skip to main | skip to sidebar

Four and Twenty+ Blackbirds

A Round Table of Lutheran pastors speaking from within their office and vocation to matters of the Christian faith and life. As iron sharpens steel, our mutual engagement of questions and concerns pertaining to the Church and Ministry of Christ serves to refine our theological acumen, clarify our confession, and guide our sacred stewardship of the Mysteries of God.


25 January 2010

Pastoral Meanderings: Scripture Does Not Speak of Christ

Pastoral Meanderings: Scripture Does Not Speak of Christ, They Speak Christ
Posted by Rev. John Frahm at 1/25/2010 01:38:00 PM

No comments:

Post a Comment

Newer Post Older Post Home
Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Facebook Page

Four and Twenty+ Blackbirds

Promote Your Page Too

The Twenty-Four Elders (and a few living creatures)

Rev. Benjamin Ball
St. Paul, Hamel, Illinois

Rev. Larry Beane
Salem, Gretna, Louisiana

Rev. Paul Beisel
Immanuel, Iowa Falls, Iowa

Rev. Peter Bender
Peace, Sussex, Wisconsin

Rev. Eric Brown
Trinity, Herscher, Illinois

Rev. Heath Curtis
Zion, Carpenter, Illinois

Rev. William Cwirla
Holy Trinity, Hacienda Heights, CA

Rev. Dr. Burnell Eckardt
St. Paul, Kewanee, Illinois

Rev. Erich Fickel
St. Paul, Chesterton, Indiana

Rev. William Foy
Prince of Peace, Valparaiso, Indiana

Rev. John A. Frahm III

Trinity, Boulder Junction, Wisconsin

Rev. Robert Franck
Mount Olive, Duluth, Minnesota

Rev. Dr. Gifford Grobien
CTS, Fort Wayne, Indiana

Rev. Dr. Kent Heimbigner
Charity, Burleson, Texas

Rev. Dr. Steven Hein
Colorado Springs, Colorado

Rev. Rich Heinz
St. Johns, Chicago, Illinois

Rev. David Kind
University Lutheran, Minneapolis

Rev. Brent Kuhlman
Trinity, Murdock, Nebraska

Rev. Alan Ludwig, Professor
Lutheran Theological Seminary
Novosibirsk, Russia

Rev. Todd Peperkorn
Holy Cross, Rocklin, California

Rev. J. Richard Sawyer
Good Shepherd, Brandon, Mississippi

Rev. Robert Schaibley, emeritus
Shepherd of the Springs,
Colorado Springs, Colorado

Rev. Dr. Richard Stuckwisch
Emmaus, South Bend, Indiana

Rev. Jacob Sutton
Immanuel, Terre Haute, Indiana

Rev. Ralph Tausz
Apostles, Melrose Park, Illinois

Rev. David Jay Webber
Redeemer, Scottsdale, Arizona

Rev. William Weedon
Lutheran Public Radio, Collinsville, IL

Rev. Dr. Georg Williams
Zion, Ainsworth, Nebraska

Rev. Kyle Wright II
St. Matthew, Hamlet, Indiana


The Twenty-Four Topics

  • Christology
  • The Holy Trinity
  • Creation and the Cross
  • Law and Gospel
  • Justification
  • The Holy Scriptures
  • Tradition and Authority
  • Spiritual Fatherhood
  • Preaching and Catechesis
  • Holy Baptism
  • Holy Absolution
  • The Holy Communion
  • Ecclesiology
  • Calendar and Lectionary
  • Rubrics, Rites and Ceremonies
  • Hymnody
  • Prayer and Devotion
  • Charity and Almsgiving
  • Evangelical Missions
  • Christian Education
  • Vocation and Office
  • Marriage and Family
  • Human Life and Ethics
  • Polity and Politics

Blog Archive

  • ►  2020 (1)
    • ►  April (1)
  • ►  2015 (1)
    • ►  August (1)
  • ►  2014 (3)
    • ►  June (1)
    • ►  May (1)
    • ►  April (1)
  • ►  2013 (16)
    • ►  September (3)
    • ►  August (1)
    • ►  July (1)
    • ►  June (3)
    • ►  May (2)
    • ►  April (4)
    • ►  February (1)
    • ►  January (1)
  • ►  2012 (20)
    • ►  December (2)
    • ►  September (1)
    • ►  July (2)
    • ►  June (4)
    • ►  May (6)
    • ►  March (3)
    • ►  February (1)
    • ►  January (1)
  • ►  2011 (19)
    • ►  October (1)
    • ►  September (2)
    • ►  August (1)
    • ►  June (2)
    • ►  May (2)
    • ►  March (1)
    • ►  February (5)
    • ►  January (5)
  • ▼  2010 (51)
    • ►  December (2)
    • ►  November (4)
    • ►  October (3)
    • ►  September (3)
    • ►  August (7)
    • ►  July (2)
    • ►  June (3)
    • ►  May (9)
    • ►  April (5)
    • ►  March (6)
    • ►  February (3)
    • ▼  January (4)
      • Funeral Issue
      • Pastoral Meanderings: Scripture Does Not Speak of ...
      • Maybe the Hippies are Right
      • A Ponderance
  • ►  2009 (117)
    • ►  December (4)
    • ►  November (5)
    • ►  October (9)
    • ►  September (14)
    • ►  August (33)
    • ►  July (6)
    • ►  June (8)
    • ►  May (10)
    • ►  April (11)
    • ►  March (6)
    • ►  February (5)
    • ►  January (6)
  • ►  2008 (35)
    • ►  December (6)
    • ►  November (2)
    • ►  October (3)
    • ►  September (7)
    • ►  August (6)
    • ►  July (11)

The Mutual Conversation of the Brethren

  • Vocation and Office (41)
  • Tradition and Authority (29)
  • Rubrics; Rites and Ceremonies (25)
  • The Holy Communion (24)
  • Polity and Politics (23)
  • Marriage and Family (21)
  • Ecclesiology (19)
  • Spiritual Fatherhood (19)
  • Human Life and Ethics (16)
  • Preaching and Catechesis (15)
  • The Holy Scriptures (11)
  • Holy Absolution (10)
  • Hymnody (9)
  • Law and Gospel (9)
  • Prayer and Devotion (9)
  • Rites and Ceremonies (7)
  • Calendar and Lectionary (6)
  • Christian Education (6)
  • Christian Faith and Life (6)
  • Evangelical Missions (6)
  • LCMS (3)
  • Rubrics (3)
  • Augsburg Confession XIV (2)
  • Church Fellowship (2)
  • Divine Call (2)
  • Divine Service (2)
  • LSB (2)
  • Liturgy (2)
  • Lutheran Confession (2)
  • Piety and Reverence (2)
  • preaching (2)
  • preaching office (2)
  • Anthropology (1)
  • Ball Family - Oops (1)
  • Bible (1)
  • Chaplain (1)
  • Christ (1)
  • Church and Ministry (1)
  • Collects (1)
  • Commemorations (1)
  • Confessional Seal (1)
  • Cross and Suffering (1)
  • Eucharist (1)
  • Fail (1)
  • Fathers (1)
  • Frese (1)
  • Gard (1)
  • Good Shepherd (1)
  • Holy Baptism (1)
  • Holy Scripture (1)
  • Jesus Christ (1)
  • LCMS History (1)
  • Loehe (1)
  • Matins (1)
  • Pentagon (1)
  • Prayer (1)
  • Religious Freedom (1)
  • Saints (1)
  • Scriptures (1)
  • Shut-ins (1)
  • Sophia (1)
  • Sunday School (1)
  • Theology (1)
  • US Navy (1)
  • USS Coronado (1)
  • VQ3 (1)
  • Wolrabe (1)
  • Word of God (1)
  • absolution (1)
  • comfort (1)
  • confession (1)
  • coronavirus (1)
  • crm (1)
  • family (1)
  • forgiving sins (1)
  • laity (1)
  • numbers (1)
  • pandemic (1)
  • pastors (1)
  • peace (1)
  • politics (1)
  • repentance (1)
  • sacraments (1)
  • teaching (1)
  • the tax man (1)

Friends, Romans, Countrymen, et al.

  • Issues, Etc.
  • Pastor Alms
  • Pastor Asburry
  • St. Paul (Brookfield, IL)
  • Pastor Beane
  • Salem (Gretna, LA)
  • Peace (Sussex, WI)
  • Pastor Brown
  • Zion (Lahoma, OK)
  • Pastor Cwirla
  • Holy Trinity (Hacienda Heights)
  • Pastor Eckardt
  • Pastor Esget
  • Gloria Christi (Greeley, CO)
  • PastorGrobien
  • Concordia Institute
  • Pastor Heinz
  • University Lutheran Chapel (Minneapolis)
  • Pastor Koch
  • Pastor Kuhlman
  • Pastor May
  • Pastor Peperkorn
  • Pastor Petersen
  • Good Shepherd (Brandon, MS)
  • Shepherd of the Springs (Colorado)
  • Pastor Stuckwisch
  • Emmaus (South Bend, IN)
  • Faith (Plano, TX)
  • Pastor Webber
  • Pastor Weedon
  • St. Paul (Hamel, IL)
  • Gottesdienst Online
  • Scholia Website
  • The God Whisperers
  • Gottesdienst
  • Historic Lectionary
  • Liturgy Solutions
  • Lutheran Theology
  • Lutheran Liturgical Congregations

On the Windowsill

  • Epistles from Exile
    Sermon for 6/8/25: The Feast of Pentecost
  • Weedon's Blog
    Remembering Jimmy
  • Father Hollywood
    Sermon: Maundy Thursday – 2025
  • Susan's Pendulum
    Book Review -- TerKeurst
  • SteadfastLutherans.org
    Lent 2025 Devotion “Jesus Christ, My Lord” released.
  • thinking-out-loud
    “Unity in the Way of Worship (Ordo): Altar & Pulpit Fellowship and Liturgical Integrity”
  • Lutheran Logomaniac
    Fight the Good Fight…with Gentleness (Sermon for St. Timothy)
  • Confessional Gadfly
    Trinity 21 Sermon
  • Blog My Soul
    Hello world!
  • + The Name of the Lord +
    Elevate Your Shopping Game with KJ’s Weekly Ad Bargains
  • Necessary Roughness
    Quels sont les inconvénients du travail flexible ?
  • Lutherans and Procreation
    Resources for Comprehensive Study
  • The Staff of Aaron
    The Best Argument for IVF
  • Historic Lectionary
    Top How to Make Cannabis Oil Tips!
  • Cranach: The Blog of Veith
    The Babylonian Trick
  • incarnatus est
    Visions Electronics Flyer December 20, 2019 - January 2, 2020
  • Esgetology
    Misericordias Domini 2018
  • Fine Tuning
    An Easy Way to Boost Congregational Singing
  • Keeping and Treasuring The Word
    September 12 - Philippians 4
  • Gottesdienst Online
    A Pastor’s Daily Prayer
  • Aardvark Alley
    + Bernard of Clairvaux +
  • Kyrie Eleison
  • The Rebellious Pastor's Wife
    Words of Comfort in Miscarriage
  • Lutheran Theology
    Christ Alone: Reading Notes
  • Cyberbrethren: A Lutheran Blog
    Erziehungstheorien von Heute
  • A myHT Fortress
    Hear, Hear!
  • Blogosphere Underground
    Neurologists Henderson Kentucky
  • Mercy Journeys with Pastor Harrison
  • c & l notes
    services of angels and men
  • Concordian Sisters of Perpetual Parturition
    Update
  • Stand Firm
    My Testimony
  • Gottesblog
    Sermons online
  • Quicunque vult...
    We Have Met the Enemy. . .
  • Kenyan Lutheran Hymnal Project
    Progress Report
  • The Wurst Blog
    Man and Woman
  • RAsburry's Res
    Move on over - to "The RAsburry Patch"
  • Moriae Encomium
    Fifteenth Anniversary
  • TUEBOR: Honoring the Office of Holy Ministry
    Pastor Roger James
  • HERMENEIA
    Getting Back on Track
  • The Burr in the Burgh
    NEW ADDRESS
  • All The Fulness
    "Validity" and the Eucharist
  • House, M.Div.
  • Concordia TheoBLOGical Seminary
  • Rev. Cwirla's Blogosphere
  • Bloghardt's Reflector
  • FIRST THINGS: On the Square
  • Brent Kuhlman
  • Cyberstones-A Lutheran Blog
  • One Lutheran...Ablog!™
  • LUTHERAN WRITER
  • This Side of the Pulpit
Show 10 Show All

Regular Readers

Contact the Administrator

  • Contact Pastor Stuckwisch

Rubrics and Blogistics for the Blackbirds

Unlike the Ten Commandments, these are not written in stone (though some of them are pretty solid). Those who may be reading over our shoulders might also find these interesting.

1. Be reverent and courteous. Piepkorn's fundamental pair of rubrics for the conduct of the Service are likewise pertinent here. It's simply faith toward God and love toward others. All the other rules and rubrics are an application of those principles to specific questions.

2. Our blog is a public forum, and we are all public servants of the Word. Therefore, what we write and the manner in which we write ought to reflect an appropriate decorum. Though you may sometimes wonder, there are people reading what you have to say. The majority of them will mostly be quiet about it, and many will probably never respond with any comments, but they will benefit, and they will appreciate it.

3. Although this is a public forum, don't be self-conscious about your writing, and don't attempt to play to the crowd. Simply address yourself pastorally to the topics you take up for consideration, as you would respond to members of your own parish who are asking about or need to be told such things as pertain to their Christian faith and life.

4. Don't be intentionally provocative or controversial, but don't shy away from engaging topics in a way that challenges the status quo (from and within the parameters of the Word of God and our common confession of the same). By the same token, let us hold each other accountable to the apostolic doctrine. Do not fear correction, nor fear to question; that is the way in which we learn from one other and sharpen one another for the common good.

5. A helpful rule of thumb is akin to Luther's advice on confession: Don't make blogging into a torture, nor seek to invent things worth saying, as though to impress anyone. Instead, if there are matters weighing on your heart or mind, address them with the Word of God from within your office and station in life, and thereby allow your fathers and brothers in Christ to respond with the Word of the Lord from within their own vocations. (Blogging should not be a kind of virtual confessional; this rubric speaks only to the way in which one ought to approach this sort of writing and discussion.)

6. Our blog lands somewhere between an e-mail discussion list and a published theological journal. Less from-the-hip than e-mail groups, but less formal than a publication. Bear in mind that your posts can be edited (or removed) after the fact; so don't agonize over every jot and tittle up front, as though your posts had to be perfect from the outset. That's not to advocate recklessness, but do not be so scrupulous that you hesitate to say anything.

7. Our blog is something like an online Logia, and your posts may be compared to the "Theological Observer" in the CTQ, or the "Public Square" in First Things. Only this forum is much faster and allows for considerably more give and take, not only amongst ourselves but with others, too.

8. Make an effort to post at least once every other month. The more, the better, but don't try to force it. When things come up in the course of your pastoral vocation, consider the possibility of reflecting upon those matters on the blog (with appropriate discretion).

9. When you post something, "label" it with one or more of the twenty-four topics, whichever of those you are addressing. The blog will tally and catologue those things for us, which will be helpful. The precise list of topics may develop over time, but let's follow those parameters along the way; that will help to keep things on track.

10. Once someone has posted on a particular topic, there would be potentially two ways for the rest of us to respond (and we should be inclined to respond, as we are so minded and able): Either by way of comments under the post, which should be the normal approach; or, if you intend to offer a significant critique or a substantial addition, then you could write a follow-up post of your own. The goal, obviously, is not to compete with one another, but to dialogue with each other, to discuss and even to debate, as the case may be.

11. Don't blog in a spirit of melancholy, despair or bitterness. You don't serve yourself or your neighbor when you succumb to such things. At such times, seek out a father in Christ to lift you up and sustain you with the Gospel. Once you have been brought from trial and tribulation into renewed faith, then you might consider sharing aspects of that burden on the blog, retrospectively, in a way that helps to lead your readers into repentant faith along with you. It is one of the ways in which the cross bears fruit, not only in you and for your benefit, but also for the benefit of your neighbor. The hymns of Paul Gerhardt are such an example. Consider how comforting and helpful they are, because they always confess such faith in the Gospel: precisely in, with and under the Cross. By contrast, imagine the difference if Gerhardt had wallowed in self-pity and despair, instead of confessing the Gospel.

12. Our cooperative blog is not the place for posting sermons or extended quotations or lists of things or personal family adventures (though in some cases such things may provide the context for theological commentary). If you want to quote something, fine, but do so for the sake of providing your own assessment and constructive critique (whether pro or con).
 

Subscribe to Four-and-Twenty Blackbirds

Posts
Atom
Posts
Comments
Atom
Comments