What Exactly Is Professionalism in the Teaching Ministry?

The word “professionalism” is overused and vague, and it is inadequate to describe Lutheran teachers who are also gospel ministers. Consider this example: A family business, which employed 20 people with differing tasks and skills, had a financially successful year. A formal celebratory gathering was in order. To heighten its significance, the naïve host suggested “professional dress” on the invitation. Imagine the embarrassment of host and guests alike when they arrived in every variety of attire, each of them thinking they were wearing “professional dress.” Continue reading

Teaching Science in the Spirit of Wittenberg

How about using science to support the Biblical teaching that God is triune? We would never do that, but this is an example of what the scholastics did before the Reformation.[i] Martin Luther had little time for this sort of reasoning. Following the posting of the 95 Theses, Luther was asked to present his views at Heidelberg in 1518. Here Luther warned that God is known only by seeing Christ on the cross.[ii] “The theology of the cross” is saving knowledge: the center of the Christian faith. In contrast, a theology of glory, attempts to know and satisfy God through human understandings and efforts.[iii] Continue reading