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Wilhelm Loehe, disciple.


Sermon at the closing worship

International Loehe Society

July 13, 2005

The Director of the Neuendettelsau Mission, Hermann Vorlander, loves to tell the story of an African traveler making his first trip to Germany. Upon arriving in Frankfurt he is awed by the sights and sounds of this ultramodern banking and commercial center. He is heard to remark, "If Frankfurt, a city I have never even heard of, is so great, how big must Neuendettelsau be!"

Indeed. How big must Neuendettelsau be? While it may not be Frankfurt am Main, Neuendettelsau is big far beyond its physical size and single Autobahn Ausfahrt (exit). For Wartburg College alumni and student tours that visit there, Neuendettelsau is invariably in·var·i·a·ble  
adj.
Not changing or subject to change; constant.



in·vari·a·bil
 a highlight of the entire trip, far surpassing sites and cities much more famous and outwardly grand.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

While the symbol of Wartburg College is the castle in Eisenach, and our athletic teams are the "Knights," the heart and soul of our college and its mission is to be found in the spirit of this little Franconian village. The place where Loehe first said "I would not even want my dog to be buried here" has become great beyond his wildest dreams. Today the name Neuendettelsau is synonymous with diaconal di·ac·o·nal  
adj.
Of or concerning a deacon or the diaconate.



[Late Latin dicon
 ministry throughout Germany and around the world. In Lutheran circles this name is known from Papua New Guinea Papua New Guinea (păp`ə, –y  to Africa to the United States.

In Matthew 13 we read, "A sower went out to sow." As Jesus tells the story, a bountiful yield of a hundredfold was the most that could be expected. Yet the harvest that grew from the sowing of Wilhelm Loehe from that modest village of Neuendettelsau far exceeds even that miraculous yield. Clearly God has richly blessed the church and the world through the call to that lowly Franconian sower and his passionate response, which is why a study of Loehe and his legacy ought to be encouraging and empowering for us all.

"Consider your own call, brothers and sisters." For most of us that's an invitation that is not immediately affirming. Like the Apostle Paul, "not many of us are wise by human standards; not many of us are powerful in the eyes of the world; not many of us are of noble birth."

And what's true for us as individuals is also true for us as institutions. Ron Matthias, Wartburg College historian, when researching our sesquicentennial ses·qui·cen·ten·ni·al  
adj.
Of or relating to a period of 150 years.

n.
A 150th anniversary or its celebration.

Noun 1.
 history, remarked, "It's a miracle It's a Miracle was a television show that aired on PAX-TV (now Independent Television) between September 6, 1998 and September 1, 2004.[1] Initially hosted by Richard Thomas[2], and later by Roma Downey, [3]  that we still exist at all! There are so many times and so many places where Wartburg College could have just 'gone under.'" It is humbling for us today to realize that six of the seven former college sites consist merely of a plaque--or a cornfield! But God chose Israel, a wandering people in search of a homeland; God chose Moses, who couldn't speak clearly; God chose David, a conniving adulterer a·dul·ter·er  
n.
One who commits adultery.


adulterer or fem adulteress
Noun

a person who has committed adultery

Noun 1.
; God chose a manger in Bethlehem, a band of ignorant, smelly fishermen, with a tax collector thrown in for good measure; God chose a bloody cross on a hill outside the city as the ultimate "Means of Grace The Means of Grace in Christian theology are those things (the means) through which God gives grace. Just what this grace entails is interpreted in various ways: generally speaking, some see it as God blessing humankind so as to sustain and empower the Christian life; ." God chose a troubled Augustinian monk who could find no peace, teaching at a struggling university, to reform and renew the church. God chose an outspoken pietist pi·e·tism  
n.
1. Stress on the emotional and personal aspects of religion.

2. Affected or exaggerated piety.

3.
 named Loehe, with a zeal for mission so suspect to church authorities that he could not get a first call (and who never did get a second), to spread God's love to the world. And in our own baptism into Christ we dare to believe Dare To Believe is a surreal TV sketch show that was shown on ITV in the UK. The programme was shown during the early hours of the mornings, and ran for two 13 half hour series between 2002 and 2004. The show gained a cult following amongst students and insomniacs.  that God has also chosen us--not wise, not powerful, not noble by human standards, but chosen nevertheless!

This is not an easy time to be chosen, especially not an easy time to be a chosen Lutheran. Nondenominational non·de·nom·i·na·tion·al  
adj.
Not restricted to or associated with a religious denomination.

Adj. 1. nondenominational - not restricted to a particular religious denomination; "a nondenominational church"
 mega-churches are booming, building shopping centers, coffee shops, gymnasiums, and swimming pools, while many humble Lutheran churches struggle to remain alive. Theologically, this is a time when being confessional is often equated with being narrow-minded or, worse yet, judgmental judg·men·tal  
adj.
1. Of, relating to, or dependent on judgment: a judgmental error.

2. Inclined to make judgments, especially moral or personal ones:
. On college campuses students are far too eager to exchange a theology of the cross The Theology of the Cross (Theologia Crucis) is a term coined by the theologian Martin Luther to refer to theology which points to the cross as the only source of knowledge who God is and how God saves.  and the awe and mystery of the gospel for a theology of absolutism absolutism

Political doctrine and practice of unlimited, centralized authority and absolute sovereignty, especially as vested in a monarch. Its essence is that the ruling power is not subject to regular challenge or check by any judicial, legislative, religious, economic, or
 and triumphalism tri·umph·al·ism  
n.
The attitude or belief that a particular doctrine, especially a religion or political theory, is superior to all others.



tri·umph
.

At a recent Northeastern Iowa Synod convention I had a breakfast conversation with a lay couple, who were lamenting the imminent demise of the Lutheran Church. They shared that they had recently attended one of the "fastest growing Lutheran churches in Iowa" with a worship band and a dynamic "jeans and flannel shirt pastor." The entryway and parking lots were overflowing. It was exciting! "But did you hear the gospel proclaimed?" I queried. The reply was hesitant: "Well, not exactly. It was more a lesson on how to be happy and successful in life."

Those of us who are blessed in the tradition of Wilhelm Loehe have a mission and a message that is larger than "the wisdom of this world." Mark 10:35-45 is a reminder that our baptism is not a baptism into earthly greatness and success but rather a call to suffering service and compassion. The root meaning of the Latin "compassion" is often lost to us. In the German, Mitleid, "suffering with," is direct and clear.

To "suffer with" is not a popular calling that quickly fills parking lots and entry-ways, yet to this age of instant success and "either/or" absolutism (what I have often called the idolatry Idolatry


Aaron

responsible for the golden calf. [O.T.: Exodus 32]

Ashtaroth

Canaanite deities worshiped profanely by Israelites. [O.T.
 of certainty) the rich heritage of Loehe brings a "both/and" word of grace. Loehe embraced a theology that was personal, yet communal; intellectual, yet practical; confessional, yet outward seeking.

This is not to suggest that we can or should merely seek to imitate Loehe. Two years ago a number of us invited our sons-in-law to join us on our annual fishing trip to Canada. After several days of fishing all of the old haunts and holes with limited success, and after listening to many fish stories from bygone trips, a less-than-impressed son-in-law lamented, "You're fishing memories!"

It is not enough to merely go back to the same old places, using the same old methods, whether our task is fishing or Christian mission. It is not enough to resign ourselves that the way it used to be is the way it ought to be today.

Loehe, like Paul, challenges us to witness to the One "who is the source of our life in Christ Jesus, who became for us wisdom from God--righteousness and sanctification sanc·ti·fy  
tr.v. sanc·ti·fied, sanc·ti·fy·ing, sanc·ti·fies
1. To set apart for sacred use; consecrate.

2. To make holy; purify.

3.
 and redemption." This is the One who pours out upon us grace upon grace in the Word, in the Water, in the bread and cup, in the community of faith.

Here we meet the one who calls us again and again to consider our own call. Faithful to the tradition of the one who ministered in that little Franconian village, we take up our particular cross in our own particular time and place, and we faithfully follow him.

Amen. May it indeed be so!

Larry Trachte

Wartburg College Pastor
COPYRIGHT 2006 Lutheran School of Theology and Mission
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2006, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:Trachte, Larry
Publication:Currents in Theology and Mission
Article Type:Biography
Geographic Code:4EUGE
Date:Apr 1, 2006
Words:1157
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