Tuesday, April 8, 2008

WELS Featured Speaker - Wisconsin Lutheran College



Homosexual-blackmail scandal? Roman Catholic Archbishop? Just the speaker we need at Wisconsin Lutheran College.


Archbishop Weakland Makes Public Apology


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By Laurel Nelson-Rowe
Catholic News Service
(From the issue of 6/6/02)

MILWAUKEE -- Wearing a simple white alb, crimson zucchetto, his favorite pectoral cross and purple stole of penance, former Milwaukee Archbishop Rembert G. Weakland used carefully chosen words and visible acts of contrition in a public apology during a prayer service in a chapel at the archdiocesan center May 31.

During a seven-minute homily delivered in somber, sometimes faltering tones, a gaunt Archbishop Weakland apologized five times.

Once he finished speaking, the clearly grief-stricken gathering of 400 rose in sustained applause, as their former archbishop knelt before them, shoulders hunched, hands shaking.

Acknowledging that there can be "no healing" for the church and the Catholic community "unless it is based on truth," Archbishop Weakland began by saying: "I come before you today to apologize and beg forgiveness. ... I apologize to all the faithful of this archdiocese which I love so much, to all its people and clergy, for the scandal that has occurred because of my sinfulness."

The archbishop also apologized "for any harm done" to Paul Marcoux. On May 23, Marcoux went public with accusations of sexual abuse by Archbishop Weakland in the late 1970s, while Marcoux was in his early 30s attending graduate courses at Milwaukee's Marquette University.

Marcoux said he was paid $450,000 by the Milwaukee Archdiocese in 1997 to remain quiet about the abuse, and produced a letter written to him in 1980 in which Archbishop Weakland discussed the "pain of deep love" in their relationship.

In a public statement issued on the day Marcoux's allegations broke, Archbishop Weakland denied Marcoux's claim, saying he had "never abused anyone."

While Archbishop Weakland's apology did not go into detail other than to pinpoint a 1979 time frame, he said in his apology, "I acknowledge and fully accept my responsibility for the inappropriate nature of my relationship with Mr. Paul Marcoux."

Archbishop Weakland said that, at the time, he "did not understand" his responsibility.

The 75-year-old archbishop, whose request to retire was accepted by the Vatican May 24 -- the day following first news reports on the relationship -- also said that since that time he has "come to see and understand the way in which the power of the Roman collar can work in such relationships, and even more so, a bishop's miter."

Instead of linking the financial payment to the relationship, however, Archbishop Weakland pointed out in his apology that he "understood the settlement agreement in question as compensation for Paul Marcoux because of the claim that I had interfered with his ability to earn income."

In the 1998 settlement agreement involving Marcoux, Archbishop Weakland and the Milwaukee Archdiocese, Marcoux's "claims against the archdiocese and the archbishop" include, "without limitation, intentional interference with contractual relations, breach of fiduciary duty and trust; reckless hiring, retention, supervision, and training; sexual assault and battery; and intentional infliction of emotional distress."

The contractual reference in the settlement agreement reportedly relates to Marcoux's efforts to gain funding for his fledgling Christodrama video business from various Catholic institutions and dioceses which might have been influenced in some way by Archbishop Weakland.

Asked about the context of the settlement, Jerry Topczewski, archdiocesan spokesman, said, "When you have two parties who disagree with the facts of the situation, settlement is the obvious legal course. Certainly mounting attorneys' fees were involved -- we have to rely on legal counsel in these types of cases and many others."

In his apology, Archbishop Weakland conceded "there is understandable concern" about the payment. He said the payment did not come from the annual Catholic Stewardship Appeal or from "any diocesan funds designated for charitable or pastoral work."

"Perhaps I should have handled this situation differently," he said. "If I had done so, there would still have been sizable costs to the church, but at least it would have been out in the open. One of my fears in not accepting the settlement was the prospect of scandal and embarrassment for myself and for the church. For that lack of courage, I apologize."

Archbishop Weakland also said he had erred in the assertion made in his first public statement on the settlement in saying his earnings during 25 years as archbishop, from writing, speeches and other honoraria "far exceed any settlement amount."

"To my continued embarrassment, I now am told that is not true," he admitted.

In a statement released after the service, the archdiocese said the stipends, honorariums, and gifts it has received because of Archbishop Weakland's work total $148,928.82. That amount has earned $47,794.38 in interest over the years, for a total of $196,723 since June 30, 1978 -- Archbishop Weakland's first fiscal year in office -- and is maintained in a separate, interest-bearing account, according to the statement.

To make restitution, Archbishop Weakland pledged in his "remaining years" to "contribute to the archdiocese whatever I can, and of course, the archdiocese will receive whatever effects I own on my death."

Following the service, Archbishop Weakland returned to seclusion in his residence on the St. Francis Seminary grounds. It was not clear whether he will proceed with plans to move into an apartment prepared for his retirement at the Archbishop Cousins Catholic Center.

Archbishop Weakland described his feelings "at this moment" as "remorse, contrition, shame and emptiness," also noting that "much self-pity and pride remain." He contended he "must leave that pride behind."

***

Roman Catholics Seem More Critical of Weakland than WELS


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St. Michael the Archangel, defend us in battle...


Seattle Catholic is not affiliated with the Archdiocese of Seattle

A Journal of Catholic News and Views7 Jun 2002
Archbishop Weakland's Legacy


by Peter W. Miller


The liberal liturgist's shameful departure

On May 23rd, Catholics across America started their Thursday mornings with another in a long string of shocking revelations as Paul Marcoux went on ABC's "Good Morning America" and accused longtime Milwaukee Archbishop Rembert Weakland of sexual assault. Additionally, Marcoux revealed that in 1998 Weakland paid him a sum of $450,000 to keep their "relationship" quiet. Now 53 years old, Marcoux was a theology student at Marquette University 20 years prior when he approached the archbishop for advice on going into the priesthood. It was during this encounter that the alleged abuse took place.1

In a statement released the same day, Weakland denied the abuse accusation but refused to comment on the financial arrangement, deferring to its confidentiality clause:

"I have never abused anyone. I have not seen Paul Marcoux for more than 20 years. Because I accept the agreement's confidentiality provision, I will make no comment about its contents." 2
Except that the intent of the confidentially provision was for Marcoux's silence, not the archbishop's. That same day, Weakland, who almost two months earlier had reached the mandatory age of retirement and submitted his resignation to Rome, asked that his pending request be expedited. The Vatican announced acceptance of Weakland's retirement that next day. Bishop Richard J. Sklba took over interim leadership of the archdiocese and delivered the following tribute:

"Therefore we enter this new moment 'living the truth in love' (Eph 4:15) and remembering Archbishop Weakland with the respect and love he has earned from his dedicated public service in our midst for the past quarter of a century." 3
If there is any justice, he will indeed get every bit of respect he has earned for himself. After a week of near seclusion, Weakland returned to the spotlight to deliver a hollow apology:

"I come before you today to apologize and beg forgiveness. ... I apologize to all the faithful of this Archdiocese ... for the scandal that has occurred because of my sinfulness. Long ago, I placed that sinfulness in God's loving and forgiving heart, but now and into the future I worry about those whose faith may be shaken by my acts. I acknowledge and fully accept my responsibility for the inappropriate nature of my relationship with Mr. Paul Marcoux. I apologize for any harm done him. At that time, 1979, I did not understand that responsibility in the same way as I do now. I have come to see and understand the way in which the power of the Roman collar can work in such relationships and, even more so, a bishop's miter." 4
After which he knelt before the altar and received a 90-second standing ovation from the congregation/audience. Lest we are tempted to carelessly join in this amnesic love-fest, remember that it takes very little courage to admit wrongdoing and deliver an apology only after one has been publicly exposed and no options to continue hiding the scandal with power and money remain. The whole world found out what he had done and were presented with two indisputable pieces of evidence. Weakland had the choice of fading into obscurity and denial or salvaging what remained of his respectability with a Jimmy Swaggart routine. For someone who loves the spotlight and values his "work" as much as Weakland does, he was left with no choice. However contrite and worthy of forgiveness this fallen prelate may now be, it does not negate the damage done over the past thirty-five years, nor does it change at all the lessons that must be learned.

Exhibit A: The "Love" Letter

Besides the nearly one half million dollars effectively stolen from the Milwaukee Archdiocese and paid to him in exchange for silence, Marcoux would produce a second piece of evidence — a letter written by hand from Weakland to Marcoux on August 25th 1980 (http://www.jsonline.com/news/metro/may02/45574.asp).

There is little more incriminating than admissions made with your own words in your own handwriting. This correspondence, read by tens of thousands in a matter of days, started out with the ironic concern that:

"My mother's sage advice ... was to warn me that I should not put down on paper what I would not want the whole world to read. — But here goes anyway." 5
Weakland goes on to discuss his personal rediscovery of celibacy's importance — perhaps about as close to admitting a sexual relationship as one can come:

"During the last months I have come to know how strained I was ... I just did not seem to be honest with God. I felt I was fleeing from Him, from facing Him. I know what the trouble was: I was letting your conscience take over for me and I couldn't live with it. I felt like the world's worst hypocrite. So gradually I came back to the importance of celibacy in my life ... I knew I would have to face up to it and take seriously that commitment I first made thirty-four years ago. ... There is no other way for me to live, Paul. Ridicule me if you must — I am expecting it. Say I am seeking escapes, but I must be me. I know now that I can never be to you a Don or anybody else." 6
He also struggles with the idea of carelessly squandering diocesan funds:

"After that visit I knew how much you needed money to bring off that Christodrama project and how much you counted on me for it. ... Paul, I really have given you all that I personally possess. The $14,000 is really my personal limit: it was the money I got from my community when I became a bishop and I simply do not have private funds. What I can now do personally to help you will be minimal. I know you are pushing me for Church money, for some sort of Church support for the Midwest Institute of Christodrama. I feel you are putting me in an impossible situation here. I consider all that Church money as a sacred trust; it represents the offerings of faithful and I must be accountable to them for how it is all spent. There are hundreds of requests on my desk for funds for worthy causes, for inner city projects, to the elderly, to the handicapped, etc. Hardly a day goes past I don't have to turn down such projects. I simply do not see how I can authorize money for your project. It is not because I don't love you..." 7
Apparently, similar scruples did not come into play eighteen years later when a half million dollars in hush money was handed over. The letter concludes:

"I love you.
Rembert" 8

The crux of this note was Archbishop Weakland explaining to Paul Marcoux that he could not donate funds from the archdiocese to support his project. While abuse was not apparent and Marcoux came out looking like a manipulative con artist, the evidence of a homosexual relationship is hard to overlook.

While it is unclear exactly what Marcoux's "Christodrama" is all about, it appears to be a cross between modern theater and biblical story-telling. Considering Weakland's involvement, the praise it has received from such groups as Call-to-Action and Dignity, as well as its acceptance in the Archdiocese of Seattle during the 1980's, it's safe to assume that "Christodrama" did not set any new high marks for orthodoxy.

Tolerance and hypocrisy

In his letter to Marcoux, Archbishop Weakland said he felt like the world's worst hypocrite — which is pretty much how he looked when this had all come to pass. Not more than a month before, Weakland was banging the war drums against abusive priests and openly advocating the implementation of a "zero tolerance," "one strike" policy in Milwaukee. Considering Weakland's past actions with abusive priests, this transparent PR attempt didn't fool many for long. Take for example the tolerance and compassion shown in the case of Fr. Effinger:

"Father Effinger was not inhibited by any sacredness of site or symbols from raping his victim—whose shamefaced agony was so obvious to his mother the next morning, when she went to see him serve Mass, that she quickly got the story from him and took it to Archbishop Weakland, who promised her that Father Effinger would be reassigned where he would not have access to children. ... Father Effinger was reassigned to a parish by Weakland, where he was convicted of molesting another boy and sentenced to ten years in prison, where he died. When the boy finally brought suit for damages, a judge threw out the case because the statute of limitations had expired—and the archdiocese successfully countersued for the $4,000 it had spent on the court procedure." 9
Shuffling abusive priests, manipulating the legal system to take advantage of loopholes and counter-suing victims are all techniques that every Catholic should have "zero tolerance" for. At the time when Marcoux's allegations were aired, there were at least six priests in the Archdiocese of Milwaukee that Weakland allowed to continue serving in parishes even though they were facing sexual abuse allegations.

And then there's Weakland's famous "blame the victim" mentality as printed in May of 1988 by Milwaukee's own diocesan newspaper. When discussing the topic of sexual abuse of children, Weakland asserted that:

"Not all adolescent victims are so innocent. Some can be sexually very active and aggressive and often quite streetwise. We frequently try such adolescents for crimes as adults at that age." 10
Given the Marcoux story, it is not completely ridiculous to think that part of this knowledge was gained through personal experience. On at least two subsequent occasions, Weakland tried to distance himself from those foolish remarks, attempting to repeatedly justify and alter the context before finally giving up.

With Catholics in Milwaukee and elsewhere understandably outraged that $450,000 in hush money was handed over, Weakland offered the feeble justification that the money he had personally earned from articles and lectures over the years far exceeded that amount. There are many problems with this excuse ranging from the proper duties of a bishop to the nature of diocesan finances, but I'm perhaps most appalled by the fact that he considers the resources obtained by his continued spreading of heterodoxy and liberalism a shield against suspicion of embezzlement and an authorization to use what he himself once called a "sacred trust" as a personal bank account. The move was not only unethical but probably illegal — The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reported on May 28th that the U.S. Attorney's office would conduct an investigation into the source of the funds used for this "settlement."

Not that his justification was in any way sufficient before, but it turned out that his personal earnings did not "far exceed" the pay-off amount but came about $250,000 shy. As Weakland said in his apology:

"This money did not come from the Stewardship Appeal or from any diocesan funds designated for charitable or pastoral work. In my mind, the money I had given the Archdiocese was more than the settlement amount. To my continued embarrassment, I now am told that is not true. In my remaining years I will continue to contribute to the Archdiocese whatever I can and, of course, the Archdiocese will receive whatever effects I own on my death." 11
I'd say he's already contributed enough.

Too liberal for Rome?

In case you're new to the planet, Rembert Weakland has for many years been the one bishop orthodox Catholics in the U.S. have most loved to hate. As the Australian Journal, AD2000 noted in 1992:

Along with Cardinal Bernardin of Chicago, Archbishop Weakland has led the push for a far more distinctively "American Church", as independent as possible from Rome. Associated with this 'push' have been Weakland's highly controversial policies and views on abortion, homosexuality, AIDS education, sex education, clerical pedophilia and feminism. Presumably these developments would make the American Church more American. That it would also be less Catholic is equally clear. Whether it would be Catholic at all remains an open question. 12
The long list of Weakland's antics is too extensive to recount in full. To get an idea of the scope, read through the rest of the AD2000 article found here: http://www.ad2000.com.au/articles/1992/oct1992p4_773.html.

While perhaps not the worst, Weakland has been the most vocal and visible dissident and rebel against Vatican authority since Hunthausen was forced to retire just over a decade ago. He became the primary lightning rod for conservative/liberal battles — a position he freely acknowledged and relished, describing himself as a "maverick" and "rebel" on multiple occasions.

In the past year, faithful Catholics in Milwaukee came to know quite well how much lasting damage could be wrought by one modernist bishop when they saw their cathedral turned into something resembling a pagan temple or a concert hall. Even when lobbyists succeeded in provoking some response from Rome, they were delivered in the form of suggestive recommendations which Weakland flatly refused to consider, asserting his own "independence" — or in Vatican II speak, "collegiality".

As in years before, the cathedral controversy resulted in no strong proactive or reactive measures from the Vatican, causing some to hope that the Church hierarchy was just waiting for Weakland to retire. Those hopes were soon called into question when his retirement request (filed on his 75th birthday — April 2nd, 2002) was, according to Vatican sources and the Milwaukee Archdiocese, put on indefinite delay, only to be processed when his homosexual and financial scandals were aired on national television. One would think the Vatican would jump at the opportunity to rid the Church of this "maverick" rather than wait nearly two months. Could it be that Rome did not see this man as the scourge Catholics in America did? Could the impressions so many had hoped Rome must have of this man be inaccurate? Since the hand was forced, it's now harder to say. What was shaping up to be an interesting exercise in excuse-making came to a quick end when Rome decided to retire the archbishop rather than let him face the music and be accountable for his actions.

However, at least one valuable lesson can be taken from the quick reaction. Just one day after the news breaking, the retirement of Archbishop Weakland was announced, demonstrating that the Vatican is both keenly aware of what's going on in America and is fully capable of acting swiftly and decisively when it deems fit. While some are quick to label pleas for action as "attacks" when they are raised to the Holy Father and insist that "the Church acts according to its own timeline," lessons from recent history show this timeline to be highly arbitrary.

Weakland and the New Mass

Archbishop Weakland's primary religious interest and the field in which he has been granted "expert" status by numerous publications has been the liturgy. When he wasn't referring to himself as a "maverick" he was relishing his role in the liturgical reform movement. In 1997, the self-described "bishop in the trenches" of the liturgical "renewal" described to the Jesuit magazine America his beliefs on the extent of liturgical abuses:

"I can honestly and truthfully say that the aberrations that arose in the late sixties from excessive zeal and exuberance had begun to run their course and to disappear by the early eighties." 13
If they all disappeared decades ago, what does he consider and aberration? He goes on to lament Pope John Paul II's 1984 indult to "allow" very limited usage of the 1962 missal (under certain specific conditions) as somehow "derailing" the liturgical movement:

"My hopes, however, were shattered. What totally derailed the liturgical renewal, from the point of view of this bishop in the trenches, was the decision of Pope John Paul II made I am sure, with great anguish to grant in 1984 the indult that allowed the Tridentine usage to flourish again. ... Just at the moment when the situation was beginning to settle down and the deeper and more spiritual aspects of the renewal were becoming possible, a whole new battle began, one in which the renewal itself was called into question or where everyone seemed free to project his or her personal views on how the renewal of the Council should have taken place. As well-meaning as that decision to broaden the Tridentine usage was, one cannot emphasize enough how devastating the results have been." 14
Although I, among many, wish what he calls "the renewal" actually had been derailed by the broadened use of the Tridentine Mass, the result has far from substantiated his conclusion. Even such, the reason he took the very questioning of the reforms quite personally was due to his experience with the construction and establishment of the New Mass. Weakland was appointed by Pope Paul VI as a consultor in 1964 and then a voting member in 1968 of the Consilium for the Implementation of the Liturgy after Vatican II.15 But he was much more than just another participant:

Rembert G. Weakland was a key confidant of the pope in January 1968 as one of the most profound changes in Roman Catholic Church history was about to take place. The Second Vatican Council had adopted a document on sacred liturgy, but Paul VI had to implement it — and in doing so, replace the 400-year-old Tridentine Mass.
Resistant Vatican officials were pressuring him. He didn't want a schism. To resolve doubts, the Pope tried three versions of the new Mass. Five people, mainly bishops and cardinals, attended each. Only two were at every session — Weakland, then the abbot primate or worldwide head of the Benedictine order of monks and priests, and the late Annibale Bugnini, then a monsignor and secretary of the Vatican liturgical commission. Weakland termed the sessions "decisive." 16

There are many Catholics who have stood in opposition to Weakland for as long as they can remember, but will adamantly defend and support the Novus Ordo Missae as the height of perfection and in every sense, above question. Are not the beliefs and dispositions of the men who were involved in devising this missal worth consideration?

The other contributor mentioned and easily the most influential figure in the implementation of the liturgical reforms was the head of the Consilium, alleged Freemason Annibale Bugnini. Also of questionable orthodoxy, Bugnini would be dismissed by his superiors on two separate occasions, ending up spending his later years as Papal Nuncio to Iran — a reassignment that makes Fr. Fessio's exile look like the dream promotion of a lifetime.

With the input and support of such individuals, is it not reasonable to assume that at least the implementation of the liturgical reforms (if not the entire effort including the Vatican II schema and document which kicked it off) had its share of serious problems? While the subsequent fall from grace of the men involved is not necessary to observe such things, it certainly reinforces the idea that the Consilium participants had their own agendas and saw the Mass as something more in need of a "renewal" than a sacred treasure to be preserved.

Throughout his career, many Catholics have openly challenged Weakland's interpretation of what liturgical reforms were and were not called for by Vatican II. He considered himself more than qualified to interpret the intentions of the Council and, given his experience in the development and implementation of those reforms, it would appear that this conception was vindicated by Rome very early on. If he's right, then Sacrosanctum Concilium is deserving of a second look.

One less wolf

As Weakland departs from his position of leadership and perhaps becomes an indentured servant of the Milwaukee Archdiocese, what is the legacy he leaves behind? According to Rod Dreher of National Review Online:

"Neither Weakland nor the money-grubbing Marcoux are victims. The Catholics of Milwaukee are. Their archbishop's arrogance and selfishness in the seedy Marcoux matter has cost them nearly half a million dollars. But in truth, the intangible cost is much higher. ... A local church riven with heresy and anti-Roman dissent, a bare, ruined cathedral, demoralized priests, and a scandalized flock: This, tragically, is the legacy of Rembert Weakland." 17

Although Weakland's fall may have been cause for temporary schadenfreude on the part of his opponents, how much of a cause for celebration really is this? I know several Catholics in Milwaukee who were counting down the days until his seventy-fifth birthday and were starting to get a little uneasy that he was still around in late May; but when he is replaced with a slightly less liberal bishop, how much will it matter? Milwaukee still has an offensive cathedral, a dying priesthood of individuals mostly selected and promoted by Weakland, experimental liturgies, poor Catholic education programs and a host of other problems afflicting almost every American diocese. Hopefully the local Catholics have not been so jaded by twenty-five years of having a horrible bishop that their standards have slipped and they will accept (or praise) a bad bishop, thankful that "at least he's not Weakland." What about the whole pack of bishops who supported Weakland in his open defiance of Vatican authority? They knew as well as you and me what was going on in the Archdiocese of Milwaukee, but not a single one stood up to offer any sort of "fraternal correction" against a man so clearly unqualified to care for thousands of souls.

No, the battle is not over. When facing a battalion of thousands, the falling of a single captain should not be cause for much pause. Although Rembert Weakland embodied many of the problems facing the Church, he was not himself the problem and his passing from a position of authority is not any sort of solution. A Church-wide crisis of Faith and morals will continue despite his retirement and will thrive if Catholics delude themselves into thinking that the end of the Weakland era represents a new Springtime for the Church.

Peter W. Miller
Seattle, WA
6/7/2002

FOOTNOTES:
1 B. Ross, "Vow of Silence" ABC News (May 23, 2002)
2 Ibid.
3 www.archmil.org
4 R. Weakland, "Apology of Archbishop Rembert G. Weakland, O.S.B." www.archmil.org (May 31, 2002)
5 "1980 letter from Weakland to Marcoux" Milwaukee Journal Sentinel (May, 2002)
6 Ibid.
7 Ibid.
8 Ibid.
9 G. Wills, "Scandal" The New York Review of Books (May 23, 2002)
10 The Catholic Herald, (May 26, 1988)
11 R. Weakland, "Apology of Archbishop Rembert G. Weakland, O.S.B." www.archmil.org (May 31, 2002)
12 "Why is Archbishop Weakland invited to Australia?" AD2000 (October 1992)
13 R. Weakland, America (June 7-14, 1997)
14 Ibid.
15 R. Weakland, "The Liturgy as Battlefield" Commonweal (January 11, 2002)
16 T. Heinen, Journal Sentinel, www.shrine.com
17 R. Dreher, "Weakland's Exit - A liberal bishop and his downfall" National Review Online (5/24/2002)

God Bless DP Benke



Benke Loves Every Denomination Except His Own


How often can sensible Lutherans point to one man who exemplifies the insanity of the Lutheran Church today? God bless DP Benke for serving that role. He is the true ecumenical leader of the Lutheran Church, loving every denomination except his own. He is also a good reminder of those who have humbly served in the same function, not seeking their own glory, but only the glory of unionism.

Lately Benke is making waves for meeting with the Antichrist.

John Lawrenz, (WELS) president of their portable Asian seminary, met with JP II in the Ukraine already in 2001. The Ukraine Catholic Church once featured a photo of Lawrenz in a state of mystical adoration, meeting with the Antichrist.

Wisconsin Lutheran College (WELS) invited the noted homosexual predator and Archbishop, Rembert Weakland and his Catholic priests to speak at a series for the ovine public in Milwaukee. Weakland was one of the few clerics canned by the Vatican for his scandalous behavior, pursuit, and pay-offs to a young man. Weakland is also honored among pedophiles for stating that children were looking for sex with adults. Members and clergy of WELS and the Little Sect on the Prairie were utterly silent about this event, showing they were far ahead of Benke in their ecumenical sensitivity.

Bethany Lutheran Seminary (Little Sect on the Prairie) invited a Roman Catholic (a former bishop, no less) to march with them in a religious procession and join in their Lutheran worship service - where he spoke! Rolf Preus, the Archimandrite of the Church of Defenestration, denounced me on LutherQuest (sic) for questioning the ELS pioneering effort. Erling Teigen arranged the service, so Rolf said, "Teigen doesn't have an ecumenical bone in his body, and you know it."

Norman Teigen has left a new comment on your post "God Bless DP Benke":

I wasn't at Bethany during the convocation which you mention in your post, but it is possible that you have been misinformed. I have been reliably informed that the chapel service was clearly ended before the academic convocation began. Thought you might like to have a second opinion on this. I know that Bethany is very careful not to give offense on these matters, which, incidentally, mean more to the college than they do to me personally. I have become much more tolerant on these questions as I have grown older. I now find the fellowship questions which you find so important to be somewhat amusing.

Norman Teigen
ELS layman

GJ - I am very reliably informed by an eye-witness at the event. I have a vivid description of the Roman Catholic priest (once a priest, always a priest, even if married, in the Church of Rome) marching in the religious procession with the Bethany "Lutheran" seminary faculty. To say one part of the service was religious while another was secular is pure Talmudic hair-splitting. I find it amusing that Bethany bragged about the bishop in the local paper and then hid the details in the Bethany College yearbook. That is the Fuller syndrome, so familiar in WELS/ELS - brag among the apostates and hide the facts among the traditionalists. My greatest amusements come from bouts of ELS/WELS bouts of telescopic orthodoxy. A WELS person on LutherQuest (sic) will shout - "Look at those evil LCMS liberals, playing kissy-face with the pope." Meanwhile, the facts show WELS did it seven years earlier.

As they say in DC, "It's not the unionism. It's the cover-up."

***

Sometimes an eyewitness doesn't always get things right. I know that from my work as an insurance claims adjuster that one witness does not a story prove. I would suggest that you not report the Bethany story as fact.


Norman Teigen
ELS layman

***

GJ - My eyewitness was not related to the perpetrators of this event, had no interest in a cover-up, and reported the event dispassionately as fact. I am shocked, shocked that the ELS would brag about the worship service in the Mankato newspaper and then act as if it never happened.

I am not shocked that the seminary faculty would participate. They watched in dumbstruck awe as the ELS entered into a continuing relationship with Fuller Seminary and the perfidious Church Growth Movement.

----

Paul Teifel (aka Teufel) and David Koenig (Church of the Lutheran Confession - sic) promoted Roman Catholic piety in their laughably bad While It Is Day newsletter. Reminding their cult-followers of how much they learned from WELS, the CLC leaders said, "That newsletter no longer exists." When the current newsletter was quoted extensively, the CLC promptly circled the wagons to support their ecumenical leaders, Teifel and Koenig, perhaps for providing comic relief at their surly, demented, hair-splitting conventions.

The CLC leaders did not know this was going on, even though the newsletters were circulating freely at their homespun college in the woods. Stories changed frequently to provide cover for the naughty duo, foreshadowing the whoppers told by Obama about his spiritual mentor, pastor, and Leonard Sweet student, Jeremiah Wright.

Are Angels Rejoicing in Heaven?
Koelpin Called to The Love Shack






Official Call List, WELS
Koelpin, Rev Philip A
Home Missions Office - Milwaukee WI 04/04/2008
Regional Mission Counselor,
PNW, AZ-CA, SC Districts.

Leonard Sweet on Jeremiah Wright






Sweet and Wright








"Jeremiah has been a model for many preachers around the country (for) preaching and pastoring," said the Rev. Daryl Ward, senior pastor at Omega Baptist Church in Dayton. Ward was a top administrator at the United Theological Seminary in Dayton when Wright, 66, received his doctor of ministry degree there in 1990.

Wright, who retired last month as pastor of Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago, recently canceled a number of speaking engagements, including three services at a Houston church on Sunday. He cited security concerns, including the safety of his family.

A former Marine and Navy hospital corpsman, Wright is known for "his fiery orations and his passion," said Leonard Sweet, a theologian and author who was president of United Theological Seminary the year Wright graduated.

The Rev. Mike Slaughter, pastor of Ginghamsburg Church in Tipp City, has compared Wright to the Old Testament prophet Jeremiah. "Jeremiah was the 'angry' prophet who prophesized the demise of his own nation for forsaking God, the Torah and turning to idolatry," Slaughter, who studied at United Theological Seminary with Wright, wrote on his blog.

Obama, who was married by Wright and whose children were baptized by the minister, said in his speech on race last week that some of Wright's comments "expressed a profoundly distorted view of this country" and had been "divisive" and "racially charged." At the same time, Obama said he would not disown the minister.

***

And WELS is sweet on Sweet!

Concordia Seminary, St. Louis, "the best seminary in the world" (Otten) is also sweet on Sweet.

Catholic, Lutheran, Protestant
Free PDF To Promote Doctrinal Study




A pastor and a layman both asked about the PDF for Catholic, Lutheran, Protestant. They wanted to make it more available to laity for study groups. I decided to make the PDF download for CLP free. Yes, free. Of course, I will need to have a gala auction each year to make up for it. Just kidding.

As Jack Preus said about the Lutheran publishing business, "Don't quit your day job." My friend, Diablo, visiting from another location, said, "No, don't give it away."

My reasoning is: People want to study at home or have the documents available. This way it is free for everyone. I doubt whether it would affect book sales negatively (downwardly trending, as they say at the Love Shack). Free PDFs may help. The difference one way or another is not going to be great.

The main purpose is to make doctrinal materials available to everyone.

The cover is going to be designed by Norma Boeckler. The content will be the same. Unless I find major problems to be fixed, the pagination will be kept to make teaching easier.

The teacher's manual for CLP will be free as a PDF, low-cost for printed orders. Lulu charges a little for printing and shipping, so any printed matter will cost something.

The offer remains for those who want to order 10 or more CLPs.

Ten copies of CLP - $160, including shipping.

Twenty copies of CLP - $320, including shipping.

Make the check out to Gregory Jackson because I do not have a separate account for Martin Chemnitz Press.

Individual orders can be processed through Lulu.com or Christian News. Both accept credit cards.

Has Wayne Mueller's Cow Been Tested?




Supporters of Luther Prep expect to get their beef from reasonably sane cows.

Luther Prep



Wayne's Bull Will Help Fund Arsetta, Inc.


Luther Prep, Watertown, Wisconsin
Tuition - 5,250
Room - 950
Board - 2,110

TOTAL - $8,310

GALA Junk for Jesus Sale - Priceless

Description: In our live auction we'll begin a bid that many many folks can join in. You get to raise your paddle at any amount from the cost of training one student's full tuition ($8310.00) down to $100 a bidder. Plan now to be a part of raising the amount of financial aid available to Prep students and their families. When we all work together on a goal, the near results are more students enrolled in your synod prep school at a more affordable cost. The long lasting result: more full time WELS pastors and teachers working through out the world to proclaim the Gospel!

***

GJ - I have to hand it to this sect. First they stick the parents with a high school tuition bill that equals a state university's. Second, they organize a meretricious auction to raise even more money. Years ago they did not have a paid recruiter to try to make up for the loss of students caused by price-gouging for tuition. Paying for a recruiter and all fund-raising costs - ultimately part of tuition.

This auction is managed by a professional group. Here is what they say:

About Us
Founded in 2003, Arsetta’s mission is to provide affordable, enterprise-class software solutions to non-profit organizations of all sizes. ReadySetAuction®, Arsetta’s flagship product, was developed around a simple vision: to make it easier for non-profit organizations to raise the funds they need to fulfill their missions.

Since ReadySetAuction’s launch, hundreds of non-profit organizations across the United States — including schools, religious organizations, charitable organizations, youth sports leagues, and other community groups — have used ReadySetAuction to streamline their auction processes and raise millions of dollars.

Arsetta, Inc. is located near Seattle, Washington.


The lucky winner of Wayne Mueller's holy cow will pay $500 or more, but Arsetta will get a piece of bossy, too.

Denominations used to avoid competing in the market place for obvious reasons. In spite of the invocation of 2 Corinthians 8 and 9 on the prep website, the school is asking for retail business, not for gifts for the poor. Paul asked the Corinthians to support the poor in Jerusalem through giving. He did not ask them to sell trinkets to support their own institutions.

Luther Prep has a bevy of provisions to help it thrive as a charity. People get tax deductions for giving. The school is spared payment of many taxes and fees. A business must pay those taxes and fees, so Luther Prep is taking advantage of its status to make a few bucks.

Luther Prep is saying, "We cannot support ourselves, so we expect the retail establishment to donate things they cannot sell and write those gifts off. We expect our families and friends to buy these items and give a cut to Arsetta. We will run a business but not obey the laws that regulate a business."

The genius money managers of the Mueller-Gurgel administration forced the preps into groveling for a few more bucks. They jacked tuition up by 30%, which caused a decline in enrollment. (Economics 101) Mueller-Gurgel encouraged the preps to find more money on their own. Death threats are wonderfully motivating.

The irony is that people will give far more money than they would relinquish by supporting a Junk For Jesus Gala Event. The Gospel moves people to good works because they are thankful to God for His blessings. Gospel giving is maximum giving. When people buy stuff, they look for bargains and trinkets they like.

The posts about this auction were prompted by an active member of WELS. I would name him, but I do not want to visit his grave.

Monday, April 7, 2008

A Load of Bull
From WELS President-in-Waiting
Wayne Mueller



Donated By: Wayne Mueller
Est. Value: $500.00


Description: Jack-of-all-trades Wayne Mueller offers a quarter of a locally "grown" Black Angus steer to the selective carnivores among us. Lovingly tended and masterfully groomed (okay, that's stretching it) by Pastor Wayne, these prime cuts will eliminate the need to ask, "Where's the beef?"

***

GJ - This is from the Junk for Jesus sale at Luther Prep. If the Wisconsin sect keeps writing self-parodies, I will not have to write my own parodies. I can just copy their material and leave the readers rolling in the aisles.

***

Anonymous has left a new comment on your post "A Load of Bull From WELS President-in-Waiting Wayn...":

That auction is absolutely appalling. I am just floored that WELS people support this. Auctioning off parking spaces for sporting events and sacred concerts and services of a personal attendant for the live auction? I need to go vomit.

Junk for Jesus Sale at Luther Prep



Actual graphic from Luther Prep Website, quoted below:


Welcome to Luther Prep's 3rd Annual Gala and ONLINE Auction!

LIGHTS! CAMERA! AUCTION! – Gala Event is Saturday, April 19, 2008 from 4:30-9:30.

We still have room for guests – but purchase seats soon.
We’re still taking donations – but let us know soon.

Join in the fun by looking over the items that have been donated. Just click on “VIEW AUCTION CATALOG”. More items added daily.

Bid at the Gala, via proxy bidder [rothedk@lps.wels.net to secure this], or in our Online Auction.

ONLINE AUCTION: April 5-9

All the donated items are in the online catalog – some are VIEW ONLY, some are ONLINE BIDDING ONLY.

This ONLINE BIDDING opens at 6am CST on Saturday, April 5 and stays open for bidding through 8pm Wednesday, April 9 CST.

You’ll have to register to bid online. This secures we know who won the item with the highest bid. A few items have a “reserve” of a certain amount that must be met or the item can not be sold per the bidder’s wishes.

Bidding follows the online established rules like an ebay bidding: Ready Set Auction will automatically bid up at $1.00 increments to your maximum bid you entered. Someone else becomes high bidder when they surpass the maximum amount you entered. Check back often – email rothedk@lps.wels.net should you have trouble or any questions.

Thank You

As we read in II Corinthians 9:12 “This service that you perform is not only supplying the needs of God’s people but is also overflowing in many expressions of thanks to God.”

WE THANK YOU for THANKING GOD through your joyful gifts to Luther Prep!

Questions: Call Debbie at 920.262.8104 or email rothedk@lps.wels.net

The entire catalogue is available by clicking this link.

1,000+ Posts




Stay tuned.

And who is the hatchet man of the Little Sect on the Prairie? The Right Rev. Kincaid Smith, DMin in Church Growth, Concordia Seminary, Ft. Wayne.

Every synodical pope loves to have a hatchet man to do his wet work.

You Can't Do This!
I Know My Rites!
Anglicans Steal a March on Moldstad



Bishop Gene Robinson: "May I pick the hymns?"

FLORIDA: Bishop Formally Fires 22 Priests

By David W. Virtue
www.virtueonline.org
4/5/2008

On March 25, the Bishop of Florida, the Rt. Rev. Samuel Johnson Howard, formally fired 22 priests from the Diocese of Florida the largest single group of priests to be deposed in the history of the Epsicopal Church at one time.

In a letter obtained by Virtueonline, Howard wrote, "By my action today, with the advice and the consent of the Standing Committee of the Episcopal Church in the Diocese of Florida, and pursuant to Canon IV.10.2.ii, I hereby release from the obligations of priests (for causes which do not affect the person's moral character) and deprive of the right to exercise the gifts and spiritual authority conferred in ordination upon:

The Rev. David C. Allert, Priest
The Rev. Charles S. Bailey, Deacon
The Rev. Gary Blaylock, Priest
The Rev. Charles H. Colt, Priest
The Rev. Gilbert T. Crosby, Priest
The Rev. Mark Eldredge, Priest
The Rev. Travis Greenman, Priest
The Rev. Edwin C. Griswold, Priest
The Rev. George W. Hall, Jr., Priest
The Rev. Harald K. Haugan, Priest
The Rev. Dorothy Head, Deacon
The Rev. James L. Hobby, Priest
The Rev. Sharon S. Hobby, Priest
The Rev W. Hall Hunt, Priest
The Rev. Neil G. Lebhar, Priest
The Rev. Petrina A. McCarty, Deacon
The Rev. Lawrence E. O'Connell, Priest
The Rev. William Earl Palmer, Priest
The Rev. James M. Parker, Priest
The Rev. Shawn E. Porter, Priest
The Rev. Leonard Eugene Strickland,Priest
The Rev. George W. Stockhowe, Jr., Priest

Neither Strickland nor Porter were ever inhibited, a source told VOL.

This action is taken after expiration of the six month period of inhibition for abandonment of the communion of this church and failure of either of the above named individuals to communicate any retraction of any declaration of act relied upon in the determination that the above individuals have abandoned the communion of this church.

The letter was dated March 25, 2008 And signed by the Rt. Rev Samuel Johnson Howard VII Bishop of Florida.

The letter was signed in the presence of two witnesses the Rev. Gayanne Silver and the Rev. Sandra K. Moyle.

The letter was forwarded to the Presiding Bishop, Recorder of Ordinations, The Secretary of the House of Bishops, The Church Deployment Office and the Bishops of the Episcopal Authority (or Ecclesiastical Authority of each) and to various offices in the Diocese of Florida.

All of the above priests challenged the Episcopal Church on pansexuality and the church's ordination of an avowed homosexual to the episcopacy, the formal acceptance of homosexual behavior for clergy, the blessing of same sex unions, same-sex rites, and the abandonment of the authority of Scripture. They believed the church had moved beyond the bounds of Scripture to endorse behavior that endangered their souls and those of their parishioners.

Most of the priests have entered into formal association with Continuing Anglican jurisdictions that are orthodox in faith and morals.

http://www.virtueonline.org/portal/content/Howard_Pronouncement_Letter_3-25-08.pdf

Buffalo Bob Was WELS




Buffalo Bob Smith, mentor to Howdy Doody, served as a WELS organist in North Carolina. The Howdy Doody Show was one of our favorites, a true classic.

Buffalo Bob Smith - The celebrity nickname of Bob Smith, the host of the classic children's puppet series HOWDY DOODY/NBC/1947-60. With the assistance of a silent clown named Clarabell, Buffalo Bob Smith, entertained the children in his audience (known as the Peanut Gallery) and interacted with all sorts of comic characters including the freckle-faced puppet star of the show, Howdy Doody. On earlier episodes Buffalo Bob Smith was just called Mr. Smith but by 1948 he was known as Buffalo Bob, a name given him by the Sycapoose Indians, a friendly tribe of American Indians who lived near the circus town of Doodyville. Buffalo Bob wore a yellow buckskin outfit with red fringe and buffalo insignias, supposedly because he was a descendent of Buffalo Bill. At the beginning of each program Buffalo Bob asked "Say, kids, What time is it? The kids then yelled "It's Howdy Doody Time!" Before taking on his role as host of THE HOWDY DOODY SHOW, Bob Smith was a member of the "Hi-Hatters," a radio singing group popular in the 1930s. Coincidentally, Bob Smith was born in Buffalo, New York. He died of cancer on July 30, 1998 near his home at Flat Rock, North Carolina. A replica of Howdy Doody resides in the Smithsonian Institution.

Here is a great link about Buffalo Bob, explaining the keyboard and North Carolina connection.

***

(AP) "Buffalo Bob" Smith, the host of The Howdy Doody Show in the early years of television, died Thursday of cancer. He was 80.

Smith, who lived in the western North Carolina town of Flat Rock, died at a hospital in nearby Hendersonville, said family publicist Kelly Stitch. She said the family would not release further details.

Fans knew the opening routine of the show by heart. Smith would shout out, "What time is it?" and the Peanut Gallery - the kiddie studio audience - would respond with glee: "It's Howdy Doody time!"

Even though the TV show went off the air in 1960 after 13 seasons and more than 2,500 shows, Buffalo Bob and the freckle-faced marionette Howdy Doody were more than celebrities to millions of baby boomers across the country.

They became like a member of the family to their young fans and the young at heart. Columnist Bob Greene wrote in 1987 that the show "may have been the most important cultural landmark for my generation."

"I always liked kids," Smith, the father of three sons, said in an interview in 1994. "You can't kid a kid. They know right away if you like them or not."

Among the show's other much-loved characters in the town Doodyville, U.S.A.: Clarabell the Clown, Princess Summerfall Winterspring, Phineas T. Bluster, Dilly Dally, Chief Thunderthud, Trapper John and Flubadub. One of the performers who played Clarabell was Bob Keeshan, later to become TV's Captain Kangaroo.

"No one knows how hard we worked all those years," Smith told People magazine in 1987. "Live TV is the most difficult thing to do in the world. You're on the spot all the time."

Recovering from a 1954 heart attack that sidelined him for months, he actually did some appearances from a specially built studio in the basement of his home.

After his return to the NBC studio in 1955, he told The Associated Press he drove himself out of "a feeling of pride. You're happy that people want you to entertain them." He said the heart attack taught him to "remember your limits."

In the 1960s, Smith retreated from his spot in front of the TV camera and went back into radio, this time as an owner. He bought three radio stations and dabbled in real estate.

In 1970, he got a call out of the blue from a student at the University of Pennsylvania, who asked him to bring along Howdy Doody to the school and do a show.

"I thought he was putting me on," Smith said.

He wasn't.

College students who had grown up watching Howdy Doody felt right at home back in the Peanut Gallery. Over the next six years, Smith and his famous sidekick made hundreds of appearances across the country.

He and Mildred, his wife of more than 57 years, moved to Flat Rock in 1991 to spend more time on his other passion, golf. He still made occasional appearances at nostalgia events, bringing his marionette with he snub nose and perpetual smile with him.

Smith got his start on the radio and his nickname in his hometown, Buffalo, N.Y.

"I did just about everything you could do on the radio when I was 15," he said. Two years later, singer Kate Smith came to Buffalo.

Smith joined her vaudeville act, playing the piano at times and other times playing master of ceremonies. He was back working successfully in radio when NBC was looking for someone in 1947 to be host of a children's television show.

That was the birth of The Howdy Doody Show.

Despite his efforts to keep a low profile in later years, Smith's trademark "Buffalo Bob" voice always seemed to give him away.

"I walk into a supermarket and nobody recognizes me," he said in the 1994 interview. "Then I open my mouth and somebody always says, 'That's Buffalo Bob!'"

In addition to his wife, Smith is survived by sons Robin, Ronald, and Christopher and three grandchildren.

A private memorial service is planned but no date was given.

Sunday, April 6, 2008

Famous WELS Actor Dead at 84




Charlton Heston died at the age of 84, after a remarkable career as a Hollywood actor, Second Amendment advocate, and WELS member.

Mrs. Ichabod says I misspoke. Heston was an Episcopalian.

How did I make that mistake? Oh, I remember. Heston was the featured speaker at a WELS Lutherans for Life gathering. The Wisconsin sect pulled out of Lutherans for Life because they were worried about unionism. So when Heston was announced, I naturally remembered him as a Wisconsin sect member.

They would never listen to someone from another denomination! Would they?

Mrs. Ichabod is speaking. Hmm? Oh yes, I forgot. They invited every denomination except one to teach them about worship. Which one did they overlook? They forgot to invite the ELS? Tiefel - you devil.

What is the definition of a unionist? Answer - Someone who loves every denomination except his own.

Reading Comprehension 101





Michael Schottey has left a new comment on your post "Conservative Lies and Liberal Truths":

Notice I didn't say I was glad that sinned (sic). I said glad that they repented.

If the angels rejoice, Rev. Jackson, at a lost sheep who returns to the fold--why do you not? What would you demand for penance?

Are you better than Samuel, do you have a better method of proving repentance than taking a person at their (sic) word?

***

GJ - I have to repeat myself when I write about WELS felonies. The basic Wisconsin sect approach is to say, "They repented."

My primary emphasis was upon the cover-ups by synodical officials. Their secrecy shows they have not repented. The (ELCA) Lutheran magazine has often posted news of their clergy when arrested.

The same synod officials who claim they know nothing about high crimes will suddenly become omniscient when they know all about a pastor who has questioned Holy Mother Synod.

VP Paul Kuske's favorite fake pastor, Floyd Stolzenburg, was allowed to pose as a Wisconsin pastor when he was forced out of the LCMS ministry for cause. WELS officials claimed their non-WELS pet was "repentant," Michael's favorite word of the week. Yet Floyd told everyone he had a "Scriptural divorce." Does lying about one's ex-wife constitute repentance in WELS?

When VP Kuske and Pastor Schumann helped their Church Growth buddy Floyd into Emmanuel Lutheran Church, they showed no signs of repentance. No, Kuske denied helping Floyd. Kuske's denials became gold standard proof that something was true.

The lying did not stop. Soon the Little Sect on the Prairie was gathering money from Floyd's Masonic church for Thoughts of Faith. Jay Webber thought that was a terrible sin until he was a recipient of some of that money. Some interesting fibs from a repentant ELS - Thoughts of Faith was not ELS, even though John Shep was installed at an ELS convention. How do I know? I was there. Kovaciny was not ELS, even though he was sent by the ELS to the Ukraine.

Floyd posted all kinds of Thoughts of Faith material on his church website, until I linked the pages for people to enjoy. CG fanatics think it is "unclassy" to quote them. In fact, the original quoted material is "unclassy." They just do not like being caught being themselves and bragging about it.

Then we have the murderers and molesters in WELS. Are the church officials repentant about covering up for them? Did they apologize to the Escanaba congregation for allowing a murderer to serve as pastor for a year or two? Did they apologize to the pastors they stuck with Tabor's phony mission congregation in Cape Girardeau?

Ichabodians, do you notice a pattern? The guilty are protected and rewarded by synod officials. No one is allowed to discuss the secrets.

Michael, I am not sure angels rejoice that DP Mueller, VP Kuske, and the ELS all helped to legitimize the hireling ministry of Floyd Luther Stolzenburg, Junior. If the Wisconsin and Norwegian sects want to brag about spreading the Church Growth doctrine of Fuller and Willow Creek, they should brag about Stolzenburg and tell the truth...for once.

Do angels rejoice that Al Just served almost no time in the hoosegow for murdering his wife, lying about it, and letting his church officials support him? The jury found him guilty of murder. Just confessed his guilt enough that several people know about his confession. But Just also let people continue to think he was innocent. I hear no heavenly host rejoicing at this highly selective repentance.

I missed the feature article in FIC (Forward in Collusion) where the district pastors repented for electing and re-electing Ed Werner as District Pope. In fact, I do not believe the Wisconsin sect ever admitted to have a synodical official in state prison.

When the victim of Scott Zerbe and Fred Adrian sued the Wisconsin sect in court, Holy Mother WELS lied about their previous cases of abuse. The synod's lawyers said they knew nothing about anything. The victim's lawyer produced a list of well-known cases, forcing the sect to come clean for once. I still have the list they were forced to give the court. (Yes, even the infallible Wisconsin Synod must obey a judge's order.) The jury found against WELS, Adrian, his congregation, etc. $400K in damages. The repentant synod immediately appealed the verdict. Adrian rejoiced in a letter - we are covered by insurance. No Fred, everyone with that company had to pay for your failure to supervise a married vicar in your congregation. Fred had two vicar reports. One said - Yes I knew. The other said - No I did not. Michael can sort out which one caused angels to rejoice in heaven.

The Church of the Lutheran Confession (sic) is no different. If the synodical pope's relative is caught, the white-wash flows like a mighty river. False doctrine? "We only see it through our telescopes - There she blows. Like a shock of wheat. WELS in 1952. Shudder. Thank God we are not like them."

Briefly Noted



Time of Grace, Mark Jeske: Has he gone too far with unionism?


Someone asked about educational episodes through Bethany Lutheran Worship. Once we are over the Opening Night jitters, plans will be made. Some possibilities are: 1) The Book of Concord; 2) Catholic, Lutheran, Protestant; 3) Basic Christian Doctrine.

A seminarian at the Sausage Factory in Mequon says his post was true and not from a District Pope. No, a DP would have a flunky send out a false report. The only way Mequon could be called unionistic today would be to have a Lutheran teacher there. An Evangelical teaching at Mequon? Big deal. Teufel had the whole National Council of Churches teach at his "WELS" worship confab, years ago. Everyone was invited to teach--except anyone from the Little Sect on the Prairie!

Norm Teigen agreed that the Synodical VP was voted out of office but denied Pope John campaigned for the job. I never said Pope John the Malefactor campaigned for it.
The hatchet man bragged about getting rid of the other VP. Then he was sore that appeared in CN.

Who is the ELS hatchet man? You all know his name. Do the sectarian character assasins work on their own or are they guided, directed, and blessed by synodical leaders? "Thanks for the teaching job, Dad. Too bad I had to step over a few dead bodies to reach the podium."

Rev. Mouse says only stupid people sign their names to posts. Ergo, he is not stupid, but the rest of you are.

Responding to my peerless parody of Phantom of the Opera, Rev. Mouse also says that it must be nice to have so much time to waste. Mouse writes a nasty, anonymous note almost every day. Every one is a personal attack. I can tell by the content that he reads every post I write, but he never has anything to say about doctrine, the Confessions, Luther, or anything of substance. I gather he is stuck in Buffalo Chip Prairie, North Dakota, nicking sermons from the Net, passing the time by being a big shot to his ovine friends from the Sausage Factory. "Hey, Fritz, I got another note posted on Ichabod. Let's have another Schwein."

The Second Sunday after Easter




Misericordias Domini: The Second Sunday after Easter




Hymn #188
The Invocation p. 5
The Confession of Sins
The Absolution
The Introit p. 6
The Gloria Patri
The Kyrie p. 7
The Gloria in Excelsis
The Salutation and Collect p. 9
The Epistle and Gradual 1 Peter 2:21-25
The Gospel John 10:11-16
Glory be to Thee, O Lord!
Praise be to Thee, O Christ!
The Apostles Creed p. 12
Sermon Hymn #191
The Sermon
The Good Shepherd

The Prayers and Lord's Prayer p. 13
The Benediction p. 14
The Closing Hymn #656





KJV Titus 3:9 But avoid foolish questions, and genealogies, and contentions, and strivings about the law; for they are unprofitable and vain. 10 A man that is an heretick after the first and second admonition reject; 11 Knowing that he that is such is subverted, and sinneth, being condemned of himself.

KJV 1 Peter 2:21 For even hereunto were ye called: because Christ also suffered for us, leaving us an example, that ye should follow his steps: 22 Who did no sin, neither was guile found in his mouth: 23 Who, when he was reviled, reviled not again; when he suffered, he threatened not; but committed himself to him that judgeth righteously: 24 Who his own self bare our sins in his own body on the tree, that we, being dead to sins, should live unto righteousness: by whose stripes ye were healed. 25 For ye were as sheep going astray; but are now returned unto the Shepherd and Bishop of your souls.

KJV John 10:11 I am the good shepherd: the good shepherd giveth his life for the sheep. 12 But he that is an hireling, and not the shepherd, whose own the sheep are not, seeth the wolf coming, and leaveth the sheep, and fleeth: and the wolf catcheth them, and scattereth the sheep. 13 The hireling fleeth, because he is an hireling, and careth not for the sheep. 14 I am the good shepherd, and know my sheep, and am known of mine. 15 As the Father knoweth me, even so know I the Father: and I lay down my life for the sheep. 16 And other sheep I have, which are not of this fold: them also I must bring, and they shall hear my voice; and there shall be one fold, and one shepherd.

“I am the Good Shepherd: the Good Shepherd giveth His life for the sheep.”

Sadly, most people are not familiar with the images used by Jesus in this simple but profound sermon. Sheep farming is rare. I read recently that most sheep farms in the US are run as hobbies and tax dodges for the wealthy.

We had family friends who raised sheep, and that made us familiar with the nature and behavior of those creatures. As children, we played around the sheep and had fun with them. The two boys and their sister were strong and full of mischief, but they were not destructive.

We got some sheep to aim themselves into the corner where the fence came together. Sure enough, the other sheep crowded around them and tried to follow them. Soon we had a large group of sheep, all pushing forward against the fence. I thought we made a terrible mistake. Thinking the sheep might be stuck in that position until dawn, I tried to pull them away and separate them. The sheep resisted and kept pushing forward. Our friend laughed at my predicament and said, “Don’t worry. Leave them alone. They will back away later.” I waited for the drama to unfold later, but nothing happened. The sheep finally wised up.

“For ye were as sheep going astray: but are now returned unto the Shepherd and Bishop of your souls.”

The poetry of this passage comes from the way in which shepherds cared for their sheep in the time of Jesus. At night, all the shepherds kept the sheep in a communal pen with the guard across the doorway, protecting them. The only way a predator could get at the sheep was to climb over the fence or to climb over the guard at the door. In the morning, the individual shepherds came to the pen and called their sheep by name. Each sheep had a name like White Nose or Fat Tail. The shepherd knew his sheep and the sheep knew his voice.

KJV John 10:1 Verily, verily, I say unto you, He that entereth not by the door into the sheepfold, but climbeth up some other way, the same is a thief and a robber. 2 But he that entereth in by the door is the shepherd of the sheep. 3 To him the porter openeth; and the sheep hear his voice: and he calleth his own sheep by name, and leadeth them out. 4 And when he putteth forth his own sheep, he goeth before them, and the sheep follow him: for they know his voice. 5 And a stranger will they not follow, but will flee from him: for they know not the voice of strangers. 6 This parable spake Jesus unto them: but they understood not what things they were which he spake unto them. 7 Then said Jesus unto them again, Verily, verily, I say unto you, I am the door of the sheep. 8 All that ever came before me are thieves and robbers: but the sheep did not hear them. 9 I am the door: by me if any man enter in, he shall be saved, and shall go in and out, and find pasture. 10 The thief cometh not, but for to steal, and to kill, and to destroy: I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly. 11 I am the good shepherd: the good shepherd giveth his life for the sheep. 12 But he that is an hireling, and not the shepherd, whose own the sheep are not, seeth the wolf coming, and leaveth the sheep, and fleeth: and the wolf catcheth them, and scattereth the sheep. 13 The hireling fleeth, because he is an hireling, and careth not for the sheep. 14 I am the good shepherd, and know my sheep, and am known of mine. 15 As the Father knoweth me, even so know I the Father: and I lay down my life for the sheep. 16 And other sheep I have, which are not of this fold: them also I must bring, and they shall hear my voice; and there shall be one fold, and one shepherd. 17 Therefore doth my Father love me, because I lay down my life, that I might take it again. 18 No man taketh it from me, but I lay it down of myself. I have power to lay it down, and I have power to take it again. This commandment have I received of my Father. 19 There was a division therefore again among the Jews for these sayings.

When Jesus said, “I am the Good Shepherd,” He was using a term which really means, “I am the Unique Shepherd,” but that does not translate well. We all know of the Good Shepherd as Christ, the only Shepherd who lays down His life for the sheep.

The shepherd imagery comes from Old Testament times and from the economy of the New Testament times as well. Mutton and wool are not essential to us now, but they were the mainstay of the People of God. Sheep and goats travel well with their owners and provide a vast array of useful products.

Sheep are especially vulnerable and foolish, so God chose to compare us to sheep, making Jesus the Good Shepherd.

From Isaiah 40, a familiar passage in Handel’s “Messiah:”
He shall feed His flock like a shepherd,
He shall carry the lambs in His arms,
And gently lead those with young.

The words of the 23rd Psalm is so familiar that people forget a sheep seems to be the author:

1 The Lord is my shepherd; I shall not want.

2 He maketh me to lie down in green pastures: he
leadeth me beside the still waters.

3 He restoreth my soul: he leadeth me in the paths
of righteousness for his name's sake.

4 Yea, though I walk through the valley of the
shadow of death, I will fear no evil: for thou art with
me; thy rod and thy staff they comfort me.

5 Thou preparest a table before me in the presence
of mine enemies: thou anointest my head with oil;
my cup runneth over.

6 Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me all the
days of my life: and I will dwell in the house of the
Lord for ever.

The Good Shepherd provides us with the spiritual nourishment we need from the Means of Grace. He guides us and leads us toward all good things. The Bible does not emphasize material needs first, but spiritual needs. Man worries about material needs most of all, spiritual needs least.

Material needs are the small things in life, from God’s viewpoint.

“Seek first the Kingdom and its righteousness, and all these things will be yours.” The only way we can seek the righteousness of the Kingdom is through Christ. His righteousness comes to us through the Word and Sacraments, never apart from the Word and Sacraments.

In this way, God chose to give us assurance of His forgiveness. If we depend on feelings, or a beautiful sunset, or works, the foundation of assurance is weak and transient. The Word—visible and invisible—does not change or vary. The Holy Spirit at work in the Word prompts faith.

People do believe. The grace coming through the Word and Sacraments begins and sustains faith in God’s Promises. Through faith in Christ, we receive the blessings promised. The Gospel Promises promote Gospel fruits, such as prayer and good works for our neighbors.

The Good Shepherd lesson teaches us about the crucifixion and the resurrection - I lay down my life for the sheep and take it up again.

This message also emphasizes the personal relationship between the Good Shepherd and the believer. That should never be forgotten. Jesus knows each and every one of us by name. He knows us and we know His voice.

Believers do not listen to the voice of others. That is why false teachers make disciples so easily. They get to work with the vast majority who do not believe, the masses who see religion as a pacifier or a meal ticket. They demand wolf-preaching and they get wolf-preaching.

This great love of false teaching bothers faithful pastors and members, but it must be so. They want and need each other. They hate sound doctrine and persecute it. The correct teaching of the Bible is never loved by the masses. If they cannot attack the message directly, they attack the bearer of the message.

But we have this great Promise, that the Shepherd is as anxious for us as we are for Him. A shepherd can only have pity upon helpless sheep that wander and get themselves into trouble, fatal trouble. Our sinfulness is our great burden, and Christ takes that upon Himself.

If someone does something wrong, we want our pound of flesh. But the Parables of Forgiveness teach the opposite about God’s nature. In the Lost Coin, Lost Sheep, and Prodigal Son, the nature of God is rejoicing over the lost being found again.

KJV Luke 15:4 What man of you, having an hundred sheep, if he lose one of them, doth not leave the ninety and nine in the wilderness, and go after that which is lost, until he find it? 5 And when he hath found it, he layeth it on his shoulders, rejoicing. 6 And when he cometh home, he calleth together his friends and neighbours, saying unto them, Rejoice with me; for I have found my sheep which was lost. 7 I say unto you, that likewise joy shall be in heaven over one sinner that repenteth, more than over ninety and nine just persons, which need no repentance.

Lately I have had trouble getting my own homework in on time. One week I used “The Prodigal Son returns” on the email with my homework. Another week I quoted Shakespeare:

The Quality of Mercy

The quality of mercy is not strained.
It droppeth as the gentle rain from heaven
Upon the place beneath. It is twice blest:
It blesseth him that gives and him that takes.
Tis mightiest in the mightiest; it becomes
The throned monarch better than his crown.
His scepter shows the force of temporal power,
The attribute to awe and majesty,
Wherein doth sit the dread and fear of kings.
But mercy is above this sceptered sway;
It is enthroned in the hearts of kings;
It is an attribute of God himself;
And earthly power doth then show like God's
When mercy seasons justice.
The Merchant of Venice, by the Earl of Oxford (Shakespeare)

Shakespeare’s plays show that he was a Christian, perhaps a Protestant who became a Catholic at one point. The words of this passage are the essence of the Gospel, and they might have been used to calm the fury of Queen Elisabeth. I have found it effective in dealing with professors.

The Gospel promotes mercy in those who hear the message. Jesus came to us in mercy so that we would enjoy His love and mercy forever.

As the Good Shepherd, He does more than lead us to green pastures through the Word. He also uses His staff to warn away and punish false teachers. Every pastor and Christian has that obligation, to emphasize sound doctrine and reject false doctrine. Our relationship to Christ is not sustained by warm and fuzzy feelings, by vague and conflicting words, but by the Very Word of God, which conveys Christ’s mercy to us in clear, plain words.

He laid His life down and took it up again, for our sakes.

KJV John 3:14 And as Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, even so must the Son of man be lifted up: 15 That whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have eternal life. 16 For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life. 17 For God sent not his Son into the world to condemn the world; but that the world through him might be saved. 18 He that believeth on him is not condemned: but he that believeth not is condemned already, because he hath not believed in the name of the only begotten Son of God.

Collect
Lord God, heavenly Father, who of Thy fatherly goodness hast been mindful of us poor, miserable sinners, and hast given Thy beloved Son to be our shepherd, not only to nourish us by His word, but also to defend us from sin, death, and the devil: We beseech Thee, grant us Thy Holy Spirit, that, even as this Shepherd doth know us and succor us in every affliction, we also may know Him, and, trusting in Him, seek help and comfort in Him, from our hearts obey His voice, and obtain eternal salvation, through the same, Thy Son Jesus Christ, who liveth and reigneth with Thee and the Holy Ghost, one true God, world without end. Amen.


QUOTATIONS



"You may say: 'I want to remain in the heterodox church in order to accomplish good in it, namely to prevent it from losing the truth altogether.' If you happen to be in a heterodox church, then first of all, bear witness to the truth clearly and definitely. If they listen to you, good. Under certain circumstances, you can wait a little, to see whether the truth is accepted. But as soon as it is clear that they will not accept the truth, you must separate yourself from that group which holds to the error. If you, nevertheless, remain in it, then you are no longer reinforcing the truth, but rather, the error...It is an absolute contradiction to be both a witness-bearer for the truth, and an associate of false teachers."
Francis Pieper, The Difference Between Orthodox And Heterodox Churches, and Supplement, Coos Bay, Oregon: St. Paul's Lutheran Church, 1981, p. 49.

"As Luther says: You 'cannot remain in the same stall with others who propagate false doctrine or are attached to it or always speak good words to the devil and his crowd.'" [XVII, 1477; probably St. Louis edition]
Francis Pieper, The Difference Between Orthodox And Heterodox Churches, and Supplement, Coos Bay, Oregon: St. Paul's Lutheran Church, 1981, p. 49.

"Every departure from God's Word, every error, is dangerous to the soul. There is a fearful, diabolical power in error; for every error is the devil's work, and through fellowship with error a person puts himself under the influence of the devil. Here human reason is helpless."
Francis Pieper, The Difference between Orthodox and Heterodox Churches, and Supplement, Coos Bay, Oregon: St. Paul's Lutheran Church, 1981, p. 42.

"Let us therefore beware, lest by practicing fellowship with the heterodox we put ourselves carelessly into danger, and thus lose our salvation." Francis Pieper, The Difference between Orthodox and Heterodox Churches, and Supplement, Coos Bay, Oregon: St. Paul's Lutheran Church, 1981, p. 42. "Finally: heterodox churches are in a continuous state of warfare against the orthodox Church, against that Church which, in conformity with the will of God, confesses all parts of the truth. Heterodox people revile and persecute those who abide by God's Word. Surely, an evil work!"
Francis Pieper, The Difference between Orthodox and Heterodox Churches, and Supplement, Coos Bay, Oregon: St. Paul's Lutheran Church, 1981, p. 44.

"If any one shows us that even only one pastor preached false doctrine, or that even only one periodical is in the service of false doctrine, and we did not remove this false doctrine, we thereby would have ceased to be an orthodox Synod, and we would have become a unionistic fellowship." [the one after only is italicized each time] Lehre und Wehre, Jahrgang 36, Nummer 8, S. 262-3
Francis Pieper, The Difference Between Orthodox And Heterodox Churches, and Supplement, Coos Bay, Oregon: St. Paul's Lutheran Church, 1981, p. 55.

"We have no intention of yielding aught of the eternal, immutable truth of God for the sake of temporal peace, tranquility, and unity (which, moreover, is not in our power to do). Nor would such peace and unity, since it is devised against the truth and for its suppression, have any permanency. Still less are we inclined to adorn and conceal a corruption of the pure doctrine and manifest, condemned errors. But we entertain heartfelt pleasure and love for, and are on our part sincerely inclined and anxious to advance, that unity according to our utmost power, by which His glory remains to God uninjured, nothing of the divine truth of the Holy Gospel is surrendered, no room is given to the least error, poor sinners are brought to true, genuine repentance, raised up by faith, confirmed in new obedience, and thus justified and eternally saved alone through the sole merit of Christ." (Closing of Formula of Concord, Trigl. p. 1095)
Francis Pieper, The Difference Between Orthodox And Heterodox Churches, and Supplement, Coos Bay, Oregon: St. Paul's Lutheran Church, 1981, p. 65. Tappert, p. 632. Heiser, p. 294. FC SD XI, #94-96.

"That is the reason why our Church from the very beginning declared that it requires its preachers 'not to depart an inch' from its confessions, not to turn aside from the doctrines laid down in them, non tantum in rebus, sed etiam in phrasibus, that is, both as regards the matter offered in their sermons and the manner of their teaching."
C. F. W. Walther, The Proper Distinction between Law and Gospel, trans., W. H. T. Dau, St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1928, p. 277.

"On the ground of these and many other testimonies the Church has always taught with unanimity that, when a saint knowingly and purposely acts contrary to God's command, he is no longer a saint, but has lost the true faith and cast away the Holy Spirit. But if he turns again, God will keep the gracious oath which He has sworn, saying: 'As I live, I have no pleasure in the death of the wicked, but that the wicked turn from his way and live.'"
C. F. W. Walther, The Proper Distinction between Law and Gospel, trans., W. H. T. Dau, St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1928, p. 219. Ezekiel 18:23.

"But when a person persists in his sin against his conscience, though he knows it to be a sin, and continues sinning purposely for a long time, he no longer has faith and cannot truly pray to God; the Holy Spirit leaves his heart, for another spirit, the evil spirit, rules in it, whom the sinner has admitted into his heart. To him the Holy Spirit yields His place and departs."
C. F. W. Walther, The Proper Distinction between Law and Gospel, trans., W. H. T. Dau, St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1928, p. 220.