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Call Day 2018 At Concordia Seminary, St. Louis - Totals from Both Seminaries - The Lean Years with Matt the Fatt. Honey, I Shrunk the Seminaries

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 "Compared to the ELS, we are huuuuuuge."


Call Day 2018 At Concordia Seminary, St. Louis:

"For a bit of perspective, garnered from past articles of the Reporter

Year      #Pastors Placed        #Vicars Assigned

2009            183                           167
[SP Matt Harrison elected, 2010]
2012           139                            114

2013           138                            103

2017           116                              85           (176 congregations were seeking pastors, 96 seeking vicars)

2018            88                             101"

Hunter has advised the LCMS District Presidents for decades - and it shows.

WELS guru David Valleskey went to Fuller for Church Growth Eyes, and look what it did for Mordor!


'via Blog this'

 Waldo Werning worked with WELS, the Little Sect, and his own LCMS, making an indelible bad impression on faithful Christians. His reward - Who's Who in Church Growth.


If Someone Denies the Chief Article of the Christian Religion, Is His Weight the Real Issue? Look Again at the Issue.St. Paul Was Abundantly Clear in Galatians

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Matt's wife raised the issue of the Eighth Commandment when I posted
Honey I Shrunk the Seminaries on Facebook.

A recent exile from ELCA did not like my description of the Synod President as Matt the Fatt. I asked Nolan what was more offensive, a nickname or Paul calling such people "damned to Hell." There is No Other Gospel, and LCMS forcefully agrees with ELCA about Universal Forgiveness and Salvation without Faith.
Mrs. Harrison even cited Subjective Justification and Objective Justification - 'tis on the tips of Synodical Conference tongues at all times.


 Now really?
Where is the Chief Article - Justification by Faith Alone?
LCMS has abandoned the Gospel, with cheers and hosannas from WELS-ELS.

This is my best photo of a slender Paul McCain, Harrison's covert campaign manager, but not my Photoshop. McCain featured a toned down version of this saint being, ahem, nourished by the Blessed Virgin Mary's statue. Mariology is not the chief article of Christianity, but it seems to animate a large faction of LCMS clergy.

 Paul McCain has grown in office, like others who find a bowl of lentil soup incredibly high in carbos. Steadfast Lutherans are real heavyweights. UOJ and Mariology are just fine in the LCMS, but not Justification by Faith.

PS - Young Nolan does not think I have proved my case about LCMS-WELS-ELS doctrine, so I looked over the number of articles with the UOJ or Objective Justification tag. I found over 300 before I lost interest in auditing the list.

The new LCMS catechism effort specifically and idiotically cites Objective and Subjective Justification.

1901 Catechism - LCMS

Gausewitz - Not Just WELS but Synodical Conference


 Wilken, facing El Chubbo, thinks Justification by Faith is "Calvinism."
Wilken teaches his rubbish on the radio and through Steadfast Lutherans, the most ironic blog title since Intrepid Lutherans.

How Similar the Left Wing Is to the Lutherans of This Insane, Old World

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The Lutherans of today are not different from the Left Wing of politics, using the same quotas and radicalism to maintain control.

 This Steadfast Lutherans blog will not publish any post that teaches Justification by Faith or link to any blog that does.

 They wrote their own history. An ugly little fungus became a magazine, became a seminary, became a synod, and killed it.


Censorship
The first principle is censorship. No one is allowed to disagree with Holy Mother Sect. That is official in the LCMS, which celebrated the Reformation's 500th this way - teaching doctrine without official approval is a fatal offense.

WELS-ELS did not need an official statement, since that has been policy for many decades.

A small faction gets things approved and the slightest murmur against the latest folly is a grave sin.

 Diversity works best when it is selective - that is why they insist on their group being over-represented, coddled, praised, and promoted.

Quota System
The quota system, often portrayed as diversity, is a toxic solution to staff problems - but it works. People insist on a certain style of person nominated to a board, praising that person's rock-ribbed conservatism and harmlessness. Once on that board, the allies work to add more. David Valleskey (WELS) is a good example, a new idea - a professor of evangelism - but really Church Growth Evangelical Ecumenism. An ecumenist loves every denomination except his own.

Soon Valleskey has his old buddy Bivens teaching at the seminary. The entire Mordor faculty is Church Growth and UOJ, truly united in folly. It took a few decades, but it worked there and everywhere else in Lutherdom.

The quota system soon drives out the old majority or replaces them one by one. This has worked wonders in the universities of America, the school boards, and of course - the seminaries. Once the seminaries are thoroughly infected, the graduates are ordained only if they are on board this social revolution.

 WELS babies are raised to excel in the stink-eye.


Hate Them Out - The Group Stink-Eye
WELS, Missouri, the ELS, and the micro-minis practice this method with rare finesse. I wrote up the reactions of the United Lutheran Seminary (ELCA) that botched their hiring of a new president, a woman who once advocated heterosexuality. They pounded her into the ground like a tent stake, even though she was 99.9% on their side.

The value of this group stink-eye can be appreciated by all. No one feels free to express any opinion outside the newly established norm. Stalinism is alive and well in Lutherdom, from the crumbling halls of United Luther Seminary to the entire father-son faculty at Bethany Lutheran Seminary (ELS). The few with decent positions can control them by keeping out any literate person who might be a threat to them. How else to explain the great Lutheran books from the past compared to the infrequent and tedious bloviations of the present?

 Use this expression when the wrong person is nominated.
It worked for CFW Walther - and he got his clone F. Pieper elected by rigging the votes. All for a good cause.

Ruffled Feathers and the Eighth Commandment

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Coffee is an event - not a beverage - at our home.
Mrs. Ichabod's personal chef makes pour-over coffee from freshly ground beans every morning. Often the next round is shared with Ranger Bob, our kindly neighbor, an Army Ranger veteran.


Someone linked a rare, common sense article on the Eighth Commandment. Whenever feathers are ruffled, Lutherans cite this commandment - and only this one - as if no other commandment exists. The First Table is clearly dominant for Luther, but I am biased from reading the Large Catechism. Hardly anyone notices or cites the Large Catechism, one of the great works of the Reformation.

 Someone said this was right on target for the Jeske cult.






Most people can see that Lutherans err two ways in citing the Eighth Commandment. One example is debating doctrine, which St. Paul certainly approved - "There must be divisions."

1 Corinthians 11 19 For there must be also heresies among you, that they which are approved may be made manifest among you.

When their published - that is public - doctrine is questioned, they fly into a rage and do their best to use this commandment to stifle all discussion and to impugn the motives of the dissenter.

This fury is not enough for them, they engage in a barage of personal insults, often about someone they have never met. Jesus' final Beatitude handles this situation well, because the drama queens aim at their own. The Atheist Forum has no interest in Lutheran discussions.

The collateral damage is to intimidate laity and clergy who might share their insights but are frightened of the subsequent damage to them, their family, and friends.


 Their lack of doctrinal leadership during the Reformation's 500th Anniversary is enough to indict them as "not apt to teach." They failed this simple question, "What is the Chief Article of Christianity, the Master and Prince, the judge of all articles of faith?"



Luther - Faith Remains Nature's Food and Idiot

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This is the kernel of the Gospel, in which the nature and character of faith is explained as an assurance of things not seen. It clings alone to the words of God and follows the things that are not seen, as alone conveyed in the word of God, and looks askance at many things which urge it to disbelieve the Word. What nature calls playing the fool, faith calls the true way. Nature may be wise and clever, faith remains nature’s fool and idiot, and thus comes to Christ and finds him. St. Paul’s words, 1 Corinthians 1:25 apply here: “The foolishness of God is wiser than men, and the weakness of God is stronger than men.” For feeling and believing do not get together.
The Sermons of Luther, Epiphany


Volume 8 is being prepared for printing by Janie Sullivan.

Norma Boeckler is illustrating the final volume, Gems Mined from the Sermons of Martin Luther.

Nice, but where's my coffee?

John 3 KJV - Commentary in Blue

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 Norma A. Boeckler


John 3:14 And as Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, even so must the Son of man be lifted up:
The Fourth Gospel can be seen as a commentary on the Torah, the Five Books of Moses. Thus the very odd story of the serpent icon that healed prefigured the crucifixion of Christ.

15 That whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have eternal life.
Faith in Christ is the dominant theme of this Gospel. Faith means eternal life.

16 For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life.
The "for" clauses are explanatory and are major breaks in the text. These connecting words are used in the Greek text, instead of punctuation, so they are important words. The world is frequently the unbelieving world in John, yet God loved the world so much that He gave His only-begotten Son. The Only Son was given for this singular purpose - saving faith. A similar expression comes from Paul - "I am not ashamed of the Gospel, for it is the God-Power of salvation to every one who believes...Romans 1:16.

17 For God sent not his Son into the world to condemn the world; but that the world through him might be saved.
St. John makes it clear that the basic state of the world is condemnation, but that faith in Christ is salvation. In the name of grace, UOJists teach their dogma, condemning and expelling anyone who doubts them. Faith in Christ is not needed for forgiveness and salvation - ask Jon-Boy Buchholz. However, faith in the dogma of universal forgiveness is needed, and a decision must be made for him (Walther).

18 He that believeth on him is not condemned: but he that believeth not is condemned already, because he hath not believed in the name of the only begotten Son of God.
Unbelievers do not enjoy forgiveness and salvation, but condemnation, because unbelievers do not call upon the Name of Christ.

19 And this is the condemnation, that light is come into the world, and men loved darkness rather than light, because their deeds were evil.
Jesus is the only Truth, the True Light that illuminates every man who believes in Him. Paradoxically, many love darkness rather than light.



***

GJ -  John 3:16 is called the Little Gospel, and rightly so, because faith in Him is the God-Power of salvation. The Holy Spirit brings the Gospel Word to individuals, actually bringing the Son of God to people. This efficacious Word generates faith in those who hear it.

Father Abraham - More Ignored and Overlooked by Lutherans Than Martin Luther. Gospel Promise - Faith - Righteousness. The Confused and Bewildered Should Read Romans 1:16 and Romans 10

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Genesis 15 After these things the word of the Lord came unto Abram in a vision, saying, Fear not, Abram: I am thy shield, and thy exceeding great reward.
And Abram said, Lord God, what wilt thou give me, seeing I go childless, and the steward of my house is this Eliezer of Damascus?
And Abram said, Behold, to me thou hast given no seed: and, lo, one born in my house is mine heir.
And, behold, the word of the Lord came unto him, saying, This shall not be thine heir; but he that shall come forth out of thine own bowels shall be thine heir.
And he brought him forth abroad, and said, Look now toward heaven, and tell the stars, if thou be able to number them: and he said unto him, So shall thy seed be.
And he believed in the Lord; and he counted it to him for righteousness.

Gen 15:6 - καὶ ἐπίστευσεν Αβραμ τῷ θεῷ καὶ ἐλογίσθη αὐτῷ εἰς δικαιοσύνην

The chapter begins with God telling Abraham not to fear, but to have faith in God's Promises. But Abraham's complaint is that he has no heirs, apart from the servant's son. Then Abraham was directed to consider the stars in the sky. "So shall your seed be."

This Promise is extraordinary, because kingdoms do not, and families often diminish in number to nothing. This Promise includes the Messiah and all those numbered in the Kingdom of God by faith. Abraham believed in the Lord's Promise, and God counted this faith as righteousness. This counting or imputing (ἐλογίσθη) is the same concept and word in Romans 4.



Romans 4 What shall we say then that Abraham our father, as pertaining to the flesh, hath found?
For if Abraham were justified by works, he hath whereof to glory; but not before God.
For what saith the scripture? Abraham believed God, and it was counted unto him for righteousness. 
τι γαρ η γραφη λεγει επιστευσεν δε αβρααμ τω θεω και ελογισθη αυτω εις δικαιοσυνην

Verse 3 leaves no doubt about how one is justified - declared forgiven. Abraham believed and it was counted (same verb as the Greek OT) as righteousness.

If one looks at all the mental pretzels the UOJists offer to say the entire world was justified here or there and everywhere, before birth, before our existence, then how was Abraham justified when he was already justified, like those who drowned in the Genesis Flood?

 Norma A. Boeckler


We are expected to accept their precious Objective Justification after this verse! But what did St. Paul already write in Romans 1:16?

Romans 1:16 ου γαρ επαισχυνομαι το ευαγγελιον του χριστου δυναμις γαρ θεου εστιν εις σωτηριαν παντι τω πιστευοντι ιουδαιω τε πρωτον και ελληνι

For I am not ashamed of the Gospel of Christ, for it is the God-Power unto salvation for every one who believes, both the Jews and the Greeks.

In Paul's most important doctrinal epistle, Paul declares early that the efficacious Gospel is the God-Power with two results - faith and salvation.

Now to him that worketh is the reward not reckoned of grace, but of debt.
But to him that worketh not, but believeth on him that justifieth the ungodly, his faith is counted for righteousness.

τω δε εργαζομενω ο μισθος ου λογιζεται κατα χαριν αλλα κατα το οφειλημα
τω δε μη εργαζομενω πιστευοντι δε επι τον δικαιουντα τον ασεβη λογιζεται η πιστις αυτου εις δικαιοσυνην

So we see the same verb again - counted - λογιζεται. Working earns pay, but that does not count for grace - ου λογιζεται κατα χαριν, but counts for debt - κατα το οφειλημα

This comes after the Apostle has established that no form of righteousness is the righteousness of God, not civil or Mosaic or any other kind of human righteousness.

Note the emphasis by word-order. First -  not working but believing on the One Who justifies the ungodly - his faith is counted - λογιζεται η πιστις αυτου - as righteousness. 

How can anyone extract Objective Justification from those words? Easy Peasy - they isolate a part of a verse, because they are lummoxen driven by conformity, and informed only by their boastful stupidity.

One UOJist proved his mental distortions by saying that faith meant "believing that we are already forgiven," which moves the true object of faith - Christ - to the dogma of rationalistic Halle Pieties, a bad bargain.

Even as David also describeth the blessedness of the man, unto whom God imputeth righteousness without works,
Saying, Blessed are they whose iniquities are forgiven, and whose sins are covered.
Blessed is the man to whom the Lord will not impute sin.
The same word from the Greek OT is used again

καθαπερ και δαβιδ λεγει τον μακαρισμον του ανθρωπου ω ο θεος λογιζεταιδικαιοσυνην χωρις εργων
μακαριοι ων αφεθησαν αι ανομιαι και ων επεκαλυφθησαν αι αμαρτιαι
μακαριος ανηρ ω ου μη λογισηταικυριος αμαρτιαν

The counting is used two ways - 
  • It is blessed to have righteousness counted without works - λογιζεται δικαιοσυνην χωρις εργων
  • It is blessed to have sins not counted - μη λογισηται κυριος αμαρτιαν

Cometh this blessedness then upon the circumcision only, or upon the uncircumcision also? for we say that faith was reckoned to Abraham for righteousness.
ελογισθη τω αβρααμ η πιστις εις δικαιοσυνην
10 How was it then reckoned? - πως ουν ελογισθη - when he was in circumcision, or in uncircumcision? Not in circumcision, but in uncircumcision.
11 And he received the sign of circumcision, a seal of the righteousness of the faith - σφραγιδα της δικαιοσυνης της πιστεως της εν τη ακροβυστια which he had yet being uncircumcised: that he might be the father of all them that believe - εις το ειναι αυτον πατερα παντων των πιστευοντων -, though they be not circumcised; that righteousness might be imputed unto them also - εις το λογισθηναι και αυτοις την δικαιοσυνην:
12 And the father of circumcision to them who are not of the circumcision only, but who also walk in the steps of that faith of our father Abraham, which he had being yet uncircumcised.

This rather small but concise section discusses in greater detail, lest anyone get this wrong. that righteousness does not come to anyone except through faith in Christ. The faith of Abraham was not that he would be the leader of a great nation, but that he would establish the line of people who would provide the Savior and believers as uncountable as the stars in the sky.

Gen 15:5 - ἐξήγαγεν δὲ αὐτὸν ἔξω καὶ εἶπεν αὐτῷ ἀνάβλεψον δὴ εἰς τὸν οὐρανὸν καὶ ἀρίθμησον τοὺς ἀστέρας εἰ δυνήσῃ ἐξαριθμῆσαι αὐτούς καὶ εἶπεν οὕτως ἔσται τὸ σπέρμα σου (arithmatic)

This is an interesting play on words - Abraham cannot count the stars in the sky, and how does God count someone righteous? With the same faith in the Savior as Abraham saw from afar. That is how righteousness is counted. Verse 6 - Abraham believed and it was counted as righteousness.

The Righteousness of Faith - The Name of the Formula of Concord article on Justification - FC III
Romans 4:13 For the promise, that he should be the heir of the world, was not to Abraham, or to his seed, through the law, but through the righteousness of faith.
14 For if they which are of the law be heirs, faith is made void, and the promise made of none effect:
15 Because the law worketh wrath: for where no law is, there is no transgression.
16 Therefore it is of faith, that it might be by grace; to the end the promise might be sure to all the seed; not to that only which is of the law, but to that also which is of the faith of Abraham; who is the father of us all,

How do people wander so far from the righteousness of faith? Like Jay Webber, they make the Pietist Rambach their theologian, rejecting Chemnitz on 1 Timothy 3:16. They imagine that the sex cult leader - with no degree - who led the Saxon Migration was a better theologian than Luther. Do not be shocked. The ELS picked a New Testament professor who had less training than his Bethany students with a college degree. The ELS loved Moldstad's UOJ so much that they made him pope.

Romans 4:17 (As it is written, I have made thee a father of many nations,) before him whom he believed, even God, who quickeneth the dead, and calleth those things which be not as though they were.
18 Who against hope believed in hope, that he might become the father of many nations, according to that which was spoken, So shall thy seed be.
19 And being not weak in faith, he considered not his own body now dead, when he was about an hundred years old, neither yet the deadness of Sarah's womb:

The emphasis in these verses is not unbelief, but the importance of faith. The Messianic Promise canceled his natural doubts about being a father, let alone the father of many nations, and Sarah being a mother at that advanced age. 

20 He staggered not at the promise of God through unbelief; but was strong in faith, giving glory to God;
21 And being fully persuaded that, what he had promised, he was able also to perform.
22 And therefore it was imputed to him for righteousness. - διο και ελογισθη αυτω εις δικαιοσυνην

How does unbelief make someone a guilt-free saint - as the Kokomites claim? Could any illustration be more clear than this - and it ends reflecting the Genesis 15 passage again. Romans 4 rests upon Genesis 15, and Genesis 15 foreshadows the New Testament Church and Gospel preaching.

 Norma A. Boeckler

Romans 4:23 Now it was not written for his sake alone, that it was imputed to him - οτι ελογισθη αυτω
24 But for us also, to whom it shall be imputed, if we believe on him that raised up Jesus our Lord from the dead - αλλα και δι ημας οις μελλει λογιζεσθαι τοις πιστευουσιν επι τον εγειραντα ιησουν τον κυριον ημων εκ νεκρων
25 Who was delivered for our offences, and was raised again for our justification.

To inject the toxin of UOJ into this argument, one must wrench the previous argument away from the righteousness of Abraham's faith. Thus the pea-brains of Universal Forgiveness without Faith say "Raised for our salvation!" as if part of a verse makes sense without the entire argument, without Father Abraham, the Father of Nations, the Father of Faith.


Thus Paul concludes the Romans 4 argument with this transition to Romans 5 -
 Norma A. Boeckler

Romans 5 Therefore being justified by faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ:
By whom also we have access by faith into this grace wherein we stand, and rejoice in hope of the glory of God.

δικαιωθεντες ουν εκ πιστεως ειρηνην εχομεν προς τον θεον δια του κυριου ημων ιησου χριστου
δι ου και την προσαγωγην εσχηκαμεν τη πιστει εις την χαριν ταυτην εν η εστηκαμεν και καυχωμεθα επ ελπιδι της δοξης του θεου

 Lamb by Norma A. Boeckler


And Now - A Word from the Biblical Illiterates Who Advocate Justification without Faith
I'd Rather Have Rambach, a hymn destined for the new WELS-ELS Hymnal.





Greek Lesson 4 - Romans 1:26-32. Bethany Lutheran Greek Lessons

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Parsing Link

Romans Lenski - Download and save public domain PDF.

26 δια τουτο παρεδωκεν αυτους ο θεος εις παθη ατιμιας αι τε γαρ θηλειαι αυτων μετηλλαξαν την φυσικην χρησιν εις την παρα φυσιν
Matthew 10:4 - Judas betrayed Him.
1 Corinthians 15:3 - Traditions delivered resurrection.
meta-alla, φυσικην physical - natural. 
27 ομοιως τε και οι αρρενες αφεντες την φυσικην χρησιν της θηλειας εξεκαυθησαν εν τη ορεξει αυτων εις αλληλους - αρσενες εν αρσεσιν την ασχημοσυνην κατεργαζομενοι - και την αντιμισθιαν ην εδει της πλανης αυτων εν εαυτοις απολαμβανοντες

28 και καθως ουκ εδοκιμασαν τον θεον εχειν εν επιγνωσει , παρεδωκεν αυτους ο θεος εις αδοκιμον νουν ποιειν τα μη καθηκοντα

29 πεπληρωμενους παση αδικια πορνεια πονηρια πλεονεξια κακια μεστους φθονου φονου εριδος δολου κακοηθειας ψιθυριστας
righteousness - not righteous - a; porn
30 καταλαλους θεοστυγεις υβριστας υπερηφανους αλαζονας εφευρετας κακων γονευσιν απειθεις
hybris - destructive pride, by extension - an insulter
31 ασυνετους ασυνθετους αστοργους ασπονδους ανελεημονας
Two words are easy - not storge (family love), not eleemosynary - merciful. Not the five words all start with alpha - a good teaching device.
32 οιτινες το δικαιωμα του θεου επιγνοντες οτι οι τα τοιαυτα πρασσοντες αξιοι θανατου εισιν ου μονον αυτα ποιουσιν αλλα και συνευδοκουσιν τοις πρασσουσιν



LCMS Central Lutheran School posts Gofundme page to help keep it open – Twin Cities

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Central Lutheran School posts Gofundme page to help keep it open – Twin Cities:



"The school was dealt another blow last summer when a systems malfunction caused government funding for toddlers and preschoolers to lag two months behind.

“It’s such a tightrope,” Wegner said. “The checks were coming late. We had to play catch-up.”

She estimates that the school is currently $350,000 in debt, of that, $127,000 is debt to vendors. Much of the rest is back pay to teachers and to Wegner, who said she often donates her entire paycheck so her teachers can get paid.

‘DOING SOMETHING NEW’
The option of closing down is something no one at Central Lutheran wants to consider. The staff is proud of the many opportunities they provide their students on a limited budget.

Pastor Nick Kooi from Emmaus Lutheran Church, which helps support the school, said he has been impressed with the dedication and creativity of the staff."



'via Blog this'

Sayings of Charles Porterfield Krauth - Lutheran Library Publishing Ministry – "Faithful to the Reformation"

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Download the E-book




Sayings of Charles Porterfield Krauth - Lutheran Library Publishing Ministry – 



"Faithful to the Reformation": "This Lutheran Library “short” is taken from the two volume biography of Charles Krauth published by Adolph Spaeth. Spaeth includes in his Preface to that work the following:

“The Motto chosen for this Memoir is Dr. Krauth’s description of Martin Luther, in the biography of the great Reformer which he undertook shortly before his death – “Faithful to the Truth, and true to the Faith.” It may be properly applied to Dr. Krauth himself. It represents his own religious and theological development. Faithful to the truth of God’s everlasting Word, he became ever more true to the Faith of the Church of his Fathers, and in the end its most consistent, learned, and eloquent witness in the English language. If we mistake not, there are not a few in our American Lutheran Church who, under the influence of their early training, still have their difficulties with that faith of the fathers, but are earnestly endeavoring to overcome them. We trust that this Memoir may be of special service to all such honest inquirers.”1"

About the Author

Krauth, Charles Porterfield, D.D., LL. D., was born March 17, 1823, at Martinsburg, Va., son of Charles Philip K. and his wife, Catharine Susan Heiskell, of Staunton, Va. He was educated at Pennsylvania College and the theological seminary in Gettysburg. Having been licensed by the Synod of Maryland, in 1841, he took charge of the mission station at Canton, near Baltimore. In 1842 he became pastor of the Lombard Str. Church in Baltimore; 1847, at Shepherdstown and Martinsburg; 1848, in Winchester. On account of the ill-health of his wife he spent the winter 1852 to 1853 i n the West Indies, serving the Dutch Reformed congregation at St. Thomas’, during the absence of its pastor. In 1855 he became pastor of the first English Lutheran Church in Pittsburgh, Pa., and in 1859 pastor of St. Mark’s, Philadelphia. Later on he served the mission churches of St. Peter’s and St. Stephen’s, in Philadelphia. In 1861 he resigned the pastorate of St. Mark’s in order to devote his whole strength to the editorship of The Lutheran, which in his hands became the strongest weapon in the conflict against the shallow, unprincipled “ American Lutheranism “ which ruled our English Lutheran Church of that time. He was pre-eminently fitted to transplant the spirit of true, historical, conservative Lutheranism into the sphere of the English language, and there to reproduce and establish it on such a basis, that its future should be secure. When the theological seminary at Philadelphia was founded, in 1864, he was appointed Norton professor of dogmatic theology, and at the installation of the first faculty he delivered the inaugural address, defining the theological position represented by that institution.
In the establishment of the General Council he took an active and prominent part, being the author of the Fundamental Articles of Faith and Church Polity, adopted by the preliminary convention at Reading, 1866; of the constitution for congregations, adopted in 1880, and of the theses on pulpit and altar fellowship, presented in 1877. He was also actively engaged in the liturgical work of the Church, resulting in the publication of the Church Book. From 1870 to 1880 he was president of the General Council. In 1868 he was appointed professor of mental and moral philosophy at the University of Pennsylvania. From 1873 he held the position of vice-provost, and after the resignation of Provost Stills he carried the burden of this office for many months. After a journey to Europe which was undertaken, in 1880, not only for his own recuperation but chiefly in the interest of the Luther Biography with which the Ministerium of Pennsylvania had charged him, the chair of history at the University of Pennsylvania was given him in addition to all his other duties. But the burden proved too heavy. In the winter 1881-82, his work in the seminary was frequently interrupted through bodily weakness. He died January 2, 1883.
He was one of the most prolific and brilliant writers of our English Lutheran Church.2

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Lutheran Church Canada - LCMS Releated - In Financial Meltdown from Outrageous Monetary Practices

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 Why did we loan all that money out with no repayments?

Michael Schutz (Michaelschutz)
New member
Username: Michaelschutz

Post Number: 1
Registered: 5-2018
Posted on Thursday, May 03, 2018 - 1:12 pm:   Edit Post Delete Post Print Post

Hi all, I'm a pastor in LCC. I poke my head in here from time to time to read a little bit of the goings-on, but haven't been compelled to enter into discussion until now.

I'm a member of the LCC District in question, and can tell you much of the very long story, but I'll make that very long story very short for now in hopes of answering the original question, at least a little bit.

In January 2015, we found out by letter from our District President that the District's Church Extension Fund was essentially insolvent. It was described as a "cash flow shortage" and so all further deposits and withdrawals were frozen at that point while it began to be sorted out.

We came to learn that there was almost $100 million deposited in CEF, that the assets were at that point valued at somewhere around $50 million, and that there was no indication that the situation could be improved. We learned there was one project that had been going on for the last 25 or so years that comprised the vast majority of the portfolio - a church, school, and seniors housing project in Alberta. Tens of millions had been lent over the years, and virtually nothing had been paid back, not even interest. This wasn't the only project that had been having trouble with repayments, but because of the size of it and because it was such a large percentage of the fund (and because the CEF was not its own legal entity but a component of the District as a corporation) its problems essentially caused the whole District to collapse financially.

Over the past 3 years, all CEF loans have been called in - even those in good standing. All District assets are being sold off; not just CEF properties but everything, including the offices. District staff has gone from about 12 to 2. Depositors have collectively lost millions, though efforts are underway to recover as much as possible, including this big project being turned into a corporation with the depositors as shareholders. It's possible that depositors could gain all their deposits back with the promised interest, but that could be decades away, and with so many elderly depositors, the mandate for this new corporation is to get it ready to sell and sell it off as quickly as possible.

In short, it's a huge mess. The situation has been described by District leadership as "erring on the side of ministry", and as you might imagine, there's been the whole gamut of reaction to that, from essentially agreeing with that all the way to a class-action lawsuit that is now also underway against the District leadership.

In terms of restructuring, there are two types of restructuring going on right now. Firstly, the District has been under court-ordered protection for the last three years (technically, it's not bankruptcy) so that the assets of the District can be sold off and as much as possible can be returned to depositors. This has been managed by a court-appointed firm.

Concurrent to all this, LCC as a Synod, with our 3 Districts, has been undergoing a Synodical restructuring. In my opinion, our District's CEF situation was the catalyst for this actually happening, but the idea had been under discussion for many years (really, ever since the founding of LCC in the late 1980s). Again, opinions vary widely as to the specific need and the specifics of the solution we've adopted, but we are working through it.

The financial/business side of this is bad, of course, but the spiritual implications have (and will continue to be) massive as well. When it's church leadership that breaks a trust like this, the spiritual implications are even a bigger deal than the civil ones, in my opinion.

Of course, there's much, much more to the story, but I hope that gives some clarity at least to the fundamentals of the situation.

Four Inches of Rain - After I Watered the Roses

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Falling in Love, from the side.

I watered the entire front yard, anticipating a long rainstorm. They may seem odd to some people, but automatic systems have sprinklers working merrily during a storm.

I planted Calladiums, the biggest bulbs I have obtained so far. I wanted them to be hydrated before the storm, because they were ready to grow. Like other bulbs, they were already showing some new growth.

The Calladiums are under the mother of all Crepe Myrtles, so the bush was pruned and then watered. Wasteful? What happens when a flowering bush needing little rain gets a generous watering and a pruning of the seeds from last year? The bush, late in leafing out each spring, burtst into leaves in less than one day, during the storm. The watering gave it the impetus to grow leaves and roots, and both lead to all-summer blooms.

Last year's bargain Hostas were just out of the ground. I wanted all Hostas to present themselves so the rabbits did not eat the plants one by one. Divide and conquer, or in this case, divide and digest.

Mints came by early, no problems with cold, and Cat Mint is already in bloom, serving meals to needy beneficial insects, not just to bees.

 California Dreamin


Last and Best - The Roses
Daily attention to roses is a good investment. When a bush looks weak, I prune every bit of deadwood away. When roses are blooming, I "prune" and give them to neighbors and medical people. John 15 - the unfruitful ones are separate. The fruitful ones are pruned to make them more fruitful.

I saw one bush with a lot of small buds on it. My wife said, "Which one?"  I said, "I will know when they bloom."

Neighbor Surprises Wife with Rose Bushes
We planned this last year. The neighbor whose relative pruned my trees said he wanted a rainbow collection of roses. He was too late for those offers, so I told him I would get them this time.

I got an early offer and ordered them. He came over with paint buckets for me (all clean, very useful for gardening). I pulled five bare root bushes out of the rain barrel. They cost him $6 each when the typical price is $15-20 each. The colors are purple, red-yellow, yellow, orange, and white.

The typical rainbow offer is five colors, no choice in which ones they are, a bit late in the growing season. No refunds. They are great fun in finding out some new or old names.

If someone wanted a new rose garden, a double offer would be $70 with shipping, two of each color. I took on some bigger offers and had a great time seeing roses I never heard of before - and finding roses I wanted to add in large quanitities -

  • Falling in Love - pink and white, fragrant
  • Hot Cocoa - hard to define, glows in low light
  • Bride's Dream - largest rose 
  • EASY DOES IT! - out-performs all other roses in blooming
Thanks to two offers I had three Easy Does It roses ($15 total), splendid in growth, prodigal in blooming - orange and sunset colors. The rose does not photograph well but I want them for the vase, not for the darkroom.

 This Easy Does It rose was almost pure orange.
Other blooms will vary in color, randomly it seems, all very attractive.

Lutheran Library Updates – May 2018 - Lutheran Library Publishing Ministry – "Faithful to the Reformation"

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  • Welcome
  • Format Updates
  • Recreational Reading
  • Thank you


  • Lutheran Library Updates – May 2018 - Lutheran Library Publishing Ministry – "Faithful to the Reformation":

    "Welcome
    Hello to friends of the Lutheran Library Publishing Ministry. Since our establishment last summer, 69 books have been completed. All republished books are available at lutheranlibrary.org for free download in a variety of formats for Kindle, Apple, and other devices.

    The goal of the Lutheran Library is to re-release well-written and readable books from sound, faithful American Lutherans of the past for the enjoyment and edification of a new generation.

    Format Updates
    Ebooks are created with something called Cascading Style Sheets (CSS). Old-school computer programmers claim CSS is not really a language - but it does have a sort of logic to it. After a period of study with O’Reilly’s CSS guide, your editor has updated the Lutheran Library CSS files. You will be able to see an immediate improvement in all newly released ebooks. Over time, all of the back titles will be updated.

    As always, if you notice any typographical errors or strange behavior in an ebook, let us know so that it may be corrected in future versions.

    You can find the version number of any Lutheran Library title at the bottom of the copyright page. Updated versions begin with v2.

    Recreational Reading
    Every once in a while we come across books which are not religious in any way, but are fun to read. You can find these under the “Extras” tag. Here are a few you might enjoy:

    Dixie Kitten by Eva March Tappan"



    'via Blog this'

    Luther's Sermons - So Far

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    Volume 6 was tied up for a time by HAL - long story. The color version has been set free.

    A Kindle issue is being addressed.

    The Gems Mined from the Sermons of Martin Luther volume needs to have pagination added to each quotation - not a big job, really a fun and inspiring task.

    Gems - selections from each of the eight volumes, designed to introduce people to Luther's Sermons. This is smaller in size so it will be full color only and Kindle.

    Volume 8 is being prepared by Janie Sullivan for Amazon-Kindle.

    If someone does not grasp this gem from Luther, he does not understand the Reformer, the Gospel, or the Scriptures.

    Anticipated Results

    When everything is done, the sermons in black and white will be about $40 TOTAL for all eight volumes - author's price. With sales tax and shipping for the whole set, that might be $60 - 70 or so. Sales tax varies quite a bit.

    The Gospel Sermons - Volumes 1-5 - would be about $40 with taxes and shipping. Don't kid yourself, the Epistle Sermons are just as good.

    Kindle ebook prices will be a little higher but I may run some specials, which will be noted here.

    Gems will be $10-15 (author's price) and a good gift or library addition by itself.

    Pastors who get stuck for sermon ideas should turn to Gems, or the complete set of Luther's Sermons, not to ELCA preaching books (yuk!), or Calvin's Commentaries (Why?) or the Pietistic Spoonfuls on Purpose.

     No, we saved a few titles.


    United Lutheran Seminary and Civil War Trust Announce Agreement to Protect Sell Historic Seminary Ridge

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    Presbyterian minister Theresa Latini identified as an ELCA Lutheran until they found out she sinned against the Lavender Mafia decades ago. An ELCA bishop volunteered to take over her job, and he promptly sold Gettysburg's property down the river - "to preserve it." When God hands you a gift and a heritage, you convert it to cash.

     We visited Gettysburg Seminary when we were in the area.

     Will they preserve the work of Henry Eyster Jacobs?
    He graduated from Gettysburg, taught there,
    and became a leader in the General Council.


    United Lutheran Seminary and Civil War Trust Announce Agreement to Sell Historic Seminary Ridge:



    "GETTYSBURG, Pa., May 4, 2018 /PRNewswire/ -- The United Lutheran Seminary today announced an agreement with the Civil War Trust to permanently preserve 18 acres of historic open space on Seminary Ridge in Gettysburg. The property, located on both sides of Seminary Ridge Road, has been a part of the Seminary since it moved to the site in 1832.

    "This property is a gift from God and we are stewards of this gift. We have a deep love for the property and its unique historic and scenic character," ULS Acting President-Bishop James Dunlop said. "For generations, these qualities have inspired thousands of seminary students as well as visitors from across our nation and around the world."

    Under the terms of the $3.5 million purchase agreement, the Trust will acquire an 11-acre portion of the United Lutheran Seminary property straddling Seminary Ridge Road and a conservation easement on 7 acres along Chambersburg Pike east of those two parcels.

    "We feel, as stewards of this site for more than 180 years, that we have a sacred responsibility to see it is protected for future generations," Bishop Dunlop said. "We believe this land needs to be preserved for the next generations of seminarians, and others, to reflect upon, learn from, and appreciate.""



    'via Blog this'

    Another Expression of Gratitude for Luther's Sermons - and for Alec Satin's Lutheran Library

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    Yet Another Lutheran Layman Wrote:

    Dear Pastor Jackson: Congratulations on nearing the completion of your work on the reprinting of Lenker's edition of Luther's  Sermons.  I look forward to purchasing a complete set as well as the GEMS volume, since I no longer have the Baker set I had years ago, along with the Baker HOUSE POSTILS.


    It is also important that the works of Krauth, Loy, Stellhorn, Richard, Wolf, Jacobs, Spaeth, Stump, Lenski and others are reprinted; I am aware that some have been.  I noticed that the dogmatics of Revere Weidner and Milton Valentine are back in print, so why not more of the others?

    ***

    GJ - He also expressed great appreciation for all the works published by Alec Satin's Lutheran Library Publishing Ministry.

    I set up a folder on my hard drive named Alec. I download the pdfs to that location and read books from there. I have a large monitor named Glau-co-ma, so Mrs. Ichabod and I can read at the same time.

    I hear from laity all the time, very seldom from pastors. I get all kinds of spam email because I publish one email address at the top of the page. However, I consign all those offers of $10 million plus - often from the Third World - to the junk folder.


    And from another reader

    Thank you for posting "The Sayings of Charles P. Krauth".   I have printed it out and putting it in glassine cover with plastic spine for ready reference.    I still enjoy sending snail mail greeting cards and short personal notes.  Always looking for short, thoughtful gems to include, and Krauth's "sayings" will be a welcomed source of inspiration to use   (with attribution of course).

    38% of ELCA Parishes Have 50 or fewer worship attendees.

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     Why are they not rushing in to join us in ELCA?
    Nadia Bolz-Weber might ask.


    38% of ELCA Parishes Have 50 or Fewer Worship Attendees.


     Some WELS pastors think Nadia is the bomb.



     Guess which minister - from the  group above -spoke for Jeske's conference?


     WELS-LCMS-ELS already decided in favor of women's ordination.
    This is ELCA Pastor Jodi Houge, who spoke for Jeske's Change or Die! poly-sect conference:
    ELCA-WELS-ELS-LCMS.
    As a board member of Thrivent, Jeske represents the cutting edge of apostasy in America. Thrivent's vast expenditures on various church growth programs and education can be compared to America's War on Poverty - not working.

    When I identified Jeske's Church and Change board members, photos, and bios, they began disappearing from that page. The WELS leadership at The Love Shack was 100% Church and Change, so the Jeske agenda was and is the WELS agenda. And, to quote the paragraph above - not working.




    A Reader Sent a WSJ Article on Social Activism in the Churches

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    Politics in the Pews: Anti-Trump
    Activism Is Reviving Protestant
    Churches—at a Cost
    A push toward activism among liberal Christian
    denominations is reshaping traditional worship and
    splitting congregations
    Ian Lovett May 4, 2018 10:51 a.m. ET
    By Ian Lovett

    Some people might think that social activism is limited to the Left-wing mainline denominations. That is the focus of this article. But the Church Growth Movement moved toward social activism, perhaps because its message of entertainment and success was too shallow, even for them.

    The article tries to paint activism as reviving congregations, but that is definitely not true. The main example we all know is the experience of ELCA deliberately causing division its entire history and reaping the just rewards of its polarizing tactics. Mark Hanson was not enough. Liz Eaton had to replace him - a white man! - and really enforce the quotas.

    One of my friends from school and our local Disciples of Christ congregation became an ELCA pastor. She took over a large congregation that was ripped apart by "the issue." I studied the church website and saw the evidence in the announcements. She resigned because she could not take the tension.

    The buzz from one fad gets old, so they march onto a new battlefield. The WSJ article describes an Episcopal congregation removing the George Washington and Robert E. Lee plaques from their church because Washington owned slaves and Lee fought for the South. Thirty people left immediately.

    Who knows what the next social justice fad may be.

    Norma A. Boeckler

    Luther's Sermon for Rogate - Prayer Sunday - The Fifth Sunday after Easter

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    Chartres Cathredral Rose Window


    Luther's Sermon for Rogate  - Fifth Sunday after Easter

    Second Sermon

    KJV John 16:23 And in that day ye shall ask me nothing. Verily, verily, I say unto you, Whatsoever ye shall ask the Father in my name, he will give it you. 24 Hitherto have ye asked nothing in my name: ask, and ye shall receive, that your joy may be full. 25 These things have I spoken unto you in proverbs: but the time cometh, when I shall no more speak unto you in proverbs, but I shall shew you plainly of the Father. 26 At that day ye shall ask in my name: and I say not unto you, that I will pray the Father for you: 27 For the Father himself loveth you, because ye have loved me, and have believed that I came out from God. 28 I came forth from the Father, and am come into the world: again, I leave the world, and go to the Father. 29 His disciples said unto him, Lo, now speakest thou plainly, and speakest no proverb. 30 Now are we sure that thou knowest all things, and needest not that any man should ask thee: by this we believe that thou camest forth from God.





    A SERMON ON PRAYER.

    1. First we note that in order for a prayer to be really right and to be heard five things are required. The first is, that we have from God his promise or his permission to speak to him, and that we remember the same before we pray and remind God of it, thereby encouraging ourselves to pray in a calm and confident frame of mind. Had God not told us to pray, and pledged himself to hear us, none of his creatures could ever, with all their prayers, obtain so much as a grain of corn. From this, then, there follows that no one receives anything from God by virtue of his own merit or that of his prayer. His answer comes by virtue of the divine goodness alone, which precedes every prayer and desire, which moves us, through his gracious promise and call, to pray and to desire, in order that we may learn how much he cares for us, and how he is more ready to give than we are to receive. He would have us seek to become bold, to pray in a calm and confident spirit, since he offers all, and even more, than we are able to ask.

    2. In the second place, it is necessary that we never doubt the pledge and promise of the true and faithful God. For even to this end did God pledge himself to hear, yea, commanded us to pray, in order that we may always have a sure and firm faith that we will be heard; as Jesus says in Matthew 21:22: “All things, whatsoever ye shall ask in prayer, believing, ye shall receive.” Christ says in Luke 11:9-13: “And I say unto you, Ask, and it shall be given you; seek, and ye shall find; knock, and it shall be opened unto you. For every one that asketh receiveth; and he that seeketh findeth; and to him that knocketh it shall be opened. And of which of you that is a father shall his son ask a loaf, and he give him a stone? or a fish, and he for a fish give him a serpent? Or if he shall ask an egg, will he give him a scorpion? If ye then, being evil, know how to give good gifts unto your children, how much more shall your heavenly Father give the Holy Spirit to them that ask him?” With this and like promises and commands we must consolingly exercise ourselves and pray in true confidence.

    3. In the third place, if one prays doubting that God will hear him, and only offers his prayers as a venture, whether it be granted or not granted, he is guilty of two wicked deeds. The first is, that he, himself, makes his prayer unavailing and he labors in vain. For Jesus says: “Whoever will ask of God, let him ask in faith, nothing doubting: for he that doubteth is like the surge of the sea driven by the wind and tossed. For let not that man think that he shall receive anything of the Lord.” James 1:6-7. He means that the heart of such a man does not continue stable, therefore God can give it nothing; but faith keeps the heart calm and stable and makes it receptive for the divine gifts.

    4. The other wicked deed is, that he regards his most true and faithful God as a liar and an unstable and doubtful being; as one who can not or will not keep his promise; and thus through his doubt he robs God of his honor and of his name of truth and faithfulness. In this, such a grievous sin is committed that by this sin a Christian becomes a heathen, denying and losing his own God, and thus he remains in his sin, and must be condemned forever, without comfort. Moreover, if he receives that for which he prays, it will be given, not for his salvation, but for his punishment in time and eternity and it is not for the sake of the prayers, but because of his wrath that God rewards the good words which were spoken in sin, unbelief and divine dishonor.

    5. In the fourth place, some say: Yes, I would gladly trust that my prayer would be heard, if I were only worthy and prayed aright. My answer is: If you do not pray until you know and experience that you are fit, then you will never need to pray. As I have said before, our prayers must not be founded nor rest upon ourselves or their own merits, but upon the unshakable truth of the divine promise. Where they are founded upon anything else, they are false, and deceive us, even though the heart break in the midst of its great devotions and we weep drops of blood. The very reason we do pray is because of our unworthiness; and just through the fact that we believe we are unworthy and confidently venture upon God’s faithfulness to his Word do we become worthy to pray and to be heard. Be you as unworthy as you may, only look to it, and with all earnestness accept it as true, that a thousandfold more depends upon this, that you know God’s truth and not change his faithful promise into a lie by your doubting. Your worthiness does not help you, but your unworthiness is no barrier. Disbelief condemns you, and trust makes you worthy and sustains you.

    6. Therefore, be on your guard all through life that you may never think yourself worthy or fit to pray or to receive; unless it be that you discover yourself to be a freebold character risking all upon the faithful and sure promises of your gracious God, who thus wishes to reveal to you his mercy and goodness. Just as he, out of pure grace, has promised you, being so unworthy, an unmerited and unasked hearing, so will he also hear you, an unworthy beggar, out of pure grace, to the praise of his truth and promise. This he does in order that you may thank, not your worthiness, but his truth, by which he fulfils his promise, and that you thank his mercy that gave the promise, that the saying in Psalm 25:8-10 may stand: “Good and upright is Jehovah: Therefore will he instruct sinners in the way. The meek will he guide in justice; and the meek will he teach his way.

    All the paths of Jehovah are loving kindness and truth unto such as keep his covenant and his testimonies.” Loving-kindness or mercy in the promise; faithfulness and truth in the fulfilling or hearing of the promises.

    And in another Psalm he says: “Mercy and truth are met together; righteousness and peace have kissed each other.” Psalm 85:10. That is, they come together in every work and gift we receive from God through prayer.



    7. In the fifth place, one should so act in this confidence of prayer as not to limit God and specify the day or place, nor designate the way or measure of the prayer’s fulfillment; but leave all to his own will, wisdom and almighty power. Then confidently and cheerfully await the answer, not even wishing to know how and where, how soon, how long, and through whom. His divine wisdom will find far better ways and measures, time and place, than we can devise, even should we perform miracles. So, in the Old Testament, the children of Israel all trusted in God to deliver them while yet there was no possible way before their eyes, nor even in their thoughts; then the Red Sea parted and offered them a way through the waters, and suddenly drowned all their enemies. Exodus 14.

    8. Thus Judith, the holy woman, did when she heard that the citizens of Bethulia wished to deliver the city to their enemies within five days if God, in the meantime, did not help. She reproved them and said, Now who are ye, that have tempted God? They are not designs by which one acquires grace; but they awaken more disgrace. Do you wish to set a time for God to show you mercy, and specify a day according to your own pleasure?

    Judith 8:10-12. Then the Lord helped her in a wonderful manner, in that she cut off the head of the great Holofernes and dispersed the enemies.

    9. In like manner, St. Paul says that God’s ability is thus proved, in that he does exceeding abundantly above and better than we ask or think. Ephesians 3:20. Therefore, we should know that we are too finite to be able to name, picture or designate the time, place, way, measure and other circumstances for that which we ask of God. Let us leave that entirely to him, and immovably and steadfastly believe that he will hear us.

    The Fifth Sunday after Easter - Rogate Sunday, 2018. John 16:23-30. Limited God Is the Problem

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    Ascension Service - Holy Communion, 7 PM, May 10th




    The Fifth Sunday after Easter - Rogate 2018

     Pastor Gregory L. Jackson


    The Hymn # 202                         Welcome Happy Morning                           
    The Confession of Sins
    The Absolution
    The Introit p. 16
    The Gloria Patri
    The Kyrie p. 17
    The Gloria in Excelsis
    The Salutation and Collect p. 19
    The Epistle and Gradual 
    The Gospel 
    Glory be to Thee, O Lord!
    Praise be to Thee, O Christ!
    The Nicene Creed p. 22
    The Sermon Hymn #454        Prayer Is the Soul's Sincere Desire

    Limiting God Is the Problem

    The Communion Hymn # 207            Like the Golden Sun  
    The Preface p. 24
    The Sanctus p. 26
    The Lord's Prayer p. 27
    The Words of Institution
    The Agnus Dei p. 28
    The Nunc Dimittis p. 29
    The Benediction p. 31
    The Hymn #457                What a Friend We Have in Jesus

    KJV James 1:22 But be ye doers of the word, and not hearers only, deceiving your own selves. 23 For if any be a hearer of the word, and not a doer, he is like unto a man beholding his natural face in a glass: 24 For he beholdeth himself, and goeth his way, and straightway forgetteth what manner of man he was. 25 But whoso looketh into the perfect law of liberty, and continueth therein, he being not a forgetful hearer, but a doer of the work, this man shall be blessed in his deed. 26 If any man among you seem to be religious, and bridleth not his tongue, but deceiveth his own heart, this man's religion is vain. 27 Pure religion and undefiled before God and the Father is this, To visit the fatherless and widows in their affliction, and to keep himself unspotted from the world.


    KJV John 16:23 And in that day ye shall ask me nothing. Verily, verily, I say unto you, Whatsoever ye shall ask the Father in my name, he will give it you. 24 Hitherto have ye asked nothing in my name: ask, and ye shall receive, that your joy may be full. 25 These things have I spoken unto you in proverbs: but the time cometh, when I shall no more speak unto you in proverbs, but I shall shew you plainly of the Father. 26 At that day ye shall ask in my name: and I say not unto you, that I will pray the Father for you: 27 For the Father himself loveth you, because ye have loved me, and have believed that I came out from God. 28 I came forth from the Father, and am come into the world: again, I leave the world, and go to the Father. 29 His disciples said unto him, Lo, now speakest thou plainly, and speakest no proverb. 30 Now are we sure that thou knowest all things, and needest not that any man should ask thee: by this we believe that thou camest forth from God.

    Fifth Sunday After Easter
    Lord God, heavenly Father, who through Thy Son didst promise us that whatsoever we ask in His name Thou wilt give us: We beseech Thee, keep us in Thy word, and grant us Thy Holy Spirit, that He may govern us according to Thy will; protect us from the power of the devil, from false doctrine and worship; also defend our lives against all danger; grant us Thy blessing and peace, that we may in all things perceive Thy merciful help, and both now and forever praise and glorify Thee as our gracious Father, through our Lord Jesus Christ, Thy Son, who liveth and reigneth with Thee and the Holy Ghost, one true God, world without end. Amen.


     The early Christians considered dying for the faith a great honor. Stephen is memorialized in the New Testament - the crown of life. Europeans said, "No cross, no crown."


    Limiting God Is the Problem

    KJV John 16:23 And in that day ye shall ask me nothing. Verily, verily, I say unto you, Whatsoever ye shall ask the Father in my name, he will give it you. 

    This Sunday precedes Ascension Day and emphasizes prayer, since earlier generations were dependent upon God's Creation and the bounty of the earth. The only thing I remember about it from childhood is wondering about the name each year. But if we recall the word interrogation, we can see the Latin word for "ask" in Rogate Sunday. Praying is asking, so this Sunday emphasizes Jesus teach His disciples about prayer.

    The disciples were traveling with Jesus and therefore dependent upon Him in every way. So in this farewell sermon we see Him teaching them how to deal with this apparent void in their lives. The Savior will still be with them, but not visibly. Before, He prayed for them. Next they would pray to the Father in His Name.

    One of the terrible characteristics of this age is being afraid to pray in the Name of Jesus Christ. We attended a graduation long ago, where the chaplain went beyond that mockery to say we should pray silently to whatever power we believed. Campus chaplains are always ahead of the game.

    The new Pharisees want to silence any prayer in the Name of Christ. Thus they oppose faith where it is most evident.

    24 Hitherto have ye asked nothing in my name: ask, and ye shall receive, that your joy may be full.

    Prayer is the outward sign of faith or unfaith. Jesus urged His disciples to ask the Father because they would then receive from the Father. The progression is clear - asking in the Name of Jesus is treated the same as Jesus asking. Though we pray, God answers as though the Only-Begotten Son is asking. We do not have the merit to pray, but we wear the robe of righteousness given to us through faith in the Son. 


    ask, and ye shall receive, that your joy may be full.

    This is a great Promise, not only that asking will mean receiving but that it will fill believers with with joy. That naturally suggests the prayers fulfilled. So this first admonition gives us faith to pray because otherwise we would not even start.

    God gives us the confidence to do what He commands, because His Promises support and enliven our faith in Him.

    25 These things have I spoken unto you in proverbs: but the time cometh, when I shall no more speak unto you in proverbs, but I shall shew you plainly of the Father.

    We do not begin with the capacity to understand everything in the Scriptures. That ability grows with time spent in the Word. That was true of the disciples. Much of what they heard and experienced went past them, because they were beginners dealing with a change in the entire world. Jesus became plainer in His Word as they developed as His disciples. In the same way, we grow slowly through the Word and suddenly it seems one phrase will make so much sense. We knew it, said it, repeated it, but later we came to know what it meant. 

    But the Scriptures are a vast treasury. Luther compared it to a goldmine where the veins make people dig them out. And yet the more the mine is mined, the larger and longer the tunnels become, the greater the treasure is. That is because the each part is directly linked to the rest. Jonah pre-figures Christ, and so forth.

    Jesus spoke in parables so that the casual observers did not grasp them at all, and that is still true today. But when He wanted the Pharisees to understand, they did, and they were ready to kill Him for it.

    26 At that day ye shall ask in my name: and I say not unto you, that I will pray the Father for you: 27 For the Father himself loveth you, because ye have loved me, and have believed that I came out from God.

    God gives us the confidence to pray in the Name of Jesus and urges us to pray, repeatedly. It is all through the New Testament. Notice the repetition here, which shows the teaching style of Jesus. He just said this - why the repetition -  but then He adds a little more - one of the great Gospel statements of the Bible.


    27 For the Father himself loveth you, because ye have loved me, and have believed that I came out from God.

    The Father loves those who love Jesus and believe He is the Only-Begotten Son of the Father. Once again, those who deny the Virgin Birth in John's work (and in Paul's) fail to see parallel constructions which say as much as the Virgin Birth or more. Although the Virgin Birth is a great miracle, that also includes the Incarnation. John 1 reveals this is cosmic - through the Logos, the Son, all things were created. Nothing apart from Him was created.  As I have said many times before, the Fourth Gospel builds on the first three, so the Virgin Birth is not debated - it is given. What does it mean here? Jesus came from out of the Father, as we say in the Creed - Very God of Very God, begotten not made.

    The guilty and fearful do not ask, they are more likely to run away. But Jesus' words replace that response with God's gracious love, revealed in Christ, then magnified by the fact of the Father loving us for the work done through Christ.

    28 I came forth from the Father, and am come into the world: again, I leave the world, and go to the Father. 29 His disciples said unto him, Lo, now speakest thou plainly, and speakest no proverb. 30 Now are we sure that thou knowest all things, and needest not that any man should ask thee: by this we believe that thou camest forth from God.

    This is another great statement from Christ and a proclamation of His future Ascension, returning to the Father. The disciples confessed their faith in Him and their reception of His message to them.

    The Issue - Faith

    We are living in the era of the neos. By that I mean so many religious types who use the words of faith but have little faith in the basics of Scriptures and the Holy Trinity. The slow erosion has a tremendous effect on everyone. That is why we hear of so many clever human gimmicks for fixing everything, but the new fads are nothing more than man's imagination, often a fad dug up from the past.


    As I told one member last night, it would be a big search to find any theologians today who is not a slave to rationalism, as my ND friend said - "Faith without belief." Or in another quip - "A liberal with a sentimental attachment to the Bible." That was his description of Blessed Rage for Order, a book I never suffered from reading. But I often heard liberals gasp as they mentioned the book, really the best of everything - radical agenda, words of faith, but no belief.

    Prayer is impossible without faith, and this faith comes from the Means of Grace. We do not pray Jesus into our hearts. How can we pray for that without faith? Faith starts with preaching the Gospel, either to adults with the spoken Word or through baptism with infants, through the water and the Word, the Holy Spirit active in the Gospel in both circumstances.

    The problem with starting with prayer is that every pagan prays, so that vague, appealing to apostates, and not in harmony with the Word.

    The Word brings Jesus to us and us to Jesus. In prayer we have the chance to trust God with everything and to gain from that meeting.

    Limiting God Is the Problem
    Doubting is always going to accompany faith. A major part of doubting is first of all - failing to ask; then coming short in confidence. But the biggest short-circuit currently is limiting God.


    • The prayer has to be answered this minute.
    • The prayer has to be answered the way I wish.
    • The circumstances must fit what I ask.
    • The manner of fulfilling the request must suit my standards.

    But - the thorn in the flesh may remain, as Paul came to understand, to show that His power is perfected in weakness, to show His grace is sufficient.

    Doubtless every congregation and minister has wanted a glorious church that will wow the unbelievers. But in the light of spiritual fruits, where is that on the list? I have a collection of photos - former largest church buildings. They turn into gigantic white elephants in time and cannot be sold for their cost.

    If we give up on the limitations we would give God in prayer, we are more aware of the blessings He delivers in addition to and apart from our actual requests. 

    One chaplain wrote about his work with someone who had a horrible childhood, a real nightmare. He asked her what her biggest burden was. She said "Shame." That was not her fault, but that weighed on her terribly. He said, "Let Jesus take it away." And she did that in prayer and became better. I had an experience like that and when the individual returned, I did not recognize her. She came by to say thank you and everything was better.

    The biggest request in prayer can be something no one sees but the believer feels so much it is agony and a terrible weight to bear.

    The Holy Spirit was kind in not identifying Paul's thorn in the flesh. Otherwise if it had been a specific malady, people would say, "Well, I do not have that." 

    But he prayed earnestly three times for God to take it away, and given perfectionism of Paul, that must have been impressive. But his answer was that he would live with it, suffer from it, and see how God worked in him anyway - so it was God's work and not his. Such epiphanies can be quite liberating because the thorn is no longer a thorn but a well-disguised blessing. It may be a blessing for others but a burden for the individual, but finally seen as a blessing after all. 

    So Luther says, God does not take the affliction from our hearts, but our hearts from the affliction. The affliction remains but we see that we are living in a garden of roses.



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