The following, sent by a Reclaim News reader,
is excerpted from Walther's 1883 address at the dedication of the new
Concordia Seminary building in St. Louis. The full text occurs in Concordia
Journal, July 1989 (Vol. 15:3), pp. 222-230.
When our synod, the German Evangelical Lutheran Synod of Missouri, Ohio,
and Other States, thirty-sex years ago met for the first time in the
God-blessed city of Chicago, it was a small, despised little band of only
twelve poor congregations. The church which in this country still called
itself evangelical-Lutheran lay in utter ruin. The teaching of our church was
unknown territory for it. The small number of preachers who still knew
something about it and wanted to stick to it were considered people with
limited mental capacities, and the hope was that they would soon die out. The
Lutheran Confessions were hardly known even by name anymore, and they were
considered documents of earlier un-enlightened times, now long obsolete.
Instead of Luther's doctrine in this church that called itself Lutheran, the
teaching of Zwingli and obvious rationalism was in vogue, coupled with fanatic
methods of conversion. Hardly a single preacher had an orderly call into
office according to God's Word; almost all of them were engaged only for one
or a few years. Immortal souls were entrusted to unprepared, immature men on a
trial basis, while Christian parochial schools were abolished and Lutheran
youth were in typically heathen fashion entrusted to an irreligious state. In
short, the so-called Lutheran Church of our country was dead at that time, the
laughingstock of all the sects, who, like hungry night-in-gales, came for the
funeral.
When our synod at that time came forward with the watchword then unheard
of: Gottes Wort und Luthers Lehr vergehet nun und nimmermehr ["God's Word
and Luther's doctrine pure will now and evermore endure"], it was not
only the antichristian papacy, not only the united-evangelical community of
mixed religions, not only the fanatic sects, but above all the local so-called
Lutheran church that would lead to Rome, and with great certainty they
predicted an early, inglorious extinction for us, an outlandish growth and
un-American intrusion.
And it is true, our prospects were really very dreary. To want to
transplant the Old Lutheran church, which submitted to every letter of the
Word of God, to this land of untamed love for liberty seemed in real fact to
be a completely hopeless, worse than foolish undertaking. But far from letting
itself be made to falter, our synod did not ask: What must we do to become
large and numerous? But it only asked: What must we do to be found faithful
before the Lord of the church? Our synod knew that success was not in its
hands. Success is therefore left to God.
And what happened? The very evil plans of our enemies did not materialize
for them. When the congregations saw that the preachers of our synod did not
preach a new doctrine but proclaimed nothing but what they, the congregations,
had learned from Luther's Small Catechism; when the congregations saw that the
preachers of our synod brought them the greatest message that a preacher can
provide, namely the certainty of the grace of God and their salvation; when
the congregations saw that the preachers of our synod were not trying to lord
it over them in popish fashion but on the contrary first tried to get them to
understand their wonderful Christian freedom and their holy congregational
rights; when the congregations saw that the preachers of our synod did not
seek their own temporal advantages but were interested only in immortal souls;
when the congregations saw that the preachers of our synod prefer to suffer
hunger and anxiety, prefer to suffer shame, persecution, and exile rather than
to depart from "God's Word and Luther's doctrine" even in one
letter; behold, then one congregation after another joined our synodical
union. The mustard seed took root, shot up joyfully, and gradually assumed the
stature of a mighty tree, under the shady boughs of which the birds of the air
live. The Old Lutheranism, scoffed at because of its original diminutive
stature, yes, even laughed to scorn, gradually, among the hot battles in
America, became a power so that finally everyone who wanted to be really
Lutheran had to get used to the idea of agreeing with the doctrine of our
synod. The old treasured books of our church, in the forefront its
confessional writings and the works of Luther, where dusted off, carried from
house to house, and enthusiastically read and studied by our people. Like a
prairie fire that true Lutheran faith and Lutheran life and conduct not only
again spread irresistible across the land, but God also granted us unity of
faith and a joyfulness of faith together with an intimate brotherly love, so
that the days of Luther seemed to have come back among us. Wherever a little
Lutheran church grew up like a fruit tree, even on a lonely prairie, there
immediately also a little Lutheran schoolhouse grew up like a young shoot. The
old pure songs, full of the power of faith and excitement of love, as they
were sung by our fathers, resounded again with their charming old tunes. In
short, the true Lutheran Church, for which dirges had already been sung all
over the world, revived here of all places, came up out of the grave, and in
more than a thousand places in our great union of states planted the victory
banner of the pure Gospel. For years already the Macedonian call "Come
over to help us" sounds in our ears from all directions. An ever
increasing stream of Lutheran immigrants, also those of our German language,
is flooding over our land and settling here, so that almost week after week
new congregations are founded which to a large extent apply to us for teachers
in church and school. And not only within our new fatherland, but even from
the land of our forefathers, yes, even from the remotest countries of the
earth that well-known call for help comes over to us and profoundly moves our
hearts.
Everywhere door are opened to us for entrance with the joyful news of the
free grace of God in Christ for all sinners. Even though hundreds of workers
have already been sent out into the great harvest from our institutions, the
requests for such workers have on that account not become fewer in time but
rather steadily more numerous, so that finally, with saddened hearts we have
no longer been about to satisfy most of these requests. And so it finally also
came about in this institutional building, that the present number of
students, though insufficient, could no longer find room. A larger building
became a matter of unavoidable necessity.