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Reformation and All Saints, 2014

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The Festival of the Reformation, 2014 


Pastor Gregory L. Jackson

http://www.ustream.tv/channel/bethany-lutheran-worship

Bethany Lutheran Church, 10 AM Central Time


The Hymn # 261     Thine Honor Save Erhalt Uns Herr                  1.93
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 # 262 A Mighty Fortress                          1:86

Biblical Doctrine from the Reformation

The Communion Hymn # 308 Invited Lord                             1.63
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 # 347 I Lay My Sins                                                1.24

KJV Revelation 14:6 And I saw another angel fly in the midst of heaven, having the everlasting gospel to preach unto them that dwell on the earth, and to every nation, and kindred, and tongue, and people, 7 Saying with a loud voice, Fear God, and give glory to him; for the hour of his judgment is come: and worship him that made heaven, and earth, and the sea, and the fountains of waters.

KJV Matthew 11:12 And from the days of John the Baptist until now the kingdom of heaven suffereth violence, and the violent take it by force. 13 For all the prophets and the law prophesied until John. 14 And if ye will receive it, this is Elias, which was for to come. 15 He that hath ears to hear, let him hear.



Collect
O almighty, eternal God: We confess that we are poor sinners and cannot answer one of a thousand, when Thou contendest with us; but with all our hearts we thank Thee, that Thou hast taken all our guilt from us and laid it upon Thy dear Son Jesus Christ, and made Him to atone for it: We pray Thee graciously to sustain us in faith, and so to govern us by Thy Holy Spirit, that we may live according to Thy will, in neighborly love, service, and helpfulness, and not give way to wrath or revenge, that we may not incur Thy wrath, but always find in Thee a gracious Father, through Jesus Christ our Lord, who liveth and reigneth with Thee and the Holy Ghost, one true God, world without end. Amen.

The Everlasting Gospel

KJV Revelation 14:6 And I saw another angel fly in the midst of heaven, having the everlasting gospel to preach unto them that dwell on the earth, and to every nation, and kindred, and tongue, and people, 7 Saying with a loud voice, Fear God, and give glory to him; for the hour of his judgment is come: and worship him that made heaven, and earth, and the sea, and the fountains of waters.

Lutheran tradition holds that this selection from Revelation is about Martin Luther and the Reformation.

Without doubt, the Reformation was God's plan to renew Europe with the Gospel. In the past, an execution or two were enough to stifle any thoughts of reform in Medieval Europe. Huss is one example, and that worked well, 100 years before Luther. The Vatican even used Huss in a guilt-by-association questioning of Luther. The Reformer took the bait and agreed with Huss. That made Luther a criminal who identified with a past criminal burned at the stake.

Unlike the past, Luther had broad support. Some might point to the elector who shielded him from Rome. Or perhaps it was the newly invented (in the West) printing press, which spread Luther's writings cheaply. And yet another factor was the group of genius believers who contributed to the Reformation. 

Finally, the rise of Islam and its threatening position outside fo Vienna (1530s) meant the Lutherans were left alone to take root and never go away. Not even an army could stop the Reformation, because a Muslim army distracted the Roman Catholic opposition.

As anyone can see when examining the infinitelycomplexities of the ordinary garden, the extraordinary Reformation was not a series of accidents, but a confluence of forces unleashed by God to reshape Europe and give freedom to the world after a long period of oppression by the monarchy of Rome.

Reformation Doctrines
Trust in God's Word
The foundational Reformation doctrine is trust in God's Word, elevating it above all human institutions and man-made authorities, whether books or people. The Bible is seen as a unified truth, not a springboard for other philosophies when quoted selectively - and even deceptively.

For example, the Vatican pretended that the Genesis passage, the first Gospel, in Genesis 3:15 predicted that Mary's heel would crush Satan's head. They used that mistranslation (Latin) to promote Mary as the Immaculate Queen of Purgatory.

To make this doctrine widespread and well supported, the Reformers, Concordists, and post-Concordists (Gerhard) wrote extensively with great clarity and simplicity. It is not enough to declare something true of the Bible. The truth must also penetrate through institutions of learning, clergy, and lay leaders. 

For this to be so, people must allow God's Word to supplant all other "truths" in their minds. I know many clergy who consider themselves conservative opponents of all that is wrong today. However, they are willing to concede authority to the synod or concede authority to some favorite teachers, supplanting the Bible.

This is exactly the same as Dow Chemical doing their most dangerous work in an atmosphere of pure nitrogen. The gas replaces the normal mix of oxygen and other gasses to make fire and explosions impossible. When people accept the blanket of synodical nitrogen, they keep any new reformation from happening. The lit match goes out in synodical nitrogen. The Word is not allowed to do its work. So people would rather suffocate in the nitrogen of their synod than risk the cross that always accompanies teaching the Word of God.

Trust in the Efficacy of God's Word
Trust in the truth of God's Word means trusting in its power and effectiveness. Almost no one will mention this special Biblical word - efficacy - in their writings today. They have a fond attachment to God's Word, but they water that down to almost nothing by combining it with human tricks, schemes, and gimmicks.

The efficacy of God's Word means whatever happens from teaching and preaching the Word will be good. That means division, difficulties, and bearing the cross. But it also means declaring the Gospel of forgiveness, conversions, spiritual renewal, and everlasting life.

Faith versus Works
So many have their little cheering sessions for "faith" on Reformation Sunday, but they short-change the meaning of the Biblical teaching about faith.

There are two justifications. One is the true justification of the Bible, justification by faith, as old as Genesis 15, with Abraham as the example. Romans 4 and Galatians teach this clearly, and Jesus taught it always, especially emphasized in the Gospel of John, the doctrinal Gospel.

The other is justification without faith, which must be justification by works, in other words - justification by the Law (whether by Moses or man-made laws and tradition).

John 6 - Then said they unto him, What shall we do, that we might work the works of God? 29Jesus answered and said unto them, This is the work of God, that ye believe on Him whom He hath sent. 

The constant war against justification by faith, which takes many forms, is proof that it is one of the three main attacks against Christianity (against the humanity of Christ, against His divinity, against justification by faith - Luther).

Trust in the Word of God means trusting that Jesus has died for our sins and risen from the dead. He taught in John 16 that the Holy Spirit would convict the world of sin - because they do not believe on Me.

That is the other side of John 6. The work of God is to believe on Him Who sent the Savior. The foundational sin is not believing on the Savior - that is - having complete trust in His atonement.This faith in Him brings all the blessings of the Gospel, from the forgiveness of sin and eternal salvation to the fruits of the Spirit and joy in our lives.

It is so sad that people want to put on their Medieval chains again and deny justification by faith, because in opposing it they must lay claim to their works - they went to the right school, joined the right synod (or district, or circuit, or focus group), or had the right relatives.
Tis good God did not need that for the Reformation. His leaders went to the wrong schools, had the wrong relatives, and even took monastic vows while working for a Catholic university. However, God placed faith in their hearts through their study of the Word, since they knew by that time that something was horribly wrong.

The lay leaders did not back away but insisted on signing the Augsburg Confession and risking their lives and their regions, since a Catholic army was ready to attack at any moment.

Trust in the Invisible and Visible Word - The Means of Grace
I know a number of Evangelicals who trust in the Word, and others who trust in gimmicks. The latest thing is to rely on a "worship leader" a paid entertainer who pleases or displeases his audience each Sunday.

Sadly, Lutherans are clamoring to join this confused debacle of competing "worship teams," many of which travel around and charge big fees, though Koine at $3,000 is certainly a champion of non self-sacrifice.

The Lutheran Reformation taught the efficacy of the Word in preaching, teaching (invisible Word), and in the Sacraments (visible Word). 

The works salesmen get the message all wrong about the Parable of the Sower. They say, "We must reap in abundance or we are not doing a good job." Instead, the Bible teaches sowing in abundance (Mark 4, 2 Corinthians 8 and 9).

Believing Lutherans sow in abundance because the Word is a living seed that will always have an effect. One effect is opposition. Another is indifference. Because of indifference, we will have increasing persecution of the Gospel in America. 

The Word, whether invisible or visible, carries Christ to us and to our audience, whether in a worship service or in a conversation. Therefore, believers do not preach themselves but Christ and His mercy and forgiveness.

I have classes where students confess great and terrible sins of the past, so I am happy to tell them that Christ died for great and terrible sins, too. In fact, in each case the Gospel has reclaimed their wasted lives, before I have anything to say. I want to confirm that the Gospel is for all sin, and not just for petty sins, ones we think we can conquer. 

Proclaiming the Gospel is a teaching of grace and forgiveness. Grace does not oppose faith, as some imagine (bad training). Grace is God's nature, so He forgives if we believe on Him. When people quote Romans 4 for UOJ, I simply quote Romans 4 for the truth of God's Word. Read Romans 4:25! - by all means, but Romans 4:24 with it.

Romans 4





The Reformation - Every Sunday

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Unlike the synod franchise units, the Church of the Augsburg Confession celebrates the Reformation year around.

Critics says, "But you are only one tiny congregation. You are nothing. No one reads your blog. You broadcast from a rented room."

Their talk is a thrilling reminder that they have not opened the Bible in recent decades. Otherwise they would remember that Jesus was born in a rented room, so that cannot be all bad.

Besides that, the Church of the Augsburg Confession is not limited to one congregation. Congregations belong, by their teaching and practice if they:

  • Teach justification by faith and reject Pietism's UOJ.
  • Treat the sacraments as the Visible Word.
  • Use the historic liturgy and scorn the Pentecostal jazz hams.
  • Choose Lutheran hymns predominately for the worship service.
  • Offer sermons rather than coaching talks.
  • Dress appropriately instead of wearing clothes fit for changing the crankcase oil.


If people either love or loathe the entertainment-style seeker services promoted by Jeske, Valleskey,
Tiefel, and Mark Schroeder, they should visit a local Pentecostal church. Really. I am not kidding. Everyone should visit a Pentecostal congregation every so often.

This is what they will find at the Pentecostal church, so they should either feel at home or suffer an attack of acid reflux:

  1. A gourmet coffee bar in the nave.
  2. ATMs for i-donations in the hallway - near the coffee bar.
  3. A stage instead of a chancel. A cheap shower curtain used as a backdrop. It may fall over.
  4. A pit band set up on the stage, because they are the main show - the Worship Team.
  5. No pulpit. Likely no cross.
  6. Enormous screens in the front and back of the auditorium.
  7. A minister wearing a suit, but perhaps a Hawaiian shirt and jeans.
  8. Women teaching and preaching.
  9. No baptismal area (probably hidden away).
  10. No altar or something so tiny no would would suspect it is one.


Homework done? Now you will see that the congregational model promoted and funded by the LCMS, WELS, ELS, and CLC (sic) is modern Pentecostal.




Arkansas Voters Pick Cotton

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Tom Cotton is a combat veteran,
unlike the President - who combats veterans.



Combat veteran Tom Cotton (R) is far ahead of Mark Pryor in the early voting. We heard Mark Pryor at the Walmart meeting some time ago. Last year, Tom Cotton spoke at Ecclesia College, with several dozen Duggars present. I met him and wished him well, "Even though you went to the wrong school."

Cotton grew up on a farm and went to Harvard Law. He was mentioned as the next Senator as soon as he was elected Congressman (first term). We were talking to Alice Walton and her friend from the U. of Arkansas when the subject came up.

If Cotton is elected, the entire delegation to DC will be Republican instead of Democrat. Arkansas has remained the most Democrat state of the South, and the new governor (Asa Hutchinson) may also be replacing a Democrat.

The future governor's wife was at a David Barton lecture sponsored by Ecclesia College recently. We are in a heavily populated and prosperous area of a rural state, so everyone is always coming through here. Thanks to Walmart Saturday Morning Meetings, the celebrities, entertainers, and newsmakers make regular stops and speak. My favorite was Hugh Jackman, because he stayed after to shake hands with the audience, after leading the audience in Christmas hymns.
LI and I walked over to shake hands with Jackman when he stayed after to shake hands with the audience at the Walmart Christmas meeting. He led the Walmart choir in Christmas hymns and wowed everyone with his voice, but even more with his warmth toward a little girl who came up to give him a drawing.

Hugh Jackman was a star of musicals before he was Wolverine,
so he starred in Les Miserables.

Cotton-Picking Arkansas Voters - 100% GOP for All Statewide Offices

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Tom Cotton replaced Mark Pryor, who was a key
vote for ObamaCare.

Arkansas Governor -
2547 of 2654 precincts reporting (96%)
Last updated: 2014-11-05 01:51:52
Asa Hutchinson
465,072
55%
Mike Ross
348,102
42%
Frank Gilbert
16,059
2%
Joshua Drake
9,536
1%
Arkansas U.S. Senate -
2547 of 2654 precincts reporting (96%)
Last updated: 2014-11-05 01:51:52
Tom Cotton
473,297
57%
Mark Pryor
330,209
39%
Nathan LaFrance
16,975
2%
Mark Swaney
16,545
2%
U.S. House District 1 -
740 of 744 precincts reporting (99%)
Last updated: 2014-11-05 04:04:57
Rick Crawford
127,153
64%
Jackie McPherson
64,260
32%
Brian Willhite
8,705
4%
U.S. House District 2 -
391 of 391 precincts reporting (100%)
Last updated: 2014-11-05 00:37:48
French Hill
123,014
52%
Patrick Henry Hays
103,379
44%
Debbie Standiford
10,581
4%
U.S. House District 4 -
1023 of 1036 precincts reporting (99%)
Last updated: 2014-11-05 01:51:52
Bruce Westerman
109,140
54%
James Lee Witt
86,768
43%
Ken Hamilton
7,457
4%
Lieutenant Governor -
2547 of 2654 precincts reporting (96%)
Last updated: 2014-11-05 01:58:17
Tim Griffin
474,406
57%
John Burkhalter
319,564
39%
Christopher Olson
34,655
4%
Attorney General -
2547 of 2654 precincts reporting (96%)
Last updated: 2014-11-05 01:58:17
Leslie Rutledge
426,043
52%
Nate Steel
356,480
43%
Aaron Cash
42,451
5%
Secretary of State -
2547 of 2654 precincts reporting (96%)
Last updated: 2014-11-05 01:58:17
Mark Martin
500,567
61%
Susan Inman
289,270
35%
Jacob Holloway
35,640
4%
AR Treasurer -
2547 of 2654 precincts reporting (96%)
Last updated: 2014-11-05 01:58:17
Dennis Milligan
461,753
56%
Karen Garcia
305,064
37%
Chris Hayes
51,973

WELS and ELS Have Confessional Meeting To Discuss the Latest Arrests

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They did not provide an adequate photo of the group,
so I had to Photoshop it, to make it larger.


WELS/ELS got 24 people together for a meeting they chose to call "confessional." Yes, there is so much to confess, so much to hide.

Their original photo was too tiny to be used.
Ichabod effect?

The Little Sect on the Prairie got to send the same amount of men as their larger, more abusive sister sect - 12.

They are a treasure, marching lockstep against justification by faith, pouring funds into Pentecostal style entertainment venues, covering up scandals and crimes.


“The ELS/WELS Forum is a treasure. We are able to see how genuine Lutheran brothers are handling similar situations, and we gain a profound appreciation for the diverse fruits of the Spirit as he gives them to the church,” says Rev. Paul Prange, administrator for ministerial education and global cross-cultural outreach.

Sassy Cues and Signals

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My friends enjoy Sassy posts. She woke me up early, so I decided to write about her signals and cues to us.

Yesterday was a banner day for her. Walking in the rain, she found three squirrels to chase and nearly caught one. She learned early from a dog pal that evasive maneuvers can be countered, so she baffled and startled one squirrel, which made for a long race.

Sassy looks at me when she wants permission to cross the road. Every so often she violates the rule and we have a talk. I hold her chin up and explain the importance of asking permission. She obeys hand signals and loves to run at me when I wiggle my index finger.

Our streets are so quiet most of the time that she is tempted to think the road is just another sidewalk.

Another day she saw a new person drive up at our neighbor's. She waited and looked up at me. I said, "Go ahead and cross." She ran across the street, missed the girl getting out of the car, but got a thorough double-ear massage from the girl's father. Sassy walked away grinning, and he said, "She got what she wanted."

Sassy has a lot of vocal cues. We were warned that she was a talker. More than that, she is a manager. She knows how to finesse us into doing her will.

For treats, she has various levels of cues.

  • Murmuring and muttering.
  • Rotating her tail slowly. This is reserved for treats.
  • If I miss that one, she rotates twice as fast, striking the bed.
  • For emergencies, she moves next to me to make the tail strike my arm as I am working. It is difficult to write with a tail methodically striking my arm.


Chris got some supper for herself, so Sassy posed as the starving puppy. That did not work for getting nibbles, so Sassy gave me gentle paw jabs to force some donations. That was so funny that I went along with it and urged some sharing.

Sassy and I have quite a few discussions. If Chris thinks we should go out for a walk, a conversation with Sassy usually erupts after a delay. Sassy begins to bark loudly and sounds irritated. It is the Bad Daddy speech. I cannot win at that stage. If I defend myself, she barks even more. Once I give in, the happy barks start, and they insure our exit outside. The noise is just too great.

If I stop to talk to a neighbor for too long, Sassy barks loudly for me to hurry up. "Do you have an appointment somewhere?" She barks, "Yes, hurry." If I answer that, she has another set of barks for me.

However, at certain locations she takes on the role of watch dog. She sits up straight and faces the neighborhood, looking around intently and listening for all the various noises. Sassy adjusts her position to make sure she has complete coverage, even when resting from walking and running.

All the kids call out her name, and Sassy goes running to them for some petting. The dogs who come out the front door have warned her away somewhat, but Sassy is the dominant dog. Once she has settled a dog's hash, she will not even acknowledge the animal.

Sassy has a strange way of doing this. She will approach the dog quietly and open up with barking at close range, or she will run full speed at a fence while barking. Both tactics almost cause canine heart attacks and furious counter-barking. After that, Sassy no longer sees or hears them.





Martin Luther College (WELS) Students - Loud and Proud Videos

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CAF is the cafeteria - Concord is an undergraduate dorm at MLC.







Some other MLC videos are found at this link.

---

Greggy,

Your latest post only goes to show that MLC students are clever and funny.

Oh, love the whole "all organic gardening all the time" format.  What next, a series of articles about health food stores being better than the Wal-Mart vegetable department?

Pastor Joel Lillo, Fox Valley WELS

revlillo@gmail.com

***

GJ - Stealing music is so clever, as the lawless legalists of WELS often claim.

Winter Gardening and Blog Lists

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I was adjusting the Lutheran blog list, but used the wrong button and erased it. I revised the list as Interesting Blogs and Websites, because those are the edifying ones I read. A few others are handy for gasps of dismay, feelings of revulsion, and head-shaking ("Lutheran" all), but there is no need to promote them.

I included Virtue Online for the latest in Episcopalian/Anglican news.

Church Mouse has always been a source of great material and insights. One of the posts I copied from him is an all-time favorite.

The same is true for our friend Dr. Lito Cruz, who has another all-time favorites copied from Extra Nos.

If a blog becomes inactive, I take it off until posts begin again.

The two lists (theology and gardening) will rise and fall with the tide, as new sticky posts get features. I have a backlog of books to promote.

Trust in God's Creation - The Marvels Began Without Us and Continue Without Us - But We Can Do Our Little Part

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Mrs. Ichabod went to Hobby Lobby, so I went over to a nearby serious hardware store, the ideal place for tools. I bought a rake and tried it out around the crepe myrtle bush in the front yard. The soil creatures under the bush have been busy using up anything I put there for mulch - mushroom compost, shredded cyprus, mulched grass, and clippings from the bush itself.

We have sun today and a steady breeze, but the wind does not blow away the maple leaves that I raked up under the bush. The leaves interlock and stay in place. They will insulate and shade the soil while stopping wind and water erosion. Soil creatures (earthworms, bacteria, protozoa, nematodes, and fungi) need food and water. Mulch provides the food and holds water.

I had a big box of newspapers, easy to lift. After 3-4 inches of rain soaked into the box, lifting became a major chore. The difference is water held by the spongy nature of newsprint. Leaves are no different. They are like torn pieces of newsprint, but more artistic and pleasant to see blowing around.

I added Tending My Garden to the list, because she follows organic gardening methods. She advocates organic amendments for the soil, which is the non-mystery of Creation gardening. God works out all the details at a microscopic level.

A fungus knows how to trap and kill a nematoday,
something most gardeners do not realize.


Fungus is one example. One fungus will attract a nematode (worm) with chemicals, then use several cells to spring a trap. Fungi do not have mouth parts, so they dissolve their way into an organism and absorb the chemical components for their own use and to swap with plant roots.

Another fungus attracts nematodes with a chemical and stuns it with another chemical. Next it dissolves the nematode, moving its wormy nutrition along its incredibly long (for a fungus) body.

This graphic is a good summary for those who have read the material,
but otherwise as useful as an auto mechanic's guide for new drivers.

I like reading the small print in gardening books, the elaborate explanations, which are simplified for the non-scientists, a small indication of the infinite number of complexities and relationships in God's Creation, all dependent on each other.



Reader Enjoys Sassy, Gardening, and Theology Posts

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Lena


Enjoyed the latest Sassy-Sue post on cues and signals. Our Lena is much the same, always 'reading' us, our voices or actions. She likes to be one step ahead of what we do, clearing the path for us and keeping us safe.

She got a bit confused by the time change last week. Woke up at 4am instead of 5 and wanted to go out. Disappeared for a bit, then showed up with a great big rabbit, killed and partially gutted for our pleasure.

Here she is above, with a recipe idea, and also a shot of her very gentle and kindly brother Jakob. As you can imagine, our home place is pretty secure from cats, skunks, racoons and all other assorted intruders.

Jakob

Thanks for the entertaining/informative posts, whether dogs or gardens or theology!

Hybrid Tea Roses versus Knockout Roses

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Knockout roses bloom faster than anyone can imagine.


Knockout Roses are a popular variety of shrub roses. I see them all over this area, and most of them are neglected - the American approach to roses.

All roses need mulching and pruning. They do not need spraying and fertilizing. Total neglect means they are under-watered (with no mulch to hold water in the soil) and under-fed, with no organic material to rot into the soil. Since cutting new roses will make them bloom (John 15:1-10), letting them back in the sun means they will be increasingly unsightly, even after a good rain.

Hybrid tea roses are the second main group of roses, although there are many more. I joined the American Rose Society so I could keep up with the latest plants being offered. January is the time when gardeners get to plan and buy in advance, so I wanted to be ready.

Knockout roses bloom profusely and do not get blackspot, the fungus that attacks rose leaves and leaves the plant weak and ugly. The buds and blooms are smaller, but their profusion makes up for this. I have the original magenta Knockout rose, which is still producing roses in early November. The pink version is not so prolific but has kinder stems - fewer prickles. The white Knockouts did not really grow stronger until late in the season. They are five-petal roses with tiny buds, the hardest to cut for vases since the blooms do better on the bush than in an arrangement.

Hybrid tea roses have many advantages over shrub roses. Hybrid tea blooms are larger with various advantages in color and fragrance, though few roses have everything in abundance. Usually one key characteristic is slighted - aroma, immunity from disease, foliage, or frequency of blooms.

The Knockouts make me impatient for the hybrid tea roses to bloom. The hybrid tea buds form much more slowly and open at a glacial pace. The five sepals enclosing the bud have to be open for the bud to complete its blooming after being cut. That also seems to take forever after cutting Knockouts like crazy and having even more to share. Harvesting a bud too soon means a bud will be sitting in a vase, but no bloom will form.

My best bud story was this one. Our neighbors love roses - and who doesn't. Mrs. Right (who lives ot the right of us) loves to get them. She was coming home when I was pruning. I had a long-developing bud at the top of a rose bush, one that kept aiming at seven feet all summer. I cut one long-stemmed bud, knowing the sepals were fully open. I gave to her to take into the house. She was not impressed. I said, "Give it some time and you will have a beautiful bloom."

She told Mrs. I later, "I didn't think much of that rose, but it bloomed in the vase, just like your husband said it would." A bud like that will open up over a period of days and stay beautiful for many days more as it continues to open up. Hybrid team blooms are normally very large and showy. If the buds are especially large, the blooms will be extremely large.

I have two hybrid tea buds (rescued from the frost) slowly opening in the vase, next to some Knockouts we cut for the altar on Sunday. These have thin petals, so they look like colored tissue paper as they open.

The Double Delight rose, a hybrid tea, has the color and the fragrance.

Gardens for Children Keep Them Away from the Rough Crowd

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The rough crowd will make the wrong impression
if baby watches too much TV. The solution? - gardening.


We are going to have an overflow garden this spring. Our helper asked about using rose canes to start his own roses. I visited a home in Midland where a retired couple rooted rose canes in water and planted them, so they could have more of the roses they liked the best. They had 100 - 200 roses in their yard.

Another way is to order seed by the pound instead of the packet. That provides enough seed for every purpose and plenty to spare. When ordering in bulk, the cost difference between 1/2 pound and a pound is slight. That is why they bring in colored packets of 10 seeds at a time to Lowe's, Home Depot, and other home and garden spots. They are minting money.


Sure, he makes a lot of money,
but is this a good way to spend his life?


I buy seed packets willingly - only when they go on sale - at a dime a packet. That is a good way to experiment with new varieties late in the season. Ordering packets by mail is a double-theft, since the distributors add so much for shipping. They will send them fast for even more money, which is pretty strange, since a lot of seed can be mailed Priority for $5 a box.

Those like me--who buy 25 pound bags of black oil sunflower seeds for the birds squirrels--know that seed can be very cheap. In fact, the seed that volunteers from feeding will produce quite a few new sunflowers in the spring, germinating at the right time. No doubt squirrels plant them - just to be sure - while eating more than their share.

A large bag of giant, striped sunflower seeds will produce a nine-foot tall wall of sunflowers. That can be used to box in a play area for kids, so they can hide. Children like to go inside and call out to their parents. "Can you see me?" Parents - "No, where are you?" Laughter.

The giant disks can be harvested for roasting the seeds. Parents - make a circle with your arms. That is how big a sunflower head can be, if giant, striped sunflowers are planted. The seeds are much bigger. The stems are almost wooden. The leaves are enormous, and the seedheads gigantic.

Pole beans and edible pod peas can be grown up in tepee fashion, with a straw floor. Children go inside the door and pick beans or peas hanging from the structure. All it takes is a tall pole in the ground, a wire border fence for the perimeter, and string up to the top of the pole. If I could build that, anyone can.

A bird trapeze is a lot of fun, year around. Birds love to perch near food, but often farther away from human observation. Once again, I built my own, even though I am allergic to such projects. I screwed in s-hooks in the eaves, hung two chains, and stretched a small metal rod between the chains. Birds landed and swung there all the time (New Ulm) after feeding from the outside ledge. I scattered sunflower seeds on the ledge all winter. The more brutal the winter, the more popular my offerings.
The birds soon became used to us watching from the picture window, a short distance away.

Children like to grow food they enjoy eating, and having their own garden will make many vegetables more appealing to them. They may not like tomatoes that much, but cherry tomatoes are sweeter, easy to grow, and easy to eat outside. A green pepper growing outside is far more appealing that one wrinkling up in the fridge.

"Would you like some green pepper, Billie?" Answer - "No!"

"Stay out of the green peppers in the garden, Billie." Response - "Can I have just one?"

Mrs. I and Little Ichabod always liked raw beans, so we never cooked them. They ate them all the time. We all edible pod peas in the spring until they became loathsome to us. We gave them away to friends, which meant we had even more peas growing. The  pet rabbits ate extra growth, and that meant even more peas.

Weeds were sown among the good crops -
no doubt about it.


Berries are great fun for everyone. All creatures large and small love them all. Initially the creatures seem to get the best ones, but soon there are plenty for everyone. Some raspberry canes bear twice a summer, and they love to spread through root systems.

Wild berries like gooseberries will grow well on their own. I have bright, red wild strawberries still producing in our backyard now, on November 8th - thanks to water and mulch.

I will try domestic strawberries on straw bales in the spring. I did not like the experience of growing them on soil. They fed the ants more than anyone else.

Gardening is a great way to find out how all of God's creatures work together. Creation gardening means learning how the overlooked and despised (weeds, insects, spiders, fungi, earthworms) make our lives better and healthier.

Don't let baby join the KISS Army.

Creation - The Watch Found on the Trail

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The Henry Graves Super-Complication Watch may sell for $17 million.

The Anglican clergyman William Paley argued for intelligent design by comparing a stone found on a path outside to a watch found in the same place. The stone could have arrived by chance, but the watch is quite different. See M. Behe, Darwin's Black Box, p. 211.

The watch above is going on the auction block at the ultimate watch, with 24 complications, designed to be far more complex than the one ordered by Packard (luxury car maker) with only 16 complications.

If I understand it correctly, a complication in a watch is an added luxury, such as a timer, stopwatch, and moon phases. If one of those fails, the rest still work, I imagine.


William Paley argued from the watch found on the trail.

However, the complications in a plant cell are fatal for the cell when one function fails - and there are many functions of great complexity.

Imagine if you will, a rose seed. Roses start out as seeds unless one is rooting the canes in a glass of water.

The rose seed is complex on its own, but the plant it forms has many different cells carrying out different functions. As the rose grows, assuming no grafting, the cells must form roots, leaves, stems, flowers, prickles, and hips. Rosehips are the fruit of roses and contain the seeds, not unlike apples, which come from the same large family.

Each individual complexity shows design beyond our capacity to explain it. The root tip cells know how to attract fungi to give it food, by offering carbon credits to the fungus. The rose flower attracts pollinating critters to fertilize the seed.

The larger functions astound us, but the microscopic ones should stun us. Here is one plant cell, revealing many different mechanical and chemical functions operating all at once.




This pole bean has many different cells -
stem, skin, seeds, and flowers - for starters.

Some of my bean pods were old and over the hill this fall, so I dropped them into the mulch to be absorbed by soil creatures and turned into new plants later. A pile of old bean pods can become a tomato plant in time - through decomposition, but humans cannot take a pot of beans and make tomato soup from them.

Psalm 104 King James Version (KJV)

104 Bless the Lord, O my soul. O Lord my God, thou art very great; thou art clothed with honour and majesty.
Who coverest thyself with light as with a garment: who stretchest out the heavens like a curtain:
Who layeth the beams of his chambers in the waters: who maketh the clouds his chariot: who walketh upon the wings of the wind:
Who maketh his angels spirits; his ministers a flaming fire:
Who laid the foundations of the earth, that it should not be removed for ever.
Thou coveredst it with the deep as with a garment: the waters stood above the mountains.
At thy rebuke they fled; at the voice of thy thunder they hasted away.
They go up by the mountains; they go down by the valleys unto the place which thou hast founded for them.
Thou hast set a bound that they may not pass over; that they turn not again to cover the earth.
10 He sendeth the springs into the valleys, which run among the hills.
11 They give drink to every beast of the field: the wild asses quench their thirst.
12 By them shall the fowls of the heaven have their habitation, which sing among the branches.
13 He watereth the hills from his chambers: the earth is satisfied with the fruit of thy works.
14 He causeth the grass to grow for the cattle, and herb for the service of man: that he may bring forth food out of the earth;
15 And wine that maketh glad the heart of man, and oil to make his face to shine, and bread which strengtheneth man's heart.
16 The trees of the Lord are full of sap; the cedars of Lebanon, which he hath planted;
17 Where the birds make their nests: as for the stork, the fir trees are her house.
18 The high hills are a refuge for the wild goats; and the rocks for the conies.
19 He appointed the moon for seasons: the sun knoweth his going down.
20 Thou makest darkness, and it is night: wherein all the beasts of the forest do creep forth.
21 The young lions roar after their prey, and seek their meat from God.
22 The sun ariseth, they gather themselves together, and lay them down in their dens.
23 Man goeth forth unto his work and to his labour until the evening.
24 Lord, how manifold are thy works! in wisdom hast thou made them all: the earth is full of thy riches.
25 So is this great and wide sea, wherein are things creeping innumerable, both small and great beasts.
26 There go the ships: there is that leviathan, whom thou hast made to play therein.
27 These wait all upon thee; that thou mayest give them their meat in due season.
28 That thou givest them they gather: thou openest thine hand, they are filled with good.
29 Thou hidest thy face, they are troubled: thou takest away their breath, they die, and return to their dust.
30 Thou sendest forth thy spirit, they are created: and thou renewest the face of the earth.
31 The glory of the Lord shall endure for ever: the Lord shall rejoice in his works.
32 He looketh on the earth, and it trembleth: he toucheth the hills, and they smoke.
33 I will sing unto the Lord as long as I live: I will sing praise to my God while I have my being.
34 My meditation of him shall be sweet: I will be glad in the Lord.
35 Let the sinners be consumed out of the earth, and let the wicked be no more. Bless thou the Lord, O my soul. Praise ye the Lord.

Not from The Onion Satire Website - But from The CORE - Conflict Resolution

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Who has caused more conflict than The CORE?

Who pushed their over-funded and under-supervised carbuncle on Green Bay, one block from a real urban ministry?

Who excommunicated a St. Peter's member for telling the truth about plagiarism when Glende lied about it?

Who sued the husband of their former staffer for telling the truth about abuse, porn, and drinking on the job?

Who received massive funding while Glende was urging his Savoy debacle to quietly close the doors?

All Saints Sunday, 2014. Matthew 5:1-10. The Beatitudes

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Many times we lose our loved ones
before old age.


All Saints Sunday, 2014
Pastor Gregory L. Jackson


Bethany Lutheran Church, 10 AM Central Time


The Hymn # 371     Jesus Thy Blood                   4:6
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 # 463            For All the Saints                   4:31 

Blessed Are They...


The Communion Hymn #305            Soul, Adorn Thyself             4:23 
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 # 657            Beautiful Savior            4:24  

KJV Revelation 7:2 And I saw another angel ascending from the east, having the seal of the living God: and he cried with a loud voice to the four angels, to whom it was given to hurt the earth and the sea, 3 Saying, Hurt not the earth, neither the sea, nor the trees, till we have sealed the servants of our God in their foreheads. 4 And I heard the number of them which were sealed: and there were sealed an hundred andforty and four thousand of all the tribes of the children of Israel. 5 Of the tribe of Juda were sealed twelve thousand. Of the tribe of Reuben were sealed twelve thousand. Of the tribe of Gad were sealed twelve thousand. 6 Of the tribe of Aser were sealed twelve thousand. Of the tribe of Nepthalim were sealed twelve thousand. Of the tribe of Manasses were sealed twelve thousand. 7 Of the tribe of Simeon were sealed twelve thousand. Of the tribe of Levi were sealed twelve thousand. Of the tribe of Issachar were sealed twelve thousand. 8 Of the tribe of Zabulon were sealed twelve thousand. Of the tribe of Joseph were sealed twelve thousand. Of the tribe of Benjamin were sealed twelve thousand. 9 After this I beheld, and, lo, a great multitude, which no man could number, of all nations, and kindreds, and people, and tongues, stood before the throne, and before the Lamb, clothed with white robes, and palms in their hands; 10 And cried with a loud voice, saying, Salvation to our God which sitteth upon the throne, and unto the Lamb. 11 And all the angels stood round about the throne, and about the elders and the four beasts, and fell before the throne on their faces, and worshipped God, 12 Saying, Amen: Blessing, and glory, and wisdom, and thanksgiving, and honour, and power, and might, be unto our God for ever and ever. Amen. 13 And one of the elders answered, saying unto me, What are these which are arrayed in white robes? and whence came they? 14 And I said unto him, Sir, thou knowest. And he said to me, These are they which came out of great tribulation, and have washed their robes, and made them white in the blood of the Lamb. 15 Therefore are they before the throne of God, and serve him day and night in his temple: and he that sitteth on the throne shall dwell among them. 16 They shall hunger no more, neither thirst any more; neither shall the sun light on them, nor any heat. 17 For the Lamb which is in the midst of the throne shall feed them, and shall lead them unto living fountains of waters: and God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes.

KJV Matthew 5:1 And seeing the multitudes, he went up into a mountain: and when he was set, his disciples came unto him: 2 And he opened his mouth, and taught them, saying,
Blessed are the poor in spirit: for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.
Blessed are they that mourn: for they shall be comforted.
Blessed are the meek: for they shall inherit the earth.
Blessed are they which do hunger and thirst after righteousness: for they shall be filled.
Blessed are the merciful: for they shall obtain mercy.
Blessed are the pure in heart: for they shall see God.
Blessed are the peacemakers: for they shall be called the children of God.
10 Blessed are they which are persecuted for righteousness' sake: for theirs is the kingdom of heaven. 11Blessed are ye, when men shall revile you, and persecute you, and shall say all manner of evil against you falsely, for my sake. 12 Rejoice, and be exceeding glad: for great is your reward in heaven: for so persecuted they the prophets which were before you.


ALL SAINTS' DAY

O almighty and everlasting God, who through Thine only-begotten and beloved Son, Jesus Christ, wilt sanctify all Thine elected and beloved: Give us grace to follow their faith, hope, and charity, that we together with them may obtain eternal life: through Thy Son, Jesus Christ, our Lord, who liveth and reigneth with Thee and the Holy Ghost, one true God, world without end. Amen.



Blessed Are They...



Lenski:
The Beatitudes read like a Psalm; μακάριοι at once recalls the blessed of Ps. 1:1. “Blessed!” intoned again and again, sounds like bells of heaven, ringing down into this unblessed world from the cathedral spires of the kingdom inviting all men to enter. The word, like its opposite “woe,” is neither a wish regarding a coming condition, nor a description of a present condition, but a judgment pronounced upon the persons indicated, stating that they must be considered fortunate. The form is almost exclamatory: “O the blessedness of those who,” etc.! And it is Jesus who renders this judgment, which is, therefore, absolutely true although all the world may disagree. Each of the eight judgments is at once established by revealing in what the blessedness actually consists; and the eighth judgment is even doubled, and its blessedness is unveiled in two strong statements. All this blessedness is spiritual, each part of it coming from the great Messianic kingdom, true soul-blessedness, a rich possession now but with a glorious promise of still greater riches—the very opposite of the word’s happiness which is poisoned already in the bud and soon blasted forever. “Blessed” means joy for those concerned. But this is the heavenly way: the great gifts of the kingdom are ours, insuring a constant flow of joy, so that, even if for a moment we be sad and sorrowful, the joy will again well up in our hearts. John 15:11.
Lenski, R. C. H.: The Interpretation of St. Matthew's Gospel. Minneapolis, MN. : Augsburg Publishing House, 1961, S. 183.




We departed from the official Thrivent liturgical calendar to bring Reformation Sunday closer to Reformation Day. All Saints follows.

When the Reformation took place, only one holy day was celebrated - All Saints. There are various days for remembering those who died in the Lord. Germans mark the last Sunday in the Trinity season literally as Dead Sunday - Totensonntag. That was a very big service in Kitchener, Ontario. The church was full and we had another service at the church cemetery.

We just lost Gary Meyer, Senior.

Raymond Klatt, a regular worshiper with us, lost his wife Marie.

Earlier in the life of this congregation, we lost:

  • Walter Boeckler, Norma's husband
  • Gladys Meyer, my mother.
  • Brenda Kiehler, our dear friend and church member.
We all have others we remember and mourn, because they were dear to us, important in our lives, and members of the Christian Church.



The Beatitudes


As Lenski noted, the Beatitudes are revealed to us in a Psalm-like form. They are certainly poetic.  We often say there are eight Beatitudes, but there are nine "Blesseds." That reminds us of these blessings being nine-fold fruit of the Holy Trinity at work in our lives.


Blessed is the man that walketh not in the counsel of the ungodly, nor standeth in the way of sinners, nor sitteth in the seat of the scornful.
But his delight is in the law [GJ - Torah, teaching] of the Lord; and in his law doth he meditate day and night.
And he shall be like a tree planted by the rivers of water, that bringeth forth his fruit in his season; his leaf also shall not wither; and whatsoever he doeth shall prosper.
The ungodly are not so: but are like the chaff which the wind driveth away.
Therefore the ungodly shall not stand in the judgment, nor sinners in the congregation of the righteous.
For the Lord knoweth the way of the righteous: but the way of the ungodly shall perish.

Matthew 5:4 Blessed are they that mourn: for they shall be comforted.
This verse. like the other Beatitudes, sounds wrong at first, but it is the essence of the Gospel.  That is the reason we teach such verses to children. I remember constructing some geometric shape in paper with a Beatitude on each side. We were to memorize them that way, and we did to some extent.
The classic passages of the Bible become part of our basic memory, and we return to them later.
This verse is central to our understand of the Christian faith, because we have losses throughout life. One of my friends lost his father when he was young. He mentions that often, about 50 years later.
My friends often mention their mothers and how much they miss them. Only one mother is left among my high school friends. She is 93. My friends mention my mother too, because of her influence on their lives. One said, "Your mother saved my life." Another one said, "My biggest disappointment is that I did not get to have your mother as my teacher in grade school."
Comfort comes from forgiveness and salvation. 
The purpose of the Christian Church is to teach the Gospel, to support it with complete and thorough teaching, and to sustain the faith created by nurturing souls with even more Gospel.
Literature and History
In world literature and history, the key issue is forgiveness and salvation. We just watched Les Miserbles (musical) which is remarkably good, not so much as a film, but in its concert form (with lyrics appearing on the screen).
The novel is about a man born into poverty, who served on galley ships for 16 years because he stole bread for his sister's child. Finally released, he stole from the bishop who took him in and fed him.
The turning point of the novel is the section which was featured in many reading books - The Bishop's Candlesticks. The bishop told the policemen that Jean Valjean was supposed to have even more. He was no thief at all, he said. So a man who lived a life without experiencing any mercy finds it in the bishop, who could have demanded justice.
The rest of the novel concerns the inspector who wants to find and jail Valjean forever, pure justice. Valjean has broken his parole and Javert has a right and a duty to find him. One is easily reminded of Saul persecuting the Christians.
Finally Javert finds his entire meaning of life thrown into turmoil when Valjean shows him mercy instead of justice (sparing Javert's life, without asking anything in return). 
Valjean confesses his sins and is ushered into eternal life.
Likewise, Paul showed no mercy, but the risen Christ appeared to him, taught him, and appointed him an apostle. Paul was all justice in the Law until he found mercy with Christ.
Luther also lived according to monastic law, trying to be more observant than anyone else. He learned from his spiritual advisor that he needed the Gospel and forgiveness, not more Law and guilt.
Both with Paul, Augustine, and Luther is this great emphasis upon God's grace, which came from their total reliance on Law earlier. All three knew their faith did not come from their intellect or will but from the power of God's grace.
Grace and Faith Differ
Some clergy think that emphasizing grace is somehow an antidote to justification by faith. But that is wrong. 
God's nature is to be gracious, but it is not our nature. God's grace plants faith in us through the Gospel, and we receive grace, making us more gracious. That graciousness is not ours but God's. This graciousness is energized by the Gospel Promises.
Gracious means being more patient, more forgiving, more compassionate, not expected thanks but feeling blessed by the chance to serve, to help, to comfort, to guide and teach.
Payback comes along later, such as when I heard, "Dad, you were right about..." 
Long ago I pointed out to a member that we would not engage in money-making projects because we should not compete with local business. Another reason is that people think by paying for overpriced objects they have fulfilled an obligation. Such gimmicks are the enemy of real stewardship, which is based on thankfulness for God's grace. The needs of God's work have always been met but gimmicks have not worked consistently, only short-term. 
Many of us have watched flashy ministries go into receivership because the gimmicks got tiresome. The flash masked an inner corruption that was bound to surface.
How Can Mourning Be Blessed?
There is a sacredness in tears. They are not the mark of weakness, but of power. They speak more eloquently than ten thousand tongues. They are the messengers of overwhelming grief, of deep contrition, and of unspeakable love.
God created us to mourn. It is natural, and all people mourn. However, they mourn without a good effect if they have no faith in Christ.
Those who die in Christ - in faith - have their sins forgiven, so they enter eternal life with the righteousness of Christ.
That gives us a different perspective, which is easier as time grows shorter. We see more in the light of eternity. I see the changes in my friends as they try to get rid of things instead of accumulating them. They look back and appreciate the blessings of past, which is a good feeling.
The initial stages of grief are painful, but there is healing with each step. We never stop missing someone. Often the feelings are intense or rush upon us like a train wreck. But each step brings less pain and more appreciation.
In time, the loss itself energizes us. We wrote up the loss of our daughters and continue to give away that book. It unites us with those who have lost a member of the family or friend. Sometimes it is passed on to someone suffering from acute and unresolved grief.
Naturally it changed our attitude about everything. Threats did not mean much when the greatest treasures (on earth) were gone. Temporary gains meant nothing compared to eternal truths.


Birds Star in the Winter Creation Garden

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We know your evil dreams, cat.


The final roses were cut for the Sunday altar, and now they decorate Mrs. Wright's home (they live on our right). Mrs. Gardener may get another bunch, but that depends on the coming frost. In Arkansas we are singing "One Day More" from Les Miz.

The rose garden is where we toss the more appealing bird food. Sassy cannot stand seeing "her" food outside. Once she looked at me in shock when I tossed muffins out for the birds. She darted outside and brought one in.

The rose garden is also where cats stalk the birds, sitting under the limo or turning into a statue on the edge of the garden. "I am not here. You do not see me because I will not move until the right moment."



The backyard is fenced in, and cats have not tried to feed there. I set up four suet bags, two near our large window and two hanging from trees. Multiple feeders draw larger numbers of birds. So far, the ingrates have not shown up for suet - after I bought it for them at the meat market, ordered suet bags for them, had them intercepted by Mrs. I, bought another set, hung them for their sole benefit.

The other favorite food I bought was a 25 pound bag of black oil sunflower seeds. I scatter the seeds on the mulch in the future corn patch and vegetable garden. Birds will always be wary of a new place to feed, and they prefer their food to ours. But the birds have landed there regularly now, and we see large groups of them.

Moline is already so cold that our friend has set up her birdbath warmer, which attracts many birds looking for a place to drink and bathe. Their greatest need is to bathe and preen their feathers, so a warmed birdbath is a powerful magnet to birds.

Some are thinking, "I am not going to double my electric bill with a bird spa." The heater keeps the water just above freezing and shuts off when the bath runs dry - as it will. The colder the weather, the faster it gets splashed out. The cost is low, the return is great.


Birds love trees, bushes, and low-lying vegetation for the their winter feeding. They find a lot of insect life in bark and bushes, because God has designed insects to expose their prolific offspring above ground, hidden away but easily found by birds. The upside-down bird (nuthatch) is purpose-driven and built to look under bark for food. They also love suet.

If I manufactured a spray that never ran out, killed insects, and reduced weeds, everyone would make me a billionaire, yes? The starling does that for us - but are we thankful to God and the person who brought them to America? Starlings arrive in flocks and grub for insects in the soil, flip mulch for life hidden but moving, and eat weed seeds in abundance. Starlings have turned into enormous flocks that soar and glide in majestic mathematical patterns.


Starlings are piggish but they only want to be fruitful and multiply. If the Creation gardener provides many kinds of food, shelter, and perches, the other birds will also visit.

When a vast storm threatens an area, people rush to stores to empty them of bread, cereal, flashlights, batteries, and water. Last winter I finally ventured out after an ice storm to get groceries. I was there late, and the clerks told me how my fellow human-beings mobbed the store for food. The larger the storm, the emptier the shelves are.

Speaking of mobs, I found an article about crows using facial recognition software to identify human threats, remembering the faces and calling in pals to mob the threat.



Crows remember the faces of threatening humans and often react by scolding and bringing in others to mob the perceived miscreant, according to a new study published in the latest Proceedings of the Royal Society B.
Since the mob members also then indirectly learn about the threatening person, the findings demonstrate how just a single crow's bad experience with a particular human can spread information about this individual throughout entire crow communities.

The corvids (crows, ravens, starlings, blackbirds) are the smartest birds and the best staying alive in difficult circumstances, so we take them for granted and curse their abundance.

Grace Abundant in the Means of Grace
God gave us the Means of Grace--the invisible Word of preaching and teaching, the visible Word of the Sacraments--to His Creation, for one purpose. No one ever needs to wonder and speculate about how he is declared forgiven, given God's grace, and granted eternal salvation. Faith in Christ means receiving this grace, through these divine instruments.

Likewise, we have no reason to look for the Holy Spirit, because the Spirit is always active in the visible and invisible Word.

The great, wise, and holy men of God dismiss the Means of Grace. Why so many means? That abundance scandalizes them, but they never ask "Why so many once-in-a-lifetime giving campaigns?"

The intellectuals question infant baptism, either calling it a terrible Roman Catholic dogma or an ordinance easily ignored.

The media stars reject the Means of Grace because they advocate themselves as the path to enlightenment, prosperity, and dreams fulfilled, using themselves as examples. Their approach is also called The Greater Fool theory, since a charlatan will attract greater foods who choose to believe the fraud until they run out of fools to join them. Ask Bernie Madoff, Robert Schuller, and Mark Driscoll. Their glittering careers end in lawsuits. Ask Ski for tips on that.

Fragile birds run from hawks. The clever blue jays know this and make hawk sounds to drive birds away from feeders. Crows do not fear hawks or owls. They mob them and drive them away from their nests.

But humans invite wolves into their lives, families, and congregations, saying, "Look, he is another sheep, just like us. He is humble and only wants to help."

We have started something new.
We will make the Gospel real, relevant, and relational.


Rewarding Plagiarism Reveals Bad Management - 2012 Post Reprised - Classic Ichabod.

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The "new" post by McCain on St. Elizabeth is all over the Net, too:
hard to tell the original source.

Copied from -

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/2961081/posts



Related reading: All About The Retrospect


By Rem Rieder
Rem Rieder (rrieder@ajr.umd.edu) is AJR’s editor and senior vice president.
We’ve been here before. Too often.

There was Ruth Shalit, the young New Republic writer who was Washington journalism’s It Girl in the mid-’90s, until she imploded with a couple of high-profile plagiarism episodes and a powerful but error-riddled assault on the Washington Post’s approach to race.

Then there was Stephen Glass, also of The New Republic, whose stories, packed with amazing, dead-on detail, seemed too good to be true. And were. Glass will long be remembered as the guy who would build a Web site to corroborate his fabrications.

Now it’s Jayson Blair, the 27-year-old New York Times national reporter who destroyed his career in a stunning conflagration of pilfered material, outright fiction and just plain bizarre behavior. (See “All About the Retrospect”)

The Times has a well-earned reputation for circling the wagons when its reporting comes under attack. It often chooses not to respond to questions about its coverage, as if it were above scrutiny. It did own up to some serious shortcomings after the Wen Ho Lee train wreck, but in a grudging, defensive Editor’s Note rather than a forthright mea culpa.

Not this time. Once the San Antonio Express-News brought a clear-cut case of piracy to its attention, the Times unleashed a posse of reporters and editors to put Blair’s national desk oeuvre under a microscope. It played the devastating findings of Blair’s serial crimes against journalism at the top of page one, with four open pages inside.

So give the Times its props for an extraordinary airing of some very dirty linen. That’s a courageous—and appropriate—thing to do. Now it faces the harder challenge.

Because the Blair report exposed a frighteningly porous management structure, one that allowed a truth-challenged journalist to not only survive but thrive, despite a blinding array of warning lights.

In April 2002, the Blair problem was so severe that Metropolitan Editor Jonathan Landman wrote in a memo, “We have to stop Jayson from writing for the Times. Right now.” Blair was warned he was in danger of losing his job. He took a leave to try to straighten himself out. But—astoundingly—by December he was the national staff’s lead reporter on top-of-the-charts news: the sniper story. For the New York Times.
Worse yet, the national editor and Washington bureau hadn’t been told of Blair’s pothole-strewn track record. So no alarm bells went off when serious questions were raised about two of his sniper scoops. Editors didn’t even ask the young reporter to ID the anonymous sources on which they were based.

While the Times report pummeled Blair unmercifully, it wasn’t quite as tough on the institution that allowed him to do his damage undetected. “The person who did this is Jayson Blair,” said Arthur Sulzberger Jr., Times publisher and chairman of its parent company. “Let’s not begin to demonize our executives—either the desk editors or the executive editor or, dare I say it, the publisher.”

No, let’s not demonize them. And, no, there’s no way to stop unscrupulous people from doing bad things. But there’s got to be a way to catch them more quickly—particularly when there are so many clues.

***

GJ - Readers were not surprised to find McCain posting on Tim Glende's pale imitation of this blog. Both of them are shameless plagiarists who are supported by their bosses.

Plagiarism does not shock me, but support of it does, because the evidence cannot be denied. Rewarding plagiarism suggests a much deeper level of corruption.

Apostasy also bears fruit.




WELS District President Doug Engelbrecht,
Northern - Anything Goes - District.
Click here for an attorney's response to this clarion call.


A Clarion Call For Faithfulness To The Word And For Faithfulness To The Tenor Of The Gospel 

A Presentation And Discussion Of Various Concerns That Have Been Raised Recently In Our Midst 

Pastor D.J. Engelbrecht NWD Pastoral Conference October 25-26, 2011

A “clarion call” is defined as “a strong and clear request for people to do something”. (1 http.www.The Freedictionary.com) This paper and attendant questions for discussion are intended to be a clarion call to all of the pastors in our Northern Wisconsin District to remain faithful to the Word and at the same time to remain faithful to the tenor (2 Tenor -“the overall nature, pattern, or meaning of something, especially a written or spoken statement”) of the gospel. As Professor Daniel Deutschlander and others have so often said, we must be careful that we do not fall into the ditch on either side of the road when it comes to our doctrine and practice.  

When it comes to doctrine and practice faithfulness to the Word of God is paramount. Paul‟s second letter to Timothy could be considered a “clarion call” to his ministerial student and co-worker, Timothy, to remain faithful to the Word above all else. Likewise in chapter 4 Paul encourages Timothy to “Preach the Word,”(3 2 Timothy 4:2,3 NIV 1984 by Biblica) because the time would come when people would not put up with sound doctrine. The warnings of the Apostle John in the 22nd chapter of the book of Revelation to remain faithful to the Scriptures likewise emphasize the importance of making faithfulness to the Word “job number one” for all followers of Christ and most certainly for those who shepherd Christ‟s people. 

At the same time we want to be faithful to the tenor of the gospel. What do I mean by “the tenor of the gospel”? I mean the overall nature or pattern of the gospel. The very nature of the gospel is love. The gospel reflects the love of God for sinners through the redemptive work of Christ. And the gospel urges Christians to likewise reflect the love that God, in Christ, has shown them in everything they do and say. Christ urges his followers to “Love one another. As I have loved you, so you must love one another.”( 4 John 13:33-35 NIV 1984 by Biblica)  The Apostle Paul told the Ephesian Christians that even when we must speak the truth to an individual who may not necessarily want to hear what we have to tell him, we do so in love. “Instead, speaking the truth in love, we will in all things grow up into him who is the Head, that is, Christ.”(5 Ephesians 4:14-16 NIV 1984 by Biblica) Luther emphasized the gospel motivation for all that we do and say when, in his explanation of the eighth commandment, he said that we are “to take his (our brother's) words and actions in the kindest possible way.”(6 Luther’s Catechism, (Milwaukee: NPH, 1982), 108) Professor J. P. Koehler, one of the men identified with the Wauwatosa Theology, reminds us: “A Christian as such receives the motivation and forms of his actions from the gospel and not the law.” (7 Koehler, Gesetzlich Wesen Unter Uns, p. 3. 8 1 Timothy 4:16  NIV 1984 by Biblica)  Therefore, if a clarion call is to be made to the brothers in our district for faithfulness, it must be a two-fold call: faithfulness to the Word and at the same time faithfulness to the tenor of the gospel.  

What is it that has prompted this clarion call to faithfulness, over and above the encouragement that is continually given to all pastors in our synod to “watch your life and doctrine closely” (1 Timothy 4:16)? Over the past couple of years a number of issues and concerns have been brought before the District Presidium by various individuals, involving doctrine, practice, and approaches to ministry. Some of them were cleared up immediately, some were the result of misunderstandings and miscommunication and were resolved through extensive discussion, some fall under the category of legitimate differences of opinion on approaches to ministry, and some called for continued evangelical warnings to the brethren to help them avoid straying from the Word, the Lutheran Confessions, and the tenor of the gospel It must be stated that at no point in time did the District Presidium find false doctrine being espoused or promoted by anyone. However, through extensive discussion of these matters it became clear that it would be to the benefit of all the brothers in the District to join the discussion, to be the beneficiaries of the fruit of the discussions the District Presidium has already had on these matters, and to receive guidance, direction, and evangelical warning in regard to them, so that we all may continue to be faithful to the Word and faithful to the tenor of the gospel. 

It is not my intent to get into specifics in regard to the matters that were brought before the District Presidium with names and places. However, a number of general issues warrant discussion among a broader spectrum of and for the benefit of the brethren. The first of these general issues concerns the subject of plagiarism. 

Plagiarism 
Plagiarism is defined as: “the unauthorized use or close imitation of the language and thoughts of another author and the representation of them as one's own original work, as by not crediting the author” (9 dictionary.com) There are two basic criteria, therefore, for something to actually be considered plagiarism. One is that it is “unauthorized”. In other words, it is the use of someone else's material without being granted permission by that individual to do so. The second criterion is that it is the use of someone else's material with the purpose of passing it off as your own. “In other words, plagiarism is an act of fraud. It involves both stealing someone else's work and lying about it afterward.”(10 Wikipedia.com) By definition, then, using someone else's material with their permission would not be considered plagiarism per se. [GJ - False, Doug. The deception is a fraud perpetrated on the congregation.] The original author could not sue for copyright infringement under those circumstances, because he has given permission for his material to be used, perhaps even without citation. Doing so could, however, be considered unethical, if the person using the material did not cite the source and then represented the material as his own original work with the intent of deceiving those to whom he is presenting the material. We should note that, “Plagiarism is not a crime per se but is disapproved more on the grounds of moral offense and cases of plagiarism can involve liability for copyright infringement.”(11 Plagiarism is not a criminal offense punishable by law.  If a person feels that his original material has been used by someone else without authorization, he may bring a lawsuit against that individual for copyright infringement.) Wikipedia adds this rather interesting comment about the development of the concept of plagiarism: “the notion (of plagiarism) remains problematic with nebulous boundaries. The modern concept of plagiarism as immoral and originality as an ideal emerged in Europe only in the 18th century, particularly with the Romantic movement, while in the previous centuries authors and artists were encouraged to "copy the masters as closely as possible" and avoid "unnecessary invention.” The 18th century new morals have been institutionalized and enforced prominently in the sectors of academia and journalism, where plagiarism is now considered academic dishonesty and a breach of journalistic ethics, subject to sanctions like expulsion and other severe career damage. Not so in the arts, which not only have resisted in their long-established tradition of copying as a fundamental practice of the creative process but with the boom of the modernist and postmodern movements in the 20th century, this practice has been heightened as the central and representative artistic device. Plagiarism remains tolerated by 21st century artists.”(12 En.Wikipedia.org) [GJ - Plagiarism is against the law. An author can go to court and sue for damages when someone makes money from his original work by selling it as his own.]

While plagiarism is mainly a source of concern in the areas of academics and journalism these days, it can also be a concern in the area of the church and with our ministers of the gospel. Ministers of the gospel should not knowingly and with intent to deceive their hearers or readers pass off someone else's material as their own, i.e. plagiarize. We use the word “knowingly” because it is certainly possible to say or write something that you think is original, only to find out that someone else has already said or written it, or something very similar to what you have written. When pastors are all basically preparing sermons from the same text it would not be unusual for one person's sermon to be very similar in nature to another's. We would also add the phrase “with intent,” because, first of all, that is part of the definition of plagiarism. By definition it involves a fraudulent intent. Someone may use another person's material and even have permission to do so without citation, and yet have intent on passing it off as his own to deceive his congregation into thinking that he is doing his own work when he is just reaping the benefit of someone else's labor. 

The bottom line is: plagiarism, as defined, is out of the question for a minister of the gospel, both from the standpoint of stealing someone else's material without permission and/or citation and from the standpoint of deliberately deceiving one's congregation into thinking that the work that is being presented is original (even though permission may have been given by the author) when that (originality) is what the congregation is expecting from its pastor. [GJ - Is it too much to ask for original Lutheran sermons from Lutheran pastors who get enormous grants from the synod to perpetrate this deceitful copying of false teachers like Groeschel and aping of gay activists like Andy Stanley?]




  
Questions For Further Discussion: 

• To what extent do pastors need to cite sources either verbally or in print when using materials from places like NPH (Advent or Lent series or outlines, stewardship sermons/outlines prepared by the synod, the “green” book)? 
• To what extent should a congregation expect originality from its pastor? (Consider Bible studies, text studies, the use of phrases or illustrations.) 
• Is there such a thing as “self-plagiarism”? If so, what steps must be taken to avoid it? 
Encouragement to the Brothers: 
Be careful to avoid any semblance of plagiarism or unethical practice by making an effort to cite the source of especially longer quotes or illustrations and sermon or Bible study outlines/series where practicable. 
If you are making use of other people’s work (e.g. a synod produced sermon on stewardship or a special occasion), make every effort to inform the leaders of your congregation that you are using such materials. 

Methodist EC Craig Groeschel (far left) comparing jeans with closeted Babtist Andy Stanley.
Andy does not admit to being Babtist at Northpoint,
just like Rick Warren at Saddleback.


The Use Of Materials Outside Our Fellowship 
That leads us to a related issue, namely the use of material from sources outside our fellowship. While our church body produces a great amount of resource material for our pastors, it is safe to say that our pastors use sources from outside of our fellowship in connection with their work, and that their bookshelves contain any number of volumes that have been produced by authors that are not WELS and/or not produced by our publishing house. The mere use of material that is authored or produced by someone outside of our fellowship cannot be considered plagiarism in and of itself. Again, I go back to the definition of plagiarism as “the unauthorized use or close imitation of the language and thoughts of another author and the representation of them as one's own original work, as by not crediting the author”(13 Dictionary.com) It certainly could be, if done so without citation and the intention of deceiving the congregation into thinking that their pastor is giving them original work. However, the use of materials outside our fellowship when given permission by its author and without intention of deceiving the calling body should not be considered plagiarism nor unethical. 
[GJ - DP Doug is addressing the Ski/Glende use of Craig Groeschel's materials, which he gives permission to use but advises the ministers to be honest about using them.]


Not a Photoshop - Andy Stanley posed with Ski,
and Ski worshiped with Stanley.
Apparently, so did Glende, Parlow, Buske and others.
DP Doug did not excommunicate them, but supported them instead.

The question then becomes: Is it permissible/advisable for our pastors to use materials and resources that are produced outside of our fellowship? To say that it is not permissible for our pastors to use materials and resources that have been produce or authored by those outside our fellowship would certainly be going too far. That would lead us to head toward the ditch of legalism. And to intimate that no good scholarship or creative ideas can come from someone who is not WELS would be the height of theological narcissism. Throughout the decades our pastors have benefited from the scholarship and creative work of people who do not share our WELS confession or even our Lutheran confession. We need only look at the list of authors and their backgrounds that fill the pages of our hymnal, Christian Worship: A Lutheran Hymnal (14 Christian Worship: A Lutheran Hymnal is filled with texts and tunes that were authored by people from a variety of theological backgrounds including Charles Wesley, Fannie Crosby, Franz Joseph Mohr, Ray Palmer, and Augustus Toplady), or the materials that NPH offers in its catalog, or even check the books that our seminary has used over the years as required reading  (15 My homiletics class was trained by Professor Gerald Hoenecke using “Reu’s Homiletics” as its textbook.) to see that much can be learned from and beneficial use can be made of the scholarship, materials, thoughts, words, and ideas of those who do not share our confession. 

But the question is: how advisable is it? The excessive use of materials that are produced or authored outside of our fellowship can be not only inadvisable, but dangerous for a number of reasons. One reason is that constant exposure to unorthodox material can, without a person even realizing it, affect his thinking to the point where he begins to espouse the same false teaching contained in that material. If the expression “you are what you eat” can be applied to our theological diet, it is not out of the realm of possibility for someone to find himself losing his Lutheran confessional moorings when the lion’s share of his daily menu is Reformed or Evangelical material. Another reason would be that the consistent use of material produced outside of our fellowship can lead to pure laziness and a desire to skip the hard work and just use what somebody else has produced. Obviously, the latter could also be said of consistently using someone else’s materials even though produced by a WELS or other orthodox source. Consistent and wholesale use (that is, without thoroughly scrutinizing and reworking what needs to be reworked to reflect our Lutheran confession) is indeed very dangerous. For that reason it is extremely important to limit the use of such material to as little as possible to avoid the danger. The same could be said for the literature that fills our pastors’ book shelves. Even though we would assume that our pastors are more prepared to separate the wheat from the chaff than most of their parishioners, an overabundance of books produced by sources outside our fellowship can have the same inherent dangers. A good ratio of thoroughly orthodox books to books produced by those who do not share our confession is vitally important. We would never tell a pastor what that ratio has to be, but we would certainly encourage our brothers to keep the books and materials in their library that are authored by those outside of our fellowship to a small number in comparison to those that are produced within our fellowship or from basically orthodox sources. 

Questions For Further Discussion: 

• To what extent can unorthodox materials be “Lutheranized” or “WELSified” and be safely used by our pastors? 
• How much “original” work should our pastors be expected to do in keeping with their time and abilities? 
• Can materials from outside sources in areas such as church management or church architecture, etc. be used safely? 
Encouragement to the Brothers: 
Refrain from using materials from outside sources as much as possible, (even though they can be “Lutheranized” or “WELSified”) because of the danger of unknowingly assimilating any false theology that may be contained in the material. 
Make a greater effort to produce your own materials or make use of materials produced within our fellowship. 
Trust your brothers to know when too much is too much and encourage them rather than accuse them when Christian freedom is the issue in this area. 

Choose To Believe 
Another issue that was thoroughly discussed centered around phrases used in a number of hymns that could be deemed unclear or confusing.    One phrase in particular is found in a contemporary song entitled “Voice of Truth.”(16 Voice of Truth – Casting Crowns) “I will choose to listen and believe the Voice of truth.” The song speaks of how a Christian is bombarded by the lies of Satan and the world around him and is placed in the position of choosing between what the devil and the world tells him and what God tells him in Holy Scripture.  The Christian answers repeatedly in the song, “I choose to listen and believe the Voice of truth.” Would someone who might use that contemporary song be guilty of promoting false doctrine? At issue is the matter of decision theology as well as post-conversion cooperation in sanctification. Holy Scripture says, “ no one can say, „Jesus is Lord,‟ except by the Holy Spirit,” (17 1 Corinthians 12:3 – NIV 1984 by Biblica) and Dr. Luther reiterates that the natural man is unable to “believe in Jesus Christ (his)Lord or come to Him”. ( 18 Luther’s Catechism, (Milwaukee: NPH, 1982), 188) (i.e. natural man cannot do anything to effect his conversion.) We reject, therefore, Decision Theology which says that natural man can “ask Jesus into his heart” (19 Having said that, consider all the phrases contained in our Lutheran hymns, such as:  “Jesus is my pleasure, Jesus is my choice,” “Enter now my waiting heart”, “Come into my heart I pray…”, Come now to dwell within me-” We have to assume those are all said by someone who is a converted Christian and, therefore, we are not promoting decision theology when we pick hymns containing such phrases.), make a decision for Christ, or cooperate in some way in and with one's conversion. That is the work of the Holy Spirit alone. Speaking as an unregenerated person, there is no way we can say “I choose to believe.”   However, can a person in whose heart the Holy Spirit has produced faith in Christ say “I choose to listen and believe the Voice of truth”? 

The Lutheran Confessions state: “From this, then, it follows that as soon as the Holy Ghost, as has been said, through the Word and holy Sacraments, has begun in us this work of regeneration and renewal, it is certain that through the power of the Holy Ghost we can and should cooperate, although still in great weakness. But this [that we cooperate] does not occur from our carnal natural powers, but from the new powers and gifts which the Holy Ghost has begun in us in conversion, as St. Paul expressly and earnestly exhorts that "as workers together with Him we receive not the grace of God in vain," 2 Cor. 6:1 But this is to be understood in no other way than that the converted man does good to such an extent and so long as God by His Holy Spirit rules, guides and leads him, and that as soon as God would withdraw His gracious hand from him, he could not for a moment persevere in obedience to God. Therefore, there is a great difference between baptized and unbaptized men. For since, according to this doctrine of St. Paul, Gal. 3:27, all who have been baptized have put on Christ, and thus are truly regenerate, they have now arbitrium liberatum (a liberated will), that is, as Christ says, they have been made free again, John 8:36; Whence they are able not only to hear the Word, but also to assent to it and accept it, although in great weakness.”( 20 Formula of Concord: Thorough Declaration Article II) 

The dogmatics notes which, in part, guide the study of dogmatics at Wisconsin Lutheran Seminary say “A Christian may and must cooperate in his own sanctification ¬2 Cor. 6:1; 1 Cor. 3:9…he is one raised to new life”? Romans 6:13 Johannes Quenstedt, who is quoted in those notes says: “The Holy Ghost, however, renews us (brings about our renewal) in such a way that also man himself cooperates with him through powers of grace by which he is able to do that…Therefore the renewed man is a subordinate cause of his own renewal motivated by God to renew himself from day to day through the powers received from above. The Holy Ghost indeed without cooperation of man produces in man the ability to do good, (i.e.) the first power, (nearest power, the power that comes at the same time as conversion) and the actium primum of sanctification. The actus primus or "first act" is the ability to do good, and ability given by the Holy Ghost. But as soon as the Holy Ghost has begun the work of sanctifying man, he can cooperate in the actum secudum ("the second act"), namely, the use of the power {to do good} and the continuation of sanctification. He does that not by natural powers but supernatural. And thus by powers granted by God a man can become a coworker with God in the continuation of his own sanctification.” 

Wisconsin Lutheran Seminary Professor Richard Gurgel writes: “Does our new self joyfully and willingly cooperate in every area of sanctification—both tables of the law---of course it does! The „new self‟ is the recreation within us of the image of God that Adam and Eve once possessed. Listen to the new self speak in Psalm 119 and any idea that he does not participate in joyful obedience to both tables of the law should disappear. He delights to believe in every promise of God. It is not wrong to say that a believer chooses to believe those promises….(although)… 

Of course there are some cautions to observe. Our Confessions rightly warn us about speaking of the Spirit and our new self as equal partners in sanctification. And unlike Adam and Eve before the fall, we still have the remnant of our old self hanging around to trouble us. However…I would say this, for two reasons I wonder if “our new self chooses to believe the promises of God” is the most helpful wording. First: we are surrounded by the "Evangelicals" who have forever corrupted that phraseology so that those who hear us say "choose to believe" will often be thinking decision theology. Then, here's the second reason I wonder if this is the clearest wording: the new heart God plants in us at conversion simply does believe every promise of God. That is its very nature. Our old self, of course, since we are simul justus et peccator, at the same time refuses to believe in any promise of God. So, the struggle we have is to act on the faith our new self possesses rather than the doubt and unbelief that springs from our old self. In other words, it's not so much whether I "choose to believe the promise (I both do and don't at the same time as saint/sinner). The question is whether I will act on faith or doubt as I live. Of course, the more I act on doubt the sooner I bring the day when complete unbelief robs me of believing in any promise of God! I am convinced that the brothers who are objecting to your wording are over-reacting in fear of  "decision theology".  But in the context in which we serve, I understand the concern behind it. The Bible is quite comfortable using language and expressions that portray believers as active participants in embracing God's promises, but at the same time maintain a clarity that God is always the Prime Mover and that the concept of merit is not to enter the picture. Let us be therewith content. To deny the validity of using the language of believers choosing what God declares fitting and pleasing to him is to overreact and invariably creates a false and distorted picture that differs from the biblical norm. The envisioned cure becomes part of the problem.” 

We would also note what Bethany Professor Adolph Harstad, ELS theologian, says in Joshua -The People‟s Bible p. 241, commenting on Joshua 24:15, a passage that came up in the discussion we had: “Israel faces a choice. When seen clearly, the choice is easy. It is between idols of wood, stone, and metal on the one hand and the living, powerful gracious Lord on the other. Joshua is not advocating a „decision theology‟ of the many preachers today when he says, „Choose for yourselves.‟ Modern decision theology claims that unconverted people have the power within themselves to choose the Lord and become believers. Sinful humanity has no such power of its own to turn from unbelief to faith in the Lord. That power comes from God (1 Cor.12:3) Joshua is here calling for a choice from people who already own the gift of faith from the Lord. They can choose to abandon the Lord, or by the power of the Spirit already given them, to confirm their God-given faith and renew the covenant he put in place.”(21 The People‟s Bible ((Milwaukee: NPH, 1991) p. 241 A survey of the WELS Conference of Presidents revealed that the group, as a whole, finds the interpretation that says Joshua was addressing only unbelievers, giving them only a choice between the false gods of the Amorites or the gods their fathers served beyond the river, to be a spurious one. ) 

From the quotations above, it should be clear that the converted Christian, given the ability by the Holy Spirit, can choose to listen and believe what God has promised as opposed to what the devil and the world whisper in his ear. That is part of post-conversion cooperation in sanctification, which involves both tables of the law. From the quotations above it should also clear that man cannot in any way choose to come to faith or choose to believe the Word of God on his own, without the regenerating and sanctifying power of the Holy Spirit. 

A follow-up question is: Can man cooperate in the preservation of his faith? The Formula of Concord – Thorough Declaration says that the Synergists believed that man can cooperate “by its own powers, with the Holy Ghost, in the continuation and maintenance of this work.” (22 TD, II, p.910:77) The Confession, of course, refutes that contention and says that anything good or God-pleasing the believer does is done only through the power that the Holy Spirit grants him. He cannot come to faith “by his own powers” nor can he remain in faith “by his own powers”. For example, if I as a believer understand that in order to remain in faith I must be in regular contact with the Means of Grace, the fact that I read my Bible, go to church on Sunday, read my Meditations, etc., is something I do, but not by my own power. It is done by the power that the Holy Spirit has given me. Thus my faith and the preservation of my faith is entirely the work of God. And yet I participate in that work in a certain respect. 

Here we would do well to hear what Koehler says in his “Summary Of Christian Doctrine”. He says that faith is the work of God and the act of man. “Conversion consists in the bestowal of faith. Hence, faith is not a work of man in the sense that by his own powers he produces faith in his heart. Faith is the "operation of God" (Col. 2:12) It is given unto us to believe in Christ (Phil. 1:29). Faith is, therefore, the work of God in the sense that it is He, and He alone, who creates and sustains it in our hearts. [GJ - DP Doug seems to be a synergist.]

However, it is not God who believes in us or for us; it is man who does the believing. "If thou canst believe, all things are possible to him that believeth. And straightway the father of the child cried out with tears, Lord, I believe, help thou my unbelief." (Mark 9:23,24) What shall we do that we might do the works of God? (works God requires of us.) „Jesus answered and said unto them, This is the work of God, that ye believe on Him whom He hath sent. (John 6:28,29) These texts plainly show that faith is indeed an act or work of man, which he performs in his heart. To be sure, it is not a physical act, but, like fearing, loving, and hoping, believing is something we do in our hearts and souls. To illustrate: I live, but it is God who gives and sustains this physical life of mine; so also, I believe in Jesus as my Savior, but it is God who creates and preserves this spiritual life in my heart. Faith, therefore, is an act or work of man inasmuch as man actually does the believing.”(23 Koehler – A Summary Of Christian Doctrine (Concordia Publishing House-2006) p. 136)

Thus, there is a cooperation on the part of the Christian also in the preservation of faith in the sense that God does not continue to believe for me, but does supply the power and the means through which my faith is sustained. I am part of the process even though I supply none of the power to do so. Perhaps confusion comes from the word “cooperation” since it has the connotation of providing some power or impetus to remain in faith (“operatio”). A better word might be “participation”. Man participates in the preservation of his faith because God does not do the believing for him. At no point in time, however, can we say that such participation is meritorious, as the Confessions clearly state. We are called to faith and are preserved in faith by grace alone. 

In summary, Scripture speaks clearly of the regenerate Christian cooperating with the Holy Spirit in every aspect of sanctification, including both tables of the law. Therefore, it would not be wrong to use the phrase “I choose to listen and believe God's Word” in the context, not of conversion, but of sanctification. However, because of the confusion that such a phrase can cause among our people, especially those who do not fully understand post-conversion cooperation in light of the Scriptures and the Confessions, and because we are surrounded by the Evangelicals who espouse a Decision Theology, our pastors are encouraged to avoid the use of hymns and songs that have that phrase, or one similar, in them. 

Questions For Further Discussion: 

• How important is it to know your people and what they understand when it comes to choosing songs for worship? 
• Should we, in the theological climate in which we live today, make an effort to revise some of the hymns in Christian Worship, or would that be a case of theological paranoia? 


Encouragement to the Brothers: 
• Be judicious in the use of phrases or songs that contain words such as “I choose to listen and believe” or, if need be the hymn in CW that says, “Jesus is my choice,” to avoid confusion in regard to decision theology and the doctrine of post-conversion cooperation with the Holy Spirit in the 
Christian’s life of sanctification. 
• “It is wicked to interpret a poor choice of words as error when you know that the right meaning was intended.” (24 Gerhard, Johann – Good Works p.38) Trust that your brother has the proper understanding of a doctrine and perhaps just used poor judgment, in your opinion, rather than accuse him of false doctrine. 
• Do not consider your judgment to be more sanctified than your brother’s judgment. 

The Service You Need 
Along these same lines, concern was expressed over using the phrase “Show me, Lord, the service you will need.” Hymn #252 in “Let All The People Praise You” (NPH – 1999) contains that phrase. Scripture clearly states that the Lord, who is almighty God and creator of all things, does not need anything from His creatures. He is all-sufficient. He is El-Shaddai. “ When Abram was ninety-nine years old, the LORD 
appeared to him and said, “I am walk before me and be blameless) אל שדי (GodAlmighty.” (25 Genesis 17:1 – NIV 1984 by Biblica)
Taking into consideration what the Scriptures say about God not needing anything from us, and taking into consideration the context of the song, it should be clear that the intent of the author (and therefore the one who sings this song) is to say: “Lord, show me the kind of service you require or ask of me as a Christian. This is borne out in verse 3 where the author says, “More than words I know you want from me.” He does not say “need” from me. Though a better choice of words by author Richard Avery would be preferred in verse 1, we can understand what he means when he uses the word “need” in the phrase, “Show me, Lord, the service you will need.” The songbook “Let All The People Praise You” was produced by the synod‟s Commission On Worship, which “reviewed the songs that were proposed, offered editorial suggestions, deleted a few selections, and authorized publication.”(26 Let All The People Praise You – (NPH – Milwaukee – 1999) Introduction) We should be confident, therefore, that the words of that song, though they could be improved upon, are consistent with the doctrines of Holy Scripture. 

Encouragement to the Brothers: 
If you feel that your people will misunderstand the phrase contained in that hymn or any other hymn or contemporary song, do not make use of it in your worship. 
Consider carefully the context of words and phrases used in hymns before ascribing false doctrine to either the author or the user. 

The Efficacy Of The Word 
Holy Scripture and the Lutheran Confessions have made it clear that the Word of God is efficacious in and of itself. “For the word of God is living and active.  Sharper than any two-edged sword, it penetrates even to dividing soul and spirit, joints and marrow; it judges the thoughts and attitudes of the heart.”( 27 Hebrews 4:12 -NIV 1984 by Biblica) and “So is my word that goes out from my mouth; it will not return to me empty, but will accomplish what I desire and achieve the purpose for which I sent it.”( 28 Isaiah 55:11 – NIV 1984 by Biblica) Nothing you or I do can make the Word of God more powerful than it already is. That all-powerful Word of God, is conveyed when it is written and spoken (or sung or signed), but it is not conveyed by a sanctified life. When Jesus says in Matthew 5:16 “Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good works and glorify your Father, which is heaven,” ( 29 Matthew 5:16– NIV 1984 by Biblica) we do not understand Him to mean that people can be converted by seeing the good deeds that a Christian performs. Nor do we assume that the good works of a Christian can convey the saving gospel message of Jesus Christ crucified for sinners. The Apostle Paul emphasizes the fact that “faith comes from hearing the message,”(30 Romans 10:17 – NIV 1984 by Biblica) not by observing the sanctified life of a Christian. The familiar and often used phrase that is correctly or incorrectly attributed to St. Francis of Assisi, “Preach the gospel always, if necessary, use words,” may be understood correctly if it is meant to echo the words of Christ in Matthew 5:16 and used as an encouragement to actually live the Christian faith one professes. However, if the indication is that the saving message of Christ crucified for sinners can be conveyed simply through the sanctified life of a Christian, we would have to object to its use. 

The Word also cannot be made more powerful than it already is by the manner or method in which it is proclaimed.  Though the Word cannot be made more powerful or effective by the manner or method in which it is proclaimed, man can hinder the work or stand in the way of the Holy Spirit, thus blocking the Word from allowing its power to take effect. The Apostle Paul writes “Quench not the Holy Spirit.”(31 1 Thessalonians 5:19 -NIV 1984 by Biblica) (1 Thessalonians 5:19) Professor emeritus David Kuske writes, “Through these means (the Word and Sacraments) the Holy Spirit strengthens our faith and renews our zeal to live according to the New Man. Failure to make use of the Word and Sacraments, then, would by default give the Old Adam the upper hand and thus put out the Spirit‟s fire.”(32 The People’s Bible (NPH – Milwaukee 1999) Failure to make use of the Word and Sacraments, as well as failing to make the Word available (or understandable, i.e. in a language that the hearer can understand) can hinder the work of the Holy Spirit. The Apostle Paul says, “How then shall they call on him in whom they have not believed? and how shall they believe in him of whom they have not heard? and how shall they hear without a preacher?” (33 Romans 10:14 – NIV 1984 by Biblica) He also says in 1 Corinthians 14:13 “For this reason the one who speaks in a tongue should pray that they may interpret what they say.”(34 1 Corinthians 14:13 – NIV 1984 by Biblica ) Method or manner of presentation cannot make the Word more powerful than it is, but method or manner of presentation can either make the Word more accessible to people so that they have a greater opportunity to hear it, or it can prevent people from hearing the message. For example, though the Word of God is in and of itself the “power of God unto salvation,” (35 Romans) and nothing you do can change that, scheduling your worship services at 3:00 am on a Friday when it is likely no one, or at least a very few, will come to hear the Word being preached may prevent the power of the gospel from ever being released. The Apostle Paul stated in 1 Corinthians 9:12 “If others have this right of support from you, shouldn't we have it all the more? But we did not use this right. On the contrary, we put up with anything rather than hinder the gospel of Christ.”(36 1 Corinthians 9:12 – NIV 1984 by Biblica) Paul is referring to the fact that he and his coworkers had every right to be compensated for their work of preaching the gospel among the Corinthians. But he chose not to accept financial support from them because he did not want to hinder the gospel of Christ. The indication is that there are things that we do that can hinder the gospel, so that it does not have a chance to unleash its saving and redeeming power. Part of being faithful to the Word and to the call that we have to preach that Word is doing everything we can to remove as many hindrances as we can to the gospel reaching the ears of our people and the people of the world around us. 

No, there is nothing you and I can do that will change the ultimate will of God to save the elect and bring them to heaven. Nothing we do will “change the numbers”. But since we don't know who the elect are (“The Lord knows those who are his”) (37 2 Timothy 2:19 – NIV 1984 by Biblica), and since we don't know what the numbers are, we need to work almost as if just the opposite were the case! almost as if everything did depend on us, though we know full well it doesn't. How easy it would be for us to say, “Since there is nothing I can do to enhance the power of the gospel and since there is nothing I can do to "change the numbers" of the elect and the number of those who will ultimately be lost, I might as well spend my time on the golf course and just shake a sermon out of my sleeve on Sunday without putting any effort into it. It won't change anything in the grand scheme of things anyway.” Such thinking borders dangerously close to a belief in the double predestination of the Calvinists. [GJ - No more like the typical WELS pastor who plagiarizes from false teachers, visits the gym, but won't visit his own members.] The words of the Apostle Paul in 1 Corinthians 9:22 are interesting here. He says, “I have become all things to all men so that by all possible means I might save some.”(38 1 Corinthians 9:22 – NIV 1984 by Biblica) Paul wasn't saving anyone! Nor could he! The gospel saves, and the gospel alone, and yet Paul says that he became all things to all men, so that he might save some.  In other words, he worked as hard as he could to bring the saving gospel to people, taking away as many obstacles to the Word unleashing its saving power as possible, and working as if the success of the gospel were all up to him. That is part of being faithful to your call and faithful to the Word, doing whatever you can to prevent the gospel and its power from being hindered or failing to reach people with the hope that through you God might save some. 

Questions For Further Discussion: 

• What kind of things could be put into the category of “hindering the gospel” (not its power, but hindering it from unleashing its 
power/preventing people from hearing the message)?  
• Can “becoming all things to all men” go too far?   If so, how? • Can “becoming all things to all men” come in conflict with our 
stand as confessional Lutherans? 
Encouragement to the Brothers: • Remind yourself often of the complete efficacy and power of the Word and carry out your ministry with that in mind. • Do everything you can in your ministry to avoid putting hindrances in the way of people hearing the message. • Do not assume that brothers who approach their ministry in a different manner than you do reject the complete efficacy and power of the Word. • Keep in mind the fact that you are a confessional Lutheran as you carry out your ministry. 

Relevant/Relational Worship/Ministry 
We note the word “relevant” as it is used by some to describe worship and/or ministry. By definition “relevant” means: “bearing upon or connected with the matter in hand; the purpose—syn. applicable, appropriate, suitable”(39 Dictionary.com) We would assume that the worship that takes place in any of our WELS congregations is “connected with the matter at hand” and is therefore “relevant” in that sense.  The “matter at hand” is man‟s sin and his need for a Savior. Worship that is relevant does not have anything to do with where it takes place, or what instruments are used to lead the congregation, or what style the songs take, or what form the sermon takes, or whether the pastor wears a black or white gown. Worship that is relevant is worship that leads the worshipper to the knowledge of his sin and points to the cross of Jesus Christ as the solution to that sin. Relevant worship is worship that leads the worshipper to give praise to God for the free gift of salvation in Jesus Christ and for all other blessings in life. Worship that is relevant is worship that presents the truths of the Bible and mines the treasures of God‟s Word. It is worship that focuses not only on the “here” but more importantly on the “hereafter” as it leads the Christian through this life to life eternal in heaven. 

Our pastors should correctly understand that manner or method of presentation cannot make the Word more effective or more relevant, but that any form of worship or method of presentation that gets to “the matter at hand”, namely sin and grace, and is suitable to bring the sinner to repentance and to the foot of the cross of the Lord Jesus Christ for full and free forgiveness is “relevant” worship. 

Another term that we hear being used in respect to ministry and worship is “relational”. The dictionary defines the word relational as “indicating or specifying some relation”.(40 relational. Definitions.net. STANDS4 LLC, 2011. 19 September. 2011.) Barista Daron Lindemann in his essay delivered to the 61st Biennial Convention of the WELS said, “caring for souls means caring for people, because every soul on earth this side of eternity is embodied in humanity. If anyone could have bypassed human nature and directly cared for souls, it was Jesus Christ himself. However, consider his ministry, beginning with his own incarnation. His active obedience healed and helped people. In his parables he taught about people and for people. His full humanity participated in the work of redemption even unto death, his resurrection appearances to his friends, and his real body and blood still given in the sacrament. Jesus cares about humanness—his own and that of every soul. People matter. No wonder crowds were “amazed at his teaching.” (Mark 11:18) Relationships, as messy as they can be, build bridges for spiritual care. Might there be room in our hearts and memories to appreciate this just a little more today, and in our minds and plans to gain some fresh insights as those called to care for souls?” ( 41 Essay “Caring For Souls: People Matter – Lindemann, Daron – July ,2011 p.2.) The point that he makes in the essay is that our ministry, and our worship as well, needs to be relational, that is, concerned about souls, about people, not just about form and function. He says, “The means of grace enrich, equip, engage, and encourage people, with pastoral rites, and through personal relationships. And often both wonderfully at the same time.” (42Essay “Caring For Souls: People Matter – Lindemann, Daron – July , 2011 p.31) 

A ministry that is “relational”, therefore, is a ministry in which great emphasis is laid on creating relationships with people so that the means of grace can be brought to them. A worship that is “relational” is 
one that fosters relationships and speaks to the hearts of people, rather than one that follows only rubric and ritual. “When your job becomes running the church from Sunday to Sunday with institutional duties, much like running a house where the to-do list grows as fast as the summer grass, practice the virtue of building a home, not running a house. You‟re not the manager of the lawn but the caregiver of the family. Nurture us with the peaceful pastures of Christ‟s love.  Lead us on the paths of Christ‟s righteousness by walking alongside of us in a relationship. Restore souls. Comfort us. The house of the Lord is not a structure or a system but a shepherd calling the Good Shepherd‟s sheep closer, safer, farther.” ( 43 Essay “_aring For Souls: People Matter – Lindemann, Daron – July, 2011 p.30) 

That is what is meant when someone describes their ministry and their worship as “relational”.  

Questions For Further Discussion: 

• How can “traditional” or “contemporary” worship fail to be relevant? 
Can “becoming all things to all men” come in conflict with our 
stand as confessional Lutherans? • How can pastors fail to be relational in their ministry? • How can worship fail to be relational? Be relational but fail to 
be means of grace oriented? 

Encouragement to the Brothers: 
Don’t assume that when a brother uses the term “relevant worship” he means that “my worship is better than yours”, but uses the term “relevant” because it gets to the matter at hand, namely presenting sin and grace, Law and Gospel, with Jesus Christ and eternal life at the center. 
Take care to avoid being either “over-relational” or “too institutional”. 


Small Group Bible Studies 
The matter of small group Bible studies also came up for discussion. There is no doubt that a major factor in the Pietist movement was Jakob Spener‟s insistence on small group Bible studies. The question one must ask, however, is: when pastors make use of small group studies in their congregation does that mean they are automatically Pietists? A second question one must ask is: does the use of small group studies in a congregation automatically lead to Pietism? While it is true that small group Bible studies were part of the Pietist movement and contributed to a certain extent to the rise of Pietism in the past, we would be going too far to say that every pastor who organizes small group studies in his congregation is a Pietist, and that every congregation that uses some sort of small group Bible or sermon study in their midst will, without a doubt, soon be displaying Piestistic tendencies and leaving behind the doctrine of justification by faith in favor of a preoccupation with sanctification and “right living”. It should be noted that the small group conclaves that Jakob Spener advocated were in many ways designed to supplant the corporate worship service. There surely is a great danger in replacing the corporate worship service with small groups. The Lord has told us not to forsake the assembling of ourselves together. (Hebrews 10:25) We will never replace the corporate worship service with small group conclaves. However, there can also be great advantage in having members of a congregation actively engaged in a review of the previous Sunday's sermon or a properly led study of the Bible during the week between Sunday services in small groups. 

We would reiterate the caution previously stated when it comes to using and adapting materials that are produced outside of our fellowship for such small group studies. While we would not insist that such materials can never be used or adapted for our use, the dangers of consistently using such materials do exist and pastors should use great caution in making use of material produced outside of our fellowship. 

Questions For Further Discussion: 

• How can small group Bible studies or sermon reviews held during the week create a Pietistic atmosphere? How can they be of spiritual benefit? 

Encouragement to the Brothers: 
• Familiarize yourself with the history of Pietism and recognize the errors that were present in the movement and the methodology that may have contributed to those errors. 
• Do not universally condemn small group Bible studies in the home, either pastor or lay led.  
There are a variety of other topics that have come up for discussion among the brethren in the past few years that would be of benefit for all to hear and weigh in on, but time does not permit us to cover them all. My prayer is the discussion of these particular items and the encouragements contained herein will serve to keep us all faithful to both the Word and to the true tenor of the gospel and keep us from heading off into the ditch on either side of the road. 

Pastor D.J. Engelbrecht NWD Pastoral Conference October 25-26, 2011 

Rebuttal by Rick Techlin, an attorney who was kicked out his congregation for questioning plagiarism, the excommunication upheld by relationship expert Doug Engelbrecht.

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Not a Photoshop - Craig Groeschel.

Craig Groeschel - making the Word attractive...or something.


From Craig Groeschel on using Andy Stanley material:


How To Use Someone Else’s Material
Recently I used Andy Stanley’s series, “How to Be Rich.” (If you haven’t listened to his messages, I highly recommend that you do.)

Here’s what we did:
We asked for permission. (For the record, if you use something from LifeChurch.tv Open, you don’t have to ask for permission. Since I didn’t know North Point’s stance, asking permission seemed like the right thing to do.)

We gave Andy credit publicly and sent people to his church’s website.

We sent Andy a note with a small gift to say “thank you.” (This obviously isn’t necessary, but I wanted to express my gratitude for his hard work, excellent material, and generosity.)

Parts of the series included almost exclusively his material. Other parts were very much my own. To me, he deserved full credit and honor for God’s work through him.

Several people thanked me for exposing them to North Point’s ministry. I’m thrilled to turn them on to a great spiritual resource.

When have you observed this done well?

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GJ - DP Doug did not listen to an attorney from his own district, but he aped an EC Methodist from the Net!

http://swerve.lifechurch.tv/2008/07/21/plagiarizing-pastors/


Plagiarizing Pastors
Some have said, “If a pastor copies from one source, it’s plagiarizing. If he copies from multiple sources, he’s researching.”

This week I’d like us to talk about using other people’s material with integrity.

Giving Credit
On LifeChurch.tv Open, we don’t require attribution for resources that people download and use. We don’t need credit nor desire it. We simply want to make anything we create freely available for other pastors and churches to use in ministry.

Sadly, we know of a couple of pastors who have been fired, in part, for “plagiarizing” our work and others whose integrity has been questioned.

Here are my thoughts:

It isn’t plagiarizing if you’re given permission.
Just because it isn’t plagiarizing doesn’t always mean you shouldn’t give credit to others.

Years ago I used material—with permission—from a friend. He had asked me not to credit him, so I didn’t.

A few people took a strong stance against me for plagiarizing. Although he didn’t desire to be mentioned, we all would have been better off if I had given credit for the material I used.

Giving credit does several valuable things:
It honors the pastor or church who came up with the idea.
It demonstrates humility and security.
It exposes a church to other great leaders and teachers.
It removes any doubt of copying.
This week, we’ll discuss when and how to give credit.
What are your initial thoughts?


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 Pastor emeritus Nathan Bickel has left a new comment on your post "WELS, ELS, LCMS Beware - Rewarding Plagiarism Reve...":

Ichabod - I have no doubt that WELS will be forever discussing the issue of plagiarism; attempting to clarify it while splitting hairs and making degrees of it acceptable within its own inbred Synod. One of the things that utterly has turned me off to my own local WELS congregation, besides that of the pastor's Universalism teaching and preaching, is that he appears to be a synodical puppet.

Attending Bethel Lutheran is such, that it a local church which is compromised. Its own identity is torn because its pastor and congregational officers are so wedded and dependent upon local circuit, regional district and national synodical allegiances. On one particular occasion I noticed that the pastor plagiarized a sermon that was posted on the WELS site. It was during the time period of the synodical Bible Study on the Romans 12 gifts.

The sermon was about "encouragement" and highlighted Samuel's mother, Hannah. Finally, it is my observation that the WELS schools don't teach and train its students to be independent thinkers and to be solely beholden to the Scriptures and to the Lutheran Confessions. Students, are instead pumped through the multi-webbed system only to be a rubber stamped version of the same stale synodical status quo. Nathan M. Bickel - Bay city, MI www.thechristianmessage.orgwww.moralmatters.org

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http://ichabodthegloryhasdeparted.blogspot.com/2012/11/plagiarism-is-not-so-impressive-later.html

The Holy Trinity Is Actually Taught in the Bible

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I remember an Augustana College professor saying the Trinity was not in the Bible. I also found that Knappe, the godfather of Objective Justification, denied the Biblical basis of the Trinity as well. 

I decided to put together the Scriptural verses, and Norma Boeckler agreed to illustrate it. Available as a Kindle e-book as well.

Quoting me:

These passages were gathered by an assistant – always there when I need him most – to show that the Holy Spirit does reveal the Triune God throughout the Bible, from Genesis 1 onward. The parameters chosen were the naming of all Three Persons within two verses. In many cases, the Father Son relationship is revealed by the Spirit in the text of the Word, but the work is more powerful when all three Persons are named or described.




To order The Holy Trinity, click here.

Upcoming projects:

Metamorphosis - A defense of Christianity in the form of a murder mystery novel.

Catholic, Lutheran, Protestant - Amazon edition.

Just a Vacation. Lutheran leaders oppose justification by faith, so I am going to offer some quotations by Luther on their least favorite topic. Yes, the title will reflect Biblical doctrine rather than the LCMS/WELS deluxe winter vacations (for District Presidents) in the Caribbean.

Biblical work on the efficacy of the Word.

Biblical work on Jesus throughout Scriptures.

Decisions.



Looking at Leaves as Fall Arrives with a Blast of Arctic Air

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We started to enjoy autumn yesterday. I rescued roses from the garden just before the killer frost settled down on the fragile flowers. Green tree leaves burst into spectacular colors. Who needs Door County, Wisconsin for Normal Rockwell photos?

Our helper came over to work on the leaves. We mulch-mow the front yard and Mrs. Wright's. I reasoned last year that leaving her leaves blowing around was counter-productive. Our Lowe's mower turns the leaves into tiny scraps that blend with any grass clippings for feeding the soil. I rake up extra piles for the crepe myrtle bush. We will win the best bloom competition next year. Three things will do this for the crepe myrtle, despised by many for being hardy and prolific:

  • Feeding with mulch all winter.
  • Pruning in the spring.
  • Earthworms sprinkled on the mulch to wiggle into the soil below.


One oddball publication assumed all worms die during the winter. I have not done a survey. I assume most of them in unprotected ground will succumb. However, rotting material above generates heat and keeps the soil warmer, blocking the drying, killing winds. A heavy snow cover is much kinder to plants and soil creatures than a dry cold winter without snow. Finally, a weather holocaust would still leave the egg casings ready to hatch wormlings in the spring. A compost pile will distribute worms and casings when used. Our compost will be shared with the corn patch.

Our helper looked helplessly at the leaves in the backyard. They were piled up against the fence, on top of the wood and newsprint mulch. "How can we rake those?"

I remained composed in the crisis. "We will use them in the spring." My plan is to plant roses parallel with the fence between us and  Mr. Gardener. We will dig holes in the lawn, plant the roses, and mulch afterwards. We want them close enough for Mrs. Gardener to cut some for herself. We can get the leaves away from the fence, incorporate them in the mulch, and cover with shredded cyprus.

Some leaves will go in the compost and others will be used to create the wild area in the back. One must plan carefully to go wild. That will include Butterfly bushes, sunflowers, and various hardy and prolific herbs/weeds.

I think of people who rake, rake, rake, and bag, bag, bag, then set the leaves out in color coded plastic sacks so the professional refuse people can collect them. These rakers and baggers are the first ones to buy fertilizer at the big box stores when spring arrives. Soil fertility is so-o-o-o-o-o important to them.

Apical meristematic tissue is located just below the tips of shoots and just above the root caps. These cells can mature to become any type of cell in the entire plant and are responsible for increasing plant height and length. 

Lateral meristem cells add diameter to plants.   

Ground tissue provides most of the bulk of a plant as well as its support. These cells also serve as sites for photosynthesis, food storage, protection, and regeneration after injury.   

Vascular tissue is made up of xylem and phloem vessels that transport water and nutrients.   

The xylem carries water and dissolved nutrients upward from the roots. Transpiration, cohesion, and adhesion allow water to move through the xylem without the plant expending any energy.   

Phloem vessels move sap (water and materials produced by the plant) both upward to the leaves and downward to the roots.

Dermal tissue forms the skin of the plant, which keeps in water and helps to protect the plant from external injury.   

Stomata are pores in the epidermis that open to allow carbon dioxide to diffuse into the leaves and water vapor and oxygen out.   The key function of leaves is to provide the platform for photosynthesis. 

Chloroplasts reside in cells between the two layers of epidermal cells that cover each leaf.  

Root hairs are extremely important to the uptake of nutrients. Each is a single epidermal cell that can grow to an amazing length.   

Roots take in water and nutrient ions with the aid of microbes that live in the soil.   

Mucilage is the mixture of sloughed off root tip cells, exudates from root tips, and microbial populations and by-products. It acts as a lubricant for roots growing into soil and influences the uptake of nutrients, particularly metal ions.

Jeff; Lowenfels, (2013-05-07). Teaming with Nutrients: The Organic Gardener’s Guide to Optimizing Plant Nutrition (Kindle Locations 1423-1445). Timber Press. Kindle Edition. 

Above is just a summary of a section dealing with plant anatomy and how various parts contribute to the soil food web.

Root cap cells help build the mucilage that lubricates the root and the soil, making it easier to penetrate and increasing the contact between the soil and the root. Eventually, the outer cells of root tips are sloughed off and replaced by new root cells produced in the meristematic tissue. These sloughed off cells supplement the plant’s exudates (sugars and amino acids, mostly) that attract microbes necessary for nutrient absorption to the rhizosphere. The mixture of microbes living in and digesting this sloughed-off cellular material generates wastes that contain essential plant nutrients, particularly nitrogen. 

Mucilage has a great influence on the uptake of nutrients, particularly metal nutrients, into plants. Phosphorus, zinc, iron, and magnesium all diffuse into the mucilage gel and from the gel into the roots. This gel is particularly apt at oozing into soil particle crevices and pores, thus increasing contact with the surfaces where these metals are located. Mucilage contains acids that dissolve phosphorus, which can then diffuse through it to the root. In addition, chemical reactions that occur in the mucilage and the gel’s pH result in the uptake of metals. Plant exudates become part of the mixture, produced, at least in part, in direct response to the need for some nutrient or a need to turn off a nutrient supply, which requires a change in the mixture of microbes. In any case, the presence of mucilage contributes to the rhizosphere chemical factory. Some plants take up various metals in greater quantities than others due to the makeup of the root mucilage mixture.

Jeff; Lowenfels, (2013-05-07). Teaming with Nutrients: The Organic Gardener’s Guide to Optimizing Plant Nutrition (Kindle Locations 1365-1377). Timber Press. Kindle Edition. 


We Heard George W. Bush Today - Walmart Meeting, BBQ, Batman Gifts. Composting the Leaves

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George W. Bush came to Bentonville, Arkansas
to promote his book about his father, George H. W. Bush.
We went extra early to the Walmart Saturday Morning Meeting, to hear to his former staffer Dan Bartlett interview him. 
Dan Bartlett now works for Walmart.
W. fascinated the audience as he spoke about his father, his presidency, and his father's. He brought down the house by admitting his birth at Yale New Haven hospital was a political mistake.

LI was born at the same hospital. Chris and I worked at the Yale Medical complex. She helped a famous professor, Dr. Joan Fassler, with research - as she had at the University of Waterloo. I gathered and copied medical articles for researchers in a government program.

More than once I wore LI in a baby carrier and met Chris at the Yale Medical Library, our joint employer. I found it convenient to leave the Yale Shuttle Bus for a Baskin Robbins French Vanilla malted. The owner asked, "How much malt?" I told the owner, a fan of malteds, "I want enough to make me cough." He said, "I know what you mean."

Laura Bush came another time to promote her book, charming everyone,
but we have not seen the current president or his wife.
Friends went with us to see the George W. Bush Library in Dallas. We went to Dealey Plaza the same day.

The younger Bush is often called W for short, so that became my nickname among the Intrepid Lutherans who organized around a blog. The WELS leaders always blame me for the trouble caused by their own corruption, dishonesty, and false doctrine. The Intrepids heard that so often that I became "W" as a joke on WELS.

After the meeting, Chris heard all about it from LI, who told her about the technical revolution and the new high WM stock price.



I fired up T-Rex and we had a great meal. Unfortunately, a brief spell away from the grill meant the bacon blazed up and turned to ash.  We had homemade cheesecake and other delights.

Alex got Batman birthday gifts. He suggested a Batarang for next year's birthday. I looked it up with him on Amazon and sent him one for Wednesday, not for next year. He went outside with me and the helper to rake leaves for the compost. Snow is coming. We filled up the compost and put the garden hose on branches of the dead tree. Alex told our helper how they would divide the job up - division of labor. Our helper wondered how he become junior assistant. Seniority! Alex was raking leaves for me several years ago.


Other Walmart meeting stars, from previous meetings.

Joe Montana.

Tim Tebow.
Hugh Jackman led the Christmas singing at the meeting
and shook hands with LI and me fterwards. 




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