A Lutheran Toolkit
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About this ebook
The "Lutheran" in the title doesn't mean The Lutheran Toolkit is just for Lutherans. It's about a Lutheran witness for the whole church and for all sinners with ears to hear. It's a slender book about the big theological ideas the evangelical reformers of the 16th century used as a lens for understanding God's work in Christ.
Starting with Philiip Melanchthon's 1530 Augsburg Confession, which was drafted to defend the preaching and teaching of Luther and his colleagues, Ken Sundet Jones sees its primary themes as a set of tools that God uses to build faith in us. He takes the reader beyond scholarly analysis and historical explanations and uses his own experience as a college professor, parish pastor, and sinner looking for mercy, to discover God's handiwork in our lives.
Each chapter takes as its starting point one of the foundational ideas presented to the Holy Roman Emperor and representatives of the church, including Sin , God hidden and revealed, justification, ministry, the Christian life, the church, sacraments, and vocation. These are not simply theological categories for scholars to debate or historians to recount. They're the lived experience of the faithful from the first believers, to big thinkers like Augustine and Luther, to people in the pews, at the supper table, in their careers, and at their deathbeds throughout the ages.
The tools in this kit continually point to Jesus as the one who promises mercy and abundant life — and who has the power to deliver them. This is a word for those who've not yet heard it and for those who desperately need to hear it again.
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A Lutheran Toolkit - Ken Sundet Jones
A Lutheran Toolkit
© 2020 New Reformation Publications
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, including photocopying, recording, or other electronic or mechanical methods, without the prior written permission of the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical reviews and certain other noncommercial uses permitted by copyright law. For permission requests, write to the publisher at the address below.
All Scripture quotations, unless otherwise indicated, are taken from New Revised Standard Version Bible, copyright © 1989 National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved worldwide.
Scripture quotations marked (NIV) are taken from the Holy Bible, New International Version®, NIV®. Copyright © 1973, 1978, 1984, 2011 by Biblica, Inc.™ Used by permission of Zondervan. All rights reserved worldwide. www.zondervan.com The NIV
and New International Version
are trademarks registered in the United States Patent and Trademark Office by Biblica, Inc.™
Published by:
1517 Publishing
PO Box 54032
Irvine, CA 92619-4032
Publisher’s Cataloging-In-Publication Data
(Prepared by The Donohue Group, Inc.)
Names: Jones, Ken Sundet, author.
Title: A Lutheran toolkit / Ken Sundet Jones.
Description: Irvine, CA : 1517 Publishing, [2021] | Includes bibliographical references.
Identifiers: ISBN 9781948969444 (paperback) | ISBN 9781948969451 (ebook)
Subjects: LCSH: Lutheran Church—Doctrines. | Lutheran Church—History. | God (Christianity) | Christian life.
Classification: LCC BX8065.3 .J66 2021 (print) | LCC BX8065.3 (ebook) | DDC 230.41—dc23
Cover art by Brenton Clarke Little
For Ryan and all my students who’ve had ears to hear and hearts for the gospel, and with thanks to Jim and Gerhard, who handed on what they’d been given
Contents
Introduction
1. Looking for God in the Void
2. Sin (Uppercase and Lowercase) and the Captive Will
3. Starting with Christ, the God Who Shows Up
4. Justification by Faith
5. Delivering the Goods
6. Being Made New
7. The Church? I Don’t Even Know What the Church Is Anymore
8. The Word Made Visible
9. Sacraments Valid and Effective
10. It’ll Be the Death of You
Introduction
A Lutheran toolkit? First, what it is: it’s shorthand for a set of questions and outlooks that guide us in our thinking about what God does for us in the person of Jesus Christ. Second, what it’s not: it’s not an advertisement for any Lutheran church body over or against some other denomination. In keeping with the Reformer, Martin Luther himself, being Lutheran isn’t about institutions or organizations. Instead, it’s a way of looking at life, reading scripture, hearing God, and living a Christian life.
Tools are objects that serve to obtain a desired outcome. Hammers help build the places we live in, wrenches help put together the bicycle your kid got for Christmas, and mops help us clean up kitchen messes. In the same way, the Lutheran toolkit contains things with a particular end in mind—to create and sustain saving faith. In short, the toolkit is about how and why the gospel gets proclaimed, along with how it changes what we think it means to be a faithful person in this world.
The first tools we’ll grab out of the box are really two parts of one tool, like the two parts of a pair of pliers or scissors. They tell us why we even need a toolkit and what kind of box all these Lutheran tools nestle in (in case you’re wondering, it’s Christ himself). We’ll talk about the hidden and revealed God. Then we’ll pick up the idea of sin as a way of talking about how we human beings confront our outrage that God wants to be in charge, and along the way we’ll chuck out the tool of free will as a fairly useless implement that doesn’t live up to its late-night infomercials. Two well-known Lutheran tools, justification by faith and law-and-gospel thinking, will show how God actually works to free us from sin and build up new lives in us. The sacraments of baptism and the Lord’s Supper will show the concrete means that God uses for the task of fighting the problem of our lack of faith. Finally, we’ll take up a little-known and underappreciated tool that’s usually lost in the pile of screwdrivers at the back of the box. However, this tool, vocation, is one of the best ways to describe how Christians live for God and their neighbors, and it’s one that looks different from what most people might expect to find in our toolkit.
Along the way, you’ll gain some historical background about where this stuff came from in Luther’s life and work and the history of the Reformation. We’ll dig into some key passages in the Bible that Luther relied on and that highlight what the various tools can be used for.
When we close the lid on the box, you will be able to grab the handle and take it with you. Then the Lutheran toolkit will keep you focused on a clear picture of who Christ is for you, how God can use you to create that same relationship with others (especially those closest to you), and how you are freed to live within that relationship in your everyday life. And it might become something you can lay your hands on when you’re called to account for your faith or asked to explain why you don’t seem to fit in with those who’ve drunk the world’s Kool-Aid.
Acknowledgments extend to three places: First, many thanks to the staff and campers at Outlaw Ranch, a Lutheran Bible camp in the Black Hills of South Dakota, and to a number of Iowa congregations. This project began as a series of presentations given to a group of faithful adults during a week of family camp, which itself has a place of primacy in my own faith history. Later, the lectures were modified and presented to adult education groups at Luther Memorial Church, St. John’s Lutheran Church, St. Mark Lutheran Church, and Faith Lutheran Church in the Des Moines metro area, as well as First Lutheran Church in Cedar Rapids. In each case, the participants provided helpful feedback and, more importantly, showed ears finely tuned to the gospel.
A second set of thanks goes to Grand View University, its board of trustees, president, and provost. The initial toolkit presentations began to be molded into book form during a sabbatical semester in which I was released from teaching, committee service, and duties in the Theology and Philosophy Department. The sabbatical offered me time and space to take up my scholarly vocation. These ideas have percolated over the span of more than a decade and, semester after semester, have appeared in one form or another in course lectures and conversations with the hundreds of students who have sat through a term in my classroom. The chance to pull it all together in this project is a gift indeed.
Many thanks for my brothers and sisters in Christ at 1517. I began my connection with 1517 by being delighted with the faithful and theologically reliable work I encountered online. Now that I’ve added to it through regular opportunities to be an evangelist and teacher on the website, to speak at Christ Hold Fast, and to attend the annual Here We Still Stand conference, my delight and gratitude have grown through the relationships with 1517 staff. In particular, I’ve cherished time spent with Scott and Joy Keith, Kelsi Klembara, Daniel Emery Price, Chad Bird, and so many others.
Finally, I thank the faithful five who listen and speak to me daily. My trusted colleagues Mark Mattes and Kathryn Duffy and my