We admire Marquart's eloquent and precise command of language. It
was a privilege to be in his classes in 1977 and '78. We recommend them to future
students. If I am going to be corrected, at least he makes me look forward to the trip.
But even the Synod's finest theologian can't debate black into white. He consistently
presents his flawed opinion on Voter Supremacy to "receptive" pastoral
gatherings and conferences where opponents are not given the opportunity to debate or
present an opposing view. His friends aren't doing him or the Synod any service in this.
Marquart refuses to support the Synod's historic polity on Voter Supremacy, he offers
the false alternative that the Synod is Church, an LCMS abomination. He completely
misapplies Acts 9:31, comes to an incorrect conclusion on Luther, whom he quotes from
Pieper Vol. III, 431, and totally misrepresents Walther and Pieper who taught that the
Synod is not church but a human organization.
If my conclusion that he calls Voters' Assemblies Bolsheviks was over stated he
certainly relates "Bolshevik" to the subject of Voter Supremacy in the same
paragraph of his earlier letter. We also quote his earlier writing where he states:
"'Voter Supremacy' is worldly, political sloganeering. Zeal for any 'supremacy'
except Christ's is alien to His church. One might as well be shouting: 'All Power to the
Soviets!' How's that for Hyper-Euro-Proletarianism?"
Of more than 111 examples of the Greek word for "church" or
"churches" in the New Testament, Marquart bases his Biblical support that the
Synod is church on one variant reading in Acts 9:31 from the NIV instead of the KJV. The
singular "church" in the NIV is supposed to prove the divine institution of the
LCMS and not just the local congregation.
The reader should take note of the differences in the following translations of the
same verse to which Marquart appeals for support.
KJV Acts 9:31 "Then had the churches rest throughout all Judaea and Galilee and
Samaria, and were edified; and walking in the fear of the Lord, and in the comfort of the
Holy Ghost, were multiplied."
NIV Acts 9:31 "Then the church throughout Judea, Galilee and Samaria enjoyed a
time of peace. It was strengthened; and encouraged by the Holy Spirit, it grew in numbers,
living in the fear of the Lord."
All the other examples of the word "churches" which appears about 35 times in
the New Testament apply to the local congregation. The other 81 or more examples are the
singular "church." Of these, the majority also speak about the local
congregation. The remainder refer to the church universal, the Body of Christ, such as
Matt. 16:18 and Eph. 5:22ff.
First, the Missouri Synod is neither a local congregation nor the entire body of
Christ, but a human organization of individual churches that belong to the Body of Christ.
Second, Marquart's appeal to Acts 9:31, as biblical support for calling the Synod a
church, stretches credulity. He has based his doctrine on one variant reading. The
"Majority Text," representing 90% of all the ancient Greek texts in existence,
doesn't even question that the preferred reading is "churches" instead of
"church." The NIV follows Nestlé's Western minority reading in Acts 9:31 with
"church," while the King James follows the vast majority of readings with
"churches."
Third, Acts: 9:31 refers to all of the Christians in Judea and Galilee and Samaria, not
a particular denomination that could be applied as an example of the Missouri Synod. The
LCMS could never be identified with "all" the Christians in any particular
region of the United States. Who was at "rest" when the Catholics persecuted the
Lutherans in Germany, some of the synod, but not the entire synod? Or, were only the
churches being persecuted a synod, while the churches that were persecuting them were not
a synod?
Fourth, Marquart applies Acts 9:31 three times in his book, "The Church" as a
biblical example of a divinely instituted synod, though his own footnote on page 195
argues against him. Doesn't this mean that the other 35 or more instances of
"churches" proves the opposite, namely that synods are not divine institutions
because they are not "church" in the proper sense of the word, but only a human
invention.
Fifth, during class, it was Professor Marquart, himself, who taught us that no doctrine
can be based on one passage, let alone one variant reading, but must have two passages to
support it from the homolougumena, the unquestioned 20 books of the New Testament.
What is the truth? Pieper and Walther clearly taught that the Synod is not church.
".the union of congregations into larger church bodies, such as conferences, synods,
etc., has not been ordained by God. The command 'Tell it unto the church,' according to
the context, pertains to the local church, or congregation, and it must be restricted to
the local church." (Vol. III, 421)
Pieper quotes Walther for further support on the same page: "An association of a
number of congregations to form a larger church body with governing officers, e.g., by
means of a synod with the authority of supervision, a so-called superior board, a
consistory, a bishop, etc., is not of divine right, by only a human arrangement.."
Marquart appeals to a quotation from Luther as support for the existence of one
congregation, being under one pastor that could possibly fill the entire world. Dear
Professor, if it is all the same congregation under one pastor, as Luther describes it in
this quotation, this couldn't be evidence from Luther to prove that the LCMS is
"church." A Synod is many congregations with many pastors, not one church with
one pastor.
Marquart wants us to believe that Pieper included a quotation from Luther that argued
against Pieper's own position (above) that the Synod is a human organization.
On page 428 Pieper says, the LCMS functions as a "representative church" and
only has, "advisory power."
Marquart may be able to tell us that black is white in Russian, German, Latin, Hebrew,
Greek, and I'll bet even more languages. However, neither Walther nor Pieper ever taught
that the Synod was anything but a human organization. Only the local congregation is
divinely instituted.
There couldn't be Voter Supremacy as Walther structured it in the LCMS if the Synod was
"church" because the "Big Church" must necessarily be the final
authority.
Marquart's students are not able to support their position from Scripture, the
Confessions, or Walther, which compels Marquart himself to come to their rescue with great
rhetoric, but no evidence!
When the Scriptures speak about the churches in Galatia, Syria, Cilicia, Macedonia, or
Judaea these are geographic arrangements, not divinely instituted Synod's. Even if each
congregation agrees completely with the other and works in perfect harmony with the other,
which would be a miracle, cooperation does not make a divine institution. Also, "a
churchly" function, activity, or association does not make a divine institution. Only
two or three gathered in Christ's name (the means of grace) make the local congregation
the only divinely instituted church on earth.
Those who have not read or heard Marquart must not judge his outstanding scholarship,
writing, and lectures on this one flaw in his theology.
It doesn't take a Seminary education for any layman to correct his pastor, only
knowledge of the Small Catechism. The truth has nothing to do with office, intelligence,
or reputation. The truth is its own defense.
I published "Reclaiming the Gospel in the LCMS" in
1998 over the shock that the "Church Growth Movement" and PLI could find a home
in the LCMS. The reason, I later discovered, is that both Seminaries have given up
teaching Walther's Voter Supremacy to their students. This has resulted in chaos in the
congregations. With no structure, the LCMS must fragment and shrink.
There is no question that God's Word is Supreme in the congregation but the Voters'
Assembly in the local divinely instituted congregation must be the final judge of that
Word and not the Synod, a Pastor, or any LCMS Professor.
We can now see why the lay people are no longer being encouraged from LCMS pulpits to
be in charge of, operate, and maintain their own churches. By the time the clergy wake up,
it may be too late.
The Walther Conference in St. Louis is the "line in the sand." Who will stand
with Missouri or who will stand with the Fort Wayne hyper-euro-Lutheran Bishops from the
"Big Church" or the District supported PLI CEO's?