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Fathers of the Church

January 12, 2008

Basil the Great

Stbasil_2January 10 was set aside by the Lutheran Service Book list of commemorations to remember Cappadocian Fathers: Basil the Great, Gregory of Nyssa and his friend Gregory of Naziansus, for their distinguished work and lives of holiness. This post is only about Basil. (Pronounced :Baahsil - sil as in pill, emphasis on first syllable). Here is information about this steadfast defender and confessor of the Holy Trinity. He is referred to several times in the Lutheran Confessions approvingly as one who faithfully confessed God's Word. He is mentioned in the Formula of Concord in the articles on Original Sin, Free Will and Christ.

St. Basil was Bishop of Caesarea (an area now in eastern Turkey) in the fourth century and is one of the foremost Doctors of the Church, who along with St. Athanasius, is noted as an outstanding defender of Christian orthodoxy during the Arian heresy – a heresy which, among its other errors, denied the Divine Nature of Christ. St. Basil was the son of St. Basil the Elder and Emmelia, the daughter of a Christian martyr, and was one of ten children, three of whom became saints – Basil, Macrina and Gregory. Basil, along with his brother St. Gregory of Nyssa and his friend St. Gregory of Naziansus, have been called the “Cappadocian Fathers” - renowned in Church history for their distinguished work and lives of holiness.

Raised mostly by his grandmother, Basil studied in his hometown of Caesarea, and later at both Athens and Constantinople where he developed his lifelong friendship with Gregory of Naziansus. After completing his education, Basil returned to Caesarea and became a teacher. Shortly thereafter, Basil underwent a profound spiritual conversion and set out on a journey in 357 to visit monasteries in Syria, Egypt, Mesopotamia and Palestine. Upon his return, he gathered disciples and founded a monastic community near Annesi where his sister Macrina had already established a religious community. The earlier influence of Macrina seems to have diverted Basil's course from that of being a prominent lawyer to that of religious life. Because of his innovations and philosophy of monastic life, and especially his creation of the Lesser Rule and the Greater Rule, Basil is considered to be the Father of Monasticism in the Eastern Churches. He gave monasticism a theological content and transformed it into an intellectual movement from simply the popular and evangelical movement it had been before. Basil's monasteries had schools attached to them, preparing children for life in the monastery or for life as strong Christians “in the world” outside the monasteries. The Rule of St. Basil is still followed by members of religious communities in both the Eastern Catholic and the Orthodox churches.

In the year 360, Basil reluctantly left his hermitage and embarked on a journey to Constantinople, the Imperial capital, to take part in a church council. Some what later, after his ordination, Basil played a major role in the administration of the diocese of Caesarea under Bishop Eusebius and this eventually brought the two men into serious conflict. Basil withdrew to his monastic community but was recalled in 365 at the urging of Gregory of Naziansus. In 370, he was chosen as successor to the episcopal see at Caesarea, which had been elevated to a metropolitan see. His appointment was lauded by St Athanasius but was not welcomed by the Emperor Valens, who had fallen into the Arian heresy. Throughout the next ten years, Basil was noted for his dutiful care of the poor and disadvantaged, his defense of the rights of the Church in the Empire, and most of all, his steadfast opposition to heresy, especially the widespread Arian heresy. While defending himself before the Emperor Valens, Basil was so fiery that a courtier questioned his nerve, to which the saint gave his famous response: “Perhaps you are not familiar with a proper bishop.”

Due to the efforts of Valens to reduce Basil's power and influence, and also to the ongoing controversy over the heretical Bishop Melitus of Antioch, Basil's friendship with Gregory was severely strained. Basil died on January 1. 379, at a time of terrible upheaval in the Roman Empire – the Goths were on the attack against the Empire on many fronts and the Arian heresy was raging with many leading church figures having fallen into heresy. Because the saint was so beloved, his funeral was attended by an enormous weeping crowd, including Christians, Jews and pagans.

St. Basil is ranked as a giant figure in Church history for his spiritual achievements and for his vast contributions to the Church in the tempestuous fourth century. The great saint was the one who formulated the classic definition of the Holy Trinity as three Persons in one Nature. His letters show us a remarkably holy and eloquent man, who, while never strong physically, was utterly fearless in both his defense of orthodox Christianity and while facing threats and pressure from the imperial authorities. The saint has left us over three hundred letters, mostly written after he became bishop. His other writings include – a treatise “On the Holy Spirit”, three books against Enomius, an heretical bishop, a compilation along with his friend Gregory from the works of Origen in the Pholokalia, and the fragments of his Lesser Rule and Greater Rule. He is also the ascribed formulator of the Liturgy of Saint Basil, still used on certain days of the year by both Eastern Catholic churches and Orthodox churches. His feast day is January 2.

Source

January 02, 2008

Wilhelm Loehe: The Missouri Synod's "real spiritual father"

Loehe_7 Today is the day set aside in the calendar of commemorations in Lutheran Service Book to remember and praise God for the life and ministry of Pastor Wilhelm Löhe. He is remembered among us chiefly as the founding father of Concordia Theological Seminary in Fort Wayne, Indiana, an institution he gave as a gift to The LCMS. But we do well to recall what Dr. C.F.W. Walther said about Loehe: "Next to God it is Pastor Loehe whom our synod must almost solely thank for the happy increase and rapid strengthening in which it rejoices; it must rightly honor him as its real spiritual father."

Although he never left Germany, Johann Konrad Wilhelm Loehe, born in Fuerth in 1808, had a profound impact on the development of Lutheranism in North America. Serving as pastor in the  Bavarian village of Neuendettelsau, he recognized the need for workers in developing lands and  assisted in training emergency helpers to be sent as missionary pastors to North America, Brazil,  and Australia. A number of the men he sent to the United States became founders of The  Lutheran Church--Missouri Synod. Through his financial support, a theological school was established in Fort Wayne, Ind., and a teachers' institute in Saginaw, Mich. Loehe was known for  his confessional integrity and his interest in liturgy and catechetics. His devotion to works of  Christian charity led to the establishment of a deaconess training house and homes for the aged. Löhe, through study and reading of the classic sources of Lutheran theology: Scripture, the Confessions, Luther and the orthodox dogmaticians, reclaimed a deep love for the Lutheran Confessions, the liturgy and the chuch's sacramental life and call to works of mission and charity. He was an ardent advocate of the primary place of the Small Catechism in the life of the Lutheran congregation, school and home and is perhaps most well known among us today as a catechist and founder of the Lutheran deaconess movement. Source Löhe's most well known work is his Three Books About the Church. You can read more about Löhe's theology and life in this book. There is an interesting overview of Löhe's life and times available in this article.
 

Löhe, like all of us, had his faults and failings. His emphasis on the divine institution of the Office of the Holy Ministry led him to some excesses in how he explained its powers and duties. He was wrong on the millennium. He is today in some of our circles often dismissed in a ham-fisted manner by those who often do not understand well what Walther taught on the ministry. It is a continuing point of conversation as to what extent Walther misunderstood and even misrepresented Wilhelm Löhe, viewing him through the controversies he had with a Lutheran pastor in New York, Grabau. Löhe's own assessment of conversations with Walther and Pastor Wynken is interesting to read. When he gave Concordia Theological Seminary to The Lutheran Church--Missouri Synod, Löhe issued a caution to The LCMS that we do well to consider today: 

In closing we want to share with you what is making our hearts
heavy, especially since it is of the utmost important to the seminary
in Fort Wayne. With much regret we have noticed that your first
synodical constitution, as is set now, did not completely follow the
example of the first congregations. We fear, and most likely rightly so,
that the basic, strong mixing of democratic, independent,
congregational principles into your church constitution will cause
more harm than the meddling of the princes and authorities did in our
church at home. Careful study of the apostles' many lessons concerning
organizing the church and ministry, would have better and differently
taught the dear brothers from among the laity. Constitution is a
dogmatic, but not a practical adiaphoron. May that which the NT
teaches of constitution, organization and ministry at large, be the
right locus of the new seminary, and may the results of new research
done by Lutheran theologians in the home country not be considered
inferior and be ignored by the professors and teachers at Fort Wayne.
If a large, interconnected church is to be assembled which is to be a
haven for harried souls, care must be taken that she be endowed in
holy form and shape by which she can be recognized and grasped.

Signed with heartfelt, loyal love and esteem your devoted friend
and Brother,

Johann Conrad Wilhelm Loehe
Pastor at Neuendettelslau in Franconia