We have to ask the question, "What does Dr. Waldo Werning
  believe?"
  Dr. Waldo Werning has apparently reversed his opposition to the statement
  that, "All of God, not one third of God died on the Cross."
  Consequently he must now agree that, "All theology is Christology."
  On June 11, 2002, Werning writes: "Jesus is God! Every Person of the
  Trinity is all of God, yet there is only One God!"
  We should say, "Hurray, Werning has it right!" Yet, he continues
  to insist that all his writings about the Trinity in his "Health and
  Healing for the LCMS" are correct. On June 12, 2002, Werning writes to
  members of Redeemer Lutheran Church and me, "Apparently, you have some
  severe problem to which you ought to attend immediately." Werning sends
  one or two attack letters a week to officers of our congregation and copies
  LCMS officials, including President Gerald Kieschnick.
  Prior to June 11, Werning was vehemently opposed to every Person of the
  Trinity being all of God.
  In the February 26, 2002, meeting I asked Werning: "When Christ died
  on the cross, was it all of God or part of God? Are you going to answer
  that?" Werning replied, "I'm not going to answer 'God.' Because I
  know as well as you, I'm no infant in this, what you are talking about.
  Secondly, about the whole unity of God, the Athanasian, One God, in One
  Godhead, the whole business . . . .and you are fabricating stuff and you did
  it right now." Again I asked, "Are you going to answer that
  question?" Werning replied, "It is a philosophical question."
  On March 6, 2002, Werning wrote to Christian News:
  "You published the following overtly outrageous statement which Cascione
  wrote on his 2/26/2002 Internet article, 'All of God, 100% of God died on the
  Cross' . . . .Now you with Cascione face the question of Trinitarian heresy
  related to Scripture. The Lutheran Confessions, and the three Creeds which
  clearly reveal that the eternally alive God did not experience death on the
  Cross from Friday to Sunday, nor did the Father and the Holy Spirit, but the
  Bible and Creeds reveal that God's only begotten Son in His human nature died
  and shed His blood for our salvation."
  On March 6, 2002, Werning wrote:
  "By the way, Cascione employs another argument that 100% of God literally
  died by quoting the Athanasian Creed out of context, 'There is not One
  Almighty but three Almighties.'"
  "Cascione confuses both Creeds by saying that " all of God, 100%
  of God, died on the Cross."
  On May 20, 2002 Werning wrote:
  "Your philosophical statement that all of God died on the Cross, not one
  third of god, not dividing God, literally not only denies the Personhood of
  the Godhead (Apostle's Creed), but denies the humanity of Jesus. . ."
  "At the same time, your misinterpretation leads to the conclusion that
  the eternal God was dead and in a grave for three days."
  On May 28, 2002, Werning wrote:
  ". . . your [Cascione's] 'All of God, not one third of God' distortion
  and heresy."
  ". . . but now you have changed the argument to your new invention
  about 'All of God, not one-third of God' died on the Cross."
  And now on June 11, 2002, Werning reverses his position on the Trinity and
  writes:
  "I have not refused to identify that Jesus is God, or that every Person
  is all of God - undivided Substance."
  It is impossible to quote Werning without being accused of breaking the
  Eighth Commandment, an accusation he makes in every letter.
  If Werning now agrees that every Person of the Trinity is all of God, then
  all of God died on the Cross, and not just Christ's human nature, which
  Werning demands above on March 6, 2002.
  Now with Werning's new position, if every Person of the Trinity is all of
  God, then "All theology is Christology." It must also be said that,
  "All theology is the Word of the Father." And, it must also be said
  that, "All theology is given by inspiration of the Holy Ghost."
  However, on pages 34-35 Werning's book claims there are three
  communications from God instead of one, which is a damnable lie about God.
  Werning fantasizes about a sliced-and-diced three-part God, with three of this
  and three of that when he writes:
  1. "experiencing God in a three-fold manner."
  2. "three manners of being (God above us, God among us, God in us),"
  3. "three levels of reality (nature, history, existence)"
  4. "three ways in which God reveals Himself"
  5. "three forms of address [from God] ('You shall!,' 'You may!,' 'You
  can!')"
  6. "one of the three ways in which God has revealed Himself"
  No one in the Missouri Synod has "experienced" God except,
  perhaps, the South Wisconsin District President and "Jesus First"
  who both endorse Werning's teaching on the Trinity. However, the Bible tells
  us that God only gives us One reality, One revelation, and One address, and
  God only has one manner of being. Every one of Werning's six statements above
  is a damnable lie about God.
  Of course, in the "New Missouri" most of the District Presidents
  and "Jesus First" feel free to make up anything they choose about
  God and worship. Why get too picky about who God is? Just tell everyone that
  Jesus loves them and keep sending those cards and letters. The validity of a
  new program or doctrine is justified by its statistical success.
  Doctor Werning now writes that he and Cascione have never been in Dispute
  Resolution. However, on October 24, 2001, Werning wrote that on the basis of
  By-law 2.27 "Commencing an Action to Terminate Membership," he was
  contacting the District President and the Synodical President because I
  publicly condemned his farce about the Trinity in "Health and Healing for
  the LCMS." On March 6, 2002, Werning wrote that action according to
  By-Law 2.27 had taken place in our February meeting.
  It was only because of By-Law 2.27 that I was compelled to meet with
  Werning in December of 2001 and again in February of 2002. In the first
  meeting we met by ourselves and in the second meeting we met with four of
  Werning's witnesses. According to By-law 8.13c these are the preliminary steps
  to Dispute Resolution.
  On May 20, 2002, Werning writes, "Please forget about By-Law 2.27 at
  this time." If we were not in Dispute Resolution to terminate my
  membership in the Synod according to By-Law 2.27, why were former Michigan
  District First Vice President Toshio Okamoto, Pastor John Reusch, former COP
  Chairman Dr. John Heins and Werning's Pastor present as Werning's official
  witnesses? Werning even demanded that spectators leave the February meeting
  for constitutional reasons.
  Heins was one of the architects of Dispute Resolution. Now I learn that he,
  Okamoto, and Reusch simply participated with Werning in a constitutional
  charade and a manipulation of the Handbook. It was all a cover for Werning's
  fairy tales about God in "Health and Healing for the LCMS."
  In the May 2002 issue "Jesus First" takes CPH to task for seeking
  "a very clear focus," while "Jesus First" staunchly
  defends Werning's lies about the Trinity in "Health and Healing For the
  LCMS" that was sent to every 2001 LCMS Convention delegate. The next vote
  and not the truth about God is "Jesus First's" top priority. We
  doubt if the "truth about God" has even crossed their minds.
  Before "Jesus First" tries to correct CPH they should stop
  endorsing published lies about God.