint proclamation of the
- gospel, by joining in Holy Communion, by joint prayer, by joint
- church work. We believe that we cannot practice religious
- fellowship with those whose confession reveals that error is
- taught or tolerated, supported or defended. The Lord bids us
- keep away from persistent errorists (Rom. 16:17,18).
-
- 8. We believe that every Christian is a priest and king before God
- (1 Pet. 2:9). All believers have direct and equal access to
- the throne of grace through Christ, our Mediator (Eph.
- 2:17,18). To all believers God has given the means of grace to
- use. All Christians are to declare the praises of him who
- called us out of darkness into his wonderful light (1 Pet.
- 2:9). In this sense all Christians are ministers of the
- gospel.
-
- 9. We believe that it is the will of God that the church in
- accordance with good order (1 Cor. 14:40) call qualified men (1
- Tim. 3) into the public ministry. They are to preach the Word
- and administer the sacraments publicly, that is, not merely as
- individuals who possess the universal priesthood, but by order
- and in the name of fellow Christians. These men are the called
- servants of Christ, ministers of the gospel, and not lords over
- God's heritage, his believers (1 Pet. 5:3). Through its call
- the church in Christian liberty designates the place, form and
- scope of service. We believe that when the church calls men
- into this public ministry, it is the Lord himself acting
- through the church (Acts 20:28).
-
- 10. We reject any attempt to identify the holy Christian church
- with an outward organization, and likewise any claim that the
- church must function in the world through specific
- organizational forms.
-
- 11. We reject any views that see in the church, as the body of
- Christ, an extension of Christ's incarnation.
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- 10
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- 12. We reject as false ecumenicity any views that look for the true
- unity of the church in some form of external or organizational
- union, and we oppose all movements toward such union made at
- the expense of confessional integrity.
-
- 13. We reject the contention that religious fellowship may be
- practiced without confessional agreement.
-
- This is what Scripture teaches about the church and its ministry. This we
- believe, teach and confess.
-
- VIII. THE CHURCH AND THE STATE
-
- 1. We believe that not only the church, but also the state, that
- is, all governmental authority, has been instituted by God.
- "The authorities that exist have been established by God" (Rom.
- 13:1). Christians will, therefore, for conscience' sake be
- obedient to the government that rules over them (Rom. 13:5)
- unless the government commands them to disobey God (Acts 5:29).
-
- 2. We believe that God has given to each, the church and the
- state, responsibilities that do not conflict with one another.
- To the church the Lord has assigned the responsibility of
- calling sinners to repentance, of proclaiming forgiveness
- through the cross of Christ, of encouraging believers in their
- Christian living. The purpose is to lead the elect of God
- through faith in Christ to eternal salvation. To the state the
- Lord has assigned the keeping of good order and peace, the
- arranging of all civil matters among men (Rom. 13:3,4). The
- purpose is "that we may live peaceful and quiet lives in all
- godliness and holiness" (1 Tim. 2:2).
-
- 3. We believe that the only means God has given to the church to
- carry out its assigned purpose is his revealed Word, the Holy
- Scripture (Matt. 28:19,20). Only by preaching the law and the
- gospel, sin and grace, the wrath of God against sin and the
- mercy of God in Christ, will people be converted and made wise
- to salvation. We believe that the means given to the state to
- fulfill its assignment are civil law and force, set up and used
- according to the light of reason (Rom. 13:4). The light of
- reason also includes the natural knowledge of God, the
- inscribed law, and conscience.
-
- 4. We believe the proper relation is preserved between the church
- and the state and the welfare of all is properly served only
- when each, the church and the state, remains within its
- divinely assigned sphere and uses its divinely entrusted means.
- The church is not to exercise civil authority nor to interfere
- with the state as the state carries out its responsibilities.
- The state is not to become a messenger of the gospel nor to
- interfere with the church in its preaching mission. The church
- is not to attempt to use the civil law and force in leading
- people to Christ. The state is not to seek to govern by means
- of the gospel. On the other hand, the church and the state may
- participate in one and the same endeavor as long as each
- remains within its assigned place and uses its entrusted means.
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- 5. We reject any attempt on the part of the state to restrict the
- free exercise of religion.
-
- 6. We reject any views that look to the church to guide and
- influence the state directly in the conduct of its affairs.
-
- 7. We reject any attempt on the part of the church to seek the
- financial assistance of the state in carrying out its saving
- purpose.
-
- 8. We reject any views that hold that a citizen is free to disobey
- such laws of the state with which he disagrees on the basis of
- personal judgment.
-
- This is what Scripture teaches about the church and the state. This we believe,
- teach and confess.
-
- IX. JESUS' RETURN AND THE JUDGMENT
-
- 1. We believe that Jesus, true God and true man, who rose from
- death and ascended to the right hand of the Father, will come
- again. He will return visibly, in like manner as his disciples
- saw him go into heaven (Acts 1:11).
-
- 2. We believe that no one can know the exact time of Jesus'
- return. This knowledge is hidden even from the angels in
- heaven (Matt. 24:36). Nevertheless, our Lord has given us
- signs to keep us in constant expectation of his return. He has
- told us to take heed to ourselves and to watch lest that day
- come upon us unexpectedly (Luke 21:34).
-
- 3. We believe that at Jesus' return this present world will come
- to an end. "But in keeping with his promise we are looking
- forward to a new heaven and a new earth, the home of
- righteousness" (2 Pet. 3:13).
-
- 4. We believe that when Jesus returns and his voice is heard
- throughout the earth, all the dead will rise and together with
- those still living appear before his throne of judgment. The
- unbelievers will be condemned to an eternity in hell. Those
- who by faith have been cleansed in the blood of Christ will be
- with Jesus forever in the blessed presence of God in heaven
- (John 5:28,29).
-
- 5. We reject every form of millennialism, since it has no valid
- scriptural basis and leads Christians to set their hopes upon
- the kingdom of Christ as an earthly kingdom. We likewise
- reject as unscriptural any hopes that the Jews will all be
- converted in those final days, or that all people will
- ultimately enjoy eternal bliss.
-
- 6. We reject any denial of a bodily resurrection and of the
- reality of hell.
-
- 7. We reject as contrary to the clear revelation of Scripture all
- attempts to interpret symbolically the New Testament facts of
- the end of the world, of Jesus' second coming, and of the
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- judgment or to see these events taking place, not in the end of
- time, but concurrently with history.
-
- This is what Scripture teaches about Jesus' return and the judgment. This we
- believe, teach and confess.
- ____________________________________
-
- For information on a WELS church near you, contact:
-
- Wisconsin Ev. Lutheran Synod
- 2929 North Mayfair Road
- Milwaukee, WI 53222
- (414) 771-9357