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Church sends family a ‘letter of excommunication’…
Church sends family a ‘letter of excommunication’…
Pastor Burke Shade of the Cornerstone Reformed Church sent a letter to his former parishioner stating that he had been “excommunicated” from the fellowship of the church and handed “over to Satan and his kingdom.”
The letter went on to claim that the former parishioner was “no longer a Christian” and was “no longer part of the company of the saved.”
The letter is now going viral on Reddit.
Ok, so the pastor “excommunicated” someone after they left…?So what prompted this disgraceful letter? It seems like a clear cut case of “You can’t quit, you’re fired!”,
I think it’s interestingSo what’s your point?
The phrase "handed ‘over to Satan and his kingdom’ ” is harsh.Ok, so the pastor “excommunicated” someone after they left…?
Is it Catholic?My first question is whether or not the Cornerstone Reformed Church is a valid church.
I guess whoever is excommunicated (and stays excommunicated) was never really “born again” in the first place.“The Father, in His infinite love and mercy, has chosen sinners from every nation to be redeemed by the Holy Spirit…
Those whom the Spirit makes alive, come to believe in Christ as Savior by the Word of God, are born again, become sons of God, are joined to Christ’s Church, and persevere to the end.”
You beat me to it, Liza.Is it Catholic?
Then no, it is not.
~Liza
This pastor is obviously not typical of most mainline or evangelical Protestant pastors.I was under the impression that most protestants didn’t think anyone could do this…
It’s not self-contradicting. For one thing, he never said that they were reprobates–he holds out the hope that they will repent and return.That letter is actually self-contradicting in Reformed theology.
Who is the Pastor to think that he can determine who is one the the doubly predestined elect or reprobate?
Just another folly of Calvinism. Carry on.
Sounds like an ecclesiastical community.My first question is whether or not the Cornerstone Reformed Church is a valid church.
If he holds to classic Reformed theology (I’m not sure he does), then he does consider those limits terribly important, and he would identify them with the limits of those particular churches where the Word is rightly preached and the Sacraments are rightly administered.I have to wonder what exactly it is that the pastor thinks he’s excommunicating this person from.
The specific group he happens to lead? This doesn’t seem to be enough to justify the “turning over to Satan” language. “We turn you over to Satan until you come back, or until you go to the First Reformed Church of Whatever instead, which we disagree with but grudgingly admit is generally ok” just doesn’t have the right ring to it.
The visible confines of the universal Church? I was not aware that many besides Catholics found that to be terribly important, and I’m not sure what he would consider those to be anyway.
The fact that he’s a minister of the Gospel and exercises the power of the keys on behalf of the Church. This is an example (albeit a particularly strident and extreme one) of how the Reformed understand the power of the keys to work. You declare the consequences of people accepting or turning away from the Word of God.The actual universal Church? If so, does he think that if the person were to die under this “excommunication” that he would be damned? And regardless, what makes him think he can do that?
Not in the Catholic sense. But the Reformed do believe in a succession of teaching.I was under the impression that most protestants didn’t think anyone could do this, but if anyone can do anything at all like this, I would think that it would obviously be tied up in Apostolic Succession. Which these people don’t usually believe in.
Hi Ahisma: I’m always glad to read your posts and I really enjoy them. But I I’m trying to figure this one out in regards to what the point is. Excommunication is an old tool of subjugation. These folks at this particular church are just a bit more bold faced and less nuanced than those who are more practiced at it, but the implications are the same as any excommunication. Did you have an observation on it? I’m always interested in your observations.So what’s your point?
My thoughts exactly. I fear this letter probably did far more damage to this person then skipping out on church did. All it takes is something like this to turn apathy to outright disgust with Christianity.That letter is actually self-contradicting in Reformed theology.
Who is the Pastor to think that he can determine who is one the the doubly predestined elect or reprobate?