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Enter the Apocalypse - The Fifth Seal Has Been Broken - Intrepids Link Ichabod

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KJV Revelation 6:9 And when he had opened the fifth seal, I saw under the altar the souls of them that
were slain for the word of God, and for the testimony which they held: 10 And they cried with a loud voice,
saying, How long, O Lord, holy and true, dost thou not judge and avenge our blood on them that dwell on
the earth? 11 And white robes were given unto every one of them; and it was said unto them, that they
should rest yet for a little season, until their fellowservants also and their brethren, that should be killed as
they were, should be fulfilled.

Lest it disappear after the traditional WELS witch-hunt:

Educational resources:
Book of Concord
Logia: A Journal of Lutheran Theology
The Kretzmann Project
Consortium for Classical & Lutheran Education
The Hausvater Project
Brothers of John the Steadfast
Lutheran Science Institute
Luther Academy
Historic Lectionary
Gottesdienst
Defending Christ (Apologetics)
Lutheran Resources linked on Ichabod

Buchholz Extended the Left Foot of Fellowship to Pastor Paul Rydecki and His Congregation, But He Gave the Right Hand of Fellowship to Jeff Gunn and Emergent Entertainment

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DP Jon Buchholz kicked out Circuit Pastor Paul Rydecki for teaching justification by faith,
although the DP promised the congregation they would continue to discuss the topic.
Next, Buchholz kicked out the congregation and foreclosed on the mortgage,
bragging about his ecclesiastical macho at the next conference meeting.
Circuit Pastor Steve Spencer got the Intrepid Lutheran blog going.


THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 2013


A Home in the ELDoNA


My Facebook friends saw this announcement on my timeline on Sunday.  Now I'm sharing it with all our Intrepid readers, so that you can rejoice together with me, my family, and my congregation.  I'm very happy to have completed the colloquy process and to be accepted as a member of the Evangelical Lutheran Diocese of North America (ELDoNA). It is my privilege to join the ranks of these faithful men and to recognize and be recognized in this fellowship of Christian pastors, together with the saints whom they serve. I have been searching for awhile for the Lutherans who honestly confess the faith of the Book of Concord of 1580 without compromise and without asterisks. By the grace of God, I have found them.  As I've said to Bishop Heiser and others, coming into the diocese is like coming home, and my brethren there have graciously welcomed me with open arms.

At our first Intrepid Lutherans conference, back in June, 2012, I presented a paper entitled, "Do we want to be Dresden Lutherans?"  I concluded that paper with these words:

No one has forced me to sign the Book of Concord. I have signed it because it is my confession.   I have signed it because I share the beliefs of the Dresden Lutherans, their exegesis, their interpretation, their sensibilities, their convictions, their love for sinners, their love for the truth, and their love for the Lord Jesus.  Their words are my words from start to finish, including these:

By God’s grace, with intrepid hearts, we are willing to appear before the judgment seat of Christ with this Confession and give an account of it. We will not speak or write anything contrary to this Confession, either publicly or privately. By the strength of God’s grace we intend to abide by it.

I would like to know who is and who isn’t committed to walking in the same direction with me, and with whom I should walk, arm in arm with the Dresden Lutherans, not by force or for convenience’ sake, but by conviction and for the sake of the truth. I want it to be the WELS with whom I walk along that road.  Do we want to be Dresden Lutherans?  As for me, I am WELS for now; Dresden Lutheran forever. So help me God.

At the time, I still had some hope that I might be able to stand shoulder to shoulder with my brothers in the WELS as a Dresden Lutheran, that is, a confessor of the Book of Concord.  I had to give them a chance to become the "confessional Lutherans" they so stubbornly claim to be.  But they were not willing.  So be it.  The Lord has been merciful and has provided a better confession of faith, and a ministerium in which I can honestly stand shoulder to shoulder with every other pastor, knowing that our confession is truly united.

It is not my intent to turn Intrepid Lutherans into a recruitment zone for the ELDoNA.  Intrepid Lutherans, as a blog, is not a church or an ecclesiastical fellowship, and is certainly not governed by any church body.  That said, I do want our readers to know where I, for my part, am coming from.  I will make no apologies for speaking highly and often of this orthodox fellowship, and I will not pretend that I do not earnestly hope and pray that others will explore the confession of the diocese and come to the same conclusion I have.

Appeasement on Friday the 13th - When Tim Glende's Brain-Damaged Staff Sues a Member of Their Own Congregation, Because They Are Passionate about Sharing Porn, Filthy Language, and Beer at Their Stinky Bar Mission

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Winston Churchill defined an appeaser -

“An appeaser is one who feeds a crocodile, hoping it will eat him last.”

Someone suggested that I lay off the St. Peter Freedom's triple lawsuit against its own member, an attempt to make a restraining order stick, even though WELS Pastor Tim Glende's was tossed out of court like a moldy pizza.

The idea was - maybe Team Glende's lawyer would cut a deal and lay off the member whose wife was sexually harassed many times while Pastor Ski enjoyed the benefits of buying a bankrupt bar stocked with beer.

Appeasing Team Jeske is feeding a crocodile in the hopes of being eaten last.

Crocs attack and devour. They do not make deals. They do not compromise.  If you bow to a croc, he will bite that much faster.

Doctrinal warfare will last until the end of history, whether that be next year or century.

As anyone can see from the loyalties of such leaders as Valleskey, Bivens, Olson, Buchholz, and Kelm - the only moderation is sidestepping in their direction.

A vast gulf exists between liturgical worship and popcorn cola entertainment sideshows.  UOJ is ideal for those simpletons who think an untalented rock band is more effective than the Word of God.

The gulf between the Praise Bandits and the liturgical leaders will never be closed, although they promise much if only they are fed a few more grants, a bit more tolerance, and a silencing of all dissent.

UOJ and justification by faith are also polar opposites - not "two sides of the same coin," as Mischke and Webber have tried to explain away.
UOJ and Church Shrinkers - a connection?
Who trained Glende in CGM and treating women as property?
Who supported Stolzenburg?
WELS and ELS would be bankrupt today if people knew the truth.


The LCMS Concordia Will Be More Difficult To Put in Order - Due to ELCA Ballast and Fuller Flotsam

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My recently departed friend said,
"Never get on a  cruise ship with an Italian captain,
especially one wearing a mullet haircut."



Raise the Costa Concordia: 12 hours, 500 engineers and 18,000 tonnes of cement... how cruise liner will be lifted in most expensive maritime salvage operation in history

  • 114,00-tonne ship sank off the coast of Tuscany in January 2012 and is due to be lifted on Monday

  • Cost of raising it off seabed has ballooned to £500m

  • Underwater platform has been built on which ship will come to rest as jacks and underwater cables haul it upright

  • Divers have pumped 18,000 tonnes of cement into bags below the ship to support it and prevent it from breaking up

  • 32 people died when it hit rocks and ran aground off the island of Giglio after an ill-judged 'salute' to inhabitants by the ship’s captain


The Costa Concordia will finally be righted next week in the largest and most expensive maritime salvage operation in history.
The cost of lifting the giant cruise liner, which sank off the coast of Tuscany in January 2012, off the sea bed, has ballooned to £500million - a figure that could rise if there are problems, organisers admitted.
Thirty-two people died when the ship, with 4,200 passengers onboard, hit rocks and ran aground off the island of Giglio after an ill-judged 'salute' to inhabitants by the ship’s captain.
The Costa Concordia will finally be righted next week in the largest and most expensive maritime salvage operation in history
The Costa Concordia will finally be righted next week in the largest and most expensive maritime salvage operation in history. Thirty two people died when the ship hit rocks and ran aground off the island of Giglio in January 2012 after an ill-judged 'salute' to inhabitants by the ship's captain


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2419071/Costa-Concordia-raised-expensive-maritime-salvage-operation-ever.html#ixzz2ejRi1KXU
Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook

UOJack Cascione Loves the Drivel Printed by UOJack Kilcrease. Will UOJ McCaine Join the Amen Corner?

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Jack Kilcrease, ever-prone to comment and erase, has published another dreary example of UOJ on steroids. I have not read it, because there is nothing to see when someone marches with the UOJ Stormtroopers and calls himself a Confessional Lutheran or even an Orthodox Lutheran.

Waltherian is a good label, because Walther gladly followed his syphilitic and adulterous bishop into the wilderness of Perryville, Missouri. Both of them were UOJ adherents, as all the European rationalistic-Pietistic Protestants of that era.

Jack Cascione, who let Paul McCain link his papal plagiarism on LutherQuest (sic), has decided to damage the Kilcrease brand by endorsing it. Cascione has a rich fantasy life; unfortunately, he publishes his fantasies as facts, leaving everyone bewildered.

UOJ is mainline Protestantism, teaching that God is so gracious that everyone is forgiven, whether they believe it or not. Everyone is saved, even without hearing the Name Jesus - even before birth. MDivers Cascione and McCain have quoted those notions as factually true. Given their status as bad writers and worse editors, the reader can judge the case on its merits.


Pope Frank agrees.


Cascione also endorses UOJ
and cited this essay in his promotion of that heresy.
ELCA believes the same thing, but is a little more honest about it.


Team Glende's Epic HumiliationThe clerk said the attorney called in this morning to remove the case.

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Glende tried to bring up this blog in Arkansas in
his lawsuit - laughed out of court.
By the way - I have never had any contact with the couple
Ski harassed and Team Glende sued.

Case Search Results


You searched for: Party Name donnan, jonathan

Displaying records 1 to 7 of 7

Click column headers to sort







2013CV000977
08-16-2013
Outagamie
Closed
Donnan, Jonathan V
09-1983
James Robert Skorzewski vs. Jonathan V Donnan
2013CV000976
08-16-2013
Outagamie
Closed
Donnan, Jonathan V
09-1983
Timothy P Glende vs. Jonathan V Donnan
2013CV000975
08-16-2013
Outagamie
Closed
Donnan, Jonathan V
09-1983
Rhonda Kay Dietzler vs. Jonathan V Donnan
2013CV000974
08-16-2013
Outagamie
Closed
Donnan, Jonathan V
09-1983
Leslye Marie Ulman vs. Jonathan V Donnan
















Letters are coming in to oppose Ski's CRM status.
Will Team Glende sue those people as well,
because he held The CORE meeting to jump-start this
and ask for support of Ski's return to the scene of the crime.

Denial That WELS Condemns Justification by Faith. Why Is JBFA Labeled Misleading in the Mequon Dog Notes?Why Were Rydecki and His Congregation Kicked Out?

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Like ·  · 
  • Bryan Lidtke WELS abuse?!?! As Forest Bivens would say, "may The Lord rebuke you!" 
    17 hours ago via mobile · Like · 1
  • Daniel Baker May the Lord rebuke the WELS. No smilie.
    17 hours ago · Like · 2
  • Jonathan Pierre Cariveau Bishop, Pastors, Deacons.
  • John Albanese ...when their was a dispute over praise bands in the Divine Service, he did not presume to pass judgment but said, "The Lord rebuke thee!"
    17 hours ago · Like · 2
  • Beckie Grunewald It's not abuse to expect your clergy to teach the correct doctrines. He refused, so he could no longer be a pastor or a member of the WELS. It's pretty cut and dry.
    17 hours ago via mobile · Like · 1
  • Daniel Baker Because Justification by faith alone is the incorrect doctrine in the WELS.
  • Past Elder What in all flaming Judas is this about? WELS is pietistic to the core, judt with a more liturgical veneer in recent decades.
    16 hours ago via mobile · Like · 3
  • Beckie Grunewald Since when, Daniel?
  • Daniel Baker Since Pastor Rydecki was expelled for refusing to deny it.
  • Landon Utterback Since when is justification by faith along incorrect doctrine in the WELS?
  • Past Elder He was expelled for refusing to deny justification by fsith alone, is that it?
  • Tim Niedfeldt Justification by faith alone is indeed condemned in the WELS. Rydecki was kicked out for affirming the confessions exposition of Justification. WELS now uses "This We Believe" and two synod essays to define the WELS belief in universal justification.
    16 hours ago via mobile · Like · 2
  • Past Elder WELS has been off track since Wauwatosa. Getting kicked out by it is meaningless.
    15 hours ago via mobile · Like · 2
  • Gregory L. Jackson No, it is the highest honor, Past Elder. Being their media guru is the lowest spot of all, especially since it involves being the bagman for ELCA via Thrivent.
    15 hours ago · Like · 1
  • Beckie Grunewald Haha, Past Elder. Apparently people disagree with you on that. Apparently it's a really big deal that is tantamount to abuse! Ah well. I've never seen anything that points to the WELS condemning justification by faith alone. I think what Rydecki *says* the WELS teaches is not actually what the WELS teaches. But that's all pretty moot, isn't it? He disagreed with the synod and the synod expelled him. Did anyone truly think he could remain a member in good standing? Let's be realistic here. Hes not the martyr some seem eager to make him out as.
  • Landon Utterback I was looking at the What We Believe on the Intrepid Lutheran blog and I don't see how these positions are different from the WELS. I've gone to WELS congregations my whole life, went K-12 in the schools, had personal discussions with my pastors and I have heard many sermons saying what makes a church alive is not numbers or style but the preaching of the gospel (which is exactly part of the Intrepid Lutheran point of view).
  • Past Elder As usual, looking for clarity in anything re WELS is a fool's mission. ELCA? Thrivent? This was somewhere in the discussion of Lutheran orthodoxy? WELS is pietist from inception, never confessional, more overtly so since Wauwatosa, more covertly so in recent decades, and to be kicked out by such a body is meaningless, certainly not an elevation to martyrdom. After ten years in WELS I kicked myself out.
    14 hours ago via mobile · Like · 3
  • Daniel Baker "I think what Rydecki *says* the WELS teaches is not actually what the WELS teaches. But that's all pretty moot, isn't it? He disagreed with the synod and the synod expelled him." 

    It's more like the opposite. To the best of my knowledge Pr. Rydecki never spoke out against the WELS or said it was in error prior to his censure (he can correct me if I'm mistaken). The problem, I believe, is that what the WELS *says* Pr. Rydecki is teaching is not actually what he is teaching. I have heard a bunch of slanderous things said against him, such as that he denies the unlimited atonement or that Christ's merits are for all. All of this is untrue. If you read his essays on justification, they're chock full of citation after citation from the Lutheran Fathers. His view is literally a regurgitation of their position. This leads me and many others to believe that the Synod is not teaching this orthodox position, or else they would have left Pr. Rydecki alone. I'll not comment more on his situation, since I don't want to speak for him. He's more than welcome to chime in if he wishes. 

    What I will say, however, is that - as Past Elder points out - the WELS as an institution has proven time and time again that it is nothing other than a Pietistic sect. That's how it started and it appears that's how it will remain. It would behoove orthodox members of the Synod to wake up and smell the coffee. The WELS is dead, and I don't think it was ever alive.
    12 hours ago · Edited · Like · 4
  • Past Elder Just so one doesn't go from being a Baptist with sacraments to trying to be Catholic without the pope and join ELDoNA or something. Oh wait ...
  • Gregory L. Jackson Selective excommunication is the most hypocritical part of a bad organization like WELS. Michigan Ex-VP also objected to UOJ, quite vociferously. All he got was a little wrist slap - withdrawal of his emeritus status - a meaningless gesture. Send James and Christel Michigan DP John Seifert makes sure all Michigan District members are removed from the list on the Intrepid Lutherans.
  • Beckie Grunewald Daniel given what you say here I'm sure you've begun to look for a new synod then correct? If I were you though I'd distance myself from Ichabod. Unless of course you have no issues with how they break the 8th commandment nearly daily.
  • Paul Rydecki Those who have followed the goings-on of the past year know that I taught that God justifies sinners through faith alone in Christ. The WELS demanded that I also teach that God justifies sinners, apart from the Word, whether they believe in Christ or not. I refused, because the Bible contradicts the latter statement, as do the Lutheran Confessions.

    Beckie's comment above demonstrates the sect that the WELS is. While overtly claiming only the Book of Concord and Scripture as its doctrinal norms, the WELS actually dismisses the Book of Concord and insists, rather, on its own sectarian This We Believe doctrinal statement. The BoC speaks extensively on the article of justification, and my teaching conforms to it precisely. WELS said that was wrong, because, essentially, times have changed and doctrine has evolved, so that the former (i.e., 1580) articulations are no longer adequate or clear.
    6 hours ago · Like · 3
  • Beckie Grunewald Interesting. That's not what the WELS is teaching over in my neck of the woods. But again, not really the crux of the point here. You disagreed with the synod. I am not sure how it amounts to abuse for them to remove you from your position and expell you. It's sort of like expressing surprise that the Catholic church excommunicated Luther
    5 hours ago via mobile · Like · 1
  • Jon Brown-Schmidt The biggest problem here is twofold. 1) Calling out the WELS as abusive, dead or a pietisitc sect runs the strong risk of creating doubt in the faiths of those members either new to their faith or struggling with their faith. 2) It places the confessions and the words of the early Lutherans on the same level of the Bible. (as example, the Father of my Lutheran faith created the world, he did not live in the 1500's) Those early Lutheran writings serve a great purpose as commentaries and historical reference, but were never written as and addendum to God's Word. Much of those works were written period specific to address issues that existed then and if those same men lived today, the confessions would almost definitely hold a different tone and structure to address issues today. Thus when current WELS Christians, who believe the Bible, read these posts, regarding the WELS departure from its orthodoxy, it can easily be misunderstood to be departure from God's Word. WELS has not strayed from God's Word; however, they may rely less on the 1500's era confessional that holds less relevance in today's society. Ro 5:18 ----- I pray these discussions cause people to dig deeper into their Bibles and not further from their faith.
  • Daniel Baker "Daniel given what you say here I'm sure you've begun to look for a new synod then correct?" 

    Quite so. ELDoNA looks promising. Just wish they had an established parish a bit closer to my area. Still, at the moment my parish is orthodox on this matter, and since I'm a member of it and not the Synod, I stick with it - for now. 

    Also, thanks for the Ichabod red herring. That was rich.
    4 hours ago · Like · 2
  • Christian Schulz "Thus when current WELS Christians, who believe the Bible, read these posts, regarding the WELS departure from its orthodoxy, it can easily be misunderstood to be departure from God's Word."

    As confessional Lutherans we believe the formulations and explanations of God's Word as contained in the Lutheran Confessions are a correct expression of God's Word. So to stray from them is, to confessional Lutherans, to stray from God's Word.
    3 hours ago · Like · 2
  • Beckie Grunewald It is no red herring. They remind me of atheists who spend the bulk of their time blustering about something they don't believe in. They prefer to slander and insult and then any point they have had is lost.
  • Daniel Baker I don't disagree. The red herring is bringing it up at all, since I'm not associated with Ichabod.
    3 hours ago · Like · 1
  • Beckie Grunewald I do not believe the WELS' doctrine on the matter departs from scriptures or from the confessions.
  • Daniel Baker You can believe what you want, but the facts speak for themselves. WELS teaches that God views the unbelieving as righteous. Scripture teaches His wrath abides on them. The discrepancy is pretty obvious.
    3 hours ago · Like · 2
  • Beckie Grunewald I simply told you to distance yourself from them. I brought them up because Gregory references their blog here.
  • Beckie Grunewald Jesus died for all. Do you dispute that?
  • Past Elder Can't speak for Mr Baker, but I do not deny that Jesus died for all -- which is not the same statement as all are saved.
  • Beckie Grunewald Then I don't see what the problem is with the WELS teaching, unless you try to make it say something it doesn't, which is what I believe Pastor Rydecki has done. And I've watched how you are influenced at different times by different people. Be careful with that.
  • Beckie Grunewald Nor does the WELS teach Universalism!
  • Paul Rydecki I certainly do not deny that Jesus died for all. To say that is the same thing as "God has declared all people righteous" is unbiblical.
    3 hours ago · Like · 3
  • Past Elder Ipse dixit.
  • Paul Rydecki For a bit more explanation, I posted this comment on the link in the OP:

    http://www.intrepidlutherans.com/...
    www.intrepidlutherans.com
    Comments will be accepted or rejected based on the sound Christian judgment of t...See More
    3 hours ago · Like · 2
  • Past Elder Judas H Priest OSB, the words of institution themselves make this clear re intention as distinct from effect in the sacrifice of Christ's body and blood. The four Gospel accounts give two expressions, both of which are used: pro vobis (for you, a familiar plural, thus, addressed to those present) and pro multis (for many, which, Latin not having a definite article, addresses The Many, the remnant). As usual the RCC leads the way in obfuscation and bullshittery. When they ashcanned the traditional liturgy for the novus ordo, the English translation read "for you and for all", which is supported by neither Scripture nor even the Latin original of the novus ordo -- and actually, at first it read "for you and for all men" until the "inclusive" types got it abbreviated to "for you and for all" and now they congratulate themselves a generation later on a corrected translation. Scripture records God's intention that all be saved, to which end he became Man, died and rose again, but also records the sacrament of that body and blood applying to those who are actually saved. Therefore, the two are not the same and one cannot read from God's intention that such intention is realized.
  • Beckie Grunewald Again: The WELS does NOT teach universalism. We don't say all men are saved. We say that Christ died for all. His death in the cross was sufficient for all. See Romans 5:18. But the forgiveness and righteousness comes from faith. So for those who don't believe, don't have faith, it is forfeit. John 8:24 show's us that. How is this not biblical?
  • Paul Rydecki Beckie, 1) this is not about "universalism"; that is a red herring. 2) It is about the WELS claiming that God has already declared all people righteous (which is false), and that the God who has justified all people sends some of these justified people to hell anyway (those who don't believe they're already justified). 3) Go back and read the first paragraph of the WELS TWB statement on justification. It says more than what you said above, and the wording matters.
    2 hours ago · Like · 1
  • Beckie Grunewald You guys and your red herrings. Someone earlier made a statement about WELS believing that all men are saved. That's universalism. As for the rest of your repkt,tell me...how would you view Romans 5:18? I see it like this: everyone has a $100 in their pocket. Nothing they did warranted this money, but everyone gets it. The believers enjoy the benefits of that $100 while unbelievers don't. Now, we know that not all men will be saved. It is not Gods fault, which is what you seem to be saying. We know that *we* can do nothing to gain salvation but everything to lose it.
  • Paul Rydecki I would take Rom. 5:18 as the Lutheran Church always took it before the Synodical Conference butchered it. I would take it, for example, as Luther did:

    "For in the same manner also St. Paul writes in Romans 5[:18]: “As through one man’s sin condemnat
    ion has come over all men, so through one man’s righteousness justification has come over all men.” Yet not all men are justified through Christ, nevertheless he is the man through whom all justification comes."

    Luther, M. (1999). Vol. 52: Luther's works, vol. 52: Sermons II (J. J. Pelikan, H. C. Oswald & H. T. Lehmann, Ed.) (71). Philadelphia: Fortress Press.

    Or as Gerhard took it, saying that it refers to what Christ earned for all men, not that God has in any way justified all men or declared all men righteous.
    2 hours ago · Edited · Like · 2
  • Past Elder The last few hundred years of Christian history is full of those saying they are true to Scripture excommunicating others who say they are true to Scripture and people stomping out saying they are being true to Scripture from those saying No you aren't...See More
  • Beckie Grunewald It makes me chuckle to hear you say that the WELS is not confessional. We (because I believe as a member of a WELS church I also hold membership in the synod) have scripture for every doctrine we profess and teach. There's no guessing. And it still doe...See More
  • Christian Schulz When one is suspended for speaking and teaching in unity with the Lutheran Confessions -- Confessions he took an oath to uphold -- the Synod ceases to be confessional or orthodox (that is assuming it was orthodox on paper to begin with, which I agree with Past Elder, it wasn't [OHM, etc., etc.])

Leading with Doctrinal Ignorance and Pastoral Corruption. The Fix Is In - Run for the Hills

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Buchholz knew all about Ski's alcohol problems and behavior,
laughing about it,
so he is an ideal person to blow smoke about UOJ.

“Jesus Canceled Your Debt!”

What?  Northern Wisconsin District Fall Pastoral Conference
Theme?  “Jesus Cancelled Your Debt!”
Keynote Speaker:  AZ-CA District President Jon Buchholz
When?  October 29th- 30th
Where?  Trinity Lutheran Church, Minocqua and “The Waters of Minocqua”
http://www.trinityminocqua.org/
http://www.thewatersofminocqua.com/

Does this look like a Groeschel gimmick?



Becoming More Confessional in WELS - Through Chest-Bumping, Tub-Thumping, Bad Rock Bandits.

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They celebrate the Lord's Supper every Sunday "at a special service at 9:45," that is, a half hour before the service starts.

They celebrate it as a "reassurance that Jesus died for all our sins."

Because the "regular" service is not loosey-goosey enough.




You know it's a good Sunday at church when you get to chest bump the Pastor before the benediction! Love my home church St. Paul's - Spls Muskego

New Here? / What to Expect




The Bridge is a new church starting on the St. Paul’s campus. As soon as you drive on to our campus, you’ll see parking lot attendants who will help you find the Trinity Café and Gym where The Bridge is located.
When you come to The Bridge, you will find a welcoming environment, hear messages that relate the Bible to your daily life, and enjoy music from The Bridge Band.
The atmosphere of The Bridge is casual. You’ll notice that our pastors wear jeans. We are serious about our faith, but try not to take ourselves too seriously. After all, we are far from perfect.

What about my kids?

Kids Club is our Sunday morning children’s programing for children from 3 years old through eighth grade. We also offer childcare (with a pager system to contact you if your child needs you) for infants up to Kids Club age. You’ll see the Kids Club check-in as you walk into the Trinity Café. Our goal is to provide children with a safe, fun environment to learn about Jesus’ love for them.
At the same time we welcome children into The Bridge service. If you need to take your child out of the service, you’ll be able to hear the singing and the message in our lobby.
You’ll see the Kids Club/Childcare check-in when you enter the building!

Want to learn more?

If you want to find out more about the Christian faith or meet our host pastor, stop by Starting Point. Here you can also learn about the other services that St. Paul’s congregation and school provide and how to become more involved in our congregation. Starting Point is a ten-minute gathering immediately after the service each weekend. Starting Point meets in the Fireside Room across the lobby from the auditorium. Ask a member of our host team for directions.

Get your chest bump here.

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Bridging the Gap
Is there are reality beyond what we can see? And, if there is, can we really know what that reality is? So many in the world are on a quest to discover and understand what we call the “supernatural,” to know what is beyond the reality we live in. Join us as we seek God’s help in Bridging the Gap.




















These aren't copied from the Net, are they?

---

Staff Bios

Meet our ministry team
Pastor Pete Panitzke - 414.422.0320, Ext. 122
Pastor Pete Panitzke
Pastor Peter Panitzke serves as the ministerial team leader, coordinating the work of the other ministerial team members. He oversees the congregation’s outreach programs and financial stewardship.
Since 1998, Pastor Panitzke has served at St. Paul’s. Prior to that, he served sixteen years at Good Shepherd Lutheran in St. Peters, Missouri — a start-up congregation in suburban St. Louis. Pastor Panitzke has been integral in the start-up of two other congregations, Apostles Lutheran Church in Dardenne Prairie, Missouri and Victory of the Lamb, Frankin, Wisconsin.
Pastor Panitzke describes himself as someone who is excited about the future and about the people around him.
- See more at: http://www.stpaulmuskego.org/about/staff-bios/#sthash.ILZ0sy6t.dpuf

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http://www.thebridgemuskego.org/find-out-more/

The Bridge is a new progression mission start on an older campus! It is part of St. Paul’s on-going effort to speak the unchanging truth of the Bible to today’s world whose language is constantly changing.

St. Paul’s Lutheran Church has been a part of the Muskego community since 1857. Initially the language of our worship was German to serve the German immigrants in our community. Gradually, a new worship language was offered – English!

In the last several decades, we have seen another change in “language.” Our traditional worship services speak well to individuals who want an organ leading them in a worship service that follows the pattern developed in the church over the centuries. About ten years ago we began our contemporary service at 11 am because the language of organ and liturgy was not the “native language” of many people in our community. It has become one of our largest attended serves.

As we recognized the need to expand our worship options, we recognized another “language” that may be more comfortable for still others in our community. The Bridge is more casual and less structured than the traditional or contemporary services already offered on our campus.

At St. Paul’s we welcome this diversity of worship styles and preferences. What unites us is our faith in a Savior that loves us, died for us on the cross, and rose again.

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Luther's Sermon for the Sixteenth Sunday after Trinity. Luke 7:11-17. The Widow's Son Raised

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Luther's Sermon for the SIXTEENTH SUNDAY AFTER TRINITY. Luke 7:11-17


KJV Luke 7:11 And it came to pass the day after, that he went into a city called Nain; and many of his
disciples went with him, and much people. 12 Now when he came nigh to the gate of the city, behold, there
was a dead man carried out, the only son of his mother, and she was a widow: and much people of the city
was with her. 13 And when the Lord saw her, he had compassion on her, and said unto her, Weep not. 14
And he came and touched the bier: and they that bare him stood still. And he said, Young man, I say unto
thee, Arise. 15 And he that was dead sat up, and began to speak. And he delivered him to his mother. 16
And there came a fear on all: and they glorified God, saying, That a great prophet is risen up among us; and,
That God hath visited his people. 17 And this rumour of him went forth throughout all Judaea, and throughout all the region round about.


This sermon, which is found only in Edition c, is composed by uniting two sermons, the first of which (§§ 1-13) appeared in 1534 under the title: “A short sermon on the Gospel of Luke 7 chapter, the widow whose son had died, 1534, Dr. Martin Luther.” The other sermon (§§ 14-40) Cruciger embodied evidently from his own copy into the Postil and is also found in the little book issued by him: “Some comforting writings and sermons for those visited by death and other distress and temptations. Dr. Martin Luther, 1545.” — At the end of the book are these words:, “Printed at Wittenberg, by Hans Luft, 1544.” A second edition appeared at Wittenberg in 1548. Its title in this collection of sermons is: “A Sermon on Death and Life, on the Gospel of Luke 7 chapter, the widow’s son raised from the dead.” Erl. 14, 131; W. 11, 2211; St. L. 11, 1658.

CONTENTS:

THE RESURRECTION OF THE WIDOW’S SON, THE YOUNG MAN OF NAIN.
I. THIS RESURRECTION IN GENERAL.

A. How it praises the grace, work and power of God in the kingdom of Christ.

* The conduct of flesh and blood in time of need and misery. 2.

II. THIS RESURRECTION IN DETAIL.

A. How it opposes the false notions, which human nature forms of God in the time of trouble, and awakens us to serve God. 3-5.

* The punishment of God in our temptations.

1. God permits the punishment for a time to pass upon the wicked and the pious.

2. Why God permits punishment to pass upon the godly.

3. How and why believers should not take offense at chastisement and temptation. 8f.

4. The thoughts believers should cherish under, chastisement and temptation. 8-12.

* A Christian should be strong in faith and praise God. 13.

B. How this resurrection paints before our eyes the true picture of Christ.

1. What is the true and characteristic work of Christ.

2. How it is set forth in this resurrection. 15f.

* Of death and life. a. in the time of death as well as of life. 16-17. b. The thoughts reason has of death. 18-19. c. The doctrine Christ teaches of death. 20-21. d. No human wisdom and power can prevent death, and restore life. 22-24. e. How without our works we must come to life through Christ. (1) The nature, sense and understanding of this. 25-27. (2) A picture of this. 28-32. f. The essence of the whole world is nothing but a picture of death and a daily journey to death. 33-34. f. The essence of the whole world is nothing but a picture of death and a daily journey to death. 33-34. g. In Christ we have a comforting picture of life. 35-38. h. With what should a Christian comfort himself in time of death. 39- 40.

1. This portion of the Gospel teaches us to know the grace, work and power of God in the kingdom of Christ, our Lord, and to praise and thank him, as well as cheerfully to serve and obey him. For this miracle and act of mercy are related in order that we may recognize him as our helper in all times of need; and then, when we acknowledge him as our helper, that we love him, thank him for his benefits, and willingly suffer and endure whatever he allows to befall us, especially since we know with certainty that he does not permit anything to happen to us in order to destroy us, but only to try our faith, to see whether our trust and refuge securely rest in him, or in something else.

2. It is the nature of flesh and blood always to seek help and comfort from other sources than God, where they should only be sought, and at last, when all other help fails, to come to God for aid; if, indeed, things turn out so well that they do not wholly despair of God, and rush to satan; for many, when no other help avails, give themselves over to the devil. This results from the fact that they do not know God, and think that he has forgotten them, if he permits some small misfortune to happen to them.

3. Overagainst such thoughts, this Gospel presents a picture of how the Lord Jesus Christ acted toward the poor widow in the time of her greatest need, at the death of her son. On earth no greater need can arise than that caused by death, when the world and everything else have an end. In this greatest extremity he helped her, and raised the dead to life, as an example for us who hear it. For this was done not merely for the sake of the widow and her son, but, as St. John 20:31, says: “But these things are done and written, that ye may believe.” In this way he impresses upon the hearts of all this and his other miracles performed by the blessed Lord Jesus, as if he meant to say: Behold, now you hear how this widow’s son was raised from the dead; let this be preached into your heart, in order that you may accept it, and in this learn what God can and will do, that he can and will help you in all times of need, no matter how great they may be. And if it should happen that your needs should press heavily upon you and you realize that earthly counsel and help are unavailing, that then you do not despair but let this example strengthen your heart, so that you may look to the Lord Jesus for the best that he can give.

4. This was, indeed, no jest in the life of the widow. First, she lost her husband, and then her only son, whom she loved, died. Among those people it was regarded a great misfortune, if parents could not leave a name or children. They regarded this as a great disfavor of God. Hence this widow, who after the death of her husband, placed all her hope and comfort in her only son, must have had great sorrow when her son was torn from her and she had nothing left on earth. Under such circumstances the thoughts were undoubtedly forced upon her: Behold, you are also one of the cursed women to whom God is such an enemy that they must pass from the earth without leaving an offspring. For thus it is written in the Psalms and the Prophets, that God threatens the ungodly, that he will destroy them root and branch, exactly as when one so entirely destroys a tree that neither leaf nor twig remains. This was regarded as the greatest curse and punishment, as may be seen in the lives of many emperors, kings and princes, who were so completely destroyed that nothing is known of them. This has the appearance as if it were the utmost disfavor.

5. Therefore this woman had great sorrow, not only because she had been robbed of her husband and afterwards of her son and thereby the family destroyed before her eyes; but, what seemed far more serious, because she was forced to think: Now I see that God is unfavorable to me and I am cursed; for this punishment has been executed upon me because God in the Psalms and the Prophets has threatened the ungodly to destroy them root and branch. This has happened to me. Therefore the miracle the Lord Jesus wrought in her behalf seemed to her altogether impossible; and if some one had then said to her: Thy son shall live again before your eyes, she would undoubtedly have said: Alas! do not mock me in my deep sorrow. Grant me at least so much that I may bewail my great misery, and do not add to it by your mockery. This would undoubtedly have been her answer, for she was greatly distressed, both by reason of the loss she had sustained as well as on account of her scruples of conscience.

6. But all this is portrayed here in order that we might learn that with God nothing is impossible, whether it be misfortune, calamity, anger, or whatever it may be, and that he sometimes allows misfortune to come upon the good as well as upon the wicked. Yea, that he even permits the ungodly to sit at ease, as in a garden of roses, and meet with success in all their undertakings, while, on the other hand, he appears to the pious as if he were angry with them and unfavorable to them; as, for example, it happened to the godly Job, all whose children were sadly destroyed in one day, who was robbed of his cattle and land, and his body most terribly tormented. He was an innocent man and yet he was compelled to endure a punishment such as no ungodly person had suffered, so that at last even his friends said to him: “You must undoubtedly rest under a great and secret sin, since this has happened to you.” While attempting to comfort him, they added to his misery. But he answered, saying: “I have done nothing and hence am not an ungodly person, whom God often allows to live in rioting and to go unpunished.”

7. So also, it was undoubtedly a serious problem to the widow that the Lord our God punishes the good and evil alike. But to the godly this does not come as a mark of God’s anger or disfavor; while to the ungodly it comes truly as a mark of anger, in order that they may be destroyed. For God does not trifle with them, but is truly in earnest. As to the Godfearing, who have not merited punishment, he tries to see if they will remain steadfast. If they endure the test and think: “My God, though thou triest me, yet thou wilt not forsake me,” he will come again and pour out his blessings as richly upon them as he did in the case of Job, who received twice as much as he had lost, both in property and children. The widow found all her joy in her son while he lived. God tried her and took her son from her. When she wept and cried he came again and gave her tenfold more joy than she had had before; for she rejoiced more for her son in that one hour than she had done throughout her entire previous life. So richly does our Lord God give again, if only men endure and do not doubt him.

8. Therefore learn from this, whoever can learn: If we are pious and the trials come, which God sends upon us, let us cherish the thought that he means it well with us, and let us not be offended when he permits the wicked, the Pope, bishops and all others to do as they please. These think they have deserved this at the hands of our Lord God and try to justify themselves, if punished on account of their sins. But, dear friends, let us freely confess and say: Lord, thou doest right, even though thou dost punish us; for before thee, Lord, we have no right. But we hope that thou wilt punish graciously and in thine own good time cease. If we do thus, all distress will be removed, no matter how impossible help may seem to be.

9. Flesh and blood, when under trial, say, all is lost. For when our Lord God makes an attack, he does it in such a manner that we know not where to turn; and hence, no matter how we think or plan, we can find no way out, but are hemmed in on every side, as Job says, Job 3:23: “As a man, whom the Lord has surrounded with darkness,” as when one is in darkness and does not know which way to turn. If the trial does not go thus far it is no real trial. He who in hunger still knows of a supply of gold or grain, is not yet in real darkness; but when one is utterly helpless and without counsel he may be said to be really punished. As the widow’s way was so hemmed in on every side that she was compelled to conclude: I am cursed, God is against me; so she was in the midst of darkness, where there was neither a way nor an opening, and knew not where to turn.

10. All this is presented to us as an example, that we may learn to remain steadfast in faith and regard God in no other light than that of a merciful God who, indeed, may permit us to be tempted, as if he were angry with us and were laughing at us with the world; but let us guard ourselves against such laughter and not become terrified at the anger, with which he attacks his people. It may appear as if at times he were on the side of the wicked and persecuted the godly without mercy; yet it does no harm and it depends only upon a glance. But it is a blind and spiritual glance, which we must give with blind eyes, that is, with the eyes of faith, which sees nothing; For faith is invisible. Faith lays hold of things that are not seen and of things that are not matters of experience, Hebrews 11:1.

11. Philosophers have an art that deals with visible things, which can be experienced and comprehended; but a Christian deals with invisible, unsubstantial, spiritual things, that cannot be seen, nor comprehended, so that one can hardly think they are possible. In this state Sarah was with reference to her son. There was nothing but the simple word. Her womb was not fit for that because of her age and her natural condition that she was barren, and her son Isaac was indeed invisible and as nothing. So this widow, with reference to her son, did not see that he lived, but saw only that he was dead; but Christ knew that he lived and brought the dead son to life, and so made the invisible visible.

12. All this happened, as I have often said, for us to learn to trust our Lord God and believe in him in all our need, and not become terrified when we do not fare well, nor be offended if the wicked prosper. For our Lord God is one who tries, who allows his own to be tried and to suffer, so that they may truly perceive and learn to know that he is a gracious God, even though he at times hides his grace so deeply that it cannot be seen.

Afterwards, if men persevere, it is only a matter of a single word and the necessary assistance is rendered; as in this Gospel, only a word was necessary and the dead son was restored to life. By this he desires to show that what is impossible with us, is so easy for him that it requires only one little word: “Arise.” It is easily spoken, and yet is has power to restore the dead to life. We should learn to know that he can and will help us out of all our needs.

13. He who desires to be a Christian should be strong in faith and praise God and his Word, and should say: “I will acknowledge, praise and serve that God, and gladly do and suffer what he wills, who can so readily and easily help.” Thus, this and other miracles of Christ should serve to comfort us and make us better, and urge us on to believe in him and serve him, as no other god, for no other god manifests himself as our dear Lord Jesus has manifested himself. Therefore, we praise and magnify him daily, and daily bring others to him that they may also do the same. May God continue his help more and more. This is the teaching of the Gospel as presented in the example of the widow.

14. This narrative still further exhibits the true nature of Christ’s work, showing why he came and reigns, namely, that he might destroy death and in its stead give life, as the prophet Isaiah, 25:8, says: “He will swallow up death forever;” and St. Paul, 1 Corinthians 15:24-26, says that Christ must reign until he has destroyed the last enemy, death, for his Christians, and thus give them eternal life; after that he shall deliver up the kingdom to the Father, when he shall have abolished all rule and all authority and power. This is the work he will accomplish among his people and has already begun in faith before bodily death takes place. Afterwards, however, when he shall have brought all his own together he will complete his work in them at the last day.

15. Signs and types, yea, testimonies of the same are found in this and other narratives, that record the raising of people from the dead. But these form only the prelude to the work he will finally accomplish among all Christians. The pictures of both life and death are here placed over against each other, and it is shown where both originate and oppose each other, and how Christ manifests his power and authority over death.

16. For, first, when you hear the Scriptures speaking of death, you must think not only of the grave and the coffin, and of the horrible manner in which life is separated from the body and how the body is destroyed and brought to naught, but you must think of the cause by which man is brought to death and without which death and that which accompanies it, would be impossible. This cause Scripture points out and teaches, namely, that it is sin and the wrath of God on account of sin. This cause brings death, always sticks in it, appears from it, and works and draws after it all the misery and misfortune on earth, and in addition banishes man from God and from all his grace and joy.

17. Likewise, on the contrary, when the Scriptures speak of life you must also conceive the cause that brings and gives life; that must be the righteousness by which man is acceptable to God and by which he also finds in God his pleasure, delight and joy, and receives thus from God every good thing he may desire through all eternity.

18. Both these things you may see in this picture, two sorts of persons and processions: the deceased with those who carry him out of the town, and Christ who comes to meet him. All men know very well that they must die and that all of us go the same way, and see death before us, by our side and behind us. Even the learned among the heathen have complained of this misery of the human race; but they have not been able to perceive the cause of death. Most of them think death is a matter of chance, that we die like the brute, and that man is so created that he must die.

19. Others, seeing that so much misfortune, misery and sorrow pass over the human race, that so many die before their time and many are miserably destroyed, things which could happen only by chance, have searched for the cause and have been surprised that such misfortunes befall man, who, alone among all living creatures, is the noblest and should be better situated, and guarded against injury, but they have not been able to ascertain the cause of the evil, except in so far that they have seen how many men, through their own malignity or willfulness, have brought death and other misfortunes on themselves. But this in itself is a matter of great wonder how a man can be so wicked that he can willfully cast himself into trouble and misery.

20. Here Scripture teaches us, in the first place, that death originated in paradise, as the result of the eating of the forbidden fruit, that is, from the disobedience of our first parents, and since then has come upon all men on account of their sins. For if sin did not exist, there would be no death. By this we mean not only gross sins, such as adultery, murder, and the like; but they also die who neither commit, nor can commit these, as children in the cradle; yea, even the great and holy Prophets, John the Baptist, all must die.

21. Therefore some greater and different sins than murder and similar public crimes, which the executioner punishes with death, must be meant, why the whole human race is subject to death. This is the sin which we have inherited from Adam and Eve, and from our fathers and mothers, which is innate in all men born according to the common course of nature.

This exists and remains, as it did in Adam and Eve, after they had committed sin, had been banished from the presence of God, full of evil lusts and disobedience to God and his will. Hence all under the wrath of God are condemned to death, and must be forever separated from God. In this way God manifests his strong and terrible wrath against all men, which we bring upon us through sin, so that all of us must be overcome by death; because we are born of flesh and blood and in consequence must bear the guilt of our parents, and thus have become sinners and worthy of death. Psalm 90:7 teaches us: “For we are consumed in thine anger, and in thy wrath are we troubled.” It is the wrath of God, he says; hence it is not an accidental thing, or because man has been so created by God; but it is our fault that we commit sin. For since there is wrath, there must also be guilt, which causes such wrath. This wrath is not a mere ordinary thing, but such a serious affair that no one can endure it, and under which all must succumb; and yet the world is so blind that it does not see nor regard this wrath of God; yea, even the pious do not sufficiently comprehend it. The Psalmist says, Psalm 90:11: “Who knoweth the power of thine anger, and thy wrath according to the fear that is due unto thee?”

22. Much less can the world understand how one may be freed from all this misery, nor can it accomplish this by its own wisdom and power; even as in its blindness it attempts to do, when it hears of the wrath of God and seeks by its works and life to be reconciled to God and merit life. For since all men are by birth sinners and, under the wrath of God, subject to death, how shall we be able by our own works to free ourselves from death? Alas! when death is considered or how to escape death, there is neither comfort nor hope for any one, as St. Paul says, 1 Thessalonians 4:13: “That ye sorrow not, even as the rest who have no hope.”

23. For neither do these know that it is possible for a single individual to be raised from death to life, and hence they conclude: “He who is dead, must remain dead forever and must be annihilated.” Others, as the Jews, Turks, Papists, even though they hear that there is to be a resurrection, are nevertheless ignorant of the fact how they may take part in the resurrection of the righteous and the saved, think that they can merit eternal life by their own efforts; as we monks have hitherto believed and taught: that if we strictly observed the rules of our orders, prayed much, read mass, etc., God would have respect for such a holy life and in consequence help not only us, but others also, to escape death.

24. This, however, is nothing but a vain human comfort and hope, without any authority of the Word of God; for such power and authority to help ourselves cannot exist within us. Since on account of sin we have become subject to death, so that we cannot even delay bodily death, much less can we save ourselves or work ourselves free from eternal death. This we ourselves have been compelled to experience and testify to by our monkery and work-righteousness. For although we have had to do with these for a long time and comforted ourselves with them, yet at last we found them useless. When once the straits of conscience were concerned, when we had to struggle and stand before the judgment of God, all this comfort left the heart and nothing remained but vain terrified doubts, yea, even convulsions and tremblings on account of the thought: Alas! I did not live a sufficiently holy life. How shall I be able to stand before the judgment of God? For it must finally come to this, that man must feel and become conscious of that which all the Saints have experienced and confessed, namely, that no one can stand in the judgment of God on the basis of his own life, no matter how good it may have been. Of this the prophet Isaiah speaks, Isaiah 49:24: “Shall the prey be taken from the mighty, or the lawful captives be delivered?” The “mighty” he calls the power of death, that strangles and carries away all men and whom no one can resist or rob of its prey; but by the “lawful captives” he means the law with its t judgment, which is God’s judgment and which rightly holds all men captive, so that no one can free himself or others from it, but all must, as far as in them be, remain forever captive under it; for they themselves have merited such captivity through sin and disobedience, and have fallen into the righteous and eternal wrath of God.

25. Therefore there is no help from any creature against this. God himself had to have compassion on our misery and to conceive a plan for our deliverance, as he said in the prophecy of Isaiah, 49:25: “Even the captives of the mighty shall be taken away, and the prey of the terrible shall be delivered.” This had to be done by Christ, the Son of God himself, and he therefore became man, that is, took upon himself death and its cause, sin and the wrath of God, in order that he might free us from these and bring us to life and righteousness. For, as by one man both sin and death came upon all of us; so also by one man must victory over death, righteousness and life be given to us, as St. Paul says, Romans 5:17.

26. Therefore this work of life has been accomplished in such a manner that without our effort or work we attain it, just as we became subject to death without our effort and work. And in like manner as we did not bring death upon ourselves, except in so far as we were born of Adam and through the sin of another our flesh and blood became corrupt, so that we also must die; so also can we much less work out and merit redemption from sin and death, that is, righteousness and life, but must be brought to it through the righteousness and life of another one. Therefore, since sin is born in us through Adam and has now become our own; so also must the righteousness and life of Christ become our own, so that this same power of righteousness and life may work in us, as if it had been born in us through him. For it is in him not only his personal, but an actual and powerful righteousness and life; yea, a fountain that gushes forth and overflows for all who have become partakers of him, in like manner as sin and death have gushed into human nature from Adam. It means, therefore, that now all men can be delivered from sin and death and be made alive, not by nor through their own efforts, but apart from themselves through the righteousness and life of this Lord Jesus Christ, namely, if he touches them with his hand and through his Word imparts to them his work and power to destroy sin and death, and provided they believe his Word.

27. For this reason we are called Christians, that is, righteous, living and holy people, because we have this Lord and have become partakers of him through the faith of his Word and Sacrament, who is the true sin-destroyer and death-devourer (I say of our sin and death, which have strangled and devoured us) by virtue of his own power and authority. He did both these things in his own person, inasmuch as he took upon himself our sin and death. But since he was not only without sin and the guilt of death, but in himself was perfect and eternal righteousness, and sin and death had no hold on him, they were condemned and destroyed by him, and pure righteousness and life presented to us in place of sin and death. For after his victorious death and resurrection he established a kingdom in Christendom, in which he now continually until death and the grave destroys sin in his Christians through forgiveness and the power of his Spirit, and begins life in them through faith, until he can bring them all together on one day, when he will bestow on them perfect righteousness and life, both in body and soul.

28. All this you may see clearly and lovingly presented in this narrative:

This youth died, not because he had been a murderer, adulterer or open sinner who had to be punished because of his misdeeds; but before he could have become guilty of sins which those commit who have grown to maturity, and become old, death carried him away only by reason of the sin in which he was born. His mother might well bemoan her own sin, by reason of which she lost her son, who had inherited sin and death from her.

29. But now that he has died, where may counsel or comfort and help be found? Certainly not through the mother’s sorrow and tears, which must have been unlimited. If human work and effort could in this case have been of any avail or be meritorious, surely the tears of the widow would have accomplished much more; for they certainly came from a most anxious heart, as of a sorrowing and miserable mother, whose heart was broken by reason of her love for her son, and who would willingly have done and suffered anything, even her own death, in order to have saved her son. And now, that he was dead, she doubtless cherished the secret wish and longing: Ah! if it could be the will of God that my son might still be alive or could again be restored to life. This was so deeply concealed in her heart, that she could not see it herself, yea, she dared not even think of petitioning the Lord for it, and yet her heart was filled with the thought. If she had been asked and had confessed what her greatest desire was and what she would ask of God, she could have said nothing else than: Alas! what should I desire or ask more on earth than that my son might live. And this is a more earnest and heart-felt prayer than any one can express, for it proceeds from a purely inexpressible longing.

30. And yet this is useless both for her as well as all others, and she must cast it aside and remain in doubt; for had she not sighed, wept and prayed most earnestly before her son died, that she might retain him alive? But since all this was of no avail and her son had died, how much less could she draw hope or comfort from his suffering; she saw clearly that he could not be brought back by sighs and tears. If this were possible, other mothers would have or would still do it.

31. In a word, unbelief fought against her prayer and made it unavailing; and hence contrary to all human thought, hope and effort, her son was restored to her, alone for the reason that the Lord met and had compassion on the poor widow, as the text says, and comforted her not only with friendly words, but also with his power and authority restored her son alive to her; so that she was compelled to say that it was not her merit or that of any human being, but the pure grace and gift of the Lord, and that he was a Lord who is able to do and give “exceeding abundantly above all that we can ask or think,” as the Epistle for to-day says, Ephesians 3:20. For this is his way that he always manifests himself towards his saints in a wonderful manner, as Psalm 4:3 says, and in their distresses hears, delivers and saves them, not according to their own thoughts, hopes and faith, but according to his own divine and almighty power, when human counsel fails and is despaired of.

32. Behold, how the Lord exhibits his work against death when it comes into his presence, and thereby typifies or indicates for our comfort what he will also do for all his people, when, like this youth, they are seized by death. For here you see two processions or companies meeting each other; the one, the poor widow with the dead youth and the people following him to the grave; the other, Christ and those who went with him into the city.

The first picture shows what we are and what we can bring to Christ; for this is the picture of the whole world and the way of man on the earth.

There is a crowd all of whom must follow death out of the city, and Christ, when he comes, finds nothing else than that which has to do with death.

33. This is the whole essence of human life on the earth, if we look at it in the proper light. There is nothing but the image and work of death, and constant and daily approaching death until the last day, since one after another dies and the rest have to do only with the horrible affair how one may carry the other to the grave, and others follow daily. They render this service to the dead, in order that to-day or to-morrow some one else may follow them also to their graves. Wherefore Christ speaks of the character and order of our earthly life to those whom he calls into his kingdom, Matthew 8:22: “Leave the dead to bury their own dead.”

34. Thus you see on this side and in this crowd of the whole world and of the human race nothing but death. We bring this with us and with it drag ourselves from our mother’s womb, and all at the same time travel the same road with one another, only that one precedes or is carried before the others, and the rest follow after until the last one dies. Nor is there any deliverance or help for this from any creature, for death rules over them all, as St. Paul says, Romans 5:14, and drags all of them along, without the ability to resist. Yea, with such demonstration and pomp does death do this that when he overcomes one he defies all the rest who are alive and carries the dead to the grave, and shows them that he has them also in his clutches and under his power and may seize them whenever he will.

35. But on the other hand, you see here also a comforting counterpart of life, and a glorious and joyous procession of the Lord Jesus, who does not go out of the city with the dead, but meets death on his way into the city; not however as those who return home from the grave, only until they shall carry another one out. For the Lord does not come with such thoughts of death, as if he had to fear death and come under its power; but steps into his presence and opposes him as the one who has power and authority over death; first he comforts the poor widow, whose heart is filled only with death, and tells her to sorrow and weep no more, speaks other words which no one else can utter, steps up to the bier, lays his hands on it, requests the bearers to stand still, and immediately follows with a word and says: “Young man, I say unto thee, Arise.” These words are instantly followed by such power and efficacy that the dead man did not lie as before, but sat up, bound and covered as he was, began to speak and showed that he was no longer dead, but alive.

36. This was a wonderful and quick change from death to life, on the part of the young man. Where the spark of life had long been extinguished and there was truly no sign of life, there are instantly and fully restored breath, blood, sensibility, movement, thought, speech and everything else that belongs to life; and Christ, with one word, turned the sad and sorrowing procession, and the carrying of the dead from the gate of the city, into a joyous, lovely and beautiful procession of life, in which both the youth, who was being carried by four or more to be buried under ground, together with his sorrowing mother, joyously follow the Lord Jesus, accompanied by the whole crowd into the city, forgetting death, the bier and the grave, and speaking joyously and thankfully only of life.

37. But the glory and honor of this work belong only to the Lord Jesus, through whose power and authority alone death can be removed and life brought forth from it, as he also proves. Hence the fame and report concerning Christ, of which this Gospel speaks, saying that it went forth throughout the whole country, is recorded for our consolation and joy overagainst the fear and dread of death, in order that we may know what kind of a Savior we have in Christ. For he so manifested himself on earth in his ministry, office and form of a servant, that he can be known as the Lord both of death and life, to destroy the former and bring the latter to light; that although he often met death and fought with it, as in the case of the daughter of Jairus, and again in that of Lazarus, and at last in his own person, he nevertheless finally overcame and destroyed it.

38. Christ also desires to prove in our death and that of all Christians, since death casts every one of us under the ground and it thinks it has completely swallowed all; as Christ promised and confirmed by his own mouth and word in John 11:25: “I am the resurrection and the life; he that believeth in me, though he die, yet shall he live.” Again, John 5:28 says: “The hour cometh in which all that are in the tombs shall hear his voice, and shall come forth.” Then only the work, which he has portrayed in this example, shall really begin, which he has put off until that time, since he wishes to complete it not only in one or a few, but at one time in all, in order to destroy death with one blow, as Isaiah 25:8 says, so that no one shall forever afterwards be overcome or taken captive by it. This shall then form a truly joyous and glorious procession, when he shall bring together, in a moment of time, all who have died, calling them forth with one word from the earth, dust and ashes, air, water and all other places, and, as St. Paul says, 1 Thessalonians 4:14, will bring with himself, as the Head, in an innumerable company all believers, having freed all from death and given them eternal life, and, as Isaiah 25:8 says, having wiped away all tears from their eyes, so that they may forever and without ceasing praise and glorify their Lord, with everlasting joy, praise and honor.

39. We should also learn to believe this and comfort ourselves in the hour of death and in all other distresses, so that, although we may come to such straits that we neither see nor feel anything else than death and destruction, as in the case of this poor widow, because of her son, yea, even though we may be in the clutches of death, as her son on the bier and on the way to the tomb; yet that we may nevertheless firmly conclude that in Christ we have obtained victory over death and life. For faith in Christ must be so disposed, as the Epistle to the Hebrews 11:1, teaches, that it can grasp and hold fast those things that can not, yea those things of which only the antithesis can be seen, as in this case, Christ wants this widow to believe in and hope for life, when he says, “Weep not;” although such faith was indeed weak and small in her, as it also is in us, since she and all the world had in their minds feelings and thoughts that despaired of life.

40. For he desires to teach us that also in our experience there is nothing in us or apart from us, except only corruption and death; but from him and in him only life, which shall swallow up both our sin and death. Yea, the more misery and death are in us, the more and the more richly shall we find comfort and life in him, provided we hold fast to him by faith, to which he spurs us on and admonishes us both through his Word and such examples as the one before us. Amen.

The Sixteenth Sunday after Trinity. Luke 7:11-17. The Widow's Son Raised

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The Sixteenth Sunday after Trinity, 2013


Pastor Gregory L. Jackson


Bethany Lutheran Church, 10 AM Central Time


The Hymn #  191                 Christ the Lord                      2:97
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 #188                Hallelujah                   2:20     

The Widow's Son Raised

The Communion Hymn #  206            Jesus Christ, My Sure Defense  2:81
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 #   212     A Hymn of Glory                                    2:93

KJV Ephesians 3:13 Wherefore I desire that ye faint not at my tribulations for you, which is your glory. 14 For this cause I bow my knees unto the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, 15 Of whom the whole family in heaven and earth is named, 16 That he would grant you, according to the riches of his glory, to be strengthened with might by his Spirit in the inner man; 17 That Christ may dwell in your hearts by faith; that ye, being rooted and grounded in love, 18 May be able to comprehend with all saints what is the breadth, and length, and depth, and height; 19 And to know the love of Christ, which passeth knowledge, that ye might be filled with all the fulness of God. 20 Now unto him that is able to do exceeding abundantly above all that we ask or think, according to the power that worketh in us, 21 Unto him be glory in the church by Christ Jesus throughout all ages, world without end. Amen.

KJV Luke 7:11 And it came to pass the day after, that he went into a city called Nain; and many of his disciples went with him, and much people. 12 Now when he came nigh to the gate of the city, behold, there was a dead man carried out, the only son of his mother, and she was a widow: and much people of the city was with her. 13 And when the Lord saw her, he had compassion on her, and said unto her, Weep not. 14 And he came and touched the bier: and they that bare him stood still. And he said, Young man, I say unto thee, Arise. 15 And he that was dead sat up, and began to speak. And he delivered him to his mother. 16 And there came a fear on all: and they glorified God, saying, That a great prophet is risen up among us; and, That God hath visited his people. 17 And this rumour of him went forth throughout all Judaea, and throughout all the region round about.

SIXTEENTH SUNDAY AFTER TRINITY

Lord God, heavenly Father, who didst send Thy Son to be made flesh, that by His death He might atone for our sins and deliver us from eternal death: We pray Thee, confirm in our hearts the hope that our Lord Jesus Christ, who with but a word raised the widow's son, in like manner will raise us on the last day, and grant us eternal life: through Thy beloved Son, Jesus Christ, our Lord, who liveth and reigneth with Thee and the Holy Ghost, one true God, world without end. Amen.

The Widow's Son Raised


KJV Luke 7:11 And it came to pass the day after, that he went into a city called Nain; and many of his disciples went with him, and much people.

There are three examples of raising the dead in the Gospels. One is the little girl – people laughed at Jesus.

Another is Lazarus. The crowd warned Jesus away from the tomb.

This is a third example. In each case, no one expected or demanded such a miracle.

Luther’s first point about this miracle is an attack on the Roman Catholic concept of grace – that people receive grace because they deserve it. Or – good people have it coming to them. The modern version is the Anonymous Christian of Rahner (the modern Catholic theologian). Rahner argued that people were already Christian before they received the Gospel from missionaries, because they were already good people.

Any system that rejects faith alone is going to end up with works.

But where are the works here? The widow was leaving with her son’s body, in sorrow because of her loss. She had no faith in Jesus. She did not ask him anything. The son was beyond the point of being good or not. Neither one merited grace. Neither one had faith.

Luther went on to say that his woman lost her son because she was not grateful for her blessings. That seems to be an exaggeration at first, but it is largely true of our blessings. America is a prime example. The norm of dignified liturgical Lutheran sermons has been replaced by a new norm – rock entertainment sessions where soft drinks and treats are served: no altar, no font, no pulpit, no sermon – just a coaching session.

People did not appreciate fine pipe organs or highly trained organists – so they are going away completely.

The blessings of liberty in a Christian country, a city set on a hill – those have been drained away by apathy, ingratitude, and hedonism.

Every single warning in the Scriptures is aimed at the individual, because faith is individual. Those who depend on institutions have fastened themselves to the mast of a sinking ship. Churches do not have faith. They have the responsibility of being true to the Gospel, but they do not save or forgive. The power of the Gospel does not. Strangely, people are grateful for recent man-made institutions, for brick and mortal, not for the immortal Word of God.

“Heaven and earth will pass away, but My Words will never pass away.”

12 Now when he came nigh to the gate of the city, behold, there was a dead man carried out, the only son of his mother, and she was a widow: and much people of the city was with her.

This is a poignant verse, which describes the pain of this woman in a few words. When she had a husband, he provided for her. When he died, her son had a lifetime to live and work to support her. As Luther speculated, she said, “I will fine. He will outlive me and provide for my needs.” She took that for granted, as we do all our blessings.

Now she was left with no one to support her in any significant way. And society was especially cruel and hard in those days. She lost her comfort and protection in life – and she was bereft.

5. Therefore this woman had great sorrow, not only because she had been robbed of her husband and afterwards of her son and thereby the family destroyed before her eyes; but, what seemed far more serious, because she was forced to think: Now I see that God is unfavorable to me and I am cursed; for this punishment has been executed upon me because God in the Psalms and the Prophets has threatened the ungodly to destroy them root and branch. This has happened to me. Therefore the miracle the Lord Jesus wrought in her behalf seemed to her altogether impossible; and if some one had then said to her: Thy son shall live again before your eyes, she would undoubtedly have said: Alas! do not mock me in my deep sorrow. Grant me at least so much that I may bewail my great misery, and do not add to it by your mockery. This would undoubtedly have been her answer, for she was greatly distressed, both by reason of the loss she had sustained as well as on account of her scruples of conscience.

6. But all this is portrayed here in order that we might learn that with God nothing is impossible, whether it be misfortune, calamity, anger, or whatever it may be, and that he sometimes allows misfortune to come upon the good as well as upon the wicked. Yea, that he even permits the ungodly to sit at ease, as in a garden of roses, and meet with success in all their undertakings, while, on the other hand, he appears to the pious as if he were angry with them and unfavorable to them; as, for example, it happened to the godly Job, all whose children were sadly destroyed in one day, who was robbed of his cattle and land, and his body most terribly tormented. He was an innocent man and yet he was compelled to endure a punishment such as no ungodly person had suffered, so that at last even his friends said to him: “You must undoubtedly rest under a great and secret sin, since this has happened to you.” While attempting to comfort him, they added to his misery. But he answered, saying: “I have done nothing and hence am not an ungodly person, whom God often allows to live in rioting and to go unpunished.”

13 And when the Lord saw her, he had compassion on her, and said unto her, Weep not.
This shows us that God comes to those without faith and in His compassion creates faith through His Word and actions. He uses the faithful to accomplish this, so we have the satisfaction in participating in His work and yet knowing all the power comes from His Word, not from our charm, manners, salesmanship, or clever gimmicks.

The widow was consumed with grief, as she should have been, sobbing in her pain. That was her comfort because she had no other, no faith in such a miracle about to happen.

And the crowd no doubt felt her sorrow. There was a large group with Jesus and another group with the coffin, son, and mother.



13 And when the Lord saw her, He had compassion on her, and said unto her, Weep not. 14 And He came and touched the bier: and they that bare him stood still. And He said, Young man, I say unto thee, Arise.

This is the power of the Word. When the Word of God commands, it happens. The water turns into wine. The disciple walks on water. Lepers are healed. The blind receive their sight. The deaf hear. And people believe in Christ, and in believing have forgiveness of sin and everlasting life.

15 And he that was dead sat up, and began to speak. And He delivered him to his mother.

There are tw great moments in this little verse. The dead son sat up and began to speak. This showed everyone that he was alive again.

Jesus delivered the son to his mother. Death took the son away, but the Messiah gave him back to his mother.

34. Thus you see on this side and in this crowd of the whole world and of the human race nothing but death. We bring this with us and with it drag ourselves from our mother’s womb, and all at the same time travel the same road with one another, only that one precedes or is carried before the others, and the rest follow after until the last one dies. Nor is there any deliverance or help for this from any creature, for death rules over them all, as St. Paul says, Romans 5:14, and drags all of them along, without the ability to resist. Yea, with such demonstration and pomp does death do this that when he overcomes one he defies all the rest who are alive and carries the dead to the grave, and shows them that he has them also in his clutches and under his power and may seize them whenever he will.

35. But on the other hand, you see here also a comforting counterpart of life, and a glorious and joyous procession of the Lord Jesus, who does not go out of the city with the dead, but meets death on his way into the city; not however as those who return home from the grave, only until they shall carry another one out. For the Lord does not come with such thoughts of death, as if he had to fear death and come under its power; but steps into his presence and opposes him as the one who has power and authority over death; first he comforts the poor widow, whose heart is filled only with death, and tells her to sorrow and weep no more, speaks other words which no one else can utter, steps up to the bier, lays his hands on it, requests the bearers to stand still, and immediately follows with a word and says: “Young man, I say unto thee, Arise.” These words are instantly followed by such power and efficacy that the dead man did not lie as before, but sat up, bound and covered as he was, began to speak and showed that he was no longer dead, but alive.

36. This was a wonderful and quick change from death to life, on the part of the young man. Where the spark of life had long been extinguished and there was truly no sign of life, there are instantly and fully restored breath, blood, sensibility, movement, thought, speech and everything else that belongs to life; and Christ, with one word, turned the sad and sorrowing procession, and the carrying of the dead from the gate of the city, into a joyous, lovely and beautiful procession of life, in which both the youth, who was being carried by four or more to be buried under ground, together with his sorrowing mother, joyously follow the Lord Jesus, accompanied by the whole crowd into the city, forgetting death, the bier and the grave, and speaking joyously and thankfully only of life.

16 And there came a fear on all: and they glorified God, saying, That a great prophet is risen up among us; and, That God hath visited his people. 17 And this rumour [this Word] of him went forth throughout all Judaea, and throughout all the region round about.

The power of to give life to the dead – that could only come from God, so in various places, Jesus displayed His divine power over death. This was so great a miracle that it filled the people with awe, with fear.

They did not say  “a great prophet” but literally, as in a title – Great Prophet. There is no article suggesting one prophet among many, but The Great Prophet. This detail can be lost in translation.
The spread of faith in Christ can be seen in what happened. The Word (logos) went out. Everyone began speaking in faith about what they had seen and believed. They testified about God’s power in Christ.

This is also why fear and revenge built up in the religious opposition.

This Gospel miracle teaches us to cling to spiritual treasures rather than to those things admired so much by unbelievers.

The constant temptation of the church and the individual is to have it both ways, to be faithful to the Word and to be admired by unbelievers for having as much – or more – than they have.

Luther said that believing in Christ means being willing to get socked in the mouth because of the Word. That sounds extreme, but it happens often when faith encounters unbelief.

Many are searching or lost and grateful for the Gospel and the first stirrings of faith, but when someone has been carefully trained in apostasy, faith is an irritant that must be eliminated, battled, put down, and humiliated.

It is that opposition that tells us the battle continues.

In our own lives we can take comfort that we all move toward an end point in life, and yet we have the comfort of the Gospel and eternal life. We are not spared the sorrows of loss, but the Word of eternal life is no different from what happened to the widow.

In the midst of death, Jesus gave her son back to her.

In a Christian funeral, the Word of God says, “Do not be full of sorrow. The Gospel will give this person back to you in eternal life.”

And it is just as much true as if this miracle were re-enacted. The difference is the time that will elapse. It seems long at first but it is just a moment in God’s time.

Those experiences telescope back and forth. Every time we see the grandchildren we have flashbacks to their babyhood and to our daughters. There are so many reminders and reasons to laugh.

That is all the more reason to treasure every moment now. God blesses the ordinary moments in life with miracles no one can believe or explain. Just as He turned ordinary water into extraordinary wine, so He transforms every aspect of life for believers.


Teaching Office

"This is the province of the work, which the Holy Spirit is to begin in the kingdom of Christ. It is the teaching office of the apostles, which is to be of such a character that it must convict the world, as it finds it outside of Christ, and nobody is to be excepted, great, small, learned, wise, holy, of high or low condition, etc. This means in short, to bear the world's anger and to begin strife, and to be struck in the mouth for it. For the world, which rules on earth, will not and cannot endure its course to be disapproved; therefore persecution must arise, and one party must yield to the other, the weakest to the stronger. But, as the office of the apostles is to be only a teaching office, it cannot use worldly power and the world retains its external kingdom and power against the apostles. But, on the other hand, the apostles' office of conviction of the world shall likewise not be suppressed, because it is the office and work of the Holy Spirit, but shall overcome all and triumph; as Christ promised to them: 'I will give you a mouth and wisdom, which all your adversaries shall not be able to withstand.' Luke 21:15"
Martin Luther, Sermons of Martin Luther, 8 vols., ed., John Nicholas Lenker, Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1983, III, p. 136. Fourth Sunday after Easter, Third Sermon. John 16:5-15.

"Though God might convert men through angels, He desires to accomplish it by human beings--by us, so that faith might be established and completed in a more congenial way through a kindred agency. Were angels constantly to dwell with us, faith would cease here...If we were taken to heaven immediately after baptism, who would convert the others and bring them to God by means of the Word and a good example?"
Martin Luther, Sermons of Martin Luther, 8 vols., ed., John Nicholaus Lenker, Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1983, VI, p. 153. Early Christmas Morning Titus 3:4-8.

"It is a glory which every preacher may claim, to be able to say with full confidence of heart: 'This trust have I toward God in Christ, that what I teach and preach is truly the Word of God.' Likewise, when he performs other officials duties in the Church--baptizes a child, absolves and comforts a sinner--it must be done in the same firm conviction that such is the command of Christ. He who would teach and exercise authority in the Church without this glory, 'it is profitable for him,' as Christ says, (Matthew 18:6), 'that a great millstone should be hanged about his neck, and that he should be sunk in the depths of the sea.' For the devil's lies he preaches, and death is what he effects."
Martin Luther, Sermons of Martin Luther, ed. John Nicolas Lenker, Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1983, VIII, p. 227. Twelfth Sunday after Trinity 2 Corinthians 3:4-11; Matthew 18:6.     

Holy Communion

"And just as the Word has been given in order to excite this faith, so the Sacrament has been instituted in order that the outward appearance meeting the eyes might move the heart to believe [and strengthen faith]. For through these, namely, through Word and Sacrament, the Holy Ghost works."
Apology Augsburg Confession, XXIV (XII), #70. The Mass. Concordia Triglotta, St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1921, p. 409. Tappert, p. 262. Heiser, p. 123.         

"Our adversaries have no testimonies and no command from Scripture for defending the application of the ceremony for liberating the souls of the dead, although from this they derive infinite revenue. Nor, indeed, is it a light sin to establish such services in the Church without the command of God and without the example of Scripture, and to apply to the dead the Lord's Supper, which was instituted for commemoration and preaching among the living [for the purpose of strengthening the faith of those who use the ceremony]. This is to violate the Second Commandment, by abusing God's name."
Apology Augsburg Confession, XXIV. #89. The Mass. Concordia Triglotta, St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1921, p. 413f. Tappert, p. 265f. Heiser, p. 124.     

"Whoever denies the Real Presence of the body and blood of Christ in the Lord's Supper must pervert the words of Institution where Christ the Lord, speaking of that which He gives His Christians to eat, says: 'This is My body,' and, speaking of that which He gives them to drink, says: 'This is My blood.' [Also 1 Corinthians 10:16]
Francis Pieper, The Difference between Orthodox and Heterodox Churches, and Supplement, Coos Bay, Oregon: St. Paul's Lutheran Church, 1981, p. 40. 1 Corinthians 10:16.

"And all these are established by the words by which Christ has instituted it, and which every one who desires to be a Christian and go to the Sacrament should know. For it is not our intention to admit to it and to administer it to those who know not what they seek, or why they come."
Large Catechism, The Sacrament of the Altar. #2. Concordia Triglotta, St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1921, p. 753. Tappert, p. 447. Heiser, p. 210.         

"For it is not founded upon the holiness of men, but upon the Word of God. And as no saint upon earth, yea, no angel in heaven, can make bread and wine to be the body and blood of Christ, so also can no one change or alter it, even though it be misused. For the Word by which it became a Sacrament and was instituted does not become false because of the person or his unbelief. For He does not say: If you believe or are worthy you receive My body and blood, but: Take, eat and drink; this is My body and blood."
The Large Catechism, Sacrament of the Altar. #16-17. Concordia Triglotta, St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1921, p. 757. Tappert, p. 448. Heiser, p. 211.      

"On this account it is indeed called a food of souls, which nourishes and strengthens the new man. For by Baptism we are first born anew; but (as we said before) there still remains, besides, the old vicious nature of flesh and blood in man, and there are so many hindrances and temptations of the devil and of the world that we often become weary and faint, and sometimes also stumble."
The Large Catechism, Sacrament of the Altar. #23. Concordia Triglotta, St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1921, p. 757. Tappert, p. 449. Heiser, p. 211f.        

"Therefore it {communion}is given for a daily pasture and sustenance, that faith may refresh and strengthen itself so as not to fall back in such a battle, but become every stronger and stronger. For the new life must be so regulated that it continually increase and progress; but it must suffer much opposition. For the devil is such a furious enemy that when he sees that we oppose him and attack the old man, and that he cannot topple us over by force, he prowls and moves about on all sides, tries all devices, and does not desist, until he finally wearies us, so that we either renounce our faith or yield hands and feet and become listless or impatient. Now to this end the consolation is here given when the heart feels that the burden is becoming too heavy, that it may here obtain new power and refreshment."
The Large Catechism, Sacrament of the Altar. #24-27. Concordia Triglotta, St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1921, p. 759. Tappert, p. 449. Heiser, p. 211.  

"For here in the Sacrament you are to receive from the lips of Christ forgiveness of sin, which contains and brings with it the grace of God and the Spirit with all His gifts, protection, shelter, and power against death and the devil and all misfortune."
The Large Catechism, Sacrament of the Altar. #70. Concordia Triglotta, St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1921, p. 769. Tappert, p. 454. Heiser, p. 214.         

"Therefore, if you cannot feel it {the works of the flesh, Galatians 5:199ff. above}, at least believe the Scriptures; they will not lie to you, and they know your flesh better than you yourself...Yet, as we have said, if you are quite dead to all sensibility, still believe the Scriptures, which pronounce sentence upon you. And, in short, the less you feel your sins and infirmities, the more reason have you to go to the Sacrament to seek help and a remedy."
The Large Catechism, Sacrament of the Altar. #76-78. Concordia Triglotta, St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1921, p. 771. Tappert, p. 455. Heiser, p. 214.       

"Is the Lord's Supper the place to display my toleration, my Christian sympathy, or my fellowship with another Christian, when that is the very point in which most of all we differ; and in which the difference means for me everything--means for me, the reception of the Savior's atonement? Is this the point to be selected for the display of Christian union, when in fact it is the very point in which Christian union does not exist?"
Theodore E. Schmauk and C. Theodore Benze, The Confessional Principle and the Confessions, as Embodying the Evangelical Confession of the Christian Church, Philadelphia: 1911, p. 905f.        

"For in Confession as in the Lord's Supper you have the additional advantage, that the Word is applied to your person alone. For in preaching it flies out into the whole congregation, and although it strikes you also, yet you are not so sure of it; but here it does not apply to anyone except you. Ought it not to fill your heart with joy to know a place where God is ready to speak to you personally? Yea, if we had a chance to hear an angel speak we would surely run to the ends of the earth."
Martin Luther, Sermons of Martin Luther, 8 vols., ed. John Nicholas Lenker, Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1983 II, p. 199.     

"In addition there is this perversion, that whereas Christ instituted the use of His Supper for all who receive it, who take, eat, and drink, the papalist Mass transfers the use and benefit of the celebration of the Lord's Supper in our time to the onlookers, who do not communicate, yes, to those who are absent, and even to the dead."
Martin Chemnitz, Examination of the Council of Trent, trans., Fred Kramer, St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1986, II, p. 498.       

"However, you will be sure as to whether the sacrament is efficacious in your heart, if you watch your conduct toward your neighbor. If you discover that the words and he symbol soften and move you to be friendly to your enemy, to take an interest in your neighbor's welfare, and to help him bear his suffering and affliction, then all is well. On the other hand, if you do not find it so, you continue uncertain even if you were to commune a hundred times a day with devotions so great as to move you to tears for very joy; for wonderful devotions like this, very sweet to experience, yet as dangerous as sweet, amount to nothing before God. Therefore we must above all be certain for ourselves, as Peter writes in 2 Peter 1:10: 'Give the more diligence to make your calling and election sure.'"
Martin Luther, Sermons of Martin Luther, 8 vols., ed. John Nicholas Lenker, Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1983 II, p. 211. 2 Peter 1:10.

"Hence it is manifest how unjustly and maliciously the Sacramentarian fanatics (Theodore Beza) deride the Lord Christ, St. Paul, and the entire Church in calling this oral partaking, and that of the unworthy, duos pilos caudae equinae et commentum, cuius vel ipsum Satanam pudeat, as also the doctrine concerning the majesty of Christ, excrementum Satanae, quo diabolus sibi ipsi et hominibus illudat, that is, they speak so horribly of it that a godly Christian man should be ashamed to translate it. [two hairs of a horse's tail and an invention of which even Satan himself would be ashamed; Satan's excrement, by which the devil amuses himself and deceives men].
Formula of Concord, Epitome, Article VII, Lord's Supper, 67, Concordia Triglotta, St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1921, p. 997. Tappert, p. 581f. Heiser, p. 270.    

"Dr. Luther, who, above others, certainly understood the true and proper meaning of the Augsburg Confession, and who constantly remained steadfast thereto till his end, and defended it, shortly before his death repeated his faith concerning this article with great zeal in his last Confession, where he writes thus: 'I rate as one concoction, namely, as Sacramentarians and fanatics, which they also are, all who will not believe that the Lord's bread in the Supper is His true natural body, which the godless or Judas received with the mouth, as well as did St. Peter and all [other] saints; he who will not believe this (I say) should let me alone, and hope for no fellowship with me; this is not going to be altered [thus my opinion stands, which I am not going to change]."
Formula of Concord, Epitome, Article VII, Lord's Supper, 33, Concordia Triglotta, St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1921, p. 983. Tappert, p. 575. Heiser, p. 267.  

"Besides this, you will also have the devil about you, whom you will not entirely tread under foot, because our Lord Christ Himself could not entirely avoid him. Now, what is the devil? Nothing else than what the Scriptures call him, a liar and murderer. A liar, to lead the heart astray from the Word of God, and blind it, that you cannot feel your distress or come to Christ. A murderer, who cannot bear to see you live one single hour. If you could see how many knives, darts, and arrows are every moment aimed at you, you would be glad to come to the Sacrament as often as possible."
The Large Catechism, Sacrament of the Altar. #80-82. Concordia Triglotta, St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1921, p. 771f. Tappert, p. 456. Heiser, p. 214.     

"Therefore also it is vain talk when they say that the body and blood of Christ are not given and shed for us in the Lord's Supper, hence we could not have forgiveness of sins in the Sacrament. For although the work is accomplished and the forgiveness of sins acquired on the cross, yet it cannot come to us in any other way than through the Word. For what would we otherwise know about it, that such a thing was accomplished or was to be given us if it were not presented by preaching or the oral Word? Whence do they know of it, or how can they apprehend and appropriate to themselves the forgiveness, except they lay hold of and believe the Scriptures and the Gospel? But now the entire Gospel and the article of the Creed: I believe a holy Christian Church, the forgiveness of sin, etc., are by the Word embodied in this Sacrament and presented to us."
The Large Catechism, Sacrament of the Altar. #31-32. Concordia Triglotta, St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1921, p. 759. Tappert, p. 450. Heiser, p. 211. 

 



Deputy Doug Engelbrecht Needs Your Help

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Help Doug Engelbrecht get a clue
about Ski being CRM.
DP Doug Englelbrecht promised St. Peter in Freedom that Ski would be back at his "job" in a few months, once pressure mounted for Ski to resign from the ministerium.

According to Doug's own email, SP Schroeder agreed with this bizarre deal.

On Tuesday, August 13th, St. Peter had a meeting at the stinky old bar called The CORE (as in rotten to the...) in order to promote Ski's CRM status.

The husband of Ski's sexual harassment victim objected, which was his right. They wanted responses, right? No - wrong. Church and Changers want obedience or abject apologies. Keep this business of right and wrong, pastoral qualifications, etc - out of the Northern District.

At or after the meeting, the husband was served four ways from Sunday with orders to appear in court to defend himself against a restraining order. That is the easiest possible way to demean and insult someone, while destroying his reputation with a legal sleight of hand. Anyone can get one going for any reason, without involving a lawyer, but that does not necessarily mean the judge will roll over and play dead for a malicious usurper of the court system. In this case - four malicious abusers of the court system.

Let us ponder the whole scene. Ski, and by extension - Doug Engelbrecht, Tim Glende, and the St. Peter Freedom puppets - sexually harassed this church worker with a naked photo of Brett Favre's ___, various lewd and degrading comments, and other behavior (on the job inebriation) that disqualified him for any job, let alone the public ministry.

The puppet show supports Ski by pretending there is nothing wrong, that Ski can do anything he wants, that anyone objecting is a menace to the justice system. They wanted to go through the motions of CRM status without any real input at all.

This is no different from any other WELS abuse, murder, or molestation case. See Joel Hochmuth's case, where he was immediately absolved by His Holiness Pope Schroeder (the reform WELS pope) while others were extended the Left Foot of Fellowship.

WELS makes it clear - murder never happened, child molestation never happened, man-boy porn distribution (forgiven!). WELS teacher found in a car with her female student? Never heard of that - probably another lie from that gossip-slander blog.

Oh - by the way. Team Glende got Restraining Order #1 thrown out by whining about "this blog in Arkansas." The court had trouble making the connection. Paranoia is alive and growing in WELS, but the disorder does not get much respect in the legal system. There is no connection between the husband in this case and what I write. There are so many leakers in WELS that I have more information on my hands than I can discuss. In many cases I have to stifle myself because of the information pointing to the source.

The Northern District officials of WELS is soliciting your opinion about Ski returning to the ministry to ooze his sweaty body all over a new set of victims. They want your thoughts in a letter.

I would list the officials, their names, addresses, phone numbers, and emails, but I cannot find a list. I asked the Chessmaster today, the solemn and humorless old man of the Midwest, for the list. He was also in the dark.

So if any of you have that, I will post it here.

Let's give Glende and Ski the commendations they deserve.

As Ski screamed during an early Groeschel sermon delivered at The CORE, he would do anything, even crawl through the mud, to share Brett Favre with someone. That kind of devotion deserves a response.

If you are afraid of retribution, scared of doing anything right - you should stay in WELS and enjoy the consequences. What people and pastors failed to do in the Michigan District 30 years ago - especially in Columbus - has been visited upon Appleton in the last few years.

Moline Memories - MHS 66 Friends 100,000 Page Views - Compared to 2.2 Million for Ichabod

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September 2013 Newsletter - From St-Peter-Scares-Dot-Com. St. Peter Lobbies To Re-Instate Ski

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http://stpetercares.com/Websites/stpetercares/files/Content/3808791/Church_Newsletter_-_9-13a.pdf

Here it is readers - be sure to contact Deputy Doug Engelbrecht
to re-instate the beer-fueled ministry of Sexpert Ski.

Thomas Dietzler welcomes feedback. Lemme see -
who filed a restraining order after the last invitation for feedback?
Glende, Ski, 
Leslye Marie Ulman, and Rhonda Kay Dietzler.
Nothing promotes congregational feedback more
than a group lawsuit against a member for telling the truth.

---
A middle-aged minister poses with a Playboy model -
what better way to lead the kids at Fox Valley WELS High School?
Ski posted this photo in his Facebook albums.
http://ichabodthegloryhasdeparted.blogspot.com/2013/08/district-president-doug-engelbrechts.html

"As a result, and after consultation with WELS President Mark Schroeder and President Engelbrecht, the pastor made his suspension from ministry more clear by tending a letter of resignation.  That was then reported via the weekly call report.  Although President Schroeder expressed his approval of the plan that was developed for the pastor by the District Presidium that could lead to possible return to pastoral ministry, he felt that the term “suspension” caused both confusion and questions that could be avoided by a standard “resignation”."

---

An observer wrote:

The email address provided in the St. Peter bulletin is not his official email address. The domain listed is AOL, not WELS.net.

If I wanted a 'good and orderly' record of what was being said, and I wanted WELS HQ's legal team to have ready access to everything to avoid the appearance of obstructing justice and legal discovery, and if I wanted to make sure that only authorized Synod employees could access and retain such emails, I'd use the WELS.net email system.


However, if I didn't want HQ to know what was being said, and/or I wanted to avoid legal eagles, and/or I wanted others to be able to login and view/copy/forward emails with the plausible deniability of being able to say, "I don't know who read your email to me"  I'd use a non-official email address. 

Episcopal Tyranny Not Doing As Well As Expected

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And you think Ichabod Photoshops are abrasive?






Strike 2: The Episcopal Church loses again, this time in Quincy 
A diocese cannot leave argument holds no water with Illinois court

By Mary Ann Mueller 
VOL Special Correspondent 
www.virtueonline.org 
September 10, 2013

QUINCY, ILLINOIS --- For the second time in as many weeks, The Episcopal Church has been handed a devastating blow in its unrelenting quest to bring realigning dioceses to their knees with intimidation, legal warfare, litigation, and the draining of diocesan resources. 

Illinois Adams County Eighth Judicial Circuit Court associate judge the Hon. Thomas J. Ortbal ruled on Sept. 9 in case number 09-MR-31 (Diocese of Quincy vs. The Episcopal Church) that there is no provision in the Constitution and Canons of The Episcopal Church that expressly prohibits a diocese withdrawing from The Episcopal Church. He rejected the claim that The Episcopal Church is a thoroughly hierarchical structure from the General Convention through the diocese and down to the local parish. 

This has been the on-going mantra of The Episcopal Church: that individuals can leave the church but dioceses and parishes cannot and that The Episcopal Church is hierarchical in nature with General Convention being the ultimate definitive authority. But that spoken mantra has not been written into canon law. The first time that the word hierarchical appeared in canon law was in the 2009 revamp of Title IV. 



After hearing all the arguments on both sides, carefully reviewing the documents, briefs, motions and case law, and thoroughly studying The Episcopal Church's Constitution and Canons, Judge Ortbal has determined: "There is no provision in TEC's Constitution or Canons which require prior approval of a diocesan constitution or its canons. There is no express prohibition against withdrawal of a diocese.

"In sum, reviewing the governing documents from a secular perspective, there is no explicit or clearly delineated expression of TEC's claim that the General Convention is the ultimate authority or judicatory of the Church," he writes in his findings.

During the spring, Judge Ortbal spent nearly three weeks listening to attorneys for the plaintiff - ACNA Missionary Diocese of Quincy (DOQ) - and attorneys for the defendants - The Episcopal Church (TEC) and the Episcopal Diocese of Quincy (EDQ) -- argue the case. 

The Episcopal Church's chief litigator, David Booth Beers was on hand for the bench trial which was held in Courtroom 2B of the Adams County Courthouse. The judge was swamped with paper in the form of motions, briefs, documents, research and opinions.

He complained during the course of the bench trial, "This trial has been nothing but opinions."

This was not the first time that Judge Ortbal has ruled on the issues presented to his court by The Episcopal Church. In December 2011, the judge denied granting The Episcopal Church a summary judgment in the case based on hierarchical claims forcing the case to go forward to bench trial. 

In his 2011 Summary Judgment, he ruled: "In summary, although evidence of a hierarchal character of TEC is substantial, factual issues exist on the present record, which preclude granting motion of summary judgment. Finally, even if ultimately it is determined that TEC and the Diocese of Quincy a subordinate, dependent constituency and whose leadership is an ecclesiastical issue to which this court must defer, that would not entirely resolve the dispute. The circumstance of the hierarchical structure of government of a church does not preclude a civil decision respecting a property dispute ..." 

Three retired Episcopal bishops Ed Salmon (XIII South Carolina); Peter Beckwith (X Springfield); and Bruce MacPherson (III Western Louisiana) ran into trouble when they willingly signed affidavits opposing a motion for summary judgment made by representatives of the Episcopal Diocese of Quincy. The bishops were charged under the revamped Title IV canons when Episcopal Diocese of Quincy clergy Canon James Clement and Dean Robert Demon, and standing committee members Canon John Blossom, Christine Barrow, Tobyn Leigh, and Janna Haworth filed a Title IV complaint. 

Eventually, the bishops were forced to capitulate and sign an accord expressing "regret for any harm to the bishops, clergy and laity of the diocese resulting from their acts," as well as help pay for the costs associated with the conciliation process. 

Six other bishops, John Howe (III Central Florida-retired); James Stanton (VI Dallas); Paul Lambert (Dallas-Suffragan); William Love (IX Albany), Daniel Martins (XI Springfield); and Maurice Benitez (VI Texas), also ran into the same Title IV buzz saw when they signed a 2009 Amicus brief in the Diocese of Fort Worth on-going litigation.

At the outset of the new ruling, Judge Ortbal reiterated his summary judgment finding: "The court previously found in denying TEC's motion for summary judgment and still finds that the 'neutral principles of law' standard sanctioned by Jones v. Wolf ... has been adopted in Illinois and is applicable to the present case.


There is an unmistakable Hindu divine figure
on this dreadful looking ensemble.
Is VP Schone her personal assistant?

The Information Is There To Be Read

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Everyone can make a reasoned choice between apostasy and Biblical orthodoxy. Both sides publish extensively.

To promote their agenda, the Jeske thugs have to publish their successes, brag about them, and reveal their hideous philosophy. Their newsletters, sermons, and websites are available to everyone with a cheap computer and some bandwidth.

Team Jeske can be studied easily because they support one another, link to Time of Grace, and share the same bottom-feeding values: greed, selfishness, and materialism - all disguised as "mission."

Engelbrecht revealed - to the chorus of shocked WELS virgins - that he struck a deal with SP Schroeder to reward Ski for behavior that would end the career of a third string Packer.

Jeske is not exactly a man of mystery. He is on the board of Thrivent now, so he is the bagman for ELCA, agreeing cheerfully to donate perhaps $100 million a year to ELCA.

"ELCA is so bad, bad, bad!" WELS and Missouri both chant. And that is why they work with ELCA all the time, as the Internet discloses without blushing.

"What do Missouri and WELS stand for?" some ask innocently. Look at what they reward, what they overlook, and what they punish.

They work with ELCA because all the leaders agree on universal absolution and salvation without faith. The extreme right-wing of UOJ is one baby-step away from Universalism. The extreme Left is loudly, proudly Universalist, knowing the hicks from the Midwest are secret camp-followers and eager imitators. What Missouri and WELS do is more telling than their public relations buzz.

Mission: "Giving away $500,000 to buy a bankrupt bar
for clowns who write their sermons by copying them from the Internet."

How about This, Packer Fans. Immanuel WELS Church, Greenville, Wisconsin

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Pastor David Scharf

 Resident Missionary
 Phone:920-209-0962
 Email: pastorscharf@immluth.org

Primary Duties Include:  Oversee all outreach activities, visit prospects, primary Bible Information Class teacher, some large group Bible study, 35-45% preaching, WELS ambassador at Immanuel, weddings, funerals and counseling.


http://www.immluth.org/site/leadership.asp?sec_id=2125

JESUS IS WORTHY OF THE CENTER SPOT
 
Is Jesus in the center of your life today?  Or do you need to take care of many other things before you can get to him?

In a Berlin art gallery there once hung an unfinished picture by Menzel of Frederick the Great talking to his generals.  There was a small bare patch in the center of the picture where a charcoal sketch indicated the artist’s intentions.  He had painted in all the generals, but he had left the king to the last.

That seems life-like to us, doesn’t it?  We carefully put in all the generals (work, family, house, car, etc.) and leave the King to the last, with the hope that someday we may still get the King in the center.  Menzel died before he could finish his picture.  You can get to heaven without house or family or riches, but you can’t get there without Jesus.

He is everything.  The One who died that I might live is worth center spot in my life and yours.  Everything else pales in comparison!

“I consider everything a loss compared to the surpassing greatness of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord.” 
Philippians 3:8



ANNOUNCEMENTS

Wednesday Morning Bible Study will begin this week, September 4, at 10:00AM, in the chapel, with a study of 2 Samuel.

Communion Schedule & Friendship Sunday  The calendar for September lists communion on the regular 2nd and 4th weekends.  

After further review, we’d like to make Friendship Sunday as visitor friendly as possible.  

Therefore, we’ll be observing communion on the 3rd and 5th weekend of September.  Please invite your unchurched friends to our special service and picnic on September 8. 

[GJ - We do not want them turned off by Holy Communion. They might think we believe in the Sacraments, the Real Presence, the Means of Grace, the efficacy of the Word.]

Kids' G.R.O.W. Staff Meeting - Monday, September 9 @ 6:30PM (Fellowship Hall)  All Kids' G.R.O.W. volunteers please attend as we want to discuss final details for 2013-2014.

Baptismal Hymn by Martin Luther - Two Verses Omitted by Tiefel's Wretched WELS Hymnal.When Will LCMS and WELS Repent of Their UOJ?

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The Baptism of Jesus, by Norma Boeckler

http://www.hymntime.com/tch/htm/t/j/c/tjctcolo.htm

To Jordan came our Lord the Christ,
To do God’s pleasure willing,
And there was by Saint John baptized,
All righteousness fulfilling;
There did He consecrate a bath
To wash away transgression,
And quench the bitterness of death
By His own blood and passion;
He would a new life give us.

So hear ye all, and well perceive
What God doth call baptism,
And what a Christian should believe
Who error shuns and schism:
That we should water use, the Lord
Declareth it His pleasure;
Not simple water, but the Word
And Spirit without measure;
He is the true Baptizer.

To show us this, He hath His Word
With signs and symbols given;
On Jordan’s banks was plainly heard
The Father’s voice from Heaven:
This is My well-beloved Son,
In whom My soul delighteth;
Hear Him. Yea, hear Him every one
Whom He Himself inviteth,
Hear and obey His teaching.

In tender manhood Jesus straight
To holy Jordan wendeth;
The Holy Ghost from Heaven’s gate
In dovelike shape descendeth;
That thus the truth be not denied,
Nor should our faith e’er waver,
That the Three Persons all preside,
At baptism’s holy laver,
And dwell with the believer.

Thus Jesus His disciples sent:
Go teach ye every nation,
That lost in sin they must repent;
And flee from condemnation:
He that believes and is baptized,
Obtains a mighty blessing;
A new-born man, no more he dies,
Eternal life possessing,
A joyful heir of Heaven.

Who in this mercy hath not faith,
Nor aught therein discerneth,
Is yet in sin, condemned to death,
And fire that ever burneth;
His holiness avails him not,
Nor aught which he is doing;
His inborn sin brings all to naught,
And maketh sure his ruin;
Himself he cannot succor. [GJ - Omitted by WELS.]

The eye of sense alone is dim,
And nothing sees but water;
Faith sees Christ Jesus, and in Him
The Lamb ordained for slaughter;
She sees the cleansing fountain red
With the dear blood of Jesus,
Which from the sins inherited
From fallen Adam frees us,
And from our own misdoings.

---

http://www.bach-cantatas.com/Texts/Chorale106-Eng3.htm

1

Christ, unser Herr, zum Jordan kam
Nach seines Vaters Willen,
Von Sanct Johann's die Taufe nahm,
Sein Werk und Amt zu 'rfüllen.
Da wollt' er stiften uns ein Bad,
Zu waschen uns von Sünden,
Ersäufen auch den bittern Tod
Durch sein selbst Blut und Wunden,
Es galt ein neues Leben.

Christ our Lord came to the Jordan
in accordance with his father’s will,
he received baptism from Saint John,
to fulfil his work and ministry.
By this he wanted to establish for us a bath
to wash us from our sins,
to drown also bitter death
through his own blood and wounds.
This meant a new life.
2
So hört und merket alle wohl,
Was Gott heißt selbst die Taufe,
Und was ein Christen glauben soll,
Zu meiden Ketzer Haufen:
Gott spricht und will, das Wasser sei
Doch nicht allein schlecht Wasser,
Sein heiligs Wort ist auch dabei
Mit reichem Geist ohn Massen,
Der ist allhie der Täufer.

Therefore hear and mark well
what God himself calls baptism
and what a Christian should believe
to avoid a load of heresies:
God says and means, there is water
but not just water alone,
his holy word is also present
with the rich, measureless Spirit –
He is here the one who baptises.
3
Solchs hat er uns beweiset klar,
Mit Bildern und mit Worten,
Des Vaters Stimm man offenbar
Daselbst am Jordan hörte.
Er sprach: das ist mein lieber Sohn,
An dem ich hab Gefallen,
Den will ich euch befohlen han,
Daß ihr ihn höret alle
Und folget seinen Lehren.

This he has shown clearly to us
with pictures and with words,
the Father’s voice was openly
heard in that very place at the Jordan.
He said: this is my dear son
in whom I have delight,
concerning him I give orders to you
that you should all listen to him
and follow his teaching.
4
Auch Gottes Sohn hie selber steht
In seiner zarten Menschheit,
Der heilig Geist hernieder fährt
In Taubenbild verkleidet;
Daß wir nicht sollen zweifeln dran,
Wenn wir getaufet werden,
All' drei Person getaufet han,
Damit bei uns auf Erden
Zu wohnen sich ergeben.

Here also God’s son himself stands
in his gentle humanity,
the holy spirit comes down here
clothed in the image of the dove;
so that we should have no doubt
when we are baptised
all three persons have baptised,
thereby with us on earth
they give themselves to dwell.
5
Sein Jünger heißt der Herre Christ:
Geht hin all Welt zu lehren,
Daß sie verlor'n in Sünden ist,
Sich soll zur Busse kehren;
Wer glaubet und sich taufen läßt,
Soll dadurch selig werden,
Ein neugeborner Mensch er heißt,
Der nicht mehr konne sterben,
Das Himmelreich soll erben.

Christ the Lord calls his disciples:
go and teach all the world,
so that those who are lost in sin
may turn to repentance;
who believes and is baptised
shall thereby become blessed,
he is called a newborn man
who can die no more
but shall inherit the kingdom of heaven
6
Wer nicht glaubt dieser großen Gnad,
Der bleibt in seinen Sünden,
Und ist verdammt zum ewgen Tod
Tief in der Höllen Grunde,
Nichts hilst sein eigen Heiligkeit,
All sein Thun ist verloren.
Die Erbsünd machts zur Nichtigkeit,
Darin er ist geboren,
Vermag ihm selbst nichts helfen.

whoever does not believe in this great mercy
remains in his sins,
and is condemned to everlasting death
deep in the depths of hell.
His own holiness is of no use,
all that he does is lost,
it is nullified by original sin
in which he is born,
he is unable to help himself at all.
7

Das Aug' allein das Wasser seiht,
Wie Menschen Wasser gießen,
Der Glaub im Geist die Kraft versteht
Des Blutes Jesu Christi,
Und ist für ihm ein rothe Fluth
Von Christi Blut gefärbet,
Die allen Schaden heilen tut
Von Adam her geerbet,
Auch von uns selbst begangen.

The eye sees only water
when the water is poured,
faith in the Spirit understands the power
of the blood of Jesus Christ
and for him it is a red stream
coloured with Christ’s blood
that heals all the injuries
we have inherited from Adam
and also those we have brought upon ourselves
--

Episcopals Shrink, Give Away Their Property to Muslims

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ELCA's new presiding bishop, Elizabeth Eaton,
will be another Jefferts-Schori,
but WELS and LCMS will continue to follow Mammon
rather than the Holy Trinity.

http://www.virtueonline.org/portal/modules/news/article.php?storyid=18024#.UjhdoNJtiSo

The Paradox of Episcopal Pansexuality 
Declining income, UTOgate, Islamic intrusion, recent court decision reversals reveal a church in free fall

News Analysis

By David W. Virtue 
www.virtueonline.org
September 15, 2013

The paradox is startling if not exactly noticeable or obvious to Episcopal Church liberals. It is this.

The more the Episcopal Church caves into and embraces the culture of pansexuality, the more their churches continue to wither and shrink. Millenials, a group most churches don't have much idea of how to reach with the gospel of Jesus Christ, are almost completely tolerant of homosexuality, and homosexual marriage. They are not shocked by the medical facts of homosexual behavior; they see the issue as one of equality and justice. They do not reflect on the cosmology or ontology of gay marriage; live and let live is their motto.

Those who are orthodox in faith and morals must now admit that they have lost the culture wars on gay behavior, gay marriage in society and, tragically, most mainline Protestant churches.

The sexual blitzkrieg has been swift. The Maginot line of traditional moral values has been breached. The collapse of a biblical worldview is now almost complete.

Ironically, liberal and revisionist Episcopal dioceses are not reaping the rewards of their slavish capitulation to these behaviors. Gays and lesbians are not rushing in to fill the pews. Thousands of small parishes continue to die with the gay community blithely uninterested in all the heartfelt efforts to include them. More than a third of all Episcopal parishes are now without a full time priest, overseen by part time or non-stipendiary priests. Unless there is a turnaround, that figure will reach 50% in the next few years.

At the most, TEC has about 2000 gays and lesbians, including a handful of bishops, but their influence is disproportionate to their numbers. They have seized the reins of ecclesiastical power and twisted the church into a sexual pretzel. 

The truth is there never was a grass roots movement for homosexual acceptance like the civil rights movement or women's vote. It was started by a small band of strident homosexual imperial elitists in the church who convinced a group of bishops starting with Edmond L. Browning and his "no outcasts" motto carried on by Frank Griswold who pushed even harder in the name of ongoing "conversation". It morphed into "Indaba" under Jefferts Schori proclaiming to the entire world that sodomy was good and right in the eyes of God.

The unsuccessful lobbying of global south Anglican leaders proved TEC's downfall and its ultimate estrangement from the Global South as well as the Roman Catholic and Orthodox churches. Orthodox Anglicans have stood united, unconvinced by the pleadings of the North American Episcopal Church and Church of England homosexuals that God now approves of what the Scriptures have never approved.

At the local level, however, thousands of small parishes with less than 70 members increasingly held together by non-stipendiary priests, the issue is not discussed; the dozens of resolutions passed at General Convention lie fallow, unread and unacted upon. In short, most parishes don't care what goes on at the national level. They only care about what goes on in their parish and the importance of the altar guild matters more than they care about Bishop Gene Robinson's outrage at what he perceives to be global homophobia. Most parishes don't want to talk about sex, especially as the average age of an Episcopalian approaches 65. They are more concerned with their own survival and whether or not the church remains open long enough for them to be buried in the parish's columbarium. While most of the older generation has "gone along" with the Episcopal Church's changed mores, many long for the older Prayer books (1929 and 1662) and mourn their loss, even as they accept what the culture and now the church sexually embraces. Go along to get along is the order of the day. Few pew sitters could make the biblical case against homosexual behavior as pulpits are now largely bereft of "sound teaching".

Katharine Jefferts Schori's incessant call to social action is largely greeted with a yawn. Most Episcopalians are willing to drop a few extra bucks in the plate, but how they live their lives remains unchanged. Most are too old to do much of anything. The Presiding Bishop's response is to suggest that God is actually pruning his church without realizing that she is one of many dead branches being pruned.

United Thank Offering Grab

However the national church's recent grab for the United Thank Offering boxes is something that resonates deeply with average Episcopalians. Even usually compliant liberals are baying at the blatant power grab by the church's leaders for its money. This might well be the straw that breaks the camel's back of "liberal" fascism.

Who knows how the money, said by The Living church to be some $14 million with about $1.5 million annually coming into the church through the UTO boxes, will be spent. Despite assurances from House of Deputies President Gay Jennings that Episcopalians have nothing to fear, that life for the UTO will go on as normal, anyone who is familiar with the church's grim financial picture -- even the national headquarters facing the chopping block to pay the millions of dollars in legal fee s-- knows that this money could disappear into the bottomless law firm of David Booth Beers.

One has only to witness the restructuring going on in the church. The truth is TEC can no longer afford 815 2nd Avenue NY and it is busy renting out floors to cover its own costs. Furthermore, no one looking in from the outside is fooled by three week long general conventions every three years at some exotic location that costs several million dollars to pass resolutions most Episcopalians will ignore. They discover that these conventions are really about moving the pansexual marker down the road another mile, fools no one looking from the outside in. Who's fooling who?

The vast majority of Episcopalians are still broadly conservative. Their loyalty is to their local parish not to the national church or Jefferts Schori who will be replaced, hopefully by someone who has actually had a theological training of some note and can affirm basic doctrines of the faith. Don't count on it, however. No one following her could possibly be orthodox in faith and morals; they would not have a snowballs chance in hell of getting the nod. Think black, think gay, think diversity, but don't think inclusivity except if you're one of those groups just cited. Can you imagine a Communion Partner bishop actually becoming the next Presiding Bishop. The heavens would open and God might be heard to yell, "This is my beloved believing bishop; elect him; he has MY approval; hear ye him." It's not going to happen. The Episcopal Church will roll along on its predestined path with a new vanguard of bishops perhaps more centrist than old ideologues like Spong, Righter, Bennison, Shaw, Gepert, Griswold, Bruno et al but they will not change the direction of the church. They WILL toe the line.

Many of the old guard are now jumping ship, like Bishop Charles Jenkins of Louisiana who pled PTSD following Katrina though he never got his feet wet. More recently, there was Bishop Paul Marshall of Bethlehem who mysteriously resigned years before he had to because these bishops know their failing dioceses have no future without a transcendent gospel to proclaim. They long ago rolled over to the Episcopal pansexual zeitgeist and have seen the fruit of its capitulation. But a pension is a pension and a golf course is a golf course and none of them believe for a moment "that judgment begins first with the household of God". These men and women are practicing universalists for whom salvation is for all regardless of what you believe, so long as you are vaguely sincere.

Islam to the rescue

Witness the latest Episcopal outrage. This past week the Bishop of Connecticut, Ian Douglas announced that Christ Episcopal Church in Avon is being handed over to a Muslim group in the name of "interfaith partnership." The church dwindled from 110 to 35 families and had become unsustainable when 64 congregants left for safer spiritual pastures. Fr. Ron Gauss, a converted Jew who lost his property - Bishop Seabury in a legal battle with the diocese said, "It is truly a sad day, when we have to shut down a church, and 'lease' it to another religion. If the Diocese of Connecticut wanted an interfaith relationship then they needed to work with the Roman Catholics, The Lutherans (Missouri Synod, ELCA,) The Presbyterians, the Evangelicals, or Orthodox Anglicans." This is nothing more than TEC giveaways to Allah's army, he noted.

This is the second time that an Episcopal diocese has sold out to Islam. The last time was in Binghamton, New York where The Church of the Good Shepherd was sold off to an Islamic Awareness Center for $50,000. The parish had declared itself independent of TEC who refused them the option to buy it.

The irony should not be missed. It was this past week that we learned that a Nigerian Anglican Archbishop was kidnapped in southern Nigeria by Islamic extremists and is being held for ransom. Note this is not Boko Haran who would have macheted and shot him on sight. These are more "moderate" Muslims who only want money. (The archbishop was later released unharmed).

At All Saints Episcopal Church in Pasadena, California recently the Muslim Public Affairs Council (MPAC) addressed the topic of radicalization in the wake of the Boston bombings. Their leaders said there is a "crisis" of "Islamophobia" in America. MPAC denounced violence but said terrorism is a response to the U.S. "aiding and abetting oppression" at the behest of the military-industrial complex. What safer place to announce this than in the gayest Episcopal parish in America complete with its own whiny lesbian priest. Islamophobia and homophobia perfect together.

So American Muslims are playing the victim card blaming "Islamophobia" in the same way gays yell and scream "homophobia" if anyone dare criticizes their behavior.

The truth is liberalism cannot defeat Islamism. Ultimately, it is forced to capitulate to it and all its demands. It's all about numbers. When Muslims are only a small percentage of the population, they are acquiescent. When they reach 40% or more, they demand Sharia Law. It's downhill from there. Witness what has happened in Egypt recently where the Muslim Brotherhood almost gained the political upper hand. In a brief civil war, some 60 Christian churches were destroyed and hundreds of Christians died defending freedom. Christians in Iran are regularly arrested on trumped up charges of evangelism. In Syria whole Christian villages have been torn apart with Assad's army freeing many of them from the clutches of Al Qaeda terrorists.

The actions of a revisionist bishop like Douglas are an affront to orthodox Episcopalians (now Anglicans) who have lost their churches in court battles with the diocese. The "Ct Six", as they were called, are history, having lost their properties and moved on leaving expensive properties to be taken over by Islamists in the name of "interfaith" alliances. But recent TEC defeats in the courts in Ft. Worth, Quincy and South Carolina indicate that the pendulum might now be swinging in the opposite direction. It is the Episcopal Church that is now on the defensive.

The circle of life for TEC is a circle in need of life support. Witness the ongoing series of discussions on the governance of The Episcopal Church where some interesting statistics have emerged that must give the hierarchy true pause.

The Executive Council Budget Subcommittee issued its report on the results of the survey on the diocesan asking formula that was sent to bishops and deputies in August, to help the committee prepare the proposed 2016-2018 triennium budget. The figures were hardly encouraging.

With a total of 221 bishops and deputies responding, some 60% believed consequences or restrictions should be imposed on dioceses that do not meet the full asking request. This is like beating a dying horse in the hope that if you hit him hard enough and long enough he'll struggle to his feet and thank you for hitting him.

Nearly 89% believe that dioceses in financial distress should have a process to seek relief from paying the full asking amount. This includes the Diocese of Newark, the home of Louie Crew the 'high priest' of sodomy, the founder of Integrity and the scourge of orthodoxy. Nearly 58% believe that the current diocesan asking formula should be reduced with only 40% believing it should remain at 19%. Do the words MENE, MENE, TEKEL, UPHARSIN ring a bell here?

The millions of dollars that could once be found at the end of the Episcopal rainbow are no longer there. The Episcopal well is drying up with millions unnecessarily spent on litigation for properties. Mission, (the Great Commission) is not on anyone's radar screen. The average pew sitter has no idea just how bad things are. Wringing money from the faithful to pay for lawsuits even as a third of all parishes cannot even afford a full time priest should give Episcopalians pause. Apparently not. The church's leadership does whatever it wants to do with impunity. No one dares challenge Katharine Jefferts Schori, she knows too much about the lives of bishops to get rid of her.

Twins - Universal Objective Justification and Church Growth Movement

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