CONCORDIA THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY
NEWSLETTER – Spring 1981
6600 North Clinton
Fort Wayne,
Indiana 46825
THE PRESIDENT’S MESSAGE – "OBJECTIVE JUSTIFICATION"
The doctrine of objective justification is a lovely teaching drawn
from Scripture which tells us that God who has loved us so much that He
gave His only to be our Savior has for the sake of Christ’s
substitutionary atonement declared the entire world of sinners for whom
Christ died to be righteous (Romans 5:17-19).
Objective justification which is God’s verdict of acquittal over the
whole world is not identical with the atonement, it is not another way
of expressing the fact that Christ has redeemed the world. Rather it is
based upon the substitutionary work of Christ, or better, it is a part
of the atonement itself. It is God’s response to all that Christ died to
save us, God’s verdict that Christ’s work is finished, that He has been
indeed reconciled, propitiated; His anger has been stilled and He is at
peace with the world, and therefore He has declared the entire world in
Christ to be righteous.
THE SCRIPTURAL SUPPORT
According to all of Scripture Christ made a full atonement for the
sins of all mankind. Atonement (at-one-ment) means reconciliation. If
God was not reconciled by the saving work of Christ, if His wrath
against sin was not appeased by Christ'’ sacrifice, if God did not
respond to the perfect obedience and suffering and death of His Son for
the sins of the world by forgiveness, by declaring the sinful world to
be righteous in Christ -–if all this were not so, if something remains
to be done by us or through us or in us, then there is no finished
atonement. But Christ said, "It is finished." And God raised Him from
the dead and justified Him, pronounced Him, the sin bearer, righteous (I
Timothy 3:16) and thus in Him pronounced the entire world of sinners
righteous (Romans 4:25).
All this is put beautifully by an old Lutheran theologian of our
church, "We are redeemed from the guilt of sin; the wrath of God is
appeased; all creation is again under the bright rays of mercy, as in
the beginning; yea, in Christ we were justified before we were even
born. For do not the Scriptures say: ‘God was in Christ reconciling the
world unto Himself, not imputing their trespasses unto them?'’ This is
not the justification which we receive by faith...That is the great
absolution which took place in the resurrection of Christ. It was the
Father, for our sake, who condemned His dear Son as the greatest of all
sinners causing Him to suffer the greatest punishment of the
transgressors, even so did He publicly absolve Him from the sins of the
world when He raised Him up from the dead." (Edward Preuss, "The
Justification of a Sinner Before God," pp. 14-15)
OBJECTIVE JUSTIFICATION AND JUSTIFICATION BY FAITH
The doctrine of objective justification does not imply that there is
no hell, that God’s threats throughout Scripture to punish sins are
empty, or that all unbelievers will not be condemned to eternal death on
the day of Christ’s second coming. And very definitely the doctrine of
objective, or general, justification does not threaten the doctrine of
justification through faith in Christ. Rather it is the very basis of
that Reformation doctrine, a part of it. For it is the very pardon which
God has declared over the whole world of sinners that the individual
sinner embraces in faith and thus is justified personally. Christ’s
atonement, His propitiation of God and God’s forgiveness are the true
and only object of faith. Here is what George Stoekhardt, perhaps the
greatest of all Lutheran biblical expositors in our country, says,
"Genuine Lutheran theology counts the doctrine of general (objective)
justification among the statements and treasures of its faith. Lutherans
teach and confess that through Christ’s death the entire world of
sinners was justified and that through Christ’s resurrection the
justification of the sinful world was festively proclaimed. This
doctrine of general justification is the guarantee and warranty that the
central article of justification by faith is being kept pure. Whoever
holds firmly that God was reconciled to the world in Christ, and that to
sinners in general their sin was forgiven, to him the justification
which comes from faith remains a pure act of the grace of God. Whoever
denies general justification is justly under suspicion that he is mixing
his own work and merit into the grace of God."
THE REALITY OF OBJECTIVE JUSTIFICATION
Objective justification is not a mere metaphor, a figurative way of
expressing the fact that Christ died for all and paid for the sins of
all. Objective justification has happened, it is the actual acquittal of
the entire world of sinners for Christ’s sake. Neither does the doctrine
of objective justification refer to the mere possibility of the
individual’s justification through faith, to a mere potentiality which
faith completes when one believes in Christ. Justification is no more a
mere potentiality or possibility than Christ’s atonement. The doctrine
of objective justification points to the real justification of all
sinners for the sake of Christ’s atoning work "before" we come to faith
in Christ. Nor is objective justification "merely" a "Lutheran term" to
denote that justification is available to all as a recent "Lutheran
Witness" article puts it – although it is certainly true that
forgiveness is available to all. Nor is objective justification a
Missouri Synod construct, a "theologoumenon" (a theological
peculiarity), devised cleverly to ward off synergism (that man
cooperates in his conversion) and Calvinistic double predestination, as
Dr. Robert Schultz puts it in "Missouri in Perspective" (February 23,
1981, p. 5) – although the doctrine does indeed serve to stave off these
two aberrations. No, objective justification is a clear teaching of
Scripture, it is an article of faith which no Lutheran has any right to
deny or pervert any more than the article of the Trinity or of the
vicarious atonement.
THE CENTRAILITY AND COMFORT OF THE DOCTRINE
Objective justification is not a peripheral article of faith which
one may choose to ignore because of more important things. It is the
very central article of the Gospel which we preach. Listen to Dr. C. F.
W. Walther, the first president and great leader of our synod, speak
about this glorious doctrine in one of his magnificent Easter sermons:
"When Christ suffered and died, He was judged by God, and He was
condemned to death in our place. But when God in the resurrection
awakened Him again, who was it then that was acquitted by God in
Christ’s person? Christ did no need acquittal for Himself, for no one
can accuse Him of single sin. Who therefore was it that was justified in
Him? Who was declared pure and innocent in Him? We were, we humans. It
was the whole world. When God spoke to Christ, ‘You shall live,’ that
applied to us. His life is our life. His acquittal, our acquittal, His
justification, our justification….Who can ever fully express the great
comfort which lies in Christ’s resurrection? It is God’s own absolution
spoken to all men, to all sinners, in a word, to all the world, and
sealed in the most glorious way. There the eternal love of God is
revealed in all its riches, in its overflowing fullness and in its
highest brilliance. For there we hear that it was not enough for God
simply to send His own Son into the world and let Him become a man for
us, not enough even for Him to give and offer His only Son unto death
for us. No, when His Son had accomplished all that He had to do and
suffer in order to earn and acquire grace and life and blessedness for
us, then God, in His burning love to speak to us sinners, could not wait
until we would come to Him and request His grace in Christ, but no
sooner had His Son fulfilled everything than He immediately hastened to
confer to men the grace which had been acquired through the resurrection
of His Son, to declare openly, really and solemnly to all men that they
were acquitted of all their sins, and to declare before heaven and earth
that they are redeemed, reconciled, pure, innocent and righteous in
Christ."
THE ISSUE AT OUR SEMINARY
Many of our readers know that our seminary, and one professor in
particular, has been recently criticized for undermining this comforting
and clear teaching of objective justification. The criticism and garbled
accounts of the situation have become so widespread lately that I must
now comment on the matter in this issue of the "Newsletter.
For over 15 years now Professor Walter A. Maier, Jr., has been
teaching a course in the book of Romans, and, although he states he has
always presented the doctrine of objective justification as taught in
our synod (e.g. in the "Brief Statement"), he has taught in class that
some of the key passages used in our church to support the doctrine
actually do not speak to the subject at all. As a result some within the
seminary community and some outside concluded that Dr. Maier did not in
fact believe, teach, and confess the article of objective justification.
A few – very few – complaints were brought against Dr. Maier and against
the seminary for letting this go on.
The president of our synod, who has the responsibility for
supervising doctrine in the synod, contacted me and asked me to try to
settle the issue and to persuade Dr. Maier to teach an interpretation of
the pertinent passages (Romans 4:25; Romans 5:16-19; II Corinthians
5:19) compatible with that which the great teachers of our church in the
past (C. F. W. Walther, Francis Pieper, Theodore Engelder, George
Stoeckhardt, Martin Franzmann, William Beck and others) publicly taught.
Meetings and discussions immediately took place between Dr. Maier and
myself. Later on the matter was considered in faculty meetings, in
department meetings, and in special committees appointed to discuss and
hopefully to settle the issue. During these meetings, which were always
most cordial, Dr. Maier has remained unpersuaded that his interpretation
of the pertinent passages is faulty. At the same time he has
consistently assured all that he has always taught the doctrine of
objective justification as understood in the Missouri Synod. He has,
however, referred to other biblical evidence for the doctrine.
In the meantime the president of the synod, growing anxious for a
clear solution to the problem wrote to the entire church body a letter
cautioning congregations not to nominate Dr. Maier for president of the
synod until the issue was cleared up to his satisfaction.
Now the issue became political, and protests and criticisms against
the president of the synod for his action and also against Dr. Maier'’
teaching began to multiply all over the synod. People naturally began to
take sides, not always so much on the doctrinal issue which was not
always understood and is still being discussed at our seminary, but for
ecclesiastical and personal reasons. We now know that the warning of our
synodical president against Dr. Maier not only failed to dissuade
congregations from nominating Dr. Maier for the presidency of our synod
(as Fourth Vice-President Dr. Robert Sauer had forewarned when
attempting to persuade the synodical president not to send his letter),
but possibly gained more nominations for Dr. Maier. Dr. Maier is now one
of the five men nominated for the presidency of our synod.
On January 30, 1981, the Board of Control met with Dr. Maier and
three representatives of the synodical praesidium (which had severely
criticized Dr. Maier’s doctrinal stance). We heard from two members of
the praesidium and then from Dr. Maier and two faculty members who he
had requested to accompany him. The results of this meeting, many of us
believed, represented a real breakthrough in understanding, and the
Board exonerated Dr. Maier of any false doctrine. It was my belief that
the representatives of the praesidium present were also satisfied and
happy with the report. In the discussions of this meeting Dr. Maier
expressed many genuine concerns related to the doctrine of objective
justification, e.g., that no one is saved eternally who is not justified
by faith, that God is even now angry with those who reject Christ and do
not repent, and that objective justification ought to be preached and
taught in such a way that the biblical doctrine of justification by
faith is always prominent. The report, in the form of a news release, is
found on page 4 of the "Newsletter", and I urge the reader to read it
because "The Reporter," "The Lutheran Witness," and most of the
newspapers over the country which reported on the matter did not
reproduce the report in its entirety. At the same meeting the Board of
Control strongly expressed its disapproval of some of the actions of our
synodical president in the matter.
Meanwhile the administration of the seminary, with the concurrence of
the Board of Control, determined that it would be best for the seminary
and for Dr. Maier if he not teach the course in Romans during the next
academic year. At first I tried to keep this matter private, but later I
decided to make a public report of the fact. My reason for this was
threefold. First, Dr. Maier was reported in the news media all over the
country as stating that he had not changed his position on the doctrine
of objective justification, suggesting o many that three years of
discussions with him had been quite fruitless and that he still did not
wholeheartedly believe in objective justification. Second, several
people sympathetic to Dr. Maier had threatened to withhold funds from
the seminary and had even reported our action to the accrediting
association of our seminary, "The Association of Theological Schools;"
it was obvious to me that they would make the matter of Dr. Maier’s
courses public whenever it served their purposes. Third, the president
of the synod was preparing a release revealing the fact that Dr. Maier
would not be teaching Romans during the next academic year. I thought it
would be preferable that the president of the seminary make this fact
known rather than those who have no business making such and
announcement and who might make the announcement in a way detrimental
either Dr. Maier or the seminary.
This is where the matter now stands. The Board of Control has stated
its confidence in the doctrine of Dr. Maier. Dr. Maier is presently
teaching Romans, will teach the course this summer, but is slated to
teach courses other than Romans next year. The faculty will continue to
discuss and try to achieve total agreement in the interpretation of
those passages of Scripture which teach objective justification.
A PLEA FOR CONCERN AND UNDERSTANDING
Through this entire and uncomfortable time the Board of Control and
the administration of the seminary have found themselves in an
understandably awkward position. We are pledged to remain faithful to
the doctrinal position of our church, a position which we believe with
all our hearts, and we will not deviate from this obligation one iota.
We are at the same time pledged to defend a professor and colleague if
he fails under unjust attack or abuse. I think we were able to maintain
this delicate balance while the present issue was pending, until the
political issue was injected. Now we find ourselves uncomfortably
between two rather large conflicting elements in our synod, both friends
of our seminary; those who believe that the president of the synod,
whether they agree with his actions or not, had legitimate concerns
about the doctrinal position of Dr. Maier, and those who believe that
Dr. Maier had been wronged by the president of the synod and that the
seminary could have done more to defend and protect him. How can we
respond to this divisive situation in the middle of which we find
ourselves? We can only say that we regret deeply the anxiety and
consternation which good friends of our seminary have experienced
because of the episodes I have recounted. May I ask these friends to
bear with us and put the best construction on how we have acted in these
circumstances. If you question Dr. Maier’s teaching on justification,
please read and believe the report on page and trust the honesty and
sincerity of those, including Dr. Maier, who had a part in releasing it.
If you believe that Dr. Maier has been wronged by various parties during
the last three year which have been trying to him, please believe that
our Board of Control and all here at Concordia agree with you; but God,
who saved this lost world and forgave the sins of mankind before anyone
ever asked Him, commands us also to forgive those who wrong us. And
please do not try to defend Dr. Maier by denying the public teaching of
the Lutheran Church. God’s forgiveness shines bright and clear above all
the pettiness and weakness and wrongs and controversy that have
transpired in connection with our dear colleague Dr. Maier, and it WILL
cover the sins of us all. Lent teach us this, and Easter confirms
it.
ROBERT PREUS, President
For those who wish to read more on Objective Justification the
following articles can be secured from our bookstore for a nominal
charge:
H. J. Bouman _Conference Paper on Romans 4:5" "Concordia Theological
Monthly" (CTM), Vol. 18, 1947, pp. 338-347.
Theodore Engelder, "Objective Justification," CTM, Vol. 4, 1933, pp.
507-516, 564-577, 664, 675.
Theodore Engelder, "Walther, a Christian Theologian," CTM, Vol. 7,
1936, pp. 801-815.
Martin H. Franzmann, "Reconciliation and Justification," CTM, Vol.
21, 1950, pp. 81-93.
E. W. A. Koehler, "Objective Justification, CTM, Vol. 16, 1945, pp.
217-235.
Miscellanea, "God Purposes to Justify Those That Have Come to Faith,"
CTM, Vol. 14, 1943, pp. 787-791.
George Stoeckhardt, "General Justification," "Concordia Theological
Quarterly," April, 1978, pp. 139 – 144.
STATEMENT ADDED TO PRESIDENT’S MESSAGE
While the president’s message "Objective Justification" was being
typeset, an "Official Notice" from the president of Synod was issued
which bears on the Walter A. Maier matter. In the notice the president
of Synod expressed his disagreement with our Board action which
announced a "basic understanding" with Dr. Maier on objective
justification. I felt compelled to respond on behalf of our Board of
Control with an Official Notice from the Seminary. This Official Notice
which seeks to clarify the Board’s action and position vis-à-vis Dr.
Maier’s doctrinal stand has been submitted to "The Reporter." It is
herewith appended to the present article for our readers’ information. –
Robert Preus
BOARD OF CONTROL MEETS WITH SEMINARY PROFESSOR
The Board of Control of Concordia Theological Seminary, Fort Wayne,
has announced that a basic understanding resulted from a lengthy and
thorough discussion on January 30th, between the Board, Dr.
Walter A. Maier, Jr., of the seminary faculty, three representatives for
the president and vice-presidents (praesidium) of The Lutheran Church –
Missouri Synod, and two additional faculty members. In a January 5-6
meeting the Praesidium stated that, in its opinion, "Doctor Walter A.
Maier, Jr., holds a position different from that of the official
doctrinal position of the Synod."
At the January 30 meeting, however, Dr. Maier emphatically affirmed
his belief that on the basis of Christ’s vicarious atonement God has put
His wrath away against the world and has declared the whole world to be
righteous; that the benefits of this objective forgiveness are
appropriated only by faith; the even though the entire human race has
been redeeme3d, the Law in all its severity, including the wrath of God
against sinners as well as the Gospel of forgiveness must be preached to
all, including Christians. According to the Gospel, God is indeed
reconciled; according to the Law, the wrath of God abides on all who
reject Christ and His work of reconciliation, refuse to repent, and live
in their sins.
Dr. Robert Sauer, Dr. George Wollenburg, and former synodical
vice-president Dr. Theodore Nickel represented the praesidium at the
January 30 meeting. Professors Kurt Marquart and Howard Tepker of the
seminary faculty were also present.
The frank five-hour exchange focused on several theological issues
which were isolated for clarification. The discussion showed that there
have been misunderstandings, unclear thinking, and poor communication
because of overstatements, lifting of phrases and snippets of doctrinal
expression out of context, and sometimes even pressing of casual
expressions to ultimate conclusions not intended by the speakers.
More than semantic differences surfaced early in the January
30th meeting. At the close, however, basic agreement emerged
on such topics as the wrath of God, Law and Gospel, and "objective
justification" – a term used in the Lutheran Church to summarize a
concept in the Bible and the Lutheran Confessions that forgiveness and
justification because of the death of Christ are objectively available
for all mankind through the ages, whether or not individuals appropriate
it through faith.
Difference in the interpretation of several critical passages remain.
The Seminary board, as well as Dr. Maier, is concerned that variant
interpretations can lead to a misinterpretation of doctrine. Therefore,
the Seminary board reported, discussions will continue by the
faculty.
Dr. Maier stated: "I regret that some publicly quoted statements of
mine from a technical paper ‘prepared for faculty discussion purposes
only’ have given a wrong impression about my doctrine of justification
as a whole. I, therefore, withdraw that paper from discussion.
Doctrinally, I stand with our Synod’s historic position."
In his statement to the Board of Control Dr. Maier further stated:
"When the Lord Jesus was ‘justified’ (I Timothy 3:16) in His
resurrection and exaltation, God acquitted Him not of sins of His own,
but of all the sins of mankind, which as the Lamb of God He had been
bearing (John 1:29(, and by the imputation of which He had been
‘made….to be sin for us’ (II Corinthians 5:21), indeed, ‘made a curse
for us’" (Galatians 3:13).
"In this sense, the justification of Jesus was the justification of
those whose sins He bore. The treasure of justification or forgiveness
gained by Christ for all mankind is truly offered, given, and
distributed in and through the Gospel and sacraments of Christ."
"Faith alone can receive this treasure offered in the Gospel, and
this faith itself is entirely a gracious gift and creation of God
through the means of grace. Faith adds nothing to God’s forgiveness in
Christ offered in the Gospel, but only receives it. Thus, ‘He that
believeth on the Son hath everlasting life: and He that believeth not
the Son, shall not see life; but the wrath of God abideth on Him’" (John
3:30).
"My reservation concerning some of the traditional terminology
employed in expressing the doctrine of justification are fully covered
by the following statements from the major essay delivered to the first
convention of the Synodical Conference, assembled in Milwaukee July
10-16, 1872:
"When speaking with regard to the acquisition of salvation (by
Christ), God has wrath for no man any longer; but when speaking with
regard to the appropriation, He is wrathful with everyone who is no in
Christ ("Proceedings," p. 32). Before faith the sinner is righteous
before God only according to the acquisition and the divine intention,
but he is actually ("actu") righteous, righteous for his own person,
righteous indeed, first when he believes ("Proceedings," p. 68."
Following the meeting Board Chairman Raymond N. Joeckel commented,
"We only wish that we could have reached this stage of the discussions
and that we could have had this kind of interchange before unfortunate
statements appeared in the public press. The church can learn from this
that the Lord blesses sincere efforts to discuss and clarify the meaning
and message of the Holy Scriptures."
COMMENT ON AN OFFICIAL NOTICE
The Official Notice of our synodical president regarding Dr. Walter
A. Maier and the doctrine of objective justification in the March 30
issue of "The Lutheran Witness Reporter" requires an answer by me as
president and executive officer of the Board of Control of Concordia
Theological Seminary where Dr. Maier teaches.
Once again we wish to express our deep appreciation to the president
for his recognition of the central importance of the doctrine of
objective justification and his concern that this comforting teaching be
taught clearly at our school. We agree wholeheartedly with his citation
from Dr. Francis Pieper, ""he doctrine of objective justification is of
vital important to the entire Christian doctrine. Only by keeping this
doctrine intact will the Christian doctrine remain intact. It will be
irretrievably lost if this doctrine is abandoned."
However, there are some serious inaccuracies and mistaken judgments
in the Official Notice which call for correction and comment.
First, the president of the Synod points to an apparent conflict
between my summary of the issues on the subject of justification sent
to the Board of Control December 23, 1980, and some later statements
made by me and the Board of Control concerning Dr. Maier’s position.
In the December statement I described Dr. Maier’s position as he
expressed it to the Board at its November, 1980 meeting (with the
president of Synod in attendance). There I state that Dr. Maier can
find no explicit Biblical evidence for the doctrine of objective
justification and no explicit Biblical evidence for the doctrine that
God was reconciled (put His anger aside) on account of the ransom paid
by Christ. Two months later I stated that Dr. Maier "has always
believed" – it would have been better to have said "has consistently
affirmed to the Board and to me his belief" – in objective
justification; and the Board in its release said that Dr. Maier
emphatically affirmed his believe that on the basis of Christs’s
vicarious atonement God put His wrath away against the world and has
declared the whole world to be righteous." The explanation for this
apparent discrepancy lies in the simple fact that in the January
meeting of the Board of Control (which the president of Synod did not
attend) Dr. Maier clearly affirmed that Scripture does in fact teach
the doctrine of objective justification and that on the basis of
Christ’s atonement God put away His wrath, whereas in the November
meeting, as reported, he did not do so. An so "all" the statements
cited are true and factual
Our synodical president says "I must report that the
vice-presidents are of the opinion that there is no evidence from the
Board of Control meeting which would change their judgment that Dr.
Maier is at variance with the doctrinal position of the Synod." This
must be a mistake. Former Vice-President Theodore Nickel and
Vice-President George Wollenburg, together with Vice-president Robert
Sauer, represented the Praesidium at the January Board meeting. Dr.
Nickel and Dr. Wollenburg criticized Dr. Maier’s position at the
meeting. But when Dr. Maier affirmed his belief that objective
justification was taught in Scripture (I Timothy 3:16) and that God’s
wrath has been appeased through the death of His Son, the Board gained
the distinct impression that both Dr. Nickel and Dr. Wollenburg were
sufficiently satisfied that Dr. Maier was not at variance with the
doctrinal position of the Synod. At least, these two men never
expressed themselves to the contrary to the Board or to Dr. Maier. The
Board report of the January 30 meeting with Dr. Maier and
representatives of the Praesidium has been out since February 2, and
so Dr. Wollenburg and Dr. Nickel have had plenty of time to dissociate
themselves from it, if they wanted to do so. It does seem strange to
us that the president of the Synod did not announce his misgivings
soon after the Board meeting and news release, but rather waited until
after Dr. Maier has been clearly nominated for the presidency of the
Missouri Synod.
Furthermore, Vice-President Sauer is a member of the Board of
Control and had a hand in writing and issuing the Board release of
February 2. According to the February 14 St. Louis Globe Democrat Dr.
Sauer said, "’After a recent discussion lasting several hours,’ Dr.
Maier ‘appears to be in a position of changing with regard to the
vital doctrinal matter.’" So the president of our Synod apparently is
not including Dr. Sauer when he said, "I must report that the
vice-presidents are of the opinion that there is no evidence from the
Board of Control meeting which would change the judgment that Dr.
Maier is at variance with the doctrinal position of the Synod."
Perhaps there are other vice-presidents he is not including.
The suggestion of our synodical president that the Board of Control
is engaging in a
cover up in regard to Dr. Maier is unkind and
false. The Board has acted with utmost integrity. While the president
may differ with the Board’s conclusion and decision in the Maier
matter, it is not right of him publicly to question the ethics and
posture of the Board in the entire matter.
The president’s only evidence for a cover up is the fact that the
Board did not publicly announce that Dr. Maier would not be teaching a
course in the Book of Romans beginning with the next academic year.
This was not considered significant for the news release. At the same
meeting the Board also objected "strenuously" to "certain things" done
by the president of the Synod "which are high-handed, inexcusable, and
harmful to Dr. Maier or our school." The Board did not think of
including such items in its release either, and that out of love and
concern for the reputation of our synodical president. The omission of
pertinent or irrelevant facts in a release does not necessarily
constitute a "cover up." If it did, the president of the Synod would
be guilty of a serious "cover up." In his Official Notice he omitted
any mention of a verbatim quotation from Dr. Maier in the Board
release, affirming that Scripture does indeed teach objective
justification. Dr. Maier’s statement goes as follows, "When the Lord
Jesus was ‘justified’ (I Timothy 3:16) in His resurrection and
exaltation, God acquitted Him not of sins of His own, but of all the
sins of mankind, which as the Lamb of God He had been bearing (John
1:29), and by the imputation of which He had been ‘made…..to be sin
for us’ (II Corinthians 5:21), indeed ‘made a curse for us’ (Galations
3:13). In this sense the justification of Jesus was the justification
of those whose sins He bore. The treasure of justification or
forgiveness gained by Christ for all mankind is truly offered, given,
and distributed in and through the Gospel and Sacraments of Christ."
It was on the basis of this statement and other assurances given by
Dr. Maier that the Board announced in its February 2 release that a
"basic understand resulted from a lengthy and thorough discussion on
January 30 between the Board, Dr. Walter A. Maier, Jr. of the seminary
faculty, three representatives for the president and vice-presidents
(Praesidium) of The Lutheran Church – Missouri Synod, and two
additional faculty members."
We share our synodical president’s "frustration and amazement" at the
confusion which shrouds both the issue itself and the way it has been
handled. I know I speak for Dr. Maier and the Board of Control when I
say that we all are sorry for anything we have said or done which adds
to this confusion. I am sure that the president of the Synod too is
sorry for what he has contributed to the confusion and misunderstanding
which surrounds the matter. It is my hope that this response to his
Official Notice will serve to clarify the matter.