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March with Us at the Milwaukee Pride Parade on June 9



Join us as Episcopalians be marching with our LGBTQ+ siblings in the Milwaukee Pride Parade on Sunday, June 9. The parade step-off is at 2 p.m., and we'll gather to meet before then. The Episcopal Diocese of Milwaukee is proud to be a sponsor for this event again this year!


This year we're getting t-shirts! The t-shirts say "Wonderfully made (Psalm 139:14)" and "The Episcopal Church Welcomes You." They are available for $25, and we will distribute them at the parade. The deadline to order a t-shirt is May 21.

Please join us! To sign up and to order a t-shirt, click here. We will send the exact meet-up time and location to all who sign up. 

Ask a Theologian: Grace

Dear Theologian,

What is the theological meaning of the word “grace?” I notice that we refer to it often in our prayers and hymns. And when we ask God for “grace,” what do we hope to be given?

In Search of Grace


Dear Searcher,

In both the story of Israel and the story of Jesus, the word “grace” conveys a quality of God that has been experienced. It means that God is good, kind and generous to all human beings, blessing them beyond what they could ever “earn” or deserve.

It is not immediately evident to the human mind that “ultimate reality” is gracious. This needs to be discovered through experience. As we human beings live our finite lives in space and time, we reach out in faith to the Infinite. We wonder, sometimes anxiously, about the nature of the ultimate reality on which we depend. Is it to be trusted? Is it to be loved? May we safely abandon ourselves to it? Is God “good”?

The long tradition in which we stand answers these urgent questions with a firm “Yes.” We believe that, beginning with the remote figure of Abraham, God has been creating and forming a people to know God’s name (“what God is like”) and to live in intimate relationship with God. The revelation given to Israel, preserved in the sacred writings of the Hebrew Bible, is summed up in this text from the Book of Exodus:

“The Lord said to Moses, ‘... you have found favor in my sight, and I know you by name.’ Moses said, ‘Show me your glory, I pray.’ And he said, ‘I will make all my goodness pass before you.’ ... The Lord passed before him, and proclaimed: ‘The Lord, the Lord, a God merciful and gracious, slow to anger, and abounding in steadfast love and faithfulness, keeping steadfast love for the thousandth generation.’” (Ex 33:17-19; 34:6-7)

We Christians believe that the story of Israel culminated in Jesus of Nazareth, in whom we recognize the definitive revelation of “what God is like.”

His parables challenged people to believe in a God who is generous and merciful to the undeserving. He acted out the mystery of divine generosity and mercy by accepting and associating with the unacceptable people of his day. He ate and drank with “sinners,” and healed the wretched of their physical and emotional disorders. In all this, he was consciously showing the gracious goodness of God, the “in-breaking” of God’s blessed “rule” or “kingdom.”

But the greatest revelation of God’s graciousness came in Jesus’ death and resurrection. Only in that final, unexpected “turn” of the story do we receive the ultimate disclosure of what God is truly like, and what we may expect from God.

Out of mankind’s tragic rejection of God’s love as it was embodied in Jesus, God made a new beginning that went beyond any revelation that had been given before. The No of human beings was overcome by God’s decisive Yes.

In the risen Jesus, God was revealed as the One “who gives life to the dead and calls into existence the things that do not exist.” (Rom 4:17) A new possibility for human life was opened to believers, a way of living in trusting intimacy with God, set free from sin and the fear of death.

This is why the New Testament writings are pervaded by a joyous awareness of “grace.” St. Paul, in his letters, stresses the gift-quality of the “righteousness” that comes through faith in Christ. No one can earn or deserve God’s approval by what they do, but everyone can, by faith, humbly receive the gift of God.

The term “grace” is often used to name the gracious, freely given power of God that enables people to believe, to bear witness, and to serve. This is especially noticeable in the story of the early Church in the Acts of the Apostles.

In a profoundly true sense, “all is gift.” To live by this truth is to enter into the peace of God, which passes all understanding. At the same time, we are left free to accept or reject the gift that is constantly being offered. We are not saved without our own responsible involvement in God’s purposes.

This is the great paradox that is at the heart of Christian existence. On the one hand, all is grace. On the other hand, we are free and responsible. St. Paul’s exhortation to his people at Philippi gives clear expression to both sides of this paradox:

“Therefore, my beloved... work out your own salvation with fear and trembling; for it is God who is at work in you, enabling you both to will and to work for his good pleasure.” (Phil 2:12-13)

In another place, St. Paul acknowledges the same truth in very personal terms, as he recognizes both his own effort and the surpassing gift of God:

“By the grace of God I am what I am, and his grace toward me has not been in vain. On the contrary, I worked harder than any of them—though it was not I, but the grace of God that is with me.” (1 Cor 15:10)

And in our Anglican liturgy we recognize that even our “good works” are enabled by God’s grace:

“We humbly beseech thee, O heavenly Father, so to assist us with thy grace, that we may... do all such good works as thou hast prepared for us to walk in.”[1]

This brief explanation of the “doctrine” of grace is addressed to the mind. But for all of us there is another, much deeper level of assimilation. We can come to know something “with our heart.” This kind of learning comes only through life experience and prayerful reflection. The paradox of grace and freedom, though it can never be resolved by rational thought, can be lived in direct faith-encounter with the living God.

Faithfully,
The Theologian

[1] Post Communion Prayer, Rite One, BCP p. 339.


The Rev. Wayne L. Fehr writes a monthly column for the diocesan newsletter called "Ask a Theologian," answering questions from ordinary Christians trying to make sense of their faith. You can find and purchase his book "Tracing the Contours of Faith: Christian Theology for Questioners" here

Ask a Theologian: Salvation

Dear Theologian,

Someone asked me recently, “Are you saved?” I wasn’t sure what to say in response. Thinking about it later, I realized that I didn’t have a clear idea of what it means to be “saved.” Yet I know that we Christians talk a lot about “salvation” and “being saved.” I need some explanation of what these words really mean. Can you help?

Untaught Believer


Dear Untaught,

“Salvation” is a word that corresponds to the deepest longing of the human heart. What it signifies is in some sense the ultimate concern of all religion.

We know that all is not well with us. Injustice, oppression, and manifold forms of suffering characterize our social world, and each of us struggles against our own tendency toward evil. At the same time, we yearn for wholeness, for complete well-being of body, mind, and spiritboth for ourselves and for all human beings. We yearn for “salvation.” Where is it to be found?

The answer given in the Hebrew Bible is clear and unequivocal. It is God alone (the Lord) who savesfrom all forms of evil. “Turn to me and be saved, all the ends of the earth! For I am God, and there is no other.” (Isa 45:22) “I, I am the Lord, and besides me there is no savior.” (Isa 43:11)

The root of the Hebrew words translated by “save” and “salvation” has the basic meaning “to be broad,” “to become spacious,” and from this underlying meaning comes the idea of rescuing or delivering from some confining, threatening situation. For example, “The Lord brought me out into a broad place; he delivered me, because he delighted in me.” (Ps 18:19)

Most references to “salvation” in the Hebrew Bible have to do with being rescued from physical danger in this present life, although we Christians often “spiritualize” the meaning of “salvation” when we encounter the word in the Psalms or the Prophets. Sometimes, of course, the word does refer to the final consummation of God’s reign on “the day of the Lord,” which will include the establishment of righteousness.

In the New Testament, most uses of the Greek word sozo (“to save”) and its derivatives, especially the noun soteria (“salvation”), have a spiritual meaning, referring to the ultimate redemption of human beings in Jesus the Christ. But there are also places in the gospels where the word refers to a physical healing. For example, when Jesus says to people just healed, “Your faith has saved you,” the Greek word could just as well or more correctly be translated “has made you well.” (Mk 5:34, 10:52).

In the New Testament writings as a whole, it is clear that “salvation” for all human beings is achieved through the death and resurrection of Jesus. The meaning of this “salvation” is the establishment of the right relationship to God. Closely related concepts are “atonement,” “reconciliation,” “redemption,” and “the forgiveness of sins.”

From this perspective, the Reign of God has already been established, in principle, by what has happened in the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus. In that sense, “salvation” has been objectively achieved for all human beings. They have, in principle, been “saved” from their sinful estrangement from God.

But there is also a “not yet” dimension to this salvation. We are oriented in hope toward the complete establishment of God’s Reign at the end of time. The consummation of salvation exceeds human ability to grasp it (1 Cor 2:9-10); in the present, the gift of the Spirit is a foretaste of what is promised and hoped for (Rom 8:23, 2 Cor 1:22, 5:5; Eph 1:14).

For us who are still in the midst of our “journey,” therefore, there is also a sense in which we are still in the process of being saved as we move toward the ultimate fulfillment of God’s salvation. As St. Paul writes,

“I want to know Christ and the power of his resurrection and the sharing of his sufferings by becoming like him in his death, if somehow I may attain the resurrection from the dead. Not that I have already obtained this or have already reached the goal; but I press on to make it my own, because Christ Jesus has made me his own.” (Phil 3:10-12)

From God’s side, we might say, our salvation is assured, because of the saving death and resurrection of Jesus. From our side, though, there is still need of much learning, suffering, and transformation as we keep repenting of our sins and turning again and again to say Yes to God’s holy will.

We encounter here, once again, the paradox of Grace and human freedom. The two sides of the paradox are well expressed by St. Paul:

“Therefore, my beloved ... work out your own salvation with fear and trembling; for it is God who is at work in you, enabling you both to will and to work for his good pleasure.” (Phil 2:12-13)

“Are you saved?” You can reply with the assurance of faith that you have indeed been saved by God through the death and resurrection of Jesus, and through your Baptism and profession of faith in him. You can add that you are also still in the process of being saved, as you strive through your faithful choices to appropriate the “objective” salvation achieved in Christ.

Faithfully,
The Theologian


The Rev. Wayne L. Fehr writes a monthly column for the diocesan newsletter called "Ask a Theologian," answering questions from ordinary Christians trying to make sense of their faith. You can find and purchase his book "Tracing the Contours of Faith: Christian Theology for Questioners" here

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