Saturday, February 21, 2009

A WELS Layman Discerns the Obvious




Luther at the Diet of Worms.



Anonymous has left a new comment on your post "CORE Ignores the Obvious":

As a WELS layman whose eyes were opened through Ichabod to this apostasy only a month ago, let me ask if this is a proper summation of the CORE matter:


CORE says "Christ is at the CORE of everything* we do."

Footnote:
* Except:
a) they don't trust in the efficacy of the Word alone;

"Therefore you had better not boast much about the Spirit if you do not have the visible, external Word; for it will surely not be a good spirit but the wretched devil from hell. The Holy Spirit has embodied His wisdom and counsel and all mysteries of the Word and revealed them in Scripture and ****so no one needs to excuse himself or took and search for anything else."*** [emphasis mine in Luther's sermon words]

b) they provide false testimony about WELS beliefs by openly attending religious training with those that we would not even permit to sup with us at Holy Communion;

c) "Church and Change" scrambles to find ways to augment church worship experience and slick them up, instead of holding dear to the Theology of the Cross and the orderly worship of our forefathers.

d) The longer we lay-leaders let SkiCOREski prance in the Fox Valley without running him out of town pelting him with dog sh*t, the more wrath we'll face from our fellow WELS congregants when their eyes are opened, not to forget the double-edged sword of Christ Almighty Himself;

e) WELS doesn't have the money for such nonsense;

f) we must be on guard in our own congregations for pastors trying to water down liturgical worship, especially in the loosey-goosey Northern Wisconsin district (see the "Rite Worship for Outreach" Bible Study/presentation from the 2008 District convention; even Pastor Schroeder's research showed "contemporary worship" was the bottom of the list of things the unchurched were looking for);

g) I'm now on double-secret probation from the Church & Chicanery cabal for violating Matthew 18, because I didn't first sit down with Ski, hold his hand, and politely explain and itemize this pastors (sic) apostasy to his own satisfaction.


I submit in Love, not Fear, (1 John 4)
Your reader,
Diet O. Worms

"For Satan needs do no more through the enthusiasts than always produce doubt. He thinks it is enough where he can speak haughtily and contemptuously about us, as the rebel sacramentarians do. None of them take pains to make clear and to prove their arrogance, but their concern is to make our interpretations contemptible and uncertain. They teach doubt, not faith... The devil knows he can accomplish nothing in the bright light of truth, so he stirs up the dust, hoping to raise a cloud before our eyes so that we cannot see the light. In the cloud he dazzles us with will o' the wisps to mislead us. Having made up their minds concerning their peculiar notions, they attempt to make the Scriptures agree with them by dragging passages in by the hair. But Christ has faithfully stood by our side up to this point and will continue to trod Satan under our foot. He will protect you all against the seductions of your tyrant and Antichrist and mercifully help us to gain his freedom. Amen." Martin Luther, "A Letter of Martin Luther to Two Pastors"


"From now on, Diet, you are on double secret-probation!"

Church Solutions - Feel the Hype?



"Double frapachino caramel mocha de-caff double shot? Aww-right!"


Wisc. Movie Theater to Become Church – Permanently

02/12/2009

The former home of the Big Picture movie theater in downtown Appleton, Wisc., is the new branch home of Freedom, Wisc.-based St. Peter Lutheran Church.

Pastor Jim Skorzewski is starting up The Core, a new ministry of the church aimed at 19-to-35 year olds. The movie theater they have purchased has an IMAX screen, which Skorzewski can’t wait to use. In that room, the church will construct a 30-foot by 90-foot performance platform.

The former concession stands will be turned into coffee lounges and cafes with free WiFi.

The official opening is April 19, but the services have started already, meeting at 5:30 p.m. Sunday evenings.

Source:

WWLP.com: Big movie theater to turn into church

Related Content:

Movie Theater Churches Consider Staying Put

Willow Creek Began in Movie Theater

CORE Ignores the Obvious



The Obvious - Fellowship with the Babtists, who oppose infant baptism and baptismal regeneration as Romanism.



The Obvious - Ski bragging about skipping Deutschlander for Stanley.


The CORE website:


For all who may read this, fans and critics alike, we’re not going to try and “sell” you on anything or try to convince you to see things from our perspective. However, we do feel we need to clarify our stance on some things as there are far too many incorrect assumptions out there. And, since we cannot force people to put the best construction on our actions all we can do is make it very clear what we at The CORE believe and if people want to skew that or twist it then so be it.

Let’s start with this: We DO NOT believe there is anything inherently wrong with traditional worship. We are not saying that everyone has to worship the way we plan to. For some, an organ and a traditional worship space are wonderful. For others, however, that fails to connect with where they are at in their spiritual walk of faith. Would you force a mission congregation in the middle of Africa to worship in a traditional worship space with a pipe organ? We highly doubt it. You would allow them to make their culture a part of how they do corporate worship. Why then is it any different here? We will do worship with screens and a band because we believe there are thousands of Lost souls who need Jesus and that more modern music is a way to engage them so that we are able to share the Gospel with them.

If you have ever been to one of our worship services you know that the Law and Gospel are very clearly presented. There is no sugar coating or watering down the Word. Ski’s sermons slap you in the face with your sin and also offer you God’s grace and forgiveness through his Son’s death on the cross. We will regularly celebrate the Lord’s Supper together at an altar of sorts even if it may not look like the altar you have in your church and Lord willing will celebrate many baptisms at a baptismal font that also may not look like the one you have in your church. We don’t believe the early Christian’s worshiped with an organ in a building with pews, an altar, a baptismal font, and stained glass windows. Would you still call what they did worship? We certainly would.

Numbers in and of themselves do not equal success. But the fact that numbers represent souls who heard the Gospel at any given service? Now in that regard, they do represent success. Even if the only ones present were ourselves, the Law and Gospel preached in their truth and purity equals success. Can we do anything to add to that Law and Gospel? Most certainly not. However, we CAN do and often actually do a ton to distract people from the truth of God’s Word. Our unkind words and actions towards our fellow believers is a prime example of that.

We love that critics conveniently overlook the fact that we say over and over again “Christ is at the core of everything we do as a church.” That’s pretty hard to criticize now, isn’t it? If you are skeptical of what we do, we don’t blame you. However, before you criticize, all we ask is that come to a service and see for yourself what it is that we do. See that the Law and Gospel are preached; that we don’t have to compromise our beliefs in any way to reach people in a different way.

“Therefore, in the present case I advise you: Leave these men alone! Let them go! For if their purpose or activity is of human origin, it will fail. But if it is from God, you will not be able to stop these men; you will only find yourselves fighting against God.’” Acts 5:38-39

Janinne Skorzewski at 3:10pm February 21
Well said!

Pamela Plamann at 7:18am February 22
A BIG thank you to The Core for reaching out to those that are in dyer (sic) need of having Christ in their lives.


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Keep an eye on: The Big Picture
February 21, 2009

What's the issue: The state's only large-format theater closed its doors Oct. 15 after 19 months of operation.

The Big Picture Theater of Adventure and Discovery began operations at 215 E. Washington St. on March 19, 2005.

In an interview with The Post-Crescent, co-owner Jim Bork, president of Big Picture Concepts, said low attendance led to the closure, which put 13 employees out of work.

The building is for sale.

Why is it important: The $5.1 million, 300-seat theater opened showing educational films such as "Lewis & Clark: Great Journey West."

The top adult ticket price was $8.50. It was later reduced to $7.50.

In September, the theater played host to a Star Trek convention, showing films like "Star Trek: The Wrath of Khan."

The local Wildwood Film Festival held its fifth annual event at The Big Picture in April.

The theater, which boasts a screen 80 feet wide and 60 feet tall, closed after a well-received foreign film festival.

The city had deeded the property, formerly occupied by a printing company, to Bork and co-owners Chuck and Donna Barnum with a promise the owners would repay a city investment in the property.

The city improved the property years before the theater project was proposed.

Bork told The Post-Crescent attendance was less than half of the 200,000 to 250,000 the theater needed annually to meet financial obligations.

By August 2006, the theater was $4 million in debt, including $1.6 million owed to the city of Appleton.

The theater made one partial payment of $74,724.46 on that debt. In its developer's agreement with the city, the theater was responsible for 14 annual installments in $118,400.

The city has not foreclosed on the property.

— By Steve Wideman

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Big Picture Could See Big Regional Draw
Marketplace , Jan 25, 2005 by Lebrun, Margaret
EmailPrint
Jim Bork and partner Chuck Barnum are after a "wow" factor when they open The Big Picture Theater of Adventure & Discovery in downtown Appleton in March. The state's second large-format film theater boasts an 80-foot wide and 6-story high screen and seating for about 300.

Under construction since last fall, the 19,000-square-foot, $51 million project has been a dream of Bork's for years. He recalls seeing largeformat films in larger cities across the country and being wowed" by the experience.

"I remember thinking that would play well in this area," says Bork, who spent 25 years with Aid Association for Lutherans (now Thrivent) and the last seven years teaching business and social sciences at Fox-Valley Technical College. "The films are family friendly and they have a little educational value. This is a family area, and we're anticipating success here."

Bork and Barnum, who owned an Appleton nursing home, bought the 215 E. Washington St. site from the city of Appleton with a tax incremental financing arrangement.

The Big Picture's executive director, Ed Bisaillon, played a big role in bringing the Humphrey IMAX to Milwaukee in 1998. Bisaillon has also been involved in large-format theaters in Nebraska, Illinois and Ohio. In Hastings, Nebraska, the museum he directed more than quadrupled its annual 50,000 attendance when it added a large-format movie screen. He expects Appleton's theater to draw 250,000 a year.

"The fact that one of these large-format theaters is coming to Northeast Wisconsin is a real feather in the cap of the area," Bisaillon says.


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Big Picture’s name is no exaggeration




By Stefanie Scott


Walking into the lobby of The Big Picture Theater of Adventure & Discovery, the smell of buttery popcorn hits the senses and makes the stomach rumble.

From the framed movie posters on the wall to the box office where tickets are sold, it seems like a typical day at the movies.

But once patrons make their way into the theater portion of the facility, they immediately realize they’re not entering the local Cineplex. The immense movie screen hovers before them measuring 80 feet wide and six stories tall.

“It was just huge,” said Dvin Kohls, 10, of Winneconne, who recently viewed “Everest,” a dramatic true story of climbers who tried to make it to the summit of the magnificent mountain. “The whole thing was just great. If I had the chance, I’d come back all the time.”

Kohls and his buddies said they never expected the film to be so exciting, but that the action and special effects rival that of summer blockbuster movies.

The Big Picture, 215 E. Washington St., downtown Appleton, opened its doors in March providing family-friendly, non-violent films about science, nature and history.

“I was the dreamer behind this,” said Jim Bork, one of The Big Picture owners. “For many years, I wanted to bring this to the Fox Cities. The facility couldn’t have turned out better.”

The screen size and sound system create an immersive experience extending beyond the field of vision so viewers feel like they’re part of the film.

Doug Nelson and son Cody, 10, definitely felt like they had been transported from the streets of Appleton to the Himalayan mountains.

“When the woman slid down the rope and started spinning, I felt like I was spinning,” said the younger Nelson.

His father recalls a collective sigh from the audience as the picture panned over the steep cliffs.

In fact, the overwhelming quiet spoke volumes to the father who knows that kids only remain silent when they’re truly captivated.

“It was exciting because you never knew what was going to happen next,” Cody said.

Keeping with a complete theater experience, co-owner Chuck Barnum gets groups together to take a picture before the film. He climbs high on a ladder and gets a bird eye view for the visitors to take home as a memento, he said.

“When the kids leave, they always say they’ll be back,” Barnum said. “My motivation for being a part of this is to provide an exceptional experience and when they say that, I know we’re connecting.”

The theater shows three different large-format documentary films throughout the day. In addition to “Everest,” The Big Picture currently presents one or two other large-format movies.

A new film will replace an existing one every month and a half. “Speed,” a film about the human drive to go faster will debut in summer 2005. Shows typically last an hour, with seven showings daily.

The owners like to gauge audience reaction to the films. “In the pre-show, when they see some of the special effect, they’re just like ‘Wow,’ with their mouths hanging open – that’s really rewarding,” Bork said.

Theater management likens their films to programming seen on the Discovery and National Geographic channels. Topics for large-format films range from ocean creatures to car racing, many often crated in a first-person perspective.

“It gives kids a chance to experience history rather than just read it out of a textbook,” Bork said.

The local owners invested $5.1 million to make The Big Picture the second large-format theater in Wisconsin. While the Milwaukee Public Museum operates an IMAX system, the Appleton theater uses German-made Kinoton product.

The theater uses special, large film called 8/70 – a single frame measures four times larger than standard 35 mm and captures more details and boasts clarity, vivid detail and realism.

A 7,000-watt projector lamp brings brightness to the production. The system proves 3-D capable, a technology that filmmakers say they will be making more use of in the future.

Clear, crisp sound effects emit from the digital Dolby sound system.

Every one of the 298 roomy seats have been carefully arranged to ensure an obstructed view. Customers always get the best seat in the house.

The Big Picture has already received tremendous response from school and other youth groups. Now they hope the summer will bring more family outings and tourists.

“We really want to appeal to the family market,” Bork said. “This is the type of place grandparents, parents and kids can enjoy together.”

Sally Korn was excited to hear about the new facility because she had taken her three kids – ranging in age from 11 to 18 – to several similar theaters around the Midwest.

“We’ve always enjoyed these movies,” she said. “We’ve been going since the youngest was 3 years old.”

In addition to the exciting, edu-tainment that The Big Picture has already been showing, the management hopes to mix it up a bit this summer with a few classic Hollywood titles.

While the theater stands out for its ability to show large-format films, it can also present 5/70 film, the format in which many early Hollywood movies was shot. Although no specific titles have been chosen, Bork says “How the West was Won,” “2001 Space Odyssey” and “Sound of Music,” are just a few of the well-known films created in this format.

“We’re not interested in competing with area cinemas or making a steady diet of these movies, but we want to expose people to what’s available,” Bork said.

The facility offers assistive listening devices and wheelchair spaces with companion sitting on a first-come, first-serve basis.

Patrons should arrive about 20 minutes before a showing to ensure a seat. Refreshments such as popcorn, nachos, candy and soda are sold at the lobby concession stand.

The gift shop sells souvenirs from books to stuffed animals with an educational focus. DVDs of some of the other large format documentaries are available in the shop.

Tickets available online at www.bigpicturetheater.com or by phone at (920) 731-7700. The box office is open noon to 6 p.m. Monday through Friday.

Prices are $8.50 for ages 12 to 59, $7.50 for 60 and older, $6.50 for children ages 3 to 11. Matinees offer a 50 cent discount. Stay for additional films for $4.50 each. Children under 3 should sit on the lap of parent.


***

GJ - The Appleton area already has a surplus of WELS congregations, and many in the area are not happy with this new development.

It would be interesting to see the budget and who is paying the bills. A building that large is an energy hog, even before the 20 Sub-Woofers Behind That Screen! are fired up.

Endowment? What Endowment?





Pitt, Carnegie Mellon suing investment manager

They want $114 million back after questions were raised by audit

Saturday, February 21, 2009

By Len Boselovic and Jonathan D. Silver, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

The University of Pittsburgh and Carnegie Mellon University yesterday filed suit against Westridge Capital Management and its operators, seeking the immediate return of more than $114 million they invested. They also asked a federal judge to appoint a receiver to oversee the investment manager.

The lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court, comes after the two universities said they were unable to collect the money from Westridge or get documentation regarding the status of their money from Westridge's principal partners, Paul Greenwood and Stephen Walsh.


The schools put their money into Westridge Capital Management Enhancement Funds, a Virgin Islands fund that invested in commodities.

The complaint described them as "enhanced index" funds.

Managers of such funds try to outperform a market index by investing a minimal amount of money in a market index and investing the majority of the funds into other investments that provide returns above those provided by the market index. The promise of market-beating returns made it a popular strategy in recent years for endowments, pension funds and other large investors.

Michigan Lutheran Seminary, RIP



The Old Main is no longer there.
This was mislabled the Plywood Palace, which was a boys' dorm.
I made a mistake in my Human Nature.


One WELS observer says, and I agree, that MLS will not survive synodical budget cuts. I pointed out that the Gurgel-Mueller Church Growth administration killed enrollment first with insane tuition increases, then finished the job by talking up the closing of the school. One flapjaw at The Love Shack even put out a story after the defenestration of Gurgel, that MLS could be closed anyway, in spite of the convention. The press reported Rev. Flapjaw's remarks, and SP Schroeder had to do damage control. That has been a feature of the Church and Changers, always undermining the stated goals of the convention.

Two other factors are the birth drought in general, which lowers the recruitment pool, and the poor location of the school. They should have spent their money relocating MLS a long time ago. I imagine parents think of the location whenever they choose which prep to support.

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Anonymous has left a new comment on your post "Michigan Lutheran Seminary, RIP":

Hi, we don't need the synod postition (sic) either. The president's (sic) of the schools(who are very capable men) can report to the synod president and their respective boards which currently act like nothing more than an advisory board with calling authority. Church growth didn't get us into this mess. Leaders and called workers who can't comprehend challenge and meet expectations are the reason we are here. If you want to blame this all on church growth then you better start looking at all the called workers who can't achieve goals and our killing our churches with the lack of enthusiasm and effort to try and share the Gospel. I don't like the entertainment and some of the tactics of church growth but I am irritated with the notion that this is THE problem.

***

GJ - Once prep tuition went from being a bit pricey to being a bone-cruncher, the preps lost a whole group of students who might have attended. The schools were bled dry on purpose by the Church Growthers, so now they are kosher. I don't believe the writer realizes how many millions have been diverted to pay for Fuller, Trinity Deerfield, and Willow Creek training; to fund CG missions that went EC, Roman Catholic, or LCMS (POP-Lutheran, Columbus); to experiment; to jump-start WELS; to pay off lawsuits caused by criminal church workers; to publish slick but useless magazines; to give CG buddies high-paying jobs at The Love Shack.

The Church Shrinkers are allergic to doing congregational work. Kelm is almost parish-experience free. He did start an ELCA church near Pittsfield, which is still going, I heard. Larry Olson had one call, which never grew, so they made him Waldo Werning Professor of Church Growth at MLC.

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Anonymous has left a new comment on your post "Michigan Lutheran Seminary, RIP":

I often wonder if possibly the prep system is no longer relevant. During the past several decades, the number of WELS high schools has increased dramatically. Areas previously not served by WELS high schools now have them. For example, the metro Detroit area now has Huron Valley Lutheran High. MLS used to (maybe still does) get many of its dormer students from this area.

I have run into a number of prep alumni who have not sent their children on to prep school (where they would need to be dormer students). Sometimes this is because of the expense; often it is because there is another school within commuting distance.

Perhaps MLS could be turned into an area Lutheran high school. I have heard that some of the area WELS Lutheran high schools do provide limited facilities for dorming students.

***

GJ - Doubtless the area high schools have competed for the same students. The genius of WELS can be seen in closing the New Ulm prep and moving it to Prairie, where no Lutherans live. The New Ulm area parents immediately built an area high school, a fairly big one. Some parents like to see their children more than twice a year. Martin Luther College lost many of their students because Norm Berg would not support WELS parochial schools with mission support. Norm was always channeling Fuller nonsense because he went there, like all the Mission Board people. MLC did not get the students who wanted to become teachers because the teaching positions shriveled up. WELS liberals are good at shooting themselves in the foot.

Perhaps in the long run this was going to happen, but the Church Shrinkers are the ones who got the tuition way out of balance and de-motivated a generation of students. How they mismanaged the money is the theme of the Kuske Report, linked in my set of WELS 2009 Convention files.

Bankrupt Theatre a Stage for WELS Emergent Church



Ski, now known as Pastor Jim, prepared to start a WELS mission by skipping Deutschlander's WELS presentation for Andy Stanley's Babtist presentation. That has been a WELS tradition for decades - learn missions from the false teachers
who hate Lutheran doctrine and worship.
Hasn't that worked just great?



"We can fill this space if we keep having three-hour parties."


Logo for webpage.


Here is the link, where clicking on the little camera will open up the video report.

Downtown Appleton Theater Gets New Lease on Life

Updated: Feb 21, 2009 08:46 AM MST

Big Picture's New Lease on Life

By Matt Smith

An empty building in downtown Appleton sees life once again.

The Big Picture Theatre, which almost instantly failed several years ago. For nearly two-and-a-half years it sat empty, leaving the city unable to collect tax revenue on the property.

It lost about $3 million in its property valuation and cost the city $48,000 in potential tax revenue but now it breathes new life.

Pastor Jim has a big mission for the movie theater-turned-church. It's called The Core, an outreach of St. Peter Lutheran Church in Appleton.

Three weeks in the building, it finds 100 people coming each Sunday night -- and the official launch doesn't begin until this weekend on the World Wide Web.

"I see this space, we view it very much as a community space, so we'd love to have people in and out of our building," Pastor Jim Skorzewski said.

The church signed a one-year lease for the building. It doesn't change much for the city since it's still technically on the market.

"Where will we be at a year from now? I wish I could tell you. Is it going to be just the right size? Is it going to be too big? Too small? I don't know," Skorzewski said.

For the city this could become somewhat of a Catch-22. One one hand, it's great that a building this size downtown is occupied. On the other hand, if the church decides to buy the building it becomes a non-profit, meaning the city couldn't collect any tax revenues.

But arguably the city could see a much greater impact. The argument: Bring more people to The Core and you bring more people downtown.

Jennifer Stephany of Appleton Downtown Inc. said, "That's exactly what you need in the central district, certainly at a time we're trying to bring more people into the district, and that kind of foot traffic is going to be good for everybody."


***

GJ - Get a bankrupt property to start something new in WELS - when was that last tried? I remember - Prairie, the prep school property created from a failed Roman Catholic prep school. Prairie is now a prison, giving new meaning to the question, "When did you get out?"

WELS is much better at turning their property over to non-Lutherans - the Coral Springs church in Florida, run into the ground by Church Growth superstars, now Roman Catholic; Crossroads in S. Lyons, Michigan, now Evangelical Covenant. If memory serves me, some of the same CG scoundrels were involved in both disasters.

Ivy League Losses



Sterling Memorial Library at Yale was financed
from the estate of a railroad magnate.
Harvard's library was built in memory of a young man
who went down on the Titantic.


From the New York Times.

Harvard has said its overall endowment portfolio declined 22 percent from July through October and that it could end the fiscal year in June down 30 percent. That performance is in line with the average for university endowments, though some have done better. Yale’s endowment was off 13.4 percent in the comparable four-month period, while Princeton’s was down 11 percent, and both have projected a total 25 percent drop for the fiscal year.



Harvard borrowed money to invest, increasing their returns but also their losses - so they got burned too. They are selling off their liquid assets to make ends meet. That is part of the stock market meltdown, because many institutions are doing the same.

Bank of America and Citibank are both facing insolvency. I believe they each have about $2 trillion in assets. Obamessiah is now talking about nationalizing the banks "for a short time."

---

CNBC

Several Goldman Sachs partners have leveraged their Goldman Sachs stock to buy alternative investments such as hedge funds & private equity, and they have done so through their Goldman Sachs brokerage accounts.

But Goldman stock has declined in value by more than 50 percent since last spring, meaning that Goldman Sachs is in the awkward position of making margin calls on its own partners, who can't meet those calls because their alternative investments are underwater and they don't have enough cash on hand.


Ben Stein thought they were giving away Goldman Sachs stock when it was priced much higher. The Goldman Sachs partners, as rich as they were, borrowed against their own stock to buy speculative investments, which are plummeting in value along with the GS stock. This is another source of stock price meltdown. The most liquid assets are sold first.

After the 2006 elections, liar loans to illegals and speculators went through the roof, sending home prices into the stratosphere (credit bubble). Rating agencies collected huge fees to rate the equities based on these mortgage bundles, listing most of them as AAA or the equivalent. Credit default swaps (insurance on debt) were sold all over the world because they were also rated highly by Moody's and other rating businesses.

It is known that there was an organized run on the credit market in September of 2008. About $500 billion was withdrawn from money market accounts in one hour. A few are making big money from bear runs on financials, selling stock first (selling short) and buying it later when they have pounded the price down.

Some old frauds are exploding, like ammo cooking off in a fire, because the meltdown exposed various Ponzi schemes. Madoff is the biggest, with $50 billion looted. Another one just broke - $8 billion. A third one involved only about $600 million, so no one notices that story. The third one was exposed because one employee asked a few key questions of the fraudster. Police were summoned. Each Ponzi scheme adds to the meltdown because people lived as though they had real money when it was all gone.

Additional detonations will be heard as equities based on credit card debt sink in value. Oh yes, they bundle up credit card debt and sell it as an investment. When people refuse to pay their credit cards or cannot, the equities based on the debt turn to garlic.

Las Vegas casinos have been left half-completed. When vice goes begging for cash, things are bad.

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Bruce Church has left a new comment on your post "Ivy League Losses":

Rush Limbaugh speculated that hedge funds and money markets withdrew that $500 billion in one day in order to make the Republicans look bad and get Obama elected, but I'd say it's much more likely that someone figured out that the whole US economy had become hallowed (sic) out so it was a house of cards waiting for a gust a wind to come along.

***

GJ - I am not a financial expert. The proof is that I have not bankrupted any large banks or made any hedge funds insolvent. I think several scenarios are possible. One is definitely the election spin. Perhaps the scheme got out of hand, since all banking runs on trust. If I had to pay every bill I owe tomorrow, I would be flat busted too. Some think a few billionaires like George Soros wanted Obamessiah in power and colluded to make fortunes with naked bear runs on various institutions. A second alternative is that China pulled a lot of cash at once to destabilize America, but that got out of hand because we decided to stop buying so much cheap Chinese junk. Millions of Chinese are out of work and very restless. A few years ago, one financial magazine noted that young Chinese people stay heavily in debt (compared to wages) for the latest fads. In other words, they can afford a recession even less than we can.

Bruce Church is right about debt being a house of cards ready to fall. Consumer debt kept zooming, and houses were used to fuel that. Pay off Discover with an equity loan, build another debt, pay with a re-fi, etc.

Friday, February 20, 2009

Church and Change Takes Off the Mask,
Reveals the Slavering Fangs





Anonymouse has left a new comment on your post "The Ichaslang Lexicon":

I think that you should be angrier, more negative. I love the way that you quote Luther as if he were God. Do you have any scripture quoted in here? You talk about growth as if it were a plague - fine, go ahead and ignore it, and 20 minutes after you start moldering in your grave (something everyone can celebrate) - the last Lutheran can turn out the lights.

You are so dim. It's about saving people by preaching Christ and him crucified. The word can go out in so many ways. It is his message, not the methods - you worship the methods, not the message. It's about changing lives through the Gospel, not about keeping sad old traditions alive. It doesn't have to come from a pulpit, with organ music droning in the background with lifeless stiffs mouthing the words from their comas. Get real.

***

GJ - I hope the innocents see the real spirit of Church and Change in this comment.

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Some Scripture for Mouse, via Brett Meyer:

2 Peter 2:12-22, "But these, as natural brute beasts, made to be taken and destroyed, speak evil of the things that they understand not; and shall utterly perish in their own corruption; And shall receive the reward of unrighteousness, as they that count it pleasure to riot in the day time. Spots they are and blemishes, sporting themselves with their own deceivings while they feast with you; Having eyes full of adultery, and that cannot cease from sin; beguiling unstable souls: an heart they have exercised with covetous practices; cursed children: Which have forsaken the right way, and are gone astray, following the way of Balaam the son of Bosor, who loved the wages of unrighteousness; But was rebuked for his iniquity: the dumb ass speaking with man's voice forbad the madness of the prophet. These are wells without water, clouds that are carried with a tempest; to whom the mist of darkness is reserved for ever. For when they speak great swelling words of vanity, they allure through the lusts of the flesh, through much wantonness, those that were clean escaped from them who live in error. While they promise them liberty, they themselves are the servants of corruption: for of whom a man is overcome, of the same is he brought in bondage. For if after they have escaped the pollutions of the world through the knowledge of the Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, they are again entangled therein, and overcome, the latter end is worse with them than the beginning. For it had been better for them not to have known the way of righteousness, than, after they have known it, to turn from the holy commandment delivered unto them. But it is happened unto them according to the true proverb, The dog is turned to his own vomit again; and the sow that was washed to her wallowing in the mire."

1 Peter 3:12-17, "For the eyes of the Lord are over the righteous, and his ears are open unto their prayers: but the face of the Lord is against them that do evil. And who is he that will harm you, if ye be followers of that which is good? But and if ye suffer for righteousness' sake, happy are ye: and be not afraid of their terror, neither be troubled; But sanctify the Lord God in your hearts: and be ready always to give an answer to every man that asketh you a reason of the hope that is in you with meekness and fear: Having a good conscience; that, whereas they speak evil of you, as of evildoers, they may be ashamed that falsely accuse your good conversation in Christ. For it is better, if the will of God be so, that ye suffer for well doing, than for evil doing."

Jude 1:10, "But these speak evil of those things which they know not: but what they know naturally, as brute beasts, in those things they corrupt themselves."

---

Anonymous has left a new comment on your post "Church and Change Takes Off the Mask, Reveals the ...":

"It doesn't have to come from a pulpit, with organ music droning in the background with lifeless stiffs mouthing the words from their comas. Get real." And yet "it is his message, not the methods." Such logical inconsistency! If the method supposedly doesn't matter, why such disdain for historically tried and true methods, which are centered on "his message" (better said, the Word of God)? It reminds me of postmodernism - there is no absolute truth... but if you don't believe that, you're wrong.

It is just the same pattern of upheaval as always: tolerance, acceptance, dominance, oppression. First they sought "only tolerance" of their false ways, but then they wanted acceptance on an equal footing. And now, apparently, they have both an attitude of dominance and even the gall to oppress God-centered worship. Hopefully it is just the conceited attitudes and oppression of some and not the reality among the church at large.

-K

Lutheran Notes - On Kieschnick Suing His Own Pastors



"Ignore the fine print. That doesn't apply to you anyway. Hurry up and sign."


Read the semi-annual Lutheran Notes update.

Google Lutheran Books and Periodicals


Copied from LutherQuest (sic):

The Lutheran Watchman (1866-7) (a predecessor to the Lutheran Witness)
http://books.google.com/books?id=zGEVAAAAYAAJ

Concordia Cyclopedia
http://www.archive.org/details/concordiacyclope009 499mbp

The Concordian (1916)
http://www.archive.org/details/concordian1917conc

The Concordian (1917)
http://www.archive.org/details/concordian1917conc

The Concordian (1918)
http://www.archive.org/details/concordian1918conc

Taps (1922)
http://www.archive.org/details/taps_1922conc

The stewardship life (1929)
http://www.archive.org/details/MN41380ucmf_5

Touring with God: devotions for Christian pilgrims (1927)
http://www.archive.org/details/MN40286ucmf_2

Here I stand! : narratives and sketches from Reformation days
http://www.archive.org/details/hereistandnarrat00g raeiala

Into all the world; the story of Lutheran foreign missions (1930)
http://www.archive.org/details/MN41448ucmf_0

Church finances: a handbook for the pastor and the layman (1922)
http://www.archive.org/details/MN41699ucmf_13

Four Hundred Years: Commemorative Essays on the Reformation of Dr. Martin Luther
http://www.archive.org/details/fourhundredyear00da ugoog

Luther Discovers The Gospel New Light Upon Luther S Way From Medieval Catholicism To Evangelical Faith (1951)
http://www.archive.org/details/lutherdiscoverst013 337mbp

Popular symbolics: the doctrines of the churches of Christendom and of other religious bodies examined in the light of Scripture (1934)
http://www.archive.org/details/MN41551ucmf_1

Why Should a Lutheran Not Join Any Sectarian Church?
http://books.google.com/books?id=OPL0XZG7j70C

Spiritism: A Study of Its Phenomena and Religious Teachings (1919)
http://www.archive.org/details/spiritismastudy00graegoog [Mild Colonial Boy - thnx]

Victory Through Christ Radio Messages Broadcast In The Tenth Lutheran Hour (1943)
http://www.archive.org/details/victorythroughch011 911mbp

Patrick Hamilton. The first Lutheran preacher and martyr of Scotland (1918)
http://www.archive.org/details/patrickhamiltonf00d all

Sermons on the Gospels of the ecclesiastical year (1902)
http://www.archive.org/details/sermonsongospels00s iec

Great leaders and great events, historical essays on the field of church history by various Lutheran writers (1922)
http://www.archive.org/details/greatleadersgrea00b uch

At the Tribunal of Caesar: Leaves from the Story of Luther's Life Vol 1.
http://www.archive.org/details/leipzigdebatein101d auw

At the Tribunal of Caesar: Leaves from the Story of Luther's Life Vol 2.
http://www.archive.org/details/leipzigdebatein102d auw

At the Tribunal of Caesar: Leaves from the Story of Luther's Life Vol 3.
http://www.archive.org/details/leipzigdebatein103d auw

Luther on education (1889)
http://www.archive.org/details/lutheroneducatio00p ainuoft

The voice of history (1913)
http://www.archive.org/details/voiceofhistory00som miala

William Tyndale : the translator of the English Bible
http://www.archive.org/details/williamtyndaletr00d all

Great religious Americans (1918)
http://www.archive.org/details/greatreligiousam00d all

Christian art in the place and in the form of Lutheran worship (1921)
http://www.archive.org/details/christianartinpl00k retiala

John Ludwig Krapf : the explorer-missionary of northeastern Africa
http://www.archive.org/details/johnludwigkrapfe00k retiala

Education among the Jews from the earliest times to the end of the Talmudic period, 500 A.D
http://www.archive.org/details/educationamongje00k ret

Evolution : an investigation and a criticism (1922)
http://www.archive.org/details/evolutioninvesti00g raeuoft

Evolution: An Investigation and a Critique (1921)
http://www.archive.org/details/evolution19321gut

Luther Examined and Reexamined: A Review of Catholic Criticism and a Plea for Revaluation
http://www.archive.org/details/lutherexaminedan163 22gut

Evangelical Lutheran Hymnal (1896)
http://www.archive.org/details/evangelicalluth00st atgoog

Evangelical Lutheran Hymnal (1891)
http://www.archive.org/details/evangelicalluth01st atgoog

Sunday-school hymnal (1901)
http://www.archive.org/details/sundayschoolhyml00u nknuoft

The Fourth Reader
http://books.google.com/books?id=Y9ROAAAAMAAJ

American Lutheranism v.1
http://books.google.com/books?id=A4oSAAAAYAAJ

American Lutheranism v.2
http://books.google.com/books?id=booSAAAAYAAJ

Schwan Catechism
http://books.google.com/books?id=l9MPAAAAYAAJ

English District Convention Proceedings, 1912-19
http://books.google.com/books?id=YoW5nWGuTuUC

Homiletic Magazine 1876-1921 (some articles also printed in English, in my opinion this is more likely in the later volumes)
http://books.google.com/books?q=editions:LCCNsc760 00448

Half a Century of Sound Lutherianism in America
http://books.google.com/books?id=MooAAAAAMAAJ

Ebenezer: Reviews of the Work of the Missouri Synod During Three Quarters of a Century
http://books.google.com/books?id=fIgSAAAAYAAJ

Yes, I Joined Facebook




One of my courses for journalism is advanced digital media, and that includes social networking, for example - Facebook, LinkedIn.

Facebook uses software to connect people with common interests (work, school, hobbies) and makes it easy for them to share links, photos, messages. Facebook's policy is: "We own everything you give us." For those who value privacy, that is a real downer.

LinkedIn is another approach, which is far more left-brain (logical, text-oriented) and is often used for professional networking for jobs. I keep track of some people because of their LinkedIn updates. Academics can keep track of professionals who move and get job referrals that way. With online teaching, distance is no barrier to income, but time and eyestrain are.

Both approaches use the email directory to identify friends. I found out about where some relatives were, since it takes so much effort for them to send an email.

---

Anonymouse has left a new comment on your post "Yes, I Joined Facebook":

No wonder you get things so back asswards, Greg. The right brain is the logical reasoning side. The left is the creative freeform side of the brain. This has been well accepted in our society.

---

From the Herald Sun, and many other sources:

LEFT BRAIN FUNCTIONS
uses logic
detail oriented
facts rule
words and language
present and past
math and science
can comprehend
knowing
acknowledges
order/pattern perception
knows object name
reality based
forms strategies
practical
safe

RIGHT BRAIN FUNCTIONS
uses feeling
"big picture" oriented
imagination rules
symbols and images
present and future
philosophy & religion
can "get it" (i.e. meaning)
believes
appreciates
spatial perception
knows object function
fantasy based
presents possibilities
impetuous
risk taking

***

GJ - That is why I get the big bucks for teaching. I can keep the two straight, unlike Anonymouse, who is letting his disturbed nature show through in his use of foul language. Crude words may seem eloquent at Hooters, but not in print. I thought they taught better at DeVry. Here is how to keep it straight: l or left is for logical. R or right is for r-tistic.

Do Lutherans Have Any Subscription to the Book of Concord?



Martin Chemnitz was the principal author of the Formula of Concord and the primary editor of the Book of Concord, 1580. He studied under Luther and Melanchthon.


I enjoy watching the humorless taking issue with obvious satire. No, I don't mean Norman Teigen. One person raged about the World Headquarters of Ichabod, a hyperbole so obvious that I did not think it needed an explanatory note. Another thorn was the use of "Mrs. Ichabod," surely a major thorn in his anonymous side.

When I began reading news blogs, I noticed the trend of using the blog names for family members. Instapundit referred to his wife as Instawife and his daughter as Instadaughter. BlackFive called his son Little BF. If something makes my friends laugh and my opponents rage, I am going to continue.

Here are some things which edify or enrage, depending on the reader:


  1. Funny photos of animals.
  2. Quotations from orthodox Lutheran writers.
  3. Quotations from false teachers.
  4. Writing about the past.
  5. Writing about the present.
  6. Writing about the future.

Back to the Book of Concord. This is serious but may cause some to smile.

If Lutherans really subscribed to the Book of Concord, they would drive intellectually lazy pastors out of town, pelting them with dog manure, a statement the Synodical Conference (or its twitching corpse) subscribes to:

12] And what need is there of many words? If I were to recount all the profit and fruit which God's Word produces, whence would I get enough paper and time? The devil is called the master of a thousand arts. But what shall we call God's Word, which drives away and brings to naught this master of a thousand arts with all his arts and power? It must indeed be the master of more than a hundred thousand arts. 13] And shall we frivolously despise such power, profit, strength, and fruit-we, especially, who claim to be pastors and preachers? If so, we should not only have nothing given us to eat, but be driven out, being baited with dogs, and pelted with dung, because we not only need all this every day as we need our daily bread, but must also daily use it against the daily and unabated attacks and lurking of the devil, the master of a thousand arts. Introduction to the Large Catechism, Book of Concord


I would love to catch sight of a Doctrinal Pussycat chasing a Church Shrinker out of town, pelting him with dog manure, followed by the entire District Mission board, laity and clergy alike.

Instead, a DP serves both as criminal defense lawyer (for the false teacher) and prosecutor (for the person who dares to question the false teacher). The false teacher is defended, kept in place, or promoted. The person who questions this is pounded like a tent peg into the ground or given the Sisera treatment with tent peg and mallet (Judges 5:24).

The various Lutheran entities are not only unLutheran. They are anti-Lutheran. Those were the gold old days, when a favorite hymn chosen was Methodist. Now the rock band is mandatory for aging Boomers who should know better by now. It's bad enough to watch ancient reptilian bands like Rolling Stone slither onto stage. Now we are supposed to be converted in church by cheap imitations of a bad concept.

Now that I have a digital organist, I enjoy picking the finest Lutheran hymns without regard to the number of sharps or flats, the novelty of the melody, or the popularity of the hymn.

I get to watch the second counter on Mr. Bose, to help me repeat a verse. That has taught me something. Many hymn verses take 30 seconds to sing. A longer hymn verse is 1 minute. Every so often, one hymn will take 1 minute, 30 seconds to sing. If a hymn verse takes all of 1 minute to sing and has 10 verses, the congregation takes 10 minutes to sing the entire hymn in all its eloquence and beauty. More likely, 10 verses will take 5 minutes, which we often waste watching a string of commercials on TV: "I believe in miracles!" featuring sobbing fast-foods.

Nothing reflects our true confession of faith more than the worship service. Missouri and the ELS have made sections of the Book of Concord part of the worship service. WELS tends to make the explanation of the Second Article of the Creed replace the Creed, a novelty I never understood, especially in the light of "everything is adiaphora."

Lutheran hymns--and all great hymns--glorify God and teach the Word of God. If the goal of church music is to entertain, then only that goal will be attained. I observed a Willow Creek service one Sunday. The deadness of the service and the total lack of a Gospel message was most impressive. No cross was seen on the building or in the worship area.

But Willow Creek services cannot be condemned by someone who has never been there, as one Northwestern College professor said, and even if someone has been there. The Synodical Conference Lutherans have to admit that have spent millions of dollars joining the Enthusiasts in disparaging Lutheran doctrine and worship.

Look at the senior ministers of the LCMS, WELS, and ELS. They are the ones who have deliberately ignored--even defended--the growth of false doctrine. Perhaps their conscience is bothering them now, so they are starting to murmur against the Church Shrinkers. Too bad their fellow pastors, whom they shunned as vermin, cannot join them in finally addressing apostasy. You see, when those dissenting pastors were extended the Left Foot of Fellowship, these surviving senior pastors joined the shunners and made their classmates unpersons.

I told my friend, who was fired by one District Pope and called a jerk by another, "If you want a friend in the Lutheran Church, buy a dog."

From L P Cruz


L P
has left a new comment on your post "My Doubts about the Quia Subscription to the Book ...":

Pr. GJ,

This is one of your best posts.

I could not wipe off the grin ;-)

LPC

---

His blog is Extra Nos.

The CORE on Facebook



"Performance stage, rock band, popcorn, gourmet coffee, Danish.
What am I forgetting?"


WORSHIP AT 5:30PM and then PARTY from 6PM - 9PM

Join us for the unveiling of The CORE website. There will be lots of food, a brief presentation to highlight the functions of the website, and stand up comedy entertainment. This is a night at The CORE you will not want to miss. Everyone is welcome so spread the word and bring a friend.

Follow the CORE on Facebook.


The CORE (http://www.gotocore.com/) updated their profile. They changed the following: Phone and Location.

First of all, a huge "thank you" to everyone who came out tonight for the first worship service at The CORE. We will continue holding worship on Sunday nights at 5:30. Worship right now consists mainly of a sermon and prayers. We will add the band on April 19th.

http://www.gotocore.com/
http://www.twitter.com/gotocore
General Information: The CORE exists to transform lives for Christ through faith that is real, relevant, and relational. We are a WELS church in Appleton that loves the city of Appleton but recognizes it is sick with sin. We strive to live as a city within that city in order to transform the city for Jesus. We love Him, and we want to show His love to others.

Fox 11 video.

February 2nd: Big shout out to all who came and helped out tonight. I'd say 35+ isn't bad for our first "event." Thank you for your time and service.

January 29th: that is indeed the old IMAX theatre:) what better use for a failed business than a church, right?

From the website:

core (n): (1) the central, innermost, or most essential part of anything; (2) the deep and superficial muscles that stabilize, align, and move the trunk of the body

We now have a presence on Facebook - follow the progress or just say hi, click here to check us out on Facebook.

Services are being held at 5:30 on Sundays - we'd love to see you!

Join us for the website launch party - Its February 22nd at 5:30 pm at The CORE. [GJ - Their worship time - when most congregations launch their websites. Commune with the Internet.]


You may be asking yourself, The CORE? What kind of a name is that for a church? The idea behind it is simply that Christ will be at the core of everything we do as a church and ought to be at the core of everything we do in our day to day lives as Christians here on earth. At The CORE we will focus on strengthening our most important core - that is our spiritual one.

At The CORE we strive to connect people in a personal, intimate, and lifelong relationship with their Savior. We will do that through worship that is relevant as well as through small groups where Christians can be real and relational, and live their faith together to bring others into a relationship with their Savior. Our goal is to create an environment where people can connect on a personal level with their Savior and other Christians.

We are opening soon! For more information please contact us at: info@gotocore.com
Or call Katie at: 920-540-5298.

Jim Buske (fellow worshiper at Andy Stanley's Babtist conference) and Matt Doebler (Rock and Roll Church) are fans. What a surprise. Tim Glende is listed.

---

Anonymous has left a new comment on your post "The CORE on Facebook":

The band is coming April 19th. When will the Lord's Supper make an appearance?

A half hour "worship service" followed by a three hour party. Do we really need to know more?

Oh, wait, just in case we did: success of the first night measured in...(drumroll, please)...NUMBERS.

Wu Through



"I'm too sexy for my church, too sexy..."


While Willow Chicago searches for a new campus pastor, Todd Katter will be serving as interim campus pastor, according to the Tribune. Meanwhile, Wu has been removed from the church's web page. Christian Post


Willow Creek to Open Downtown Chicago Campus on October 1

Orginally published on Monday, August 07, 2006 at 3:08 PM

by Todd Rhoades

Named for the Palatine movie palace in which the suburban megachurch got its start, Willow Creek Community Church now plans to establish a city home in a theater of a different kind. Beginning Oct. 1, the historic Auditorium Theatre's gilded walls and massive archways will become home to Willow Creek Chicago, the church's newest campus, under a handshake agreement reached by both parties Monday.

The city satellite of the South Barrington church, which expanded its auditorium in 2004 to accommodate its 18,000 members in multiple services, was launched in March and has been drawing about 150 people on Sunday afternoons to the Union Station Multiplex on West Jackson Boulevard. The church now hopes to draw hundreds more to hear its pastor preach from a stage that has featured Frank Sinatra, Janis Joplin, Bruce Springsteen and the Joffrey Ballet.

The unconventional location is not unusual for an evangelical church--especially one that hosts worship services that resemble Broadway productions.

But the Auditorium Theatre is a cornerstone of Chicago history, a granite monument to the days when the young city aimed to outshine New York as the nation’s cultural hub. A national historic landmark, the Romanesque building at the corner of Michigan Avenue and Congress Parkway was designed by legendary architects Louis Sullivan and Dankmar Adler.

Leaders of Willow Creek were conscious of the history of the Auditorium as they planned the megachurch’s urban expansion.

“It’s got Chicago written all over it,” said Rev. Steve Wu, who moved to the city earlier this year to lead Willow Creek Chicago.

Willow Creek members will be able to worship in the theater on Sunday mornings for one year, with the caveat that they must clear out before Sunday matinees, said the Auditorium’s Executive Director Brett Batterson, who declined to disclose financial details of the arrangement.

The goals of the two organizations are the same, he said.

“The [theater’s] mission is to make it accessible to all of Chicago,” Batterson said. “If the renter is a church or a Broadway producer, we’re more than happy. It’s an auditorium for everyone.”

The history of the Auditorium Theatre is as grand as its architecture. Even before it was finished, the theater hosted the 1888 Republican National Convention that nominated Benjamin Harrison for president. When the theater officially raised its curtain a year later, new President Harrison watched from a box seat. That night, star soprano Adelina Patti performed her signature song, “Home, Sweet Home.”

Recalling the nostalgia of that era and welcoming its neighbors, Willow Creek Chicago’s first series of sermons will be titled “A Place to Call Home.”

“We want to communicate that Willow is here in the city to provide a place to call home--as a church, as an outreach to the city around us, to the community that so desperately needs the great message of the Gospel,” Wu said.

Wu, 41, who moved from California’s Silicon Valley, said he discovered the Auditorium Theatre while wandering around downtown and praying.

“There would be days I’d walk around and absorb the city, feel the culture, emotion and heartbeat,” he said. “When I walked down in the theater district, I just had this sense in me that this would be a great place to land.”

The performing arts, including live music, dance and drama, have always been a hallmark of Willow Creek’s worship, and services at the acoustically perfect Auditorium Theatre will be no different. Worshipers will hear show tunes, jazz numbers, blues and gospel, Wu said.

“One of the things we believe musically is we need to have breadth of genres that resonate with the city instead of one wedge of Christian music,” he said. “We want to really resonate with the deep musical history of the city.”

Music does not have to be Christian to draw a listener closer to God, he said.

“Music is a great gift from God we can use to speak to each other,” Wu said. “When people hear a certain tune it evokes certain thoughts and emotions. The message might not be out-and-out Christian, but it resonates with the human soul.”

The art and architecture of the theater also stirs the soul, said Willow Creek Chicago member Kathryn Tack, 60, an executive coach and mother of three. Her first visit to the theater was to see a production of “The Phantom of the Opera,” she recalled.

“There’s just the awesome presence of the Creator,” Tack said. “The building in and of itself gives you so much to fill you intellectually and touches your heart. That’s part of what God represents to so many people. It would be really amazing to have church there.”

The theater has 3,800 seats, but Wu said he believes the house will soon be full. In addition to the performances, Willow Creek Chicago plans to develop its ministries for the homeless and prostitutes.

Wu said the expansion to Chicago is not only more convenient for city dwellers but enhances the partnerships Willow Creek already shares with social service agencies. In addition to its South Barrington campus, Willow Creek has regional sites in McHenry, DuPage and Lake Counties.

“Our dream and our hope,” Wu said, “is to really bring something wonderful here to the city.”

---

Wu, 43, began pastoring Willow Creek Chicago in 2006 with 22,500 attendees, according to a 2008 list of Outreach magazine. The Willow Creek megachurch community was founded by Bill Hybels and has six other locations in Illinois. [GJ - And one in Depere, Wisconsin]

Todd Katter has agreed to serve as interim campus pastor while church officials search for the next campus pastor. Records of Wu have been removed from the church's website. The Voice

Thursday, February 19, 2009

Luther - On Judging Whether a Work
Is God-Pleasing



Word and Sacrament, by Norma Boeckler


(Luther makes the following general comment on Romans 2:6-10): "Patient continuance is so altogether necessary that no work can be good in which patient continuance is lacking. The world is so utterly perverse and Satan is so heinously wicked that he cannot allow any good work to be done, but he must persecute it. However, in this very way God, in His wonderful wisdom, proves what work is good and pleasing to Him. Here the rule holds: As long as we do good and for our good do not encounter contradiction, hatred, and all manner of disagreeable and disadvantageous things, so we must fear that our good work as yet is not pleasing to God; for just so long it is not yet done with patient continuance."
Luther's Commentary on Romans, trans. J. Theodore Mueller, Grand Rapids: Kregel Publications, 1976, p. 55. Romans 2:6-10.

Wu Who!







Wu

From Senior Pastor Bill Hybels’ childhood trips to Chicago to Willow Creek’s 20th anniversary event at the United Center, Willow Creek has had a long history in the city of Chicago. On January 19 at the Illinois Institute of Technology, Hybels began a new chapter in that history when he introduced Steve Wu as the pastor of the church’s Chicago campus.

According to Hybels, when Jim Tomberlin resigned as Willow Creek Chicago’s pastor last summer, it became clear that the church’s vision for the Chicago campus had to be put on hold until the church found another campus pastor. As soon as Hybels met Wu, he said he knew God had spoken.

“There’s this huge confirmation in my spirit that not only is he is the right guy, he’s God’s man for the job,” added Jeff Small, who served as the Chicago campus’ interim pastor during the search for a new pastor.

Though Hybels and Small immediately knew Wu was the right man for the job, Wu admitted he was not so convinced. Wu first became familiar with the Chicago campus when he briefly visited a monthly gathering last October. The next day, driving back to Chicago after meeting with Small in Barrington, Wu said he felt the tap of the Holy Spirit and knew God was calling him to Chicago. Wu said he initially had objections about moving to Chicago, and was particularly opposed to the prospect of leaving California’s warm weather and fishing.

“In the weeks to come, my heart completely changed,” Wu told the gathering of approximately 250 congregants. “I fell in love with the city.”

Wu spent years working in California’s Silicon Valley providing leadership in various capacities to Genesis Technology, Inc. and Twin Peaks Software. Then, twelve years ago, he started a church and most recently served as a pastor at Crosswinds Church in the San Francisco Bay Area. With his initial objections about moving to Chicago behind him, Wu is now committed to building Willow Creek’s Chicago campus.

“I so look forward to the day we can say, ‘Look what God has done in this place,’” Wu said. “I am thrilled to the core about Willow Chicago.”

For details on the Chicago Regional gatherings, visit http://www.willowcreek.org/chicago/


Steve Wu

"Desire: Money, Power and Sex, Part 1

CD

by Steve Wu

$10.50 List Price
$8.40 WCA Member [GJ - Notate bene, John Parlow and Paul Kelm ]

Steve spent years working in California’s Silicon Valley providing leadership in various capacities to Genesis Technology, Inc. and Twin Peaks Software. Then, 12 years ago, he started a church and most recently served as a pastor at Crosswinds Church in the San Francisco Bay Area. Wu is now committed to building Willow Creek’s Chicago regional campus.

Who?

Willow Creek Community Church's Senior Pastor Bill Hybels has announced the resignation of the head of the church's Chicago campus because of "sexual impurity."

The Rev. Steve Wu has left as campus pastor of the Chicago branch of the South Barrington megachurch. He's "taken full responsibility for his sin," according to a church statement.

Hybels, who founded Willow Creek, hired Wu in 2006 to lead and help establish Willow Creek Chicago, which held its first service that year.

A church elder read a statement on Jan. 25 during services at the Chicago congregation announcing Wu's resignation. Church spokesman Ted Allen Miller said the church's staff was told of Wu's departure the next day, while Hybels told the South Barrington campus the news earlier this month.

Willow Creek, with its 20,000 members, is routinely listed as one of the most influential Evangelical churches in the country.

The church's statement also read that Wu wants to participate in a restoration process. Miller didn't have details of what that would entail.

"Our desire is we reconcile and restore," Miller said.

Miller would not provide further details.

According to Willow Creek's Web site Wu worked for years in California's Silicon Valley and also started his own church in California. He also served as pastor Crosswinds Church near San Francisco.

Willow Creek Chicago convenes inside the city's historic Auditorium Theater. Todd Katter is serving as interim campus pastor while church officials search for Wu's replacement.

"We would ask you to pray diligently for Steve in these difficult days," the church's statement concludes.

My Doubts about the Quia Subscription to the Book of Concord





Someone wrote a correction to a comment where someone used "in so far as" in relation to Luther, the Book of Concord, and the Scriptures. That is known as a quatenus subscription to the Book of Concord, according to Dogmatics 101. If you do not remember the corrective comment about this, it is because I decided to pursue the topic later. As I recall, the original comment was not meant to diminish the Confessions in any way.

The quia subscription is defined as agreeing with the Book of Concord, because (quia) it is a proper exposition of the Scriptures. Supposedly, quatenus is the moderate position on the Confessions.

I do not like the distinctions or the practice of signing a statement, as some do when joining a congregation. Like the distinctions between one subscription and another, the practice has become meaningless.

If I can play the role of James, Brother of the Lord, on this topic - a quia subscription--without standing for the Confessions--is a dead and meaningless term.

Some LCMS pastors remember the Barry years through the filter of convenient memories, but SP Barry set the stage for the Kieschnick years by doing nothing about false doctrine. Not only that, the newly installed Barry experts tolerated no criticism from conservatives while the management team courted the liberals and empowered them. Unionist Benke was absolved instead of disciplined, so the spineless administration kicked the can down the street for others to handle without administrative support.

Kieschnick has shown how to discipline. He is taking the radio show Issues, Etc to court for using a name the synod abandoned years ago. The lawsuit may be entirely without merit, but simply explaining details to a lawyer can cost thousands of dollars before the case even starts. The St. Louis seminary almost buried Christian News under a frivolous lawsuit. Someone provided insider information to Otten, ending the matter, but that person will never be ordained by Missouri. No good deed goes unpunished in the Church Triumphalistic.

Paul McCain's blog marked the death of Luther, which was yesterday, reminding me of the WELS/ELS amen chorus for Gerhardt's hymns. Would Luther, who never backed down about doctrine, recognize McCain, who has no position, as one of his own? McCain recently praised apostate Richard J. Neuhaus for helping Missouri sit down with the Antichrist and offer their spin on Lutheran doctrine. According to McCain, B-16 was impressed.

Why would the ELS and WELS glorify Gerhardt when their seminary leaders are identical in character to those who drove Gerhardt out of the pulpit for being a Lutheran? The seminary leaders value empty sentimentalism over action against false doctrine. When Valleskey said aping Fuller Seminary was "spoiling the Egyptians," an ELS pastor gave an Amen! paper at the ELS conference. The ovine--in truth, lupine--pastors were silent. Both disgusting papers were published in the officious journals of their sects. Did anyone react? Did the faculties rebel in horror? I walked up to John (Sparky) Brenner and asked him how the Mequon faculty could publish such tripe. He said, "Write a letter," and "The editor has been sick." More telling was his shock that anyone could question their seminary publication, which should be renamed The Popes Speak. So Brenner too kicked the can down the street. The problem went away, if one ignores Leonard Sweet, Brother Stetzer, and the Emergent Churches springing up as if by magic.

The quia subscription of WELS, ELS, LCMS, and the micro-minis is set aside by the unwritten rules of each sect:


  1. No one with an official position can ever be questioned.
  2. No one related to a given family is ever wrong.
  3. No one who rocks our little boat will be forgiven.
  4. No false doctrine, once published, can ever be retracted by our little sect.

So what does a quia subscription mean after a layman or pastor goes through all the unwritten rules in his mind? The Book of Concord is a rabbit's foot for the vast majority of pastors today. Very few laity know the content of this great book of Biblical exposition. Many pastors are openly scornful of the Confessions and Luther, and they do not hesitate to communicate their attitudes.

Everyone would be better off with a thorough knowledge of Luther's Large Catechism. Most of the errors promoted by the clergy today are answered by that rather small work of supreme quality. That could be why the Large Catechism is shunned - too clear about each issue. Trying the Eighth Commandment ploy would be as difficult as an armed robbery at a gun store. The Matthew 18 gambit would be laughed at as people recited what the Large Catechism says about published errors and known miscreants.

I am suggesting that actual study of the Confessions is preferred over a rabbit's foot quia subscription. When I look at how often the pastors have retreated from the field of battle, I conclude they must have misundstood the term. They must have heard "an Ikea subscription."


Ikea is known for its cheap, do-it-yourself furniture.

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

The Big Picture - with CORE



Another innovation: Long-time friend--since MLS--Tim Glende issued Ski the call. Since when do individuals issue calls?



APPLETON — There will be a new focus for the former Big Picture Theater of Adventure and Discovery.

A one-year lease was signed Feb. 3 to turn the large format theater, which has been closed for more than two years, into The Core, an outreach ministry of St. Peter Lutheran Church in Freedom.

The daughter congregation will target the 18-to-35-year-old demographic, said the Rev. Jim "Ski" Skorzewski, who will pastor the 300-seat (plus handicapped seating) church.

The Core's vision is to become a city within the city, Skorzewski said.

"In the same way we've been transformed by Jesus, then our responsibility and opportunity is to share that Gospel message that transforms lives," he said. "We're going to start very small like a township and our goal is to grow into a city that affects the city for our Savior Jesus."

More than 100 people turned out for an impromptu service and Bible study Sunday.

The $5.1 million Big Picture opened in March 2005. It closed in October 2006 and has remained vacant since.

In August, Skorzewski, formerly with St. Marcus Lutheran Church in Milwaukee, received a call from St. Peter's pastor, the Rev. Tim Glende, to start the new ministry. Skorzewski and a friend had began working on a new model for starting a church a year ago targeting two areas in the Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod: Oconomowoc and Appleton.

"A year later I got a call from both places the same night four minutes apart to do almost the exact same thing," Skorzewski said. "My philosophy has been if we're going to go after and target the 18-to-35-year-old age group you need to be downtown."

Once interior modifications are made to the theater — such as shrinking the size of the 80-by-60-foot screen using curtains and installing a performance platform, The Core hopes to launch its first service April 19. A Web site launching party is planned Feb. 22.

"It's an exciting time for our congregation and also for this daughter congregation," Glende said.

"Our tag line is real, relevant, relational," said Skorzewski. "We're going to be a pretty non-churchy church. It will be the more reverent irreverent service you've been to. … We're going to do something I haven't seen done in the Valley, so to speak. …So often churches become 'I have to,' not 'I get to.'"



***

GJ - Would CORE be a clone of what Ski and Parlow drooled over in Atlanta - the Emergent Church, multi-screen, Rock and Roll Babtist Northpoint Community (sic) Church?

Read your publishing house's books, Ski and Glende. Deutschlander calls this kind of mission "whoopee worship."

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Anonymous Callers


"Are you living at this address....?"

GJ - "What does this concern?"

"A personal business matter. Are you Greg Jackson and living at this address?"

GJ - "What personal business matter?"

"I just told you."

GJ - "What is your mother's maiden name?"

"It's... Answer my question."

GJ - "What are the last four numbers of your social?"

(Increasingly frustrated.) "If you can't answer a simple question."

GJ - "What is your favorite foood?"

(Muffled outrage.) "That has nothing to do with..."

GJ - "What grade school did you graduate from?"

"Just tell me if you are living at that address."

GJ - "I can't answer personal questions from anonymous callers."

---

Tired of getting those expired car warrantee phone calls, I have tried to extend my warrantee on:

1. A Stutz Bearcat.
2. A Dusenberg.
3. An Edsel.
4. A Model T.

I also wanted to refer them to friend, if they covered stolen cars.

One caller from India began laughing.

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