Quantcast
Channel: Ichabod, The Glory Has Departed
Viewing all 11584 articles
Browse latest View live

Does This Fit Every WELS-LCMS-ELS Situation I Know About? - Yes.

$
0
0
Archbishop R. Weakland, covered up for his priests
and blamed child abuse on the children.
His selection as a speaker for Wisconsin Lutheran College (WELS)
suggests friendships in WELS based on abuse.



Shattered Pulpit Blog

I was abused for many years by my father, a WELS pastor. I was too young at the time to do anything, but be the "good girl" and do whatever was asked of me. Many years later when I did tell my"secrets", the DP, along with others, turned it all around and made it become my wrongdoing. Please do NOT give into them. You are the victim and the WELS is doing everything it can to turn it around and placing the blame on you. I pray that you talk to those who believe you and your safe pastor and reconsider your plan to stop writing your blog! You have opened the eyes of many people: people who DO believe you. The hierarchy of the WELS is trying to cover up anything which reflects negatively on them. You have many people praying for you. God is on your side and He will continue to be there for you. I will continue to keep you in my prayers. May God be with you and give you strength to accept His help!

***
His son, the first VP of WELS,
thought Floyd Stolzenburg was the victim.
The apple does not fall far from the tree.

GJ - Three messages will always come through:
1. The victim of abuse is the sinner, even when he or she is a child.
2. The pastor or teacher is an honored member of the Brotherhood and could not possibly be guilty of anything.
3. If someone dares to do something about the abuse, that action and those words are so heinous and wrong that the person objecting becomes the villain. The abuser is the helpless, innocent victim.

Lillian and Jane told their stories, which fit into these parameters quite well. I have experienced #3 first-hand.

Remember, worshipers of WELS - Al Just confessed to murdering his wife, lied at the trial, and was defended at the trial by Lloyd Huebner, the president of Martin Luther College in New Ulm. Al Just spent a short time in prison for murdering the mother of his children. He married the baby-sitter of his children, but she wised up soon and left him.

Lloyd Huebner got on the stand in court and served as a character reference, even though Al Just claimed that his wife rolled over on a steak knife - in bed - dozens of times and bled to death. A busload of WELS supporters came to his trial. 



New York Episcopalian Seminary - General - Models the Death Spiral of Mainline Seminaries

$
0
0
Presiding Bishop Schori was called in to meet with both sides.
These faculty refused to do any work until the board
met with them to discuss their demands.


General Seminary's Independent Faculty Website - Safe Seminary - I am not joking!

---

Will the Great Divider patch things up?


October 2, 2014
The Episcopal Church’s oldest seminary is in upheaval following the announcement this week that most of its full-time faculty members will not be returning to teach. The Board of Trustees of the General Theological Seminary in New York says that the professors offered their de facto resignation when they went on strike over concerns about their new dean and president, the Very Rev. Kurt Dunkle. But the faculty members say they never wanted to resign, and rather were fired for defending the seminary’s values, including those of diversity and communication.
They allege that Dunkle has an authoritarian management style and has made numerous inappropriate sexual, racist and anti-gay remarks over many months. He also brushed off their earlier efforts to address those concerns with him personally, the professors say. Alumni and others with ties to Christian higher education, meanwhile, have taken to social media, criticizing Dunkle and the board for their actions and demanding answers. Commentators, too, say that the seminary schism reflects a bigger divide within the Episcopal Church about how to modernize.
General Seminary’s crisis erupted last week, when 8 of the institution’s 11 full-time faculty members wrote in an email to students that they were seeking to resolve a “serious conflict” with the board. Until then, they said, they would not be teaching or attending meetings or common worship. “Trust that we have acted in what we believe to be the best interests of your formation, our common life and the future of General Seminary,” they said.
The faculty members soon sent a follow-up email to students, offering more information and pointing to Dunkle, the dean and president of one year, as the problem.
“It is our view that that the president has repeatedly shown that he is unable to articulate sensitively and theologically the issues that are essential to the thriving of the Body of Christ in its great diversity,” the second email says. “Moreover his failure to collaborate, or to respond to our concerns when articulated, has resulted in a climate that many of us find to be fraught with conflict, fear, and anxiety. Unfortunately, it is the most vulnerable members of our community who most keenly suffer the distress caused by this environment.”
The professors continued: “Please know that we are not referring to off-hand remarks, or that we are overly concerned with ‘political correctness.’ Rather we refer to a number of very serious incidents and patterns of behavior which have over time caused faculty, students, and staff to feel intimidated, profoundly disrespected, excluded, devalued, and helpless. In short, we find ourselves in an emotionally charged climate that regularly interferes with our current work of teaching and learning together for the sake of God’s Church not to mention our ability to envision and plan for our future.”
The faculty members said they had reached an “impasse” with Dunkle, even after many attempts at dialogue, including with the assistance of an outside facilitator, and again requested a meeting with the board.
But that particular meeting never happened. By early this week, rumors were swirling that the eight faculty members – some 70 percent of the faculty – had been fired. The board soon confirmed in a statement that the faculty members would not be returning. But instead of saying that the faculty members had been fired, the trustees wrote that they had voted, “with great regret to accept the resignations of eight members of the seminary faculty.”
“The board came to this decision with heavy hearts, but following months of internal divisions around the future direction of General Seminary, some faculty member's [sic] demands for action not possible under the governing structure of the seminary, and the eight faculty members’ refusal to teach, attend meetings, or even worship, it has become clear that this is the best path forward in educating our students and shaping them into leaders of the church,” the statement reads.
The trustees noted that they’d be willing to talk to any affected faculty member about reversing the resignation. But by Wednesday, the institution was taking steps to make the action permanent, including by deactivating the professors’ email accounts. Dunkle also sent an email to students letting them know how their courses would proceed. He said half of classes would be uninterrupted, while he had either developed or was developing a plan for the other half. “Remember, being in the heart of New York City affords us access to educational and formational resources second to none throughout the country,” Dunkle added.
Despite quickly moving forward, it appears the board has not completely ignored the departed faculty members’ concerns. In their statement, the trustees said they would conduct an “internal investigation into certain allegations of statements made by the dean and president.” The board declined to name specific allegations, saying it would not be helpful to do so.




The Faculty's Allegations
But on Wednesday, the former faculty members – who previously had been publicly silent about their case – put up a website offering detailed complaints and copies of earlier correspondence with the trustees. Many of their concerns are summed up in a letter they sent in mid-September.
“Dean Dunkle’s public manner of expression seriously discomforts us and diminishes the reputation of the institution,” the letter says. “Specifically, his references to women, non-white cultures, and the LGBT community are absolutely inimical to the commitments of our church. He once described Asian transit passengers in the San Francisco Bay area as ‘slanty-eyed.’ In a large community meeting last spring, he compared the technical side of theological education to ‘looking up women’s skirts.’ Before several faculty members and students, he spoke, as an obvious act of intimidation, of how ‘black people can do such interesting things with their hair,’ a comment about which students complained.”
The letter alleges Dunkle has said the General Seminary should not be “the gay seminary,” and that it should emphasize “normal people.” It also alleges that he told a female faculty member that he “loved vaginas,” and said her consequent objection to the statement was “her problem.” The letter describes a pattern of denying having made inappropriate comments and threatening the job security of faculty members who complained.
“We have consistently communicated to him that such language undercuts our practices of hospitality and inclusion of those who are gay and lesbian, people of color, those who are differently-abled, or socially non-conformist,” the faculty letter says. Indeed, the General Seminary has long prided itself on diversity and inclusivity, saying on its website that a "significant" number of its faculty are gay or lesbian.
The professors also allege that Dunkle is “controlling” in day-to-day seminary life “to the point of making our jobs impossible,” and has violated student privacy laws by sharing a student’s educational details via email with the entire seminary.
“Simply put, we must respectfully inform you that if Dean Dunkle continues in his current position, then we will be unable to continue in ours,” they said, making a series of demands. The requests included meeting with the board and securing primary control over the curriculum, in line with the standards set by their accrediting body, the Association of Theological Schools.
In a later letter, the faculty members also informed the board that they are forming a union, and that a lawyer will field further communication.
A university spokesman said he could not comment on the allegations against Dunkle, due to the pending investigation. He referred questions about the departed faculty members to the board's earlier statement.
A Trustee's Point of View
Addressing the controversy on her own Facebook page, the Rev. Ellen Tillotson, a General Seminary board member, said that the professors’ language in communications with the board differed greatly from how they described their position in emails to students. That left the board little choice other than to act as it did, she said.
“Which were we to believe?” Tillotson wrote. “The spoken and unofficial communiques with the students or their strict and repeated statements to us that the conversation could only happen according to their stated limits? On which were we to act? When offered such an ultimatum, what were we to do? No, they never used the word ‘resign.’ But over and over they said they were unable to continue to do their jobs unless we met unmeetable conditions.”
Tillotson’s defense has done little to quell backlash against the General Seminary on blogs, Christian news websites and social media. Alumni demanded more information about why and under what circumstances the faculty members had been let go on Facebook, for example, even while offering prayers. David J. Dunn, an Orthodox theologian who is friends with one of the departed professors, published an op-ed in The Huffington Post, saying the seminary displayed an astonishing lack of leadership in dismissing the professors rather than meeting with them.
Via email, Dunn said he could only see his friend “doing something like this when he feels he has no other choice. He cares about justice, but he also cares about his family. He knows that he would have a very hard time finding another job as a professor. This could not have been an easy decision for any academic to make (also, massive student loan debts).”
Dunn said tenure, which some of the professors reportedly had, should have protected them from immediate dismissal. A spokesman declined to say how many of the eight professors were tenured or tenure-track, saying his human resources department had advised him not to release information about terms of employment. (Note: This sentence has been updated from a previous version to reflect that the seminary has a tenure track.)
Anthea Butler, a prominent associate professor of religious studies and Africana studies at the University of Pennsylvania, also weighed in on the University of Southern California-affiliated Religion Dispatches blog, saying “it is clear that the group has tried to have a sustained conversation with the dean and the board, but been ignored. Now the dirty laundry of the seminary is out for the whole denomination and other interested parties to sift through.”
Butler continued: “If I remember my Reformation history correctly, it was The Act of Supremacy in 1534 that made Henry VIII head of the Church of England. Firing eight faculty members unjustly is not an Act of Supremacy, but an Act of Shame. Perhaps the board of trustees and Dean Dunkle should ponder the twists and turns of church history before they land definitively on the wrong side of it.”
Commentary on the Episcopal Café also questioned Dunkle’s leadership style. The Rev. Canon Andrew Gerns, a regular blogger and a General Seminary graduate, said that among other concerns, the faculty objected to unilateral changesthat Dunkle had made to the prayer and Eucharist schedule, in an attempt to modernize worship at the seminary.
Dunkle, who also graduated from the seminary, returned to lead it last year after serving as rector of the Grace Episcopal Church in Orange Park, Fla. That parish experienced growth under his leadership, according to information the seminary released upon his being named dean; some 965 of 1,000 members reportedly left the church prior to his arrival, due to a larger schism in the Episcopal Church over gay marriage. At the time of Dunkle's appointment to the seminary, the parish had grown to 450 members.
Dunkle also faced a challenging environment when he arrived at the seminary as dean. It suffered from financial woes, and had just sold off significant chunks of its property in Manhattan's Chelsea neighborhood. Other Episcopal seminaries have felt a similar pinch in recent years. But if General Seminary's board was looking for someone to take charge and lead the seminary into the future, it appears the faculty felt it overshot.
“Now, this is not to say that worship is at the heart of the tensions with the faculty,” Gerns said. “The pinch comes when decisions about worship that have a significant impact on the fabric of the community are made by mere fiat. That's a recipe for turmoil.”
Eliza Smith Brown, a spokeswoman for Association of Theological Schools, said the body hadn't been able to independently verify reports about what was happening at General Seminary, but that it was "very concerned."
"ATS is an accrediting agency with standards related to governance and institutional integrity, including procedural fairness; faculty, including their role in curriculum and degree program requirements; and students, including the educational quality of the programs in which they have enrolled," she said via email.
"ATS has its own standards of procedural fairness for dealing with issues like those presented at General Seminary, and it will carefully follow those procedures to determine what has happened and to pursue appropriate accrediting implications."

General Seminary "Chapel."

Episcopalian The General Seminary Reprises Seminex Battle

$
0
0


I was in my first call, Cleveland, Ohio.

Seminex, Wikipedia
On February 17, 1974, the Board of Control declared that the 45 members of the faculty majority would be "in breach of contract" if they did not announce by noon the next day their intention to return to the classrooms, and that their teaching appointments at the seminary would thus be terminated.

The General Seminary's dean seems to have pushed his rebelling far Left faculty into the same position as Jack Preus did with Tietjen's bunch in 1974. By refusing to do any work they fired themselves.

The General faculty seems to operate from a position of new-found rights while the dean has a previous history as a lawyer at a large law firm. The board supports the dean.

I doubt whether the dean is very conservative, but he is more conservative than his far Left ex-faculty members. One clue comes from the various denominational radicals crying foul. The Methodists want their newly discovered rights, too, such as the right to disrupt conventions with noisy demonstrations.

WELS' apostate Richard Jungkuntz led the Seminex faction and headed the board of governors for their portable mini-seminary. Note well - Seminex became the first Lutheran seminary to train homosexual pastors, forming an alliance with the Metropolitan Community Churches. Many Northwestern College graduates participated in the Seminex revolt.

General has an enormous endowment and only 70 students enrolled. However, they were already in a financial crisis in 2010. The deluxe campus needs $100 million in maintenance and debt relief.

Most denominations are over-built because their membership is declining and their charges to students are ridiculous. Watch the Lutheran seminaries and colleges continue to close.

The faculty is demonizing the dean, Kurt Dunkle.
The new sin - he "makes them feel uncomfortable."

Unusual Last 12 Months

$
0
0
Watching detective shows while eating gluten-free snacks.


Not long ago I had time on my hands for writing and publishing.  And I thought, "If only one school offered a little more work."

I was offered a lot more work - and it continued to build over the last year. Now I can pare back to online teaching alone, which is so handy for writing and publishing. I can move from demi-semi-retirement to semi-retirement. I intend to stay active as long as the fingers and brain work together.

Social Security gave me a pittance last year, more this year, and "full retirement" now.




No Soil Testing - Soil Improving as I Battle the Back Yard Bricks

$
0
0


The Church Growth Movement, from Fuller Seminary, has many fascinating, failed theories. Peter Wagner admitted in print that none of their CG principles work. When a founder concedes that, and the evidence backs him up, those who continue in that ideology must be idiots.



One of those Church Growth principles is Soil Testing, which the WELS Shrinkers dearly love..

Let me illustrate. I have three locations for bushes, which will screen the view of our neighbors' back yards. The problem is, I need to place the new arrivals in November, when the ground might be semi-frozen and inhospitable to gardening.

The cause is clay soil without many organic elements. The gardening books say, "Test the soil." I have never done that, because Creation Gardening relies on action rather than analysis.

I cannot dig a hole in the dry soil. I could start a brick factory if I had a kiln and compliant low-paid workers. The soil turns white and rock-hard when it dries out. My neighbors have the same problem.

After digging a small divot in the places where the Bonnie Butterfly bushes will go, I filled the depression with water. After soaking the divot for a day, I dug a much larger hole. This technique worked well in Phoenix, where the sun provided the kiln for the clay soil.

Each of the three holes received a bag of mushroom compost, a thick layer of wet newspapers on top, and some soil to hold them in place. Some call this a method of composting, and they use post-hole diggers to set up these soil creature magnets. In Midland (Wormhaven.1)  I dug a bottomless zinc garbage can into the soil and filled it with fresh compost material (with a lid on top). Eventually I pulled the can loose and beheld a new composted zone for planting.

Composting produces warmth, because the elements of decay all contribute their spark of energy. Billions of bacteria, springtails, protozoa, and nematodes are like a self-heating auditorium, where the equipment collects audience heat to keep the room warm.

The larger effect of burying a bag of mushroom compost is a zone where our favorite soil creatures meet, eat, live, love, and die. They invite themselves, like homeless people who spot a church picnic, politicians who investigate a taxing opportunity.

When the bushes arrive, the holes will be excavated, which will mix more clay with the compost, an ideal foundation for growth. The bushes will arrive dormant, but they will establish roots over the winter and spring, with mulch and Epsom Salt providing additional food and nutrition. Roots love Epsom Salt.

The elevated soaker hose will be extended to the back section of fence, and many butterfly, insect, and bird friendly plants will be added. The effect of more plants, mulch, and moisture in that zone will benefit the bushes by softening and feeding the soil.

What Should We Learn, But Seldom Apply to the Ministry?
The Parable of the Sower and the Seed (Matthew 13, Mark 4) teaches us to broadcast the Word (the seed) with abandon. The efficacious Word will take root, even though various forces war against the Gospel.

The parable is clearly the opposite of soil testing, because sowing relies on trust - that the living seed will combine with God's Creation to take root. Sowing is the opposite of soil-testing, just as the Means of Grace are the opposite of man's newly invented Church Growth principles.

Soil-testing means that materialistic ministers want to figure out where they can be successful in the eyes of the world rather than faithful to the Word of God.

Justus Liebig is justly called the Father of the Fertilizer Industry.


Here is an ironic note. Liebig invented soil-testing and adding man-made chemicals to goose the growth of his garden. Soon he realized that his methods did not work in the long run, but the inorganic chemical industry took off anyway, killing the ocean of life in the soil. That made the desperate gardeners buy more chemicals to repair the damage they just caused with their use of NPK fertilizers.

Norma Boeckler's illustration omitted the soil testing kit,
but she was following the original Parable of the Sower.


Another WELS Woman Targeted by a Pastor

$
0
0
Walther was Bishop Stephan's enforcer and enabler.
CFW and his mob conveniently robbed Stephan of his gold, land, and library.


http://shatteredpulpit.blogspot.com/2014/09/why-victims-should-not-go-to-church.html

I don't know if this is the best place to post. I was a victim of a retired WELS Pastor, who held a position working with many young women. He told me he loved me, pursued me, even as his wife was watching, knowing. I told my husband, my pastor and finally my therapist. My therapist told me what would I do if he had done to me what this spiritual leader had done. I immediately said turn you in. Then he asked why hadn't I done so in this Pastor's case. Well, it was complicated I said. I didn't want to be a trouble maker. No one would believe me. I felt sorry for him. Then my therapist ask me why would I let anyone stay in their sin - if I truly believed. That got to me. I realized he was right. But I didn't turn him in. I instead ignored him and never spoke to him again. Now it was easy for me to do this as he had moved. I learned from this experience. Pastors are sinful men. I should never let anyone come between me and my worshiping my God. Would I have done anything different now. I would hope so, but I honestly don't know. I thank God for the Christian therapist and I thank God he moved. He's dead now. I only share this with you as an example of how I dealt with a similar problem. Did I do what was right? I don't think so as I now realize it probably wasn't just me he was trying to seduce. It saddens me to think he may have done this to younger even more vulnerable girls.

I will say it has changed the way I look at Pastors. They are only human just like any of us. My advice now is report and follow through with the police. I don't want to ever let someone stay in their sin and harm others faith. Trust God is in charge and be brave for those who need our encouragement. Be faithful to God not the Pastor.
Reply

***

GJ - Clergy predators have no trouble recruiting more victims, as many court cases have shown. One was pursuing another young woman when he was on trial for his affair with a minor girl. But he was shocked and grieved that his wife divorced him.

Nobody knows anything in WELS,
and if they did, they forgot.

Sassy Helps Heal a Heel with Epsom Salt

$
0
0


We began an old TV series because it might be about Lutheran leaders - "Criminal Minds." The doorbell rang and Sassy Sue went crazy barking.

She has various levels of response. She often gets a Milkbone from the UPS driver, so she is hopeful about all deliveries. This one had her especially anxious to bark me to the front door.

Our helper was ringing the bell - with his daughter in his arms. His wife was there to grin at Sassy and say, "Happy Bark. Where's that happy bark?" That set off some joyous barking and a welcome for each member of the family.

They wanted Epsom Salt, in case I had a supply. Their girl had irritated her feet by wearing plastic flip-flops. I had two different bags, so I gave them a pound or more in one bag. We use it every day for human feet and often for rose roots. Dr. Oz has a slide show on Epsom Salt uses. Other uses include treatment for asthma - listed in Wikipedia.

We participated in that large scale regional thunderstorm that brought 3-4 inches of rain to Springdale yesterday, with more on the way. During a lull I sprinkled more Epsom Salt on the roses, crepe myrtle, spinach, and butterfly bush.

Those who say "scratch it into the soil" have no clue about its properties. Epsom Salt is hydrophilic, which means it instantly blends with water. Scratching the soil surface needlessly breaks up the fungal paths that feed the plants. It also stirs the weed seeds into action. Not smart.

Our helper's children are excited about gardening. They loved pulling gourds and giant beans from the foliage on the chain-link fence. I promised them samples of the seeds I order for the spring garden - beans, sunflowers, gourds, pumpkins. Their south-facing home will be a great place for experiments in agriculture.



Stealth Suet
If I can get the newest shipment of mesh bags past Mrs. I, more suet will be hanging in the back yard. Dime's Meat Market cut me three more pounds, without questioning my need for it.

More than one place has gone into shock about the amounts I order. I recall the response of a Midland store when I ordered a pound of edible pod pea seeds. "A pound?" I said, "I already have two pounds planted."

"What are you going to do with all those peas?" We ate them raw until longing turned to loathing. Then we fed pea vines to the rabbits, who converted them to Rabbit-Gro for the earthworms below their cages, who converted the natural fertilizer into castings and earthworm babies.

Some might ask, "Why more bags of suet?" I first saw this done in Midland, where bird feeding is almost universal. In those days, suet was in grocery stores and mesh bags were easily obtained for free. I saw groups of birds feeding from bags hanging from large lilac bushes and small trees. Since fat-loving birds are insect eaters, nurturing them is good for the yard and garden.



An ugly old bag of suet can be buried with new roses - an old wives' tale - to help the plant. No, I do not know why, but who wants an old greasy sack of suet hanging around all summer?

Our back yard has four live trees and one dead tree, The dead one has been used for storing garden hose, but next year will support a trumpet vine (a hummingbird plant). Since starlings hog a feeder, extra bags will allow other species to eat at their leisure in various places.

The neighborhood has plenty of bushes and trees for birds, so an increase in water and food will attract more species to our yard. If the winter is as wet, snowy, and icy as some predict, the reliable food zones will be appreciated and used. Birds are never completely reliant on feeders, but those feeders are extremely helpful during the worst weather, when food is hard to find - to keep the birds warm.

The birdhouse gourd.



The Seventeenth Sunday after Trinity, 2014. Ephesians 4:1-6. Seven Ones.

$
0
0

The Seventeenth Sunday after Trinity, 2014

Pastor Gregory L. Jackson




The Hymn #  44                    Ye Lands             2:41
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 #203            Morning Breaks            2:70     

Faith in God's Word - The Great Divide


The Communion Hymn # 315            I Come O Savior             2:66
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 # 467     Built on a Rock                   2:83

KJV Ephesians 4:1 I therefore, the prisoner of the Lord, beseech you that ye walk worthy of the vocation wherewith ye are called, 2 With all lowliness and meekness, with longsuffering, forbearing one another in love; 3 Endeavouring to keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace. 4 There is one body, and one Spirit, even as ye are called in one hope of your calling; 5 One Lord, one faith, one baptism, 6 One God and Father of all, who is above all, and through all, and in you all.

KJV Luke 14:1 And it came to pass, as he went into the house of one of the chief Pharisees to eat bread on the sabbath day, that they watched him. 2 And, behold, there was a certain man before him which had the dropsy. 3 And Jesus answering spake unto the lawyers and Pharisees, saying, Is it lawful to heal on the sabbath day? 4 And they held their peace. And he took him, and healed him, and let him go; 5 And answered them, saying, Which of you shall have an ass or an ox fallen into a pit, and will not straightway pull him out on the sabbath day? 6 And they could not answer him again to these things. 7 And he put forth a parable to those which were bidden, when he marked how they chose out the chief rooms; saying unto them, 8 When thou art bidden of any man to a wedding, sit not down in the highest room; lest a more honourable man than thou be bidden of him; 9 And he that bade thee and him come and say to thee, Give this man place; and thou begin with shame to take the lowest room. 10 But when thou art bidden, go and sit down in the lowest room; that when he that bade thee cometh, he may say unto thee, Friend, go up higher: then shalt thou have worship in the presence of them that sit at meat with thee. 11 For whosoever exalteth himself shall be abased; and he that humbleth himself shall be exalted.

Seventeenth Sunday After Trinity

Lord God, heavenly Father: We beseech Thee so to guide and direct us by Thy Holy Spirit, that we may not exalt ourselves, but humbly fear Thee, with our whole hearts hear and keep Thy word, and hallow the Lord's day, that we also may be hallowed by Thy word; help us, first, to place our hope and confidence in Thy Son, Jesus Christ, who alone is our righteousness and Redeemer, and, then, so to amend and better our lives in accordance with Thy word, that we may avoid all offenses and finally obtain eternal salvation, through Thy grace in Christ, who liveth and reigneth with Thee and the Holy Ghost, one true God. world without end. Amen.


Faith in God's Word - The Great Divide


Reformation will be ignored again this year, by almost all parties. The Roman Catholics want to stay Medieval in a post-modern way. The Middle Ages were preserved by Vatican I and II. so they have new documents supporting the old blasphemies, such as the infallibility of the pope. If anything, the Protestants imitate them as much as possible, but in the wrong ways.

The mainline Protestants and the Church Growth Evangelicals will ignore the Reformation because they do not teach faith but themselves. They have learned this from the Church of Rome - to make the visible church or the local congregation so sacrosanct, so much beyond criticism, that the slightest murmur is considered grounds for excommunication, shunning, and active abuse.

In this mix, with so many brands, leaders, documents, and styles, there is one decisive factor - faith in God's Word. That is the great divide. And that faith must be complete, not modified by faith in the official documents, church constitution, or anything else from man.

That does not exclude the Confessions, since they are a witness to faith in God's Word and subordinate themselves to God's Word.

One American Lutheran wrote, "We do not call the Confessions infallible. We say - the Confessions have not failed us."

We can see how clearly this is taught by St. Paul.

KJV Ephesians 4:1 I therefore, the prisoner of the Lord, beseech you that ye walk worthy of the vocation wherewith ye are called,

The vocation is - being a Christian. The Holy Spirit calls us through the Gospel to be in Christthrough faith. All the blessings of Christianity come to us through faith, chiefly forgiveness of sin and eternal life, but also many other spiritual blessings, the fruits of the Spirit.

This is Paul begging the Christians from prison, with a death sentence on his head, to conduct themselves worthy of this Faith. "Treat the world kindly and be worthy of grace. Remember one day you'll meet God face to face." Judith Durham, Australian singer, The Seekers.

We did not find the Gospel. God called us through the Gospel and the effect was felt at once. Babies baptized in the faith have a God-given affinity for the faith and hear the Word with pure faith. They do not have the adult cleverness to bandy words about, parse them, and explain them in their own peculiar and self-serving way. Men came to Luther and said, "Babies do not have faith." Luther countered, "You do not have faith either, and you are adults." 

His point was clear. The Bible reveals infant faith to us, so those who deny it lack trust in the Word. Jesus said, "You must have the faith of a child." And "You must enter the Kingdom as a child." The infants joined in calling out to Jesus as He rode into Jerusalem. One must have faith to hail Jesus as the Savior, the Son of David.

2 With all lowliness and meekness, with longsuffering, forbearing one another in love;

Children have this grace, that they are not haughty and proud unless trained to be that way. They put up with hardships and are quick to forgive. Holding a grudge is an adult occupation. 

3 Endeavouring to keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace. 

This is the central point in the first part of this lesson. The unity of the Spirit comes from faith in the Word of God. The bond of peace is justification by faith.

Romans 5:1-2 King James Version (KJV)

5 Therefore being justified by faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ: 2 By whom also we have access by faith into this grace wherein we stand, and rejoice in hope of the glory of God.

References to peace always mean that peace that comes from forgiveness and salvation. It is not the peace of the world, which is impossible while we live. In fact, faith in the Gospel will always mean enmity with the world. Unbelievers cannot abide faith in Christ, and the worst ones are apostates in the visible church.

When Rome burnt Protestants at the stake during the Reformation, people stood around and watched. They did not call out "blasphemy" to the pope but thought the martyrs deserved it. Or they were afraid to talk. Nevertheless, the Reformation raced across the world in the face of persecution and mortally wounded the Antichrist.

The only way to preserve that unity and peace is to keep the Scriptures central and always studied. Then people may debate the issues through the Word with child-like faith. 

4 There is one body, and one Spirit, even as ye are called in one hope of your calling; 5 One Lord, one faith, one baptism, 6 One God and Father of all, who is above all, and through all, and in you all.

The seven Ones confess the unity of God and the Three-ness of the One God, reminding us that this unity comes from faith in Him.

When I speak to groups or individuals, I can see how faith unites and also how it divides. Believers come from many denominations and even from Rome, where the chains of obedience have been broken for some time. 

I heard Evangelical and Pentecostals discussing matters because we live in a non-Lutheran area again. It is not as bad as Milwaukee or St. Louis or Mankato - at least they do not call themselves Lutherans when they are not.




But the Church Growth Evangelicals and Pentecostals are just like the unbelievers in the ELS, WELS, LCMS, and ELCA. That is why they all get along so well together and gather at Fuller, Willow Creek, or Trinity Divinity in Deerfield. They are united by unbelief and a material view of the Gospel. They chase gimmicks for gain and copy one another slavishly. 

In contrast, believers put their trust in Christ and rely on Him. That is why the true Church is always going to be invisible, made up of those who rely on Christ without works, whose faith in Him rests on His work, not theirs.

The Reformation was a battle of faith versus institutions. We cannot imagine what that was like. Europe was 99% organized by Catholic institutions and traditions, Catholic holy days and observances, Catholic political and military might. Today the Timid Lutherans (a large group of people calling themselves confessional) say, "What is the use? We have no power. We need our guy in the president's office!"

What did the Reformers have? - burning stakes, stone dungeons, slave ships to man when kicked out of their lands. Every soul was tuned to Roman practices and Roman domination. The duke's soldiers could arrest and hold them forever. They had nothing but the Word, which knocked the old Roman Empire into the ashcan and crippled the Antichrist.

All the Lutheran blogs avoid justification by faith. Their discussion pages avoid justification by faith. The various synods - except one - avoid justification by faith. Why avoid the foundation of the Reformation? Because people will get excited and angry and divided. They must keep everyone calm - sedated on timid topics for timid Lutherans.

Everyone has fears, especially after experiencing the blowback of apostate revenge. But Patton said, "Never take counsel of your fears." Rather than plow through what Americans say about him or what our allies said, I recall what the Germans thought. They were terrified of Patton. One of his little jaunts, to rescue his son-in-law, disrupted the entire country. They saw ghosts and goblins every where.



Luther said, "Faith makes us bold." That is why fears make us timid. If we believe in the Creation, the Incarnation, the Atonement of Christ and His Resurrection, what is left to doubt? Faith overcomes those fears.

Faith moves us to pray earnestly for our needs and the needs of others. I have no doubt that prayer gives health and strength to the objects of prayer. We cannot overcome all disease ultimately, but we can strengthen and benefit others through prayer. Experience has shown this many times.

When we know of a specific need, it is always worthwhile to pray about that, knowing that God is answering our prayer before we think to ask. The timing is such that we know it came from God when that prayer is answered. God delights in answering in such a way that we know it was not our design but His.



Unsolicited

$
0
0

Monday, October 13, 2014

Why I listen to Dr. Ichabod's Sermons.

Why do I listen to Dr. Greg Jackson's sermons? Very simple reason. Not for the eloquence, not for lofty and clever speeches, not for terrific engaging style, none of that. Only one thing - he encourages me to have faith in Christ and in Christ's Word by simple exposition of the text.

How pathetic, Lutheran preachers, reads a text of Scripture but then go talk about something else during the homily so you wonder after the service, what was it all about? Did I get something from that?


I observe that people have an over estimation of themselves. I observe most Lutherans in particular and Protestants in general, believe they have no problem with faith that is why they listen to false teachers that pat them in their sin.

I live with myself all the time and I know how I allow my anxiety to overwhelm me.

Luther was right when he said, we neither fear, nor love nor trust God. At least what he said was true about me. I confess my sins each Sunday but the root of those sins is one source - my lack of faith.

I need to be prodded to believe God, that Christ covers my sin, that God will take care of me even though I have been unfaithful, that God will not leave me nor forsake me and will provide for me etc etc. Lack of faith, that is the diagnosis of my decease - I go for the preacher who stirs me in this faith direction, that is why I listen to Dr. Jackson's sermons.

Gardening and Grilling with Our Grandson

$
0
0



I drove LI to the Walmart Saturday Morning Meeting. Often a musical act will perform. This time it was the Distinguished Men of Brass. The Pea Ridge Marching Band opened the meeting, giving a fine performance.

Normally I grill at our family events. Lately our grandson Alex has been learning to prune roses while the grill heats up. This time he pruned and adjusted the vents in the grill. What works best is a hot grill with bacon on the top shelf, meat below. The bacon cooks and flavors the meat by dripping on it. All the bacon fans are happy to have grilled bacon. LI said, "Bacon should shatter when it's done." Ours did.

We also had hickory smoke this time. In Phoenix I trimmed mesquite from the trees in the yard. Hickory smoke works best when the chips are soaked during the lighting of the grill. Damp chips offer a lot more smoke. Between the bacon fat smoke and the hickory smoke, we almost needed Hazmat suits at the grill. The results were very good.

Our daughter-in-law Tammy made cheesecake - lime and coconut.

After lunch, Alex wanted to go in the backyard, and I wanted to dig a hole for the bushes. Just before we had rock hard clay soil, which I watered to soften for digging. They came over after 5 inches of rain in two days.

The backyard was soggy but the rain had stopped. Alex said, "I need a shovel." We brought the two out to the digging site and later got the branch cutters to slice the underground roots.

Alex and I opened up a big hole in record time. The clay was like Pla-doh, soft and easily scooped away. Every so often I reached into our excavation with the Fiscar cutters and pruned the roots of the nearby trees.

I dumped a bag of mushroom compost in the hole because the bushes would not come for a month. This avoided the problem of digging in frozen or dried clay, and it gave the soil creatures a head-start in getting an area ready for the Butterfly Bush. I topped it with soggy newspapers and soil to hold them in place. That would hold moisture in and attract fungi and earthworms.

I had a little clay on my shoes but Alex had about a pound on each shoe. I had some creative suggestions for cleaning his shoes. I scraped large amounts off with a knife and washed them thoroughly. Even then he left prints on the tile (not that we cared). It reminded me of our granddaughter Josie running into the garden years ago and standing there grinning - in her new white socks. No shoes. I mentioned the episode and Tammy said, "I remember that."

I told everyone, "Alex and I built a hole." We had this debate outside, and it continued.

"We dug a hole," Alex countered.

"Built one," I affirmed.

"Dug it," he said.

"Built."

"Dug!"

"Built." We went nose to nose, but he did not budge and neither did I. We have so many laughs together, which remind me of similar debates when his dad was young.


Gerhard's Annotations on the First Six Chapters of St. Paul's Epistle to the Romans. Translated by Pastor Paul Rydecki

$
0
0



Here are Pastor Paul Rydecki's books.


Product Details

Annotations on the First Six Chapters of St. Paul's Epistle to the Romans by Johann Gerhard, James D. Heiser, Rachel K. Melvin and Paul A. Rydecki (Sep 13, 2014)

2.

Product Details

The Judaizing Calvin by Aegidius Hunnius, Paul A. Rydecki and James D. Heiser (Sep 21, 2012)

(2)

4.

Product Details

Theses on the Article of Justification: and The Forensic Appeal to the Throne of Grace in the Theology of the... by Evangelical Lutheran Diocese of North America and Paul A. Rydecki (Feb 15, 2014)

(5)



I am just getting started on the Gerhard book, which is an excellent time stamp for the origins of the elusive dogma of Universal Objective Justification (UOJ).

UOJ advocates claim that the entire world is forgiven its sin, without the Gospel, without faith in Christ. Moreover--like Masonic Lodge members and homosexuals--they insist that everyone is, or longs to be, one with them.

The UOJ Stormtroopers have enlisted Jesus, Paul, Luther, Gerhard, and Calov as distinguished members of the Forgiven Without Faith Faculty.

Gerhard is useful to study because he is a bookend of the Reformation. He was not an editor of the Book of Concord, but he finished Chemnitz' Harmony of the Gospels, so Gerhard is end of the Reformation/Book of Concord era.

Here is the plot spoiler - no one took forgiveness without faith seriously until the era of Pietism, which Calvinism spawned in its rejection of the Means of Grace. But if forgiveness without faithis the Chief Article of the Christian Religion, the Master and Prince, the Article on which the Church stands or falls, Gerhard would be the one to notice it. He was prolific in every sense of the word - children, letters, and books.

Like Chemnitz, Gerhard dealt with the aftermath of the Reformation, which included the Roman Catholic response, but also the errors of the Calvinists and other Enthusiasts. Luther had all Enthusiasts pegged in the Smalcald Articles, but later writers necessarily dealt with them in detail.




Romans 3 v.25  Whom God hath set forth to be a propitiation through faith in his blood, to declare his righteousness for the remission of sins that are past, through the forbearance of God; (KJV)
Προέθετο [He set forth], namely, in His eternal counsel and decree (1 Pet. 1:20). He has revealed this eternal counsel of His in the word of the Gospel. For in it, Christ is set before us, to be received by us by means of a true faith.

Romans 3:26

ΤὸνἐκπίστεωςΙησοῦ, “the one who is by faith of Christ,” that is, “the one who believes in Christ.”  For just as οἱἐκπεριτομῆς[those by circumcision] are “circumcised,” so also those who are ἐκπἰστεωςΙησοῦ [by faith of Jesus] are “believers” in Christ.

In this passage the causes and the object of our justification before God are expressed.
1. The chief efficient cause is the grace of God, that is, God’s free favor that takes our misery into account.
2. The meritorious cause is Christ in the office of redemption, which the Apostle describes with three very significant words.  First, with the word ἀπολύτρωσιν [redemption], which has in view the spiritual captivity in Satan’s kingdom from which we have been redeemed by the precious λύτρῳ [price] of Christ.  Second, with the word ἱλαστήριον [Propitiatorium], which has in view the lid of the ark of the covenant in the Old Testament.  Third, with the phrase the αἷμα τοῦ χριστοῦ [blood of Christ], which, by way of synecdoche, signifies the entire obedience of Christ, active as well as passive.
3. The instrumental cause is faith, that receiving (ληπτικόν) means that embraces the benefits of Christ offered in Word and Sacraments, which are the imparting (δοτικοῖς) means.
4. The formal causeis πάρεσις, the remission of sins, which is joined by an indivisible connection with the imputation of the righteousness of Christ (Rom. 4:3).
5. The final causewith respect to God is ἔνδειξις τῆς δικαιοσύνης αὐτοῦ [the demonstration of His righteousness].  In justification, or the remission of sins, God remains just in that He justly punishes our sins in Christ, who received them upon Himself; and He justifies believers by means of the righteousness of Christ that has been imputed to them.
The object of justification is man the sinner, but only such a one as believes in Christ, that is, who acknowledges his sins from the Law, who seriously grieves over them, and who by faith applies to himself the promise of the remission of sins for the sake of Christ.

***

GJ - More later.

Wendland and Stockhardt - Send in the Clowns

$
0
0

Don't you love farce?
My fault I fear.
I thought that you'd want what I want.
Sorry, my dear.
But where are the clowns?
Quick, send in the clowns.
Don't bother, they're here.

From the Wendland essay:

Wendland:
It will be argued, perhaps, that neither Luther nor our early Lutheran confessions make this distinction between “objective” and “subjective” justification. It is true that they do not make use of this specific terminology, just as little as they use the term “verbal inspiration.” But to deny that both Luther and our Confessions present justification from the standpoint outlined above would certainly take a great deal of misinterpretation. Luther surely stresses justification by faith. So do our Confessions. But faith is never presented as something necessary to complete a justification which God has only made possible. 

Stoeckhardt writes:
Never in this sense do we hear it presented: I believe; I am conscious of the fact that I believe on my Savior. Therefore I am justified in the sight of God. A believing Christian does not make the pulse of his faith-life the criterion of his state of grace… The believer rather makes this conclusion: O, how godless I still am. Out of my heart godless thoughts continue to arise. There is no doubt but that I am a poor, unworthy sinner. My sin is ever before me. But now God’s Word tells me, that God has already declared godless Sinners righteous. Thus I belong without any doubt whatsoever in the number of those whom God justifies (St. Römerbrief, p. 185).

***

GJ - The paragraph on Luther reveals the zombie-like attitude of Syn Conference leaders. After conceding--as he must--that Luther and the Confessions not have this OJ/SJ distinction, Wendland argues that denying OJ/SJ requires "a great deal of misinterpretation."

The first step is to set aside Luther and the Confessions. At least Wendland concedes the facts in this matter. Recent authors (like Blank) find OJ under every rock in the Book of Concord. All their precious OJ passages are about the Atonement.

But Wendland is more dangerous in asserting a blatant falsehood and using that falsehood to claim a furtive, stealthy OJ in Luther and the Confessions.

Here is the Wendland argument - verbal inspiration is not found in Luther and the Confessions either. Verbal inspiration was not being debated in Luther and the Confessions, yet the concept is taught with great clarity. The term verbal inspiration is not found because it is a modern term, but the doctrine is there - even the Latin words for inerrant and infallible (Luther's words, in the Book of Concord).

A note on terminology - When apostates began attacking verbal inspiration with tricky little subversive arguments, the faithful began saying plenary inspiration. Likewise, since infallible was under attack--"infallible in doctrine, but not in history or geography"--inerrant was used. Thus older works could be lacking in the latest terms but still teach the same doctrine as before.

Although Wendland destroys his own argument, he makes it anyway. On Wendland's authority we are supposed to assume that double-justification is the basis for Luther and the Confessions. He contradicts himself.

"Luther surely stresses justification by faith. So do our Confessions."

What follows is incomprehensible.

"But faith is never presented as something necessary to complete a justification which God has only made possible."

Like all UOJ Enthusiasts, Wendland is keen to make the case for universal absolution without faith. Once the reader understands the agenda, it is easy to see how every bit of nonsense is applied to confuse and bewilder the victim.

Who better to Stoeckhardt to turn confusion into doctrinal surrender?

Stoeckhardt: "Never in this sense do we hear it presented: I believe; I am conscious of the fact that I believe on my Savior. Therefore I am justified in the sight of God. A believing Christian does not make the pulse of his faith-life the criterion of his state of grace…"

I am not sure what the pulse of faith-life is, but this bizarre claim is guaranteed to make faith in the Gospel seem to be an illusion. Another characteristic of all the UOJ writers is to attack faith.



In contrast, Luther clearly teaches at all times, in harmony with the Scriptures, believers are forgiven. The foundational sin, in the words of Jesus Himself, is "they do not believe on Me." (John 16)

More Stoeckhardt - and they let him teach?

The believer rather makes this conclusion: O, how godless I still am. Out of my heart godless thoughts continue to arise. There is no doubt but that I am a poor, unworthy sinner. My sin is ever before me. But now God’s Word tells me, that God has already declared godless Sinners righteous. Thus I belong without any doubt whatsoever in the number of those whom God justifies (St. Römerbrief, p. 185).

Exactly how can the believer be called "godless"? They are still sinners because they are human. Stoeckhardt comforts sinners by telling them they were already forgiven, without faith, so now they know they are forgiven.

Stoeckhardt followed Walther, literally and figuratively. Behind this confusion is the theme of Walther's Easter absolution sermon:
1. God has already forgiven the sins of the entire world.
2. Now you must believe that this is true.

One must trust in an anti-Scriptural, anti-Confessional absurdity (universal absolution, without faith, without the Word, grace without the Means of Grace) to be forgiven, because the first absolution does not work unless one makes a decision to accept the unacceptable. They call this decision "subjective justification."

This is a counterfeit argument. As one Lutheran student said, the UOJ essays are comical if one has just spent a day reading the Book of Concord.




---

"For neither you nor I could ever know anything of Christ, or believe on Him, and obtain Him for our Lord, unless it were offered to us and granted to our hearts by the Holy Ghost through the preaching of the Gospel. The work is done and accomplished; for Christ has acquired and gained the treasure for us by His suffering, death, resurrection, etc. But if the work remained concealed so that no one knew of it, then it would be in vain and lost. That this treasure, therefore, might not lie buried, but be appropriated and enjoyed, God has caused the Word to go forth and be proclaimed, in which He gives the Holy Ghost to bring this treasure home and appropriate it to us. Therefore sanctifying is nothing else than bringing us to Christ to receive this good, to which could not attain ourselves."
The Large Catechism, The Creed, Article III, #38, Concordia Triglotta, St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1921, p. 689. Tappert, p. 415.

J-501
"But outside of this Christian Church, where the Gospel is not, there is no forgiveness, as also there can be no holiness [sanctification]. Therefore all who seek and wish to merit holiness [sanctification], not through the Gospel and forgiveness of sin, but by their works, have expelled and severed themselves [from this Church]."
The Large Catechism, The Creed, Article III, #56, Concordia Triglotta, St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1921, p. 693. Tappert, p. 418.

"The danger is that by use of the term 'subjective justification' we may lose the objective divine act of God by which He declares the individual sinner righteous ex pistews pistin in the instant faith (embracing Christ) is wrought in him, leaving only the one divine declaration regarding the whole world of sinners, calling this an actus simplex, the only forensic act of God, and expanding this to mean that God declared every sinner free from guilt when Christ was raised from the dead, so many millions even before they were born, irrespective of faith, apart from and without faith." This surely wipes out 'justification by faith alone.' Only his faith is reckoned to him for righteousness."
R. C. H. Lenski, Interpretation of Romans, Augsburg Publishing House: Minneapolis, 1963, p. 85. Romans 1:17.

“But this must be noted: Christ died 1900 years ago, on a certain day, at a certain hour in time. But this counts for all time: for the entire future time, for all the prior time. For by Christ’s death ‘all died,’ Adam and all his descendants. The effect covered all. It is literally true: ‘the Lamb slain from the foundation of the world.’ His death availed for Adam. All in the Old Testament who believed were saved by that death just as all are in the New Testament who believe.”
R. C. H. Lenski, Interpretation of Second Corinthians, Columbus: Wartburg Press, 1957, p. 1033. 2 Corinthians 5:15.

I believe that Jesus Christ, true God, begotten of the Father from eternity, and also true man, born of the Virgin Mary, is my Lord, who has redeemed me, a lost and condemned creature, purchased and won [delivered] me from all sins, from death, and from the power of the devil, not with gold or silver, but with His holy, precious blood and with His innocent suffering and death, in order that I may be [wholly] His own, and live under Him in His kingdom, and serve Him in everlasting righteousness, innocence, and blessedness, even as He is risen from the dead, lives and reigns to all eternity. This is most certainly true.”
Martin Luther, The Small Catechism, Explanation of the Second Article of the Creed, II. 4. Concordia Triglotta, St. Louis; Concordia Publishing House, 1921, p. 545.

"This faith, encouraging and consoling in these fears, receives remission of sins, justifies and quickens. For this consolation is a new and spiritual life [a new birth and a new life]. These things are plain and clear, and can be understood by the pious, and have testimonies of the Church [as is to be seen in the conversion of Paul and Augustine]. The adversaries nowhere can say how the Holy Ghost is given. They imagine that the Sacraments confer the Holy Ghost ex opere operato, without a good emotion in the recipient, as though, indeed, the gift of the Holy Ghost were an idle matter."
Article IV., Justification, Apology of the Augsburg Confession, Concordia Triglotta, St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1921, p. 139. Tappert, p. 115.

"Now, that faith signifies, not only a knowledge of the history, but such faith as assents to the promise, Paul plainly testifies when says, Romans 4:16: 'Therefore it is of faith, to the end the promise might be sure.' For he judges that the promise cannot be received unless by faith. Wherefore he puts them together as things that belong to one another, and connects promise and faith."
Apology of the Augsburg Confession, Article IV, Justification, Concordia Triglotta, St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1921, p. 135. Tappert, p. 114. Romans 4:16.

"But as the Confutation condemns us for having assigned these two parts to repentance, we must show that [not we, but] Scripture expresses these as the chief parts in repentance and conversion. For Christ says, Matthew 11:28: Come unto Me, all ye that labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. Here there are two members. The labor and the burden signify the contrition, anxiety, and terrors of sin and of death. To come to Christ is to believe that sins are remitted for Christ's sake; when we believe, our hearts are quickened by the Holy Ghost through the Word of Christ. Here, therefore, there are these two chief parts, contrition and faith."
Apology of the Augsburg Confession, Article XII (V), #44, Concordia Triglotta, St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1921, p. 263. Tappert, p. 187. Matthew 11:28.

"How is a person justified before God? This occurs solely by faith in the Son of God, Jesus Christ; that is, freely, not because of any works or merits of one's own but only because of the one Mediator, Jesus Christ, who became the sacrificial victim and propitiation on our behalf. By this sacrifice, man obtained forgiveness of sins and became righteous; that is, God-pleasing and acceptable. His righteousness was imputed to man for Christ's sake, and man becomes an heir of eternal life when he believes with certainty that God gives him these blessings for the sake of His Son."
David Chytraeus, A Summary of the Christian Faith (1568), trans., Richard Dinda, Decatur: Repristination Press, 1994. p. 105.

"Christian righteousness is the forgiveness of sin, the imputation of the righteousness of Christ and acceptance to eternal life. It is free, not the result of any virtues or works but is given solely because of Christ, the Mediator, and apprehended by faith alone."
David Chytraeus, A Summary of the Christian Faith (1568), trans., Richard Dinda, Decatur: Repristination Press, 1994. p. 106.

"Scripture therefore uses these words, 'We are justified by faith,' to teach both: 1) What the reason (or merit) for justification is, or what the blessings of Christ are; to wit, that through and for the sake of Christ alone we are granted forgiveness of sins, righteousness and eternal life; and 2. How
these should be applied or transferred to us; namely, by embracing the promise and relying on Christ by faith alone."
David Chytraeus, A Summary of the Christian Faith (1568), trans., Richard Dinda, Decatur: Repristination Press, 1994. p. 107.

"It must be admitted that when our Lutheran Confessions speak of justification they speak almost exclusively of that facet of justification we usually call 'subjective' justification, which has also been called 'special' or 'personal' justification. But the Confessions also show us that the basis for this justification is the justification that precedes faith."
Rick Nicholas Curia, The Significant History of the Doctrine of Objective or Universal Justification, Alpine, California: California Pastoral Conference, WELS. January 24-25, 1983. p. 13.

"The chief differences between the contestants [Norwegians and Augustana] seems to have been in the essence rather than in the effect of Absolution. Both agreed that the Gospel offered the forgiveness of sins, but the one side held that it was given only to those who in faith received it, while the other side said that it was given also to unbelievers, though they did not accept it. Both agreed that unbelievers received no benefit from such an absolution."
J. Magnus Rohne, Norwegian Lutheranism up to 1872, New York, Macmillan, p. 231. Rick Nicholas Curia, The Significant History of the Doctrine of Objective or Universal Justification, Alpine, California: California Pastoral Conference, WELS. January 24-25, 1983. p. 20. [This is important for understanding the early Robert Preus, who supported UOJ.]

"Against both these parties the pure teachers of the Augsburg Confession have taught and contended that by the fall of our first parents man was so corrupted that in divine things pertaining to our conversion and the salvation of our souls he is by nature blind, that, when the Word of God is preached, he neither does nor can understand it, but regards it as foolishness; also, that he does not of himself draw nigh to God, but is and remains an enemy of God, until he is converted, becomes a believer [is endowed with faith], is regenerated and renewed, by the power of the Holy Ghost through the Word when preached and heard, out of pure grace, without any cooperation of his own."
Formula of Concord, Thorough Declaration, II. 5. Free Will, Concordia Triglotta, St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1921, p. 881.

"The second argument is that 'God desires all men to be saved' (1 Timothy 2:4), and He gave His Son for us men and created man for eternal life. Likewise: All things exist for man, and he himself exists for God that he may enjoy Him, etc. These points and others like them can be refuted as easily as the first one. For these verses must always be understood as pertaining to the elect only, as the apostle says in 2 Timothy 2:10 'everything for the sake of the elect.' For in an absolute sense Christ did not die for all, because He says: 'This is My blood which is poured out for you' and 'for many'--He does not say: for all--'for the forgiveness of sins.' (Mark 14:24; Matthew 26:28)
Martin Luther, Luther's Works, 25 p. 375. 2 Timothy 2:10; 1 Timothy 2:4; Mark 14:24; Matthew 26:28

"In like manner Moses must precede and teach people to feel their sins in order that grace may be sweet and welcome to them. Therefore all is in vain, however friendly and lovely Christ may be pictured, if man is not first humbled by a knowledge of himself and he possesses no longing for Christ, as Mary's Song says, 'The hungry he hath filled with good things; and the rich he hath sent empty away,' Luke 1:53."
Martin Luther, Sermons of Martin Luther, ed., John Nicholas Lenker, Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1983, II, p. 149. Matthew 15:21-28; Luke 1:53.

"The apostle says 'our,''our sins;' not his own sin, not the sins of unbelievers. Purification is not for, and cannot profit, him who does not believe. Nor did Christ effect the cleansing by our free-will, our reason or power, our works, our contrition or repentance, these all being worthless in the sight of God; he effects it by himself. And how? By taking our sins upon himself on the holy cross, as Isaiah 53:6 tells us."
Martin Luther, Sermons of Martin Luther, ed., John Nicholas Lenker, Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1983, VI, p. 180. Hebrews 1:1-12; Hebrews 1:3;

"Christ is speaking here not of the word of the law, but of the Gospel, which is a discourse about Christ, who died for our sins, etc. For God did not wish to impart Christ to the world in any other way; he had to embody him in the Word and thus distributed him, and present him to everybody; otherwise Christ would have existed for himself alone and remained unknown to us; he would have
thus died for himself. But since the Word places before us Christ, it thus places us before Him who has triumphed over death, sin, and Satan. Therefore, he who grasps and retains Christ, has thus also eternal deliverance from death. Consequently it is a Word of life, and it is true, that whoever keeps the Word shall never see death."
Martin Luther, Sermons of Martin Luther, 8 vols., ed., John Nicholas Lenker, Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1983, II, p. 177. John 8:46-59.

"To this incline your ears, and be persuaded that God speaks through men and forgives you your sins; this, of course, requires faith."
Martin Luther, Sermons of Martin Luther, 8 vols., ed. John Nicholas Lenker, Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1983, II, p. 200.


"If I do not believe it, I will not receive its benefits; but that neither renders it false nor proves that anything is lacking in Christ."
Martin Luther, Sermons of Martin Luther, 8 vols., ed., John Nicholas Lenker, Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1983, II, p. 258. Easter, Third Sermon. Mark 16:1-8.




Zorro Wrote This Note on Glende Ski Chancel Drama.Deutschlander Admitted No UOJ in the Book of Concord, But UOJ Is the Orthodox Position

$
0
0
California's meme was hand-crafted
in the subterranean art shop, Ichabode.


California wrote:
After watching one of the Who Dunnit? spectacles, some thoughts came to mind.

1.  To the stage performers (apt description, no?),  I say: Breathe deeply and repeat three times in rapid succession--- "It's not about me, it's not about me, it's not about me." Repeat.  And again.

2.  Does a head-set make you a rock star? Moves like Jagger? Uh, no.  Please stop that ridiculous wandering back and forth all over the stage. 

3.  Does your belly spill over your belt? Ewww, that's gross. Another reason to robe up! 

4.  The old Adam always says "I want to do what I want to do and when I want to do it so don't you tell me I can't!" The liturgy, in essence, is to curb that particular vanity so seductive to preachers.  I know, I know...but you want to  be relevant and connect and....sigh.

5.  Back to that wandering  across the stage thing:  Do you a bladder condition?  Control yourself and get behind that pulpit.  What...no pulpit?!

6.  The tie and shirt look is kind of, well, goofy.  I get it, you want a professional yet edgy look, right? Not to be mean, but it looks as if you forgot something. Just sayin'...

With all due respect, 

Zorro

---

Brett Meyer has left a new comment on your post "Watch the Tim Glende Videos":

More "gold" from Appleton and the (W)ELS.


(W)ELS Pastor Ski
WhoDunnit series 2
00:30 “not going to be as bold as Pastor Tim and call God out. I don’t know if any of you noticed but Pastor Sievert and I tried to slide...(?)...when the lightening hit him we did not be affected. Now I’m not gonna say, not gonna say that God possibly isn’t a suspect, that’s not what I’m gonna say…”
15:50 “because our savior Jesus was on a mission, a mission for you and a mission for me, and through His life and through His death and through His resurrection a broken relationship that sin has caused will be repaired and eternal life would be given to us.”
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ie8I2QGAtbg&feature=g-user-u

(W)ELS Pastor Tim Glende
WhoDunnit series 5
3:50: “And if we want to talk back about week one when I talked about God we see God at work, but his handprint, his literal handprint, he wasn’t there actively.”

13:20 “and the Son of the Father was crucified, so that all the sons and daughters of the Father could have eternal life.”

14:00 “he (Barabas) must have said, “There’s no chance I’m free. I have so many crimes and sins against me I’m going to be punished. But he was given a new lease on life. The same is true for us, because the ultimate Son of the Father stood in our place. And released from us all the sins and weight and guilt of all of our problems and said, “you are free, your sins, they are forgiven.””
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z-tPbEWcWyw&feature=g-user-u 

***

GJ - It is important to note that Uncle John Brug's dogmatic materials mark justification by faith passages in classical orthodoxy as MISLEADING.

The one and only dogma taught at Mequon is this -

the entire world has been declared forgiven of sin and saved, without faith, without the Word. 

That renders all discussions about doctrine, liturgy, music, and creeds obsolete.

Whoever fails to report a criminal assault against a child is a criminal himself.

DP Ed Werner went to his state prison for assaulting girls in his congregation.
But he was born forgiven, according to UOJ.
Deutschlander cannot fit UOJ (the orthodox position!) into the Confessions,
no matter what. What does that make UOJ? Hmm?

UOJ and Pietism go well together.
Knapp is still in print today, 
and UOJ is the only dogma of mainline Protestantism.
The translator was a ... Calvinist!



Law of Physics - I Garden in Every Plot of Land I Occupy

$
0
0
Butterfly Bush is also good for hummingbirds.



Team Jackson was discussing my garden plans for next year. Little Ichabod volunteered, "It is a law of physics. Dad gardens in every plot of land he occupies."

I laughed about how futile that was in Bella Vista, where a pickax is the only useful gardening tool. Between the excessive shade and the lack of soil, I did little gardening. I planted some roses, and the results were doomed.

Butterfly Weed is related to milkweed,
and Monarch butterflies like both plants.
I have planted roses everywhere, and tutored others in how to have beautiful blooms with relatively little work. One newbie bawled when I pruned the deadwood off her roses by 50%. She wept again (for joy) when the roses bloomed in two weeks, as I predicted. Later, for a special event, she pruned all her roses early, and they all bloomed in time for the party.

Roses need mulch, plenty of water, soil creatures, and regular pruning. If the gardener gives roses away all the time, the roses will thrive from that pruning. Newbies do not realize that the act of cutting off deadwood and new flowers will promote cane, flower, and root growth.

One of my Facebook friends said his citrus were not responding to all the Miracle Gro he is applying. I said, "You are killing the soil creatures." That reminded me of the gardening center warning me against goat manure on my tangelo and lemon trees. "Manure is salty. Phoenix already has salty soil." What he suggested was an inorganic salt.

As Marx would say, "Goat manure is free. Miracle Gro is cheap to make but very expensive to buy. Another capitalist plot."

Butterflies like to puddle in mud or manure.

Previous experience showed me that I could turn lawn into rich, composted soil by shading it with organics. One accidental episode was covering an area with pine branches. I wanted to create a shelter for animals in New Ulm, Minnesota. In spring the lawn was gone (for a short time) and the soil was easily dug. Now I create shelters for soil creatures by shutting off the sunlight with newspapers and wood mulch. I knew that was good for earthworms and bacteria, but I soon learned that fungi also thrived because of the wood. All three components (and protozoa) are major donors to soil and plant health. Those four can be generated at a very low cost.

Gardening areas for next year:

  1. The Fence Garden includes around 200 feet of fence with soaker hose to fixed on top for even, easy watering. Vining plants, sunflowers, and butterfly plants will be on or near this fence.
  2. The Vegetable Garden has begun with spinach. Favorites for this plot will be tomatoes, okra, and other favorite food plants.
  3. The Corn Patch. The sunniest back yard plot is covered with mulch now. Silver Queen corn, pumpkins, and pole beans will grow there.
  4. The Sunny Garden. This area gets the most intense sun, so I will use straw bales for strawberries, potatoes, and some other produce.
  5. The Rose Garden. We have room for more bushes, so I will add Mr. Lincoln (red, fragrant), Pope John Paul II (white), Double Delight, and Queen Elizabeth.
  6. Maple Tree Garden. I have moved the perimeter out and will prune the tree more, so I am sure Mr. Lincoln will thrive there, perhaps with white roses for contrast.
  7. North Garden. We have mulched some areas where weeds were thriving. Oddly, this area is rather sunny and should support some plants, as opportunities (sales) arise.


Our helper asked how we would deal with all the mulch. That is simple. Where we want to plant, we rake back some mulch in that row and leave the rest in place. As I found out this fall, the damp newspaper gives way and the soil is soft for planting underneath.



I have found Mr. Lincoln online for $8,
but the going rate for new roses is $30 per bush.


Men Overboard - Robin Steinke Installed as the First Female President of Luther Seminary. Liberian Leader Attends

$
0
0
Robin Steinke came to install the new female head of the Berkeley ELCA seminary,
which has very few students but very valuable land.
The seminary has merged with California Lutheran U.,
so Boss Bloomquiest is merely a dean.




This ELCA pastor preaches herself and really likes the word "like." She's like saying like whenever transitioning to another, like, story about her favorite topic, her amazing life.

---

Feel free to watch the installation of Robin Steinke as president of Luther Seminary, where Jack and Robert Preus attended.

I found the entire service to be strained, awkward, and weird. This is the largest seminary for Lutherans, but the church was not full. The school is located in the Twin Cities, where one ELCA congregation alone has 10,000 members. Those attending seemed mostly to be seniors - not seniors in seminary, but elderly and possibly stunned.

The choir was small; the orchestra accompanying it was every bit as good as a high school band.

One of the opening songs was African, so Steinke can be seen rocking back and forth a bit. The new ELCA presiding bishop, Liz Eaton, is petite and mannish. Robin Steinke is large and mannish, wearing slacks, heavy boots, and preaching from the chancel holding a notebook. The face mike reminded me of Ski's attempts to be cool.

The pulpit was nearby but empty. Everything is in code. The radical Left knows what the language and symbols mean. Pacing about in the chancel is a message, like Ski preaching in his car repair clothes. Words about new horizons and reaching out to the marginalized  - that means their radical Left activism that will leave liberal mouths hanging open in dismay.

If you want to study bumbling sermons, try to listen to Steinke. Everything seems to say, "We finally got to take over the ELCA institutions, and now it is not so fun."

I could not find a news story about the event, which should be a major bragging point. The gay Left was thrilled with Eaton taking over ELCA. Reconciling Works, their home base, bragged about Eaton, who is safely married to a man. Why not Steinke? Her domestic status is never mentioned. That may account for the sullen reaction to her installation - but I am only speculating.

Karen Bloomquist is the new dean of the transplanted California seminary.
Her obedient husband Bill is on the right.
The old campus had a spectacular view - they will miss Sodom-by-the-Bay.

This pot on the head dance was part of the Bloomquist installation.
Where do they get these clowns?


Try to read her Leftist mumbo-jumbo below.
She is not speaking in tongues.
She is speaking in gay Marxist rhetoric.

Karen Bloomquist

I am a constructive theologian/ethicist, pastor and administrator, committed to preparing the people of God to discern critically and work collaboratively with others to further God’s liberating mission in pluralistic, multi-faith contexts.  Given the global horizons within which I have been networking, teaching and writing over the past decade, I am eager to find ways in which my experience, expertise and perspectives might be drawn upon in the preparation of religious and other leaders in settings throughout the world.  Throughout my career, my passion has been relating to, analyzing and actively seeking to change situations of injustice and furthering God’s mission in the world.
The preacher at the Bloomquist installation was a long-term friend,
and has a doctorate in feminist theology.

Education
Ph.D., Theology, Union Theological Seminary [The Devil's Playground], NYC
M.Div., Pacific Lutheran Theological Seminary
B.A., Sociology and Religion, St. Olaf College
Professional History
Director, Department for Theology and Studies, Lutheran World Federation
Associate Professor of Theological Ethics, Wartburg Theological Seminary
Director for Studies, Division for Church in Society, Evangelical Lutheran Church in America
Assistant Professor of Church and Society, Lutheran School of Theology at Chicago
Pastor, Lutheran Church of St. Philip, Brooklyn, NY
Pastor, Faith American Lutheran Church, Oakland, CA

Chairman of the Board


Prepping for Edible Pod Peas

$
0
0
Directions for dragon claws are here - can be used for salads.

 In Midland I put chicken wire around the entire garage for supporting edible pod peas, and I made a teepee to support more. Needless to say, longing turned to loathing during the harvesting season, which was extended by picking them (more flowering, more fruiting, just like beans and roses). Our members from Hong Kong got two large sacks of dragon claws for their soup, a real delicacy for them. I said, "Don't worry. We will have even more tendrils because I harvested these." And we did.

The rabbits ate vines galore too.

I am planning on repeating this along the fence. Our helper came by looking for a project. I had a wheelbarrow full of soggy newspapers, which are ideal for laying down. I was only needing some organic paperweights, like mushroom compost, soil, or mulch.

Sassy and I went out to do some errands that would necessarily take us by Lowe's, so I decided to pick up some then. Lowe's welcomes dogs, and she loves the attention she gets there. I take her in without a leash each time. She obeys hand signals and voice commands.

We walked in together and I saw straw bales. I had a conversation about when they would be available in the spring and how much they cost - $6 for large ones. Many use them for Halloween displays, but that is not a holy day in our house. The worker said stray bale gardening was really growing in the area.

I ordered some mulch and mushroom compost. Instead of relying on a phone message (not always effective at Lowe's if a teen gets it) we went out looking for guys with big carts. Sassy was excited so she walked around with her happy bark. That got immediate attention in the back and I showed them my receipt.

"Do you have a truck?" I said, "I have a Lincoln Town Car."

We walked back and found the clerk squatting low to the ground with her arms out for Sassy. Our wonderdog wiggled all the way there and loved getting petted and praised. "Oh, you are the most beautiful dog!" Once the cart came toward us we went to the car. Sassy waits at crossings and crosses with me. She got in the car and we soon had our load.

The store could be fussy about dogs, but they welcome dogs without leashes. Sassy has often has a meet and greet with other loose dogs shopping in the garden department. The clerks are unusually welcoming and she knows she is welcome.



Peas love cold weather and can be planted before the last snow fall. Snow peas, right?

They are shallow rooted and enjoy sweet soil. I had them thrive in gravely (limestone) soil.

Classic Ichabod from 2011 - Jeske's New Age Huberism

$
0
0


AC V has left a new comment on your post "Readers Respond to the Wizard Mark Jeske: WELS LCM...":

Time of Grace layin' it all out there:

Time of Grace on Facebook:

Jesus is already pure, and now he says you are too. Do you look at yourself as pure? Or does your guilty conscience endlessly remind you of what a piece of trash you are? You are pure. He made purification for you! When you lay your head on the pillow tonight, you can say, "I am pure." Not on the basis of your own performance, but on the basis of HIS performance.

http://www.facebook.com/timeofgrace

That kind of theology is exactly what the orthodox Lutheran theologians at Wittenberg condemned Samuel Huber for only 15 years after the Book of Concord was published:

“And to make his (Huber) opinion plain enough to us, he then asked us, how we would deal with people, if we came to a place, where nothing had been taught about Christ before. Then we answered him that we would start with the Law; make it clear to them that they were poor sinners and under the wrath of God, which they should recognize with penitent hearts. If they now were sorry for their sins, God offers through the Gospel His grace and remission of sins in Christ, wishing to make them righteous and saved, as far as they would accept it in true faith. To this Dr. Huber responded: No, this would not be the true way to preach to the unbelievers, but he would begin by saying this: You have the grace of God, you have the righteousness of Christ, you have salvation. - Concilia Theologica Witebergensia, Frankfurt an Mayn 1664, p. 554.

Link - from Bethany Lutheran College!, E. Teigen's course:

http://hans.blc.edu/~eteigen/Theology_&_Church_History_files/Justification%20and%20Easter.pdf



---

AC V has left a new comment on your post "Readers Respond to the Wizard Mark Jeske: WELS LCM...":

Another Time of Grace gem:

One of the great gifts that our Bethlehem birthday boy came to bring is to switch on the lights for people, then and now, who are blind and stumbling around in darkness. - "Messiah is Coming"

http://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=10150369746438006&set=a.461286403005.263920.186323323005&type=1&theater



---

AC V has left a new comment on your post "Readers Respond to the Wizard Mark Jeske: WELS LCM...":

Medical quacks partners with Time of Grace? Posted under "We're excited to share this great video with you from Dr. Tom Potisk, friend and partner of Time of Grace and a member of Pastor Jeske's home church. Enjoy!"

Martha Torreson As an RN, ND who practices with significant emphasis on spiritual care, I was interested in what Dr. Potisk had to say...much good to encourage healthy living. But am somewhat concerned that he doesn't seem to accurately reflect a medical model (I understand he comes from a chiropractic practice), and of more concern is the subtle mixture of some New Age religious beliefs in his wholistic approach...lacking in glorifying God in these beings (our lives) that He created and that He redeemed, and that He will raise to live eternally in the New Heaven & New Earth! Just trying to add to this "healthy" discussion in Christian love, most sincerely!!

http://www.facebook.com/timeofgrace


---

AC V has left a new comment on your post "Readers Respond to the Wizard Mark Jeske: WELS LCM...":

Censorship at Time of Grace:

We're excited to share this great video with you from Dr. Tom Potisk, friend and partner of Time of Grace and a member of Pastor Jeske's home church. Enjoy!

Time of Grace, Spiritual Growth for You and Me www.youtube.com
http://www.wholehealthhealing.com/?p=478. Time of Grace is my favorite Christian spiritual growth media source.
Like · Comment · 7 hours ago ·

Debbie Johnson, Hannah Arneth, Jane Sternberg and 5 others like this. 2 shares

Tom Potisk Thanks TOG! My intention with this video/article is to introduce my fans to your wonderful mission. Keep up the fantastic work! 7 hours ago

Nancy-Elizabeth Wentzel Dr. Potisk, I see from your blog post on your website that you have a book called "Wellness Wins!" that promotes many of your holistic health philosophies. http://www.wholehealthhealing.com/?p=478

I was just wondering if all the spiritual wisdom in your book is strictly speaking from a Christian point of view, or if you draw on ideas from other faiths as well (I noticed a mention of Deepak Chopra, for example.) Thanks for any info you can provide! 4 hours ago

Elizabeth Woodfin Moll Thank you for your post, Emily - you are not the only one with serious concerns. 3 hours ago

Nancy-Elizabeth Wentzel Hey, where did Emily's post go? 3 hours ago

Craig Gerke Thank you for your previous post, Emily. It was deleted. I thought Time of Grace's social media policy was to engage in conversation. Apparently certain conversations are not welcome. Sad. 2 hours ago

Nancy-Elizabeth Wentzel Yes, I don't understand why Emily's post was deleted. It seemed like she was just raising some legitimate questions/ concerns about Dr. Potisk's teachings and spiritual stance. Would someone from Time of Grace be able to address this...? about an hour ago

Time of Grace Our policy, shortened, is to "Support each other as together we share the love of Jesus Christ" and to "promote community and HEALTHY discussion". We try to be very understanding with posts and opinions and comments, but if you do not adhere to that policy (i.e., supporting each other with healthy conversation) then we will remove your comments to protect the rest of our ToG family who is adhering to that policy with respect and Christ-like love. about an hour ago

Craig Gerke Thank you guys for the response! I'm not sure what the previous poster Emily said that was unhealthy?

http://www.facebook.com/timeofgrace

Parlow, Jeske, Kelm, Patterson.

---

AC V has left a new comment on your post "Mark Jeske, Time of Grace: Samuel Huber's False Do...":

Lest we lose the direct link to the UOJ "Messiah is Coming" book, here it is:

http://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=10150380994913006&set=a.461286403005.263920.186323323005&type=1&theater



And lest someone retort with a "But that's Subjective Justification," here's Time of Grace's mission as published on Facebook:

About
ToG is a non-profit outreach media ministry that was founded in 2001. The sole mission is to share the good news of Jesus Christ with as many people as possible through the most advanced technology available.

Wormhaven Gardening Book Preceded This Article by Decades

$
0
0
That is not me in the back yard,
just some Amish farmer stealing my secrets of Creation gardening.
The Wormhaven Gardening Book - free PDF, share it with anyone.

http://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2014/10/the-amish-farmer-replacing-pesticides-with-nutrition/380825/?single_page=true

“In the Second World War,” Samuel Zook began, “my ancestors were conscientious objectors because we don’t believe in combat.” The Amish farmer paused a moment to inspect a mottled leaf on one of his tomato plants before continuing. “If you really stop and think about it, though, when we go out spraying our crops with pesticides, that’s really what we’re doing. It’s chemical warfare, bottom line.”

Eight years ago, it was a war that Zook appeared to be losing. The crops on his 66-acre farm were riddled with funguses and pests that chemical treatments did little to reduce. The now-39-year-old talked haltingly about the despair he felt at the prospect of losing a homestead passed down through five generations of his family. Disillusioned by standard agriculture methods, Zook searched fervently for an alternative. He found what he was looking for in the writings of an 18-year-old Amish farmer from Ohio, a man named John Kempf.
Kempf is the unlikely founder of Advancing Eco Agriculture, a consulting firm established in 2006 to promote science-intensive organic agriculture. The entrepreneur’s story is almost identical to Zook’s. A series of crop failures on his own farm drove the 8th grade-educated Kempf to school himself in the sciences. For two years, he pored over research in biology, chemistry, and agronomy in pursuit of a way to save his fields. The breakthrough came from the study of plant immune systems which, in healthy plants, produce an array of compounds that are toxic to intruders. “The immune response in plants is dependent on well-balanced nutrition,” Kempf concluded, “in much the same way as our own immune system.” Modern agriculture uses fertilizer specifically to increase yields, he added, with little awareness of the nutritional needs of other organic functions. Through plant sap analysis, Kempf has been able to discover deficiencies in important trace minerals which he can then introduce into the soil. With plants able to defend themselves, pesticides can be avoided, allowing the natural predators of pests to flourish.

According to Kempf, the methods he developed through experimentation on his Ohio farm are now being used across North and South America, Hawaii, Europe, and Africa. The entrepreneur promises clients higher-quality crops, bigger yields, better taste, and produce that carries a lucrative “organic” label. Kempf, however, considers his process as an important improvement upon standard organic farming methods. “Organic certification is a negative-process certification,” he explained, “You can do nothing to your field and become certified. In contrast, we focus on actively restoring the balance found in natural systems.”


***

GJ - In case you missed it in the caption, here is your free copy of The Wormhaven Gardening Book. I may rewrite it with the newest information in it.

Table of Contents


The summaries parallel the material here -

In the human world, we send in the National Guard, to hold the line against criminals . But in soil, the levels of inorganic fertilizer being used, or the constant applications of toxic pesticide sprayed, mean the National Guard of the soil has been killed, too. We have to purposefully restore the beneficial biology that has been lost. Where will the new recruits come from? You have to add them—bacteria, fungi, protozoa, nematodes, earthworms, microarthropods— back to your soil. Roots of plants feed these beneficials, but to make sure that the beneficials get reestablished, care packages may need to be delivered. 

Soil Foodweb , Inc., helps people rapidly reestablish the biology that creates the foothold for health to come back into these systems; and this book describes these hardworking members of the front line of defense for your plants . Where do they live? Who are their families? How do you send in lunch packs, not toxics, to help the recruits along? 

Win back your soil’s health. Put nothing on your soil if you don’t know what it will do to the life under your feet . If there is “no information” about how something impacts the life in your soil, or if the material has never been tested to determine what it does to the organisms in your soil, don’t use the material. If you have already purchased the product, test it yourself.

Lewis, Wayne; Lowenfels, Jeff; (2010-09-10). Teaming with Microbes: The Organic Gardener's Guide to the Soil Food Web, Revised Edition (Kindle Locations 50-60). Timber Press. Kindle Edition. 


The article on the Amish farmer shows a poor grasp of the concepts, but a good idea about the results.

Modern agriculture, promoted by the federal government, has turned agricultural land into a toxic chemical waste dump. Gardening centers promote the same ideas and warn against natural methods of the past. 

As I wrote before, I avoided chemicals at the start because they cost so much. The gardener who talks up natural methods will generate donations of useful material, whether from horses, rabbits, or newspapers. Many projects have been funded by free materials. I needed a lot of newspapers for mulching the fence line, and I got them.

They get roses in return, so no one is short-changed.

Our helper said, "I worry about how we are going to do all this, but you read all the time. The bush bloomed, just like you said." He was referring to the second bloom of the crepe myrtle bush. Now it is producing seed and going dormant, so it will be a feeder and shelter for birds a storage locker for insect larvae.

The Amish article focuses on adding certain minerals to fix plant problems, certainly a good idea on a farm where the soil was once soaked in toxins. 

My approach has always been to create healthy soil, the foundation for healthy plants. If plants have everything they need, insect damage and plant disease will be minimal. 

The Rodale Press organic gardening books were my introduction to Creation gardening. The soil food web material is my second stage of education, far more detailed about life at the microscopic level. I am in a continuous state of wonder about the interaction of fungi, bacteria, protozoa, and nematodes.

Here is a summary of damage I saw while gardening without chemicals:
  • Cutworms on the borage, so I tossed the plant away. Roses were not affected.
  • Some chewing on the sunflowers, which was trivial once they grew more.
  • Some bugs in several gourds. All the rest were perfect.
  • A little eating on the white rose blooms, but no other roses.
  • A bit of black spot (a fungus) on two roses.


Pole beans and tomatoes were prolific. Roses were - and are - the talk of the town.




How Is Hillsong's Child Abuse Cover-up Different from LCMS-ELS-WELS?Why Were Hochmuth and Others Never Reported?

$
0
0
Frank and Hazel Houston, Hillsong Church
Press conference
Note this new story about globral Hillsong's changing stance on homosexuality.

http://boz.religionnews.com/2014/10/17/hillsong-church-abuse-unreported-perpetrator-rewarded/

Disturbing news surfaced last week that the founder and senior pastor of one of the largest churches in Australia, and a church well known in this country for its worship music, failed to report his father for sexually abusing children. Brian Houston of Hillsong Church, told the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Abuse that in October of 1999, he learned that an adult had reported being sexually abused as a child by leading Pentecostal pastor, Frank Houston.   The elder Houston was permanently suspended from preaching and given a “retirement package”. The victim was sent $10,000.00.   The church eventually uncovered up to eight more cases of child sexual abuse by Frank Houston before he passed away in 2004.   None of these cases were ever reported to law enforcement.
Does any of this pass the “smell good” test?  An adult comes forward to disclose being sexually victimized as a child by an influential minister who happens to be the father of another well-known minister.    The son’s immediate response to hearing about this crime is not to contact the police, but to confront his father who immediately confesses.  Even after the confession, Brian Houston doesn’t call the police, but instead attends a meeting with his father, an attorney, and the church CEO, where it is decided to offer the victim $10,000 as “final payment”. (Undoubtedly, a condition to receive this money would have been that the victim agree not to seek legal action against Houston or the church.)  When he was recently asked why he didn’t report this crime, Brian Houston remarked, “This is one of the things that made it complicated.  He was adamant he didn’t want any kind of police investigation or even a church investigation, he just wanted it dealt with and he just wanted to know that justice was going to happen.” The fact that a victim is an adult when they disclose being sexually assaulted as a child does not relieve those in leadership of the moral duty to report the crimes.  Think about it, what if an adult had stepped forward to report that as a child they witnessed a pastor commit murder?  What if there was evidence that this same pastor had actually murdered 8 other people?  Would there be any hesitation by church leaders to report these crimes to the authorities?  Even if the witness had requested them not to report?  Interestingly, Brian Houston never provides a reason for not reporting the other 8 cases of abuse perpetrated by his father.
Hillsong Church service - courtesy of Kristofer Palmvik via Flickr  (http://goo.gl/ZUGOnz)
Hillsong Church service – courtesy of Kristofer Palmvik via Flickr (http://goo.gl/ZUGOnz)
One of Houston’s victims told the Royal Commission, “I was so ashamed of the abuse that I kept it inside for many years and did not tell anyone.”  Survivors silenced by years of shame are often empowered to come forward and report after finding out about child sexual abuse investigations and learning that they are not alone.  The failure to report this crime certainly prevented the God ordained authorities in Australia and New Zealand from identifying and helping others who may also have been sexually assaulted by this confessed child molester.   Not only do child sexual abuse investigations empower survivors to come forward, but they often result in finding additional victims.  Recent reports claim that the number of boys sexually victimized by Frank Houston could be in the hundreds.  The failure to report these crimes means that we may never know the degree and extent of the crimes against children committed by this church leader.
Reporting this admitted abuse 14 years ago not only would have helped to identify more victims of Frank Houston, but it would have also provided the opportunity to provide the survivors much needed support and professional assistance.
Brian Houston recently said,
“We probably don’t know now many [victims].  We may never just how far it went.”
What he fails to acknowledge is that his calculated decision not to report these crimes is why we will never know the full extent of abuse and harm perpetrated by his father.    What he fails to acknowledge is that his calculated decision not to report these crimes fourteen years ago left untold numbers of abuse victims stranded and alone.   What he fails to acknowledge is that his calculated decision not to report these crimes ignored the lives of untold numbers of victims who lived through the dark and painful horrors of childhood abuse and are now drowning without hope as adults.
Brian Houston recently told the media that he had “never hidden it [abuse] from the church.”  That statement is hard to reconcile with the fact that in 2001, the Assemblies of God sent a letter notifying pastors that Frank Houston had been suspended because of committing a “serious moral failure”.  At no time was this “serious moral failure” ever identified as the rape of a child.  Even more concerning, the letter went on to say, “We cannot see any reason for this to be announced to your church or further afield.”  Isn’t the intentional use of vague words to mask a dark truth consistent with hiding abuse?  Isn’t a directive to keep silent consistent with hiding abuse?  One can only wonder why Brian Houston and other church leaders believed they had the authority to withhold such child endangering information from the very people who needed to know about it – parents and children.
The failure to report this crime to the authorities, offering money to the victim, giving the perpetrator a retirement package, and the hiding all of this from church members, was a seemingly very convenient way to make the whole matter go away.  Fortunately, survivors don’t go away.  God carries their cries to bring light and truth into the dark places – especially in the Church.
One of the lesser-known horrors of this nightmare is that Brian Houston comes from a “Christian” culture that seemingly prefers to remain silent when learning about children being sexually abused by a pastor.  The Daily Telegraph reports that the Assemblies of God in New Zealand “revealed that 50 of its pastors had known of Frank’s sex abuse.  None of them went to the police or did anything about it.”  Should we be surprised that Brian Houston reacted any differently when he found out?   Yes.  I think we should always be surprised when one who professes to follow Jesus turns his back on the vulnerable who have been exploited and abused.  The Jesus I know actually runs towards the vulnerable and gave His life for them.
Brian Houston recently commented that he was “very pleased” with the way he handled the disclosure of his father’s abuse.  Pleased? Really?  In a well-known scripture passage, Jesus tells us, “…whoever causes one of these little ones who believe in me to sin, it would be better for him to have a great millstone fastened around his neck and to be drowned in the depth of the sea.” [Matthew 18:6]   Instead, Frank Houston is given a retirement package, a victim is thrown $10,000 to keep quiet, a church is not told the truth, and perhaps hundreds of other victims are left unknown.   Pleased?  Really?
In his book, The Ragamuffin Gospel, Brennan Manning writes,
“The choice usually presented to Christians is not between Jesus and Barabbas.  No one wants to appear an obvious murderer. The choice to be careful about is between Jesus and Caiaphas.  And Caiaphas can fool us.  He is a very “religious” man.”
When we fail to report the heinous crimes against children, we fail to choose Jesus.  It’s time for churches to stop making the wrong choice.
Pleased? Really?
- See more at: http://boz.religionnews.com/2014/10/17/hillsong-church-abuse-unreported-perpetrator-rewarded/#sthash.keD6D3A0.dpuf

Burke's Law - Conservative Cleric Removed by Leftist Jesuit Pope Frank

$
0
0


http://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/conservative-us-cardinal-demoted-by-pope-he-tells-buzzfeed/ar-BB9OCXz


Cardinal Raymond Burke, the conservative American who holds the top position in the Vatican’s justice system, on Friday told BuzzFeed he was being demoted.
Burke, a former archbishop of St Louis, has publicly challenged Pope Francis on issues including abortion and homosexuality.
A preliminary report from the church’s extraordinary synod on the family, released on Monday, signalled a readiness to adopt a more conciliatory attitude towards homosexuality, divorce and other “irregular” family situations.
More than 200 bishops contributed to the report, which said: “Homosexuals have gifts and qualities to offer to the Christian community: are we capable of welcoming these people, guaranteeing to them a fraternal space in our communities?”
A day later, Burke expressed concern, and said a great number of synod fathers had objected to the contents of the report. He told the Catholic World Herald Francis was “long overdue” in making a definitive statement about suspected changes in the Catholic church.
“The pope, more than anyone else as the pastor of the universal church, is bound to serve the truth,” Burke told Buzzfeed. “The pope is not free to change the church’s teachings with regard to the immorality of homosexual acts or the insolubility of marriage or any other doctrine of the faith.”
Burke told Buzzfeed he was being transferred from his position as prefect of the supreme tribunal of the Apostolic Signatura to be patron of the sovereign military order of Malta, though he said he had not received a formal order. He assumed his role as chief guardian of canon law in June 2008, having been appointed by Pope Benedict XVI.
Benedict also appointed Burke to the Congregation for Bishops in 2009. Four years later, Francis removed Burke and 13 other bishops from the 18-man group. Days after he was removed from that post, in December 2013, Burke criticised Francis in an interview with the Catholic broadcaster EWTN.
“One gets the impression, or it’s interpreted this way in the media, that he thinks we’re talking too much about abortion, too much about the integrity of marriage as between one man and one woman,” Burke said. “But we can never talk enough about that.”
When National Catholic Reporter asked Burke who told him that he was being removed from the Vatican’s justice system, he replied: “Who do you think?”



***
GJ - Related - the big Catholic meeting is turning into a major rebellion against the pope. Stay tuned.

Here is more information.
WELS and Missouri have been playing
Two Steps Forward, One Step Back for decades.
Viewing all 11584 articles
Browse latest View live


<script src="https://jsc.adskeeper.com/r/s/rssing.com.1596347.js" async> </script>