It was a party for students, professors, alumni and prospective students, a time for
  fun, fellowship, wit, and humor in the Fort Wayne Student Commons, Monday night before the
  Symposium. The axiom is true, "Many a true word has been said in jest."
  There was a 24 page 8 ½ by 11 booklet for all in attendance, titled "Concordia
  The Illogical Q Party."
  After a review of the printed agenda for the evening's revelry, the greatest fear and
  the butt of jokes was, of all things, the LC-MS congregational Voters' Assembly.
  The following are verses from a few of the songs, in which the entire assembly, of more
  than a hundred, joyfully participated.
  
  Jack the Lutheran Pastor
  (Sung to the tune of "Puff the Magic Dragon")
  (Chorus)
  "Jack, the Lutheran pastor who hates the papacy
  And frolicked in the Walther myth of voters' supremacy."
  Little Herman Otten loved that rascal Jack
  And pulled some string to get him to
  Write about religious stuff. Oh,
  (Double Chorus)
  Together they would travel to speak against heresy
  Herman kept extensive files against his 'enemies,'
  Noble priests and bishops
  Would hide whene'er they came,
  Bad Dp's would lower their heads
  When Jack roared out their names, Oh,
  (Double Chorus)
  Jack set up a website to fight the liberal hordes
  But soon the website Walther First
  Went way, way overboard.
  One gray night it happened, Jack fired off a flaming dart
  Instead of shooting at a lib, he shot at Kurt Marquart.
  His head was bent in sorrow, but sinful pride remained
  "Marquart is just covering for
  Those profs down in Fort Wayne!"
  Offending, life-long friends, and gaining great disdain
  Many thought that mighty Jack had finally gone insane!"
  (Double Chorus)
  
  I Am Jesus' Right Hand Man
  (Sung to "I Am Jesus Little Lamb")
  I am Jesus' right hand man
  Needed by the church I am
  Cause my name is Laurence White
  I joined the religious ri- - ght.
  I'll change Synod's polity.
  Or she'll die eternally.
  I am Jesus right hand man,
  Needed by the Church I am.
  I'll sniff out a story rotten
  Or my name ain't Herman Otten.
  My appointment's been denied
  Even though I'm certified.
  I am Jesus' right hand man,
  Needed by the Church I am.
  I enjoy creating Schism.
  Hyper-euro Lutheranism
  Is the thing that I attack.
  You can call me pastor Jack
  (There are 3 more verses)
  
  It Only Takes a Vote
  (Sung to "It Only Takes a Spark")
  It only takes a vote
  To remove a faithful pastor
  And soon all those around
  We'll show the church who's master
  That's how it is with Synod,
  Once you've experienced it.
  Democracy, it works for me,
  I want to vote him out.
  It only takes a vote
  To exercise the priesthood
  We want our pastor out
  He preaches like a priest would
  And nothing like the Baptists
  We think they're right on.
  Assem-bl-ee, Suprem-a-cy
  I want to vote him out.
  (There are two more verses)
  
  The booklet also included a full-page spoof of the Second National Free Conference on
  C. F. W. Walther titled, "Reclaiming Walther First: Jesus Last. Theme: 'Where two or
  three Walther quotes are misquoted, there you have a Synod.'"
  During the lectures and Banquet two different pastors handed me red and black
  "Voter Assembly Buster" lapel stickers. There was also a second sticker with a
  cross promoting Hyper-Euro-Lutherans.
  At the Banquet downtown, with some 800 people in attendance, one of the highlights of
  the evening's entertainment was Dr. David Scaer asking all of the lay people to stand up,
  about 200. He then told them that Pastor Jack Cascione says now you can all vote to become
  a church. There was a great deal of laughter from the audience. Doctor Scaer then asked
  all of the Hyper-Euro-Lutherans to stand up. Between 300 and 400 people stood up. There
  was a great deal of applause for the Hyper-Euro Lutherans.
  (A Hyper-Euro-Lutheran is someone who supports a return to pre-Walther European
  Lutheran hierarchy similar to that taught by Martin Stephan, Wilhelm Loehe, and Grabau.)
  My picture was then flashed on the screen in front of the audience with the
  announcement that Pastor Cascione was one of the ten most influential people in the LC-MS.
  No, they don't like Voter Supremacy at Fort Wayne.
  However, not one professor from the St. Louis Seminary was present for the "Second
  National Free Conference on C. F. W. Walther," held on the first weekend in November
  in St. Louis. Walther and his Voters' Assemblies are something they want to forget.
  In the 1960's and '70's, life in the Synod was a lot simpler. There were two sides,
  libs and conservatives. Today it is a three-way divide like the old Clint Eastwood
  spaghetti Western, "The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly." We have those who want to
  keep Walther's congregational polity, those who want PLI/Church Growth/Leadership
  Training, and those who want a return to pre-Walther European Lutheran hierarchy.
  No side has a majority to support its own candidate at the Convention. The whole
  scenario makes for some strange political bedfellows. Much of the conservative movement of
  the '70's has devolved into orthodoxy for its own sake.
  During the Banquet, three Fort Wayne professors let me know confidentially that they
  supported Voters' Assemblies and they couldn't understand what was happening at Fort
  Wayne. The problem must be placed squarely at the feet of the 1989 Balance candidate,
  Chairman of the Board of Regents, Rev. David Anderson.
  After the Banquet, a layman commented to me that he couldn't believe what he had just
  witnessed. The man has considerable experience in business. I told him if this had been a
  Midwest Regional Allstate Insurance Agents' event, the focus would have been on the
  customer. If this had been a Midwest Regional Ford Auto Dealers' Banquet, the focus would
  have been on the driver. But this was an LC-MS pastors' event and the focus was on them.
  The layman agreed completely.
  Pastors with no constituency may soon find out they are no longer pastors.