Thursday, December 23, 2010

Some Denominations Have a Sense of Shame

PENNSYLVANIA: Standing Committee Turns Up Heat to Get Rid of Bishop Charles Bennison

By David W. Virtue
www.virtueonline.org
December 14, 2010

Despite repeated calls for returning Pennsylvania Bishop Charles E. Bennison to resign, the disgraced bishop has steadfastly refused to heed calls for him to step down.

On December 8, eight members of the Standing Committee drove to New York City to meet with Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori, her chancellor David Booth Beers, and Bishop Clayton Matthews, officer for Pastoral Development.

According to a memo VOL received, the meeting was arranged at their request "to offer support and leadership for the diocese." TRANSLATION. We want your help to get rid of Bennison.

They noted that at the recent Diocesan Convention, 73% of delegates called for Bennison to resign saying that his continued presence stands in the way of attending to the important word of proclaiming the love of God in Christ Jesus and carrying forth the mission of the Church."

The eight described their time with Episcopal Church leadership as a time of "good conversation; we felt heard, understood, supported and encouraged."

Charges of conduct unbecoming a priest or bishop still remain against Bennison. He was found guilty of covering up his brother's sexual abuse of a minor. The verdict against the bishop was overturned because of a narrow interpretation of the "Statute of Limitations".

Since his return, there have been repeated calls for him to resign including from the Presiding Bishop, the entire Episcopal House of Bishops, Bonnie Anderson, HOD President, numerous priests (both liberal and conservative) in the Diocese of Pa, entire deaneries, a neighbor Bishop Paul Marshall, (Bethlehem), the Diocesan Standing Committee and a number of outraged laity and VOL, all to no avail.

Although he stated that he would be a listener, six weeks back on the job, the Diocesan Standing Committee wrote Bennison accusing him of throwing up obstructions, creating dissent through distrust and misinformation, and investing heavily in anything that stretched the finances of the diocese beyond anything realistic, causing more and more parishes to withhold funds.

They expressed shock that Bennison said witnesses at his trial intentionally perjured themselves. "These are shocking words, and words which we feel you need to address immediately. Can you possibly have meant what you said? If so, this is one more indication of a serious problem. You have managed to ignore or discount the opinions and conclusions of three courts, two Presiding Bishops, the House of Bishops, and untold numbers of lay and clergy in the diocese of Pennsylvania, and now all the witnesses at your trial. We find it amazing that you are able to think that this is in any way normal behavior.

"Bishop, the letter of the law has allowed you to return. Please consider the spirit of the law as you determine your way forward, for yourself and for the Diocese of Pennsylvania."

Clearly angered by Bennison's high-handed approach to running the diocese, its leaders still are pressuring the National Church to get rid of Bennison.

The revised Title IV Changes to the canons which grants the National Church greater authority to the church's presiding bishop over other bishops, and to diocesan bishops over their clergy, when they are accused of misconduct, could give Jefferts Schori all the authority she needs to remove Bennison permanently from his position.

***

GJ - Bishop Bennison is still hanging on, since Anglican polity says electing a bishop is a lifetime mistake arrangement.

But let us give them some credit. They are trying to dump him rather than make him the honcho in charge of a multi-site emergent church.

Bishops are no longer in charge of cover-ups, as much as they might want to continue the old ways. The legal authorities can catch up with them even faster with a paper trail.

Bird Invades Ich-Abode

This photo is fair warning for anyone who thinks he can outsmart a squirrel.


Someone wants me to put the squirrels on a web camera. I am sure that has already been done.

Sassy and I came home from the Bark Park to a scene of alarm and confusion. Mrs. Ichabod was opening a package which contained a calming nerve tonic instead of soy butter, which we ordered. She was phoning the company when a bird, inside the house, fluttered around and tried to land on her head. That caused no end of excitement. The customer service agent said, "The nerve tonic is free. It sounds like you could use some."

Chris said, "My husband thinks he is St. Francis of Assisi. Now they are coming inside to eat."

I discovered the tiny nuthatch (upside-down bird) in the living room. I also noticed dry dog food and a water dish near the outside dog door. I hastened to point out how much birds enjoy dog food. Rescue groups use dog food for injured and distressed birds.

The bird flew to the laundry room, and I let it out into the garage, where it escaped into freedom. Sassy and I chucked some seed around the front of the house in a celebratory gesture, happy to be free of the feathered terrorist.

We had bats in the house in New Ulm, because thousands thrive in the swampy lowlands, eating mosquitoes. I learned to enjoy them, even when one surprised me by flying toward me in the basement. Mrs. Ichabod's story of the bat in the bedroom is somewhat embroidered, so I suggest dividing the alleged facts by ten if she happens to start on her blood-curdling narrative.

Starlings got into the New Ulm church through the chimney, no fault of mine. I extracted one from an organ pipe, where he expired while trying to escape, his head peeking out from the top of the pipe. Other starlings responded to my calm advice about not being communing members, leaving through the door I opened for them.

Starlings and nuthatches love suet, just as woodpeckers and blue birds do. Any bird who loves suet is also an insect eating bird. Although people devalue starlings for being so common, they are quite attractive and clever. They are voracious insect-eaters and also devour weed seeds. Nothing is more comical than a starling's gait as he walks through a garden, flipping over mulch or dry leaves to look for an insect. Someone who believes in Creation will let God's purpose-driven agents do the work.

Even close up, the nuthatch is sweet and harmless.

Question du Jour

Radical for Today - Explanation of the Common Service

This information is provided by Bethany Lutheran Chapel, Bella Vista.
This is our WEF.




The book can be found here, and converting to text will make it easy to kelm.

The Donkey




The Donkey

When forests walked and fishes flew
And figs grew upon thorn,
Some moment when the moon was blood,
Then, surely, I was born.

With monstrous head and sickening bray
And ears like errant wings—
The devil's walking parody
Of all four-footed things:

The battered outlaw of the earth
Of ancient crooked will;
Scourge, beat, deride me—I am dumb—
I keep my secret still.

Fools! For I also had my hour—
One far fierce hour and sweet:
There was a shout around my head
And palms about my feet.

G. K. Chesterton

Giotto di Bondone, Scenes from the Life of Christ 10.
Entry into Jerusalem, 1304-6,
Cappella Scrovegni, Padova

Wednesday, December 22, 2010

Happy Birthday, Artist-in-Residence -
Norma Boeckler


Today is the birthday of our artist-in-residence, Norma Boeckler. She is happy to share her work for use on this blog and in various books being published.

Here is her bio.

I know many people appreciate her inspiring work, so if you want to wish her a Happy Birthday, feel free to use the comments.

Mid-Week Advent Service.
Christmas Eve Is 5 PM Central


Advent, December 22, 2010

Pastor Gregory L. Jackson

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

Mid-Week Advent, Thursday, 7 PM Central

The Hymn # 554 Now Rest Beneath 3:67
The Order of Vespers p. 41
The Psalmody Psalm 100 p. 144
The First Lection
The Second Lection
The Sermon Hymn #294 O Word of God 3:31

Jesus God and Man

The Prayers and Lord’s Prayer p. 44
The Collect for Peace p. 45
The Benediction p. 45
The Hymn #136 Angels 3:86


KJV Romans 1:1 Paul, a servant of Jesus Christ, called to be an apostle, separated unto the gospel of God, 2 (Which he had promised afore by his prophets in the holy scriptures,) 3 Concerning his Son Jesus Christ our Lord, which was made of the seed of David according to the flesh; 4 And declared to be the Son of God with power, according to the spirit of holiness, by the resurrection from the dead: 5 By whom we have received grace and apostleship, for obedience to the faith among all nations, for his name: 6 Among whom are ye also the called of Jesus Christ:

Luke 1:26 And in the sixth month the angel Gabriel was sent from God unto a city of Galilee, named Nazareth, 27 To a virgin espoused to a man whose name was Joseph, of the house of David; and the virgin's name was Mary. 28 And the angel came in unto her, and said, Hail, thou that art highly favoured, the Lord is with thee: blessed art thou among women. 29 And when she saw him, she was troubled at his saying, and cast in her mind what manner of salutation this should be. 30 And the angel said unto her, Fear not, Mary: for thou hast found favour with God. 31 And, behold, thou shalt conceive in thy womb, and bring forth a son, and shalt call his name JESUS. 32 He shall be great, and shall be called the Son of the Highest: and the Lord God shall give unto him the throne of his father David: 33 And he shall reign over the house of Jacob for ever; and of his kingdom there shall be no end. 34 Then said Mary unto the angel, How shall this be, seeing I know not a man? 35 And the angel answered and said unto her, The Holy Ghost shall come upon thee, and the power of the Highest shall overshadow thee: therefore also that holy thing which shall be born of thee shall be called the Son of God.

Jesus God and Man

Romans 1:3 Concerning his Son Jesus Christ our Lord, which was made of the seed of David according to the flesh; 4 And declared to be the Son of God with power, according to the spirit of holiness, by the resurrection from the dead:

As Luther said, the Christian faith is attacked on three fronts:
1. Justification by faith.
2. The divinity of Jesus.
3. The humanity of Jesus.

In our era, the Virgin Birth is denied, not so much by outsiders, but by those within the visible church. They have all kinds of problems with finding it in the Scriptures, even where the statements are so obvious.

That alone is strange, but the Apostolic Church had no problem with the Virgin Birth. The struggle came with those who had deep misgivings about the Savior being born of a woman. That is why Mary was elevated so far beyond any Scriptural truths that she took on divinity herself (Immaculate Conception) to allow for the Savior being born of a woman.

In this eloquent opening of Paul’s greatest epistle, the Two Natures of Christ are taught with clarity and simplicity.

One thing we should always keep in mind is the Word of God teaching the same unified doctrine using many expressions. That shows the wisdom of the Holy Spirit, in giving us such truths in so many ways, so we cannot possibly miss unless we are at war against the Word.

In adult education the experts stress that we all learn in different ways. Groups of adults need to understand the same lesson according to their basic learning style. Since God is a wise and efficient manager, as Luther observed, and has done a good job directing everything for a long time, He has already implemented this theory in His Word.

Sometimes we say “Son of God, and Son of Man,” as Beautiful Savior expresses the Two Natures of Christ.

Paul communicated the Two Natures this way:
1. made of the seed of David according to the flesh
2. And declared to be the Son of God with power, according to the spirit of holiness.

The concise expression suggests that this was common teaching among all the Christians, because he is not writing as if anything is contested. When there is a battle over certain points, much more is said in defense of the truth.

The humanity of Christ is expressed in his birth according to the flesh, descended from the House of David, as He was through Mary.

The divinity of Christ is clearly stated in calling Him the Son of God. It is simply impossible to put the two statements together and exclude the Virgin Birth from them. In that era, the miraculous was expected. That is why Jesus performed miracles, the healing miracles plus those miracles which no one could possibly have claimed. To say, Jesus healed the sick, would have been somewhat routine in the eyes of many. Their rabbis also healed the sick. But no one turned water into wine, walked on water, stilled the storm, multiplied the loaves and raised the dead in front of many witnesses.

Those miracles elevated Jesus far above anyone who claimed miracles, legitimately or not.

The humanity of Christ is often overlooked or under-stated because so much has been said in the last century against His divinity, His Virgin Birth, His resurrection.

The humanity of Christ is vitally important, because this is the source of comfort in His ministry to us. There is no sorrow or pain unknown to Him, because He shared our earthly pilgrimage and faced the ultimate temptations, from Satan’s wiles to the betrayal of His own chosen disciples.

Hebrews 4: 12 For the word of God is quick, and powerful, and sharper than any twoedged sword, piercing even to the dividing asunder of soul and spirit, and of the joints and marrow, and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart. 13 Neither is there any creature that is not manifest in his sight: but all things are naked and opened unto the eyes of him with whom we have to do.

14 Seeing then that we have a great high priest, that is passed into the heavens, Jesus the Son of God, let us hold fast our profession. 15 For we have not an high priest which cannot be touched with the feeling of our infirmities; but was in all points tempted like as we are, yet without sin. 16 Let us therefore come boldly unto the throne of grace, that we may obtain mercy, and find grace to help in time of need.

Catechism books teach about the Word of God in the first few verses and the compassion of Christ in the next. The author of Hebrews put them together, doubtless for a reason, a Holy Spirit inspired reason.

The Word of God is far more powerful than any weapon we can imagine, because God looks into our inner being and nothing is secret from Him. Knowing the power of the Word, we can look to Christ for comfort, because He was tempted in every way we are, yet He remained without sin. Because He understands our weaknesses and temptations, we can always to Him for grace in time of need.

Being born in a humble stable, revealed to the shepherds and Wise Men as a baby, Jesus draws us to Him.

When I asked a group of children why God revealed Himself in the form of a baby, one child’s voice rang out, “Because no one is afraid of a baby.”

That was the best single answer I could imagine. The humanity of Jesus teaches us:

Yes, He is the Son of God, but He was born like us. He had and still has the same humanity today – our emotions, temptations, our joys and sorrows. He is not distant from us but close to us, always able to understand us in our weakness.

Spidey Is No Match for the Efficacious Word

Tuesday, December 21, 2010

Squirrels 10, Humans 0

This is not my bird-feeder, not my squirrel, but the photo shows exactly what happened.


My inexpensive bird squirrel-feeder was all fixed up to defeat the wily foe, and it worked for one day, as I suspected.

Once the lower branch was pruned away, the squirrel could only jump on top and twitch his tail. He saw me watching through the window. I was outwardly gloating but inwardly confident about his greed and acrobatic ability.

This morning he dangled from above, hanging on with hind legs and leisurely scooping black oil sunflower seeds into his mouth, his delicate paws reaching into the tiny aperture of the feeder. Two ears of corn were not enough for him and his kin. One was fresh on the backyard feeder yesterday, the other still new on the window near my computer.

The bird food industry does well with squirrels. They sell us squirrel feeders to keep tree-rats away from the bird food. The industry sells corn for more than the price of gold, per ounce. Any ear of field corn is good for a bag of squirrel food, and yet a bag costs $6 because it has a logo on the plastic bag.

The squirrels consume their corn and stop at the bird feeders for more. That is a win/win situation for the bird food industry and the squirrels. Fortunately, the birds get to enjoy a fair amount of food anyway.

The squirrel had a great time with the window sill food, supplemented by an upturned bucket with seed on top. I thought it would make a good birdbath for all the creatures. Sassy and I make the rounds each day, and water costs a lot less than sunflower seeds.

The birds will shy away from the water for a week or two. Eventually they will make it a regular stop. Then we can look down and watch them bathe.

The cardinals are quite used to us already. I cannot decide whether the males are more splendid or the females more attractive. When viewed from two feet away, both are spectacular in the sun. Since they can sit at the feeder and open seeds with their powerful beaks, they tend to stay while looking around.

Recently I found a chickadee doing the same thing. He decided to hammer his seed open on the bird-feeder bar (which still prevents squirrels from getting at seed). That worked, so he stayed around for more.

I looked at a finch thistle-seed sock. Only $5. They love sunflower seeds, but people buy thistle because a finch feeder will be clustered with finches, gold and purple. It is their crack cocaine. Bird watchers do that to enjoy the change-over of feathers in the spring, from undistinguished to gold. A thistle-seed sock in my window is going to last as long as a Lutheran at Mequon. The squirrels eat a hole in the bottom, leak out the seed, and no one will touch it.

This photo only begins to show how beautiful a female cardinal is.
The best view is watching a female in the bright sunlight from a few feet way.

Augustana College - Named after the Augsburg Confession,
Proves My Point about Anti-Confessional Attitudes
In the Synodical Conference

Augustana College in Rock Island, Illiniois,
formed to fight the anti-Confessionalism of the General Synod,
the Church Growth Movement of its day.


Augustana began with Pietistic unionism but joined orthodoxy because of the influence of key, early leaders, one of them trained at Capitol Seminary, now ELCA, in Columbus Ohio, where Lenski and Leupold taught a little later.




Exposing the ELCA:

ELCA affiliated Augustana College in Rock Island, IL, is hosting a lecture on Jan. 13, 2011, by Dr. Peter Ochs. Dr. Ochs is a “(p)rofessor of modern Judaic studies at the University of Virginia and founder of a revolutionary approach to reading scripture . . .” (read here)

Dr. Ochs will lecture about “scriptural reasoning” and will have a demonstration of how it is done. “Scriptural reasoning is a way of studying scripture with people from different faith traditions.” This includes studying the Qur’an with Muslims.

The press release put out by Augustana College says, “Ochs' lecture will show students and community members the importance of scriptural reasoning for peace and understanding between traditions. ‘Divine voice(s) are not heard deeply without learning and effort — and, we add, without listening to those who hear in ways that are slightly different,’ he said.” (read here)

You may want to read the above quote again. Augustana is bring Dr. Ochs in to their college to “show students and community members” this method where “Divine voices” are heard in other faiths.

This is another example of an ELCA-related entity that is introducing false doctrine. The Father, Son and Holy Spirit are the one true God. They are not the god of the Muslims or any other religion. (read more about this here)

Sarcasm about Luther and the Book of Concord

Our chapel was created in simplicity by award-winning artist Norma Boeckler
who also created this photo of the chapel.



"The modern radical spirit which would sweep away the Formula of Concord as a Confession of the Church, will not, in the end, be curbed, until it has swept away the Augsburg Confession, and the ancient Confessions of the Church--yea, not until it has crossed the borders of Scripture itself, and swept out of the Word whatsoever is not in accord with its own critical mode of thinking. The far-sighted rationalist theologian and Dresden court preacher, Ammon, grasped the logic of a mere spirit of progress, when he said: 'Experience teaches us that those who reject a Creed, will speedily reject the Scriptures themselves.'"
Theodore E. Schmauk and C. Theodore Benze, The Confessional Principle and the Confessions, as Embodying the Evangelical Confession of the Christian Church, Philadelphia: General Council Publication Board, 1911, p. 685.

WELS pastors have little regard for the Book of Concord. Their knowledge of the Confessions is abysmal. Missouri pastors have not transcended "The Glories of Our Synod" approach. They are sarcastic or faux-deaf when I suggest they read Luther instead of Stoeckhardt, Pieper, and other Walther-clones.

I remember Augustana Seminary graduates writing back to me, "I worship Jesus, not Luther," when asked politely about their doctrine. Look at where that got them, as they merged into the LCA and later ELCA. The old Syn Conference is on the same path, with SP Harrison quoting Dietrich Bonhoeffer on his posts.

Given the poor preparation of MDiv graduates and their lack of study as pastors, concentrating on Luther and the Book of Concord would be the best remedy for all the woes of Lutherdom. But only if one believes in the efficacy of the Word.

Schmauk has the best diagnosis of the problem--above--which he saw firsthand, when Biblical inerrancy was still taken for granted in mainline Protestantism. An anti-Creed attitude is easily masked by Pietistic sanctimony, but the sarcasm about the Confessions and Luther are only a prelude to rejecting the Scriptures.

The Confessions were extremely important to the General Council, the group that broke with the unionistic, revivalistic General Synod after the Civil War. That interest, and the influence of the Henkels (Book of Concord pioneers in America) allowed the parts of the Muhlenberg tradition to come together again in 1918, forming the ULCA.

Several readers have noted that pastors in the ULCA were far more orthodox than the current pastors of Missouri, WELS, and the Little Sect. Tappert's work on the Book of Concord and Sasse revealed his commitment to sound theology, at a time when Missouri was hastening to abandon Luther altogether.

Inerrancy cannot be the key issue, as important as it is. A group of rock-ribbed Calvinists will be inerrancy Stormtroopers one generation and anti-inerrancy the next.

The Book of Concord provides, with Luther, an inoculation against the errors of the past, teaching a Biblical theology that cannot be refuted, based on the Holy Spirit working through the Word alone, rejecting all false doctrine in the clearest possible language.

Walther was not superman, in spite of the press he still enjoys from the idolators. He was a poor Biblical exegete, except when quoting Luther. He wanted to clone himself, so F. Pieper and George Stoeckhardt followed him. Note, readers, that UOJ did not dominate the LCMS for a long time. The second generation institutionalized false doctrine. Subsequent followers raised it to the level of the Assumption of Mary, so ancient and accepted that questioning Knapp's doctrine was akin to atheism.

Arguing against UOJ from the Confessions is a waste of time when dealing with the Syn Conference MDivs. They cannot debate what they have never grasped. Ask them to compare synods and they will write a detailed book full of trivial details.

I have featured 60 years of UOJ argumentation from WELS, so it did not start with Kokomo. Pastors sat through those presentations without laughing out loud? or crying? Not only are they badly argued from any perspective, they are hopelessly anti-Biblical and anti-Confessional.

To its credit, Missouri is fractured enough to avoid the robotic Amen Chorus of Enthusiasm. Robert Preus repudiated his own UOJ stance in his final book. WELS and the Little Sect are devoted to Enthusiasm. They imagine that mild objections to The BORE and Jeske suffice.

WELS SP Schroeder is not going to change anything, because he is devoted to UOJ as well. His Melanchthon, DP Buchholz, is a wizard in Kokomo justification, using misdirection of the eye adroitly in the service of false doctrine. How can DP Buchholz object to Jeff Gunn's plagiarized Enthusiasm when his solution is kelmed Enthusiasm with a twist of lemon?

The so-called Intrepid Lutherans could not defend their position for more than 24 hours. Someone said, "It's not the courage of your convictions that matters, but defending an attack on your convictions that matters." They crumpled and fell from one stern word. I know from an email that they were attacked for several days. Organized? Orchestrated? You betcha. For the Intrepds (sic), a mild skirmish was Hell on wheels, so they backed away and flipped.

Some people are starting to read the Confessions again. We only value what is being taken away. As long as we feel secure, we glide into thanklessness and carelessness. We should be grateful that the assault has finally awakened some people.

Various unnamed people ask for help on doctrinal issues. Sometimes I regret that the biggest doctrinal frauds are out there, spreading more poison to feather their nests. But pan-Lutheran shunning has given me the freedom and the time to write about Biblical doctrine.

I have another quiet time coming up. Teaching slows down for January, and Obama's troops may kill it altogether. The elitists hate career universities. I will work on three books:
1. Jesus Lord of Creation - in color on Lulu.com.
2. An organized version of Luther versus the UOJ Pietists: Justification by Faith.
3. Improvements on Thy Strong Word.


"Since now, in the sight of God and of all Christendom [the entire Church of Christ], we wish to testify to those now living and those who shall come after us that this declaration herewith presented concerning all the controverted articles aforementioned and explained, and no other, is our faith, doctrine, and confession, in which we are also willing, by God's grace, to appear with intrepid hearts before the judgment-seat of Jesus Christ, and give an account of it; and that we will neither privately nor publicly speak or write anything contrary to it, but, by the help of God's grace, intend to abide thereby: therefore, after mature deliberation, we have, in God's fear and with the invocation of His name, attached our signatures with our own hands."
Thorough Declaration, Of Other Factions and Sects, Formula of Concord, Concordia Triglotta, St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1921, p. 1103.

"Moreover [On the other side], both the ancient and modern enthusiasts have taught that God converts men, and leads them to the saving knowledge of Christ through His Spirit, without any created means and instrument, that is, without the external preaching and hearing of God's Word."
Formula of Concord, Thorough Declaration, II. 4. Free Will, Concordia Triglotta, St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1921, p. 881.

Will Lutherans Face the Music?

Pope Says Sex Scandal Has Hit Unimaginable Dimension

ROME — Pope Benedict XVI said on Monday that the continuing sexual abuse scandal in the Roman Catholic Church had reached a “degree we could not have imagined” this year, and that the Church must reflect on its failures, help the victims, and prevent abusers from becoming priests.
“We must ask ourselves what we can do to repair as much as possible the injustice that has occurred,” the pope told the Vatican hierarchy in a pointed Christmas message. “We must ask ourselves what was wrong in our proclamation, in our whole way of living the Christian life, to allow such a thing to happen.”
In recent months, investigations in Ireland, Germany, Belgium and the Netherlands have found that clerics had sexually abused children in the past and that the church hierarchy was often found to have covered up the abuse.

Monday, December 20, 2010

Moments at Christmas


Bethany smiled for all her photos.



Martin held his two sisters at once, Bethany on the left, Erin Joy on the right.



Chris posed with Erin Joy, who displayed the teeth we had to have removed because of involuntary grinding.
Erin Joy smiled immediately after the extractions.


Christmas reminds us of our losses. My wife and I will have a great time with Martin and Tammy's family, especially since we live only a few minutes away from them. Sometimes I imagine two other families that might have been there - Bethany's and Erin's.

Most of the time, I look back at those unique moments with our daughters. They were disabled by neurological degeneration, which made progressively weaker. However, they were alert, smart, and eager to communicate with smiles, laughter, crying, pouting, and some deliberate actions. Muscle control was very difficult, but Erin could dig her nails into me to get attention and laugh at me for yelling "Ow, you did that on purpose." That was her Olympic gold medal, quite an accomplishment.

Bethany was once "disciplined" at school, put in the corner. She found a mirror and watched the class, smiling at outsmarting the teachers, who loved her cleverness.

My wife and I were talking about the Bethany/Erin effect on our lives. We had to battle for the most basic care for both of them. Medical insights were difficult to get across to the medical people, and the helping professions were often in the way, too.

We learned to enjoy the moments with all three children, even though they were  tinged with sorrow, especially because we knew the inescapable facts. We still talk about how much fun it was to put Erin in a hammock and swing her around on her birthday.

Bethany laughed about spitting her least favorite food back at her nurse, and her nurse loved telling us. When I hear about the loss of a friend, I think about those moments.

I learned that a prominent Quad-Citian, Karl Huntoon, was taken to hospice care the other day. I only remember him as a student at Moline High. Like many others, I moved around the country and lost touch with many Moliners. Now I am in touch with  classmates, some on a regular basis, through blogging and Facebook. I am in awe of the many accomplishments of my classmates, from rocket science to medicine to community service.

Blogging is a time warp machine. I look up the old photos and see my friends as they were in school. Now they are grandparents with grandchildren who look just like them. I see a FB photo and  think, "That has to be Tim's grandson." Or "Three in a row - same blue dress!" (Kathy's clan), because grandmother, daughter, and granddaughter all posed in the same dress.

The best memories are those seemingly trivial events that grow in importance over the years. Eventually they dwarf everything else. The earthly treasures are nothing in comparison with the spiritual treasures of the Gospel. In fact, the birth of Christ was a trivial event for most people on earth. The day was unheralded, except for the shepherds. The politicians feared Him, but the Wise Men from the East came to observe the promised Savior, bringing gifts.

Holiday trips were difficult then, too. Going to Bethlehem was a long, tedious uphill climb. The inn had no room. The relatives failed to accommodate the Holy Family, who traveled incognito. No one important recognized their historic importance. A baby in a manger looks appealing now, but I do not know of any mother who wants to give birth in an animal shed and lay her firstborn in a feeding trough.

Luther had a humorous way of chiding his congregation. He said they would have gladly changed the diapers for Baby Jesus. He said, "Why not do it now? Serving your neighbor is doing the same for Jesus."

Sunday, December 19, 2010

Fourth Sunday in Advent

By Norma Boeckler, whose birthday is December 22nd, Thursday.



The Fourth Sunday in Advent

Pastor Gregory L. Jackson

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

Bethany Lutheran Church, 10 AM Central Time


The Hymn # 94 Hark, the Herald Angels 3.19
The Confession of Sins
The Absolution
The Introit p. 16
The Gloria Patri
The Kyrie p. 17
The Gloria in Excelsis
The Salutation and Collect p. 19
The Epistle and Gradual
The Gospel
Glory be to Thee, O Lord!
Praise be to Thee, O Christ!
The Nicene Creed p. 22
The Sermon Hymn #90 Come, Your Hearts 3.83

Confessing Truth in the Desert

The Hymn # 103 – Luther To Shepherds 3.82
The Preface p. 24
The Sanctus p. 26
The Lord's Prayer p. 27
The Words of Institution
The Agnus Dei p. 28
The Nunc Dimittis p. 29
The Benediction p. 31
The Hymn #95 Savior of the Nations 3.42

KJV Philippians 4:4 Rejoice in the Lord alway: and again I say, Rejoice. 5 Let your moderation be known unto all men. The Lord is at hand. 6 Be careful for nothing; but in every thing by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known unto God. 7 And the peace of God, which passeth all understanding, shall keep your hearts and minds through Christ Jesus.

KJV John 1:19 And this is the record of John, when the Jews sent priests and Levites from Jerusalem to ask him, Who art thou? 20 And he confessed, and denied not; but confessed, I am not the Christ. 21 And they asked him, What then? Art thou Elias? And he saith, I am not. Art thou that prophet? And he answered, No. 22 Then said they unto him, Who art thou? that we may give an answer to them that sent us. What sayest thou of thyself? 23 He said, I am the voice of one crying in the wilderness, Make straight the way of the Lord, as said the prophet Esaias. 24 And they which were sent were of the Pharisees. 25 And they asked him, and said unto him, Why baptizest thou then, if thou be not that Christ, nor Elias, neither that prophet? 26 John answered them, saying, I baptize with water: but there standeth one among you, whom ye know not; 27 He it is, who coming after me is preferred before me, whose shoe's latchet I am not worthy to unloose. 28 These things were done in Bethabara beyond Jordan, where John was baptizing.

Fourth Sunday In Advent
Lord God, heavenly Father, it is meet and right that we should give thanks unto Thee, that Thou hast given us a more glorious baptism than that of John the Baptist, and hast therein promised us the remission of sins, the Holy Spirit, and everlasting life through Thy Son, Jesus Christ: Preserve us, we beseech Thee, in such faith in Thy grace and mercy, that we may never doubt Thy promise, but be comforted by the same in all temptations: and grant us Thy Holy Spirit that we may renounce sin, and ever continue in the righteousness bestowed upon us in baptism, until by Thy grace we obtain eternal salvation, through the same, Thy beloved Son, Jesus Christ our Lord, who liveth and reigneth with Thee and the Holy Ghost, one true God, world without end. Amen.

Confessing Truth in the Desert

John 1: 20 And he confessed, and denied not; but confessed, I am not the Christ. 21 And they asked him, What then? Art thou Elias? And he saith, I am not. Art thou that prophet? And he answered, No. 22 Then said they unto him, Who art thou? that we may give an answer to them that sent us. What sayest thou of thyself? 23 He said, I am the voice of one crying in the wilderness, Make straight the way of the Lord, as said the prophet Esaias.

Lenski:
23) Thus approached, the Baptist complies. He said, I am a voice shouting in the wilderness, Make straight the way of the Lord, as said Isaiah the prophet. The Baptist uses Isa. 40:3, and himself mentions the prophet whose words he uses when characterizing himself. Compare the author’s The Eisenach Old Testament Selections, 66, etc. The claim that the Baptist here merely appropriates Isaiah’s words and does not mean to say that he and his work are the fulfillment of Isaiah’s prophecy would certainly be remarkable if true. Matt. 3:3; Mark 1:3; Luke 3:4 interpret Isaiah’s word as actually being fulfilled in the Baptist and in his work. Even without this decisive evidence no other conclusion can be drawn from the Baptist’s answer to the committee of the Sanhedrin. He furnishes this committee with more than they had asked when they requested, “What dost thou say concerning thyself?” He supplies them with a divinely inspired statement from the greatest of their own prophets concerning his person and his work. Isaiah’s words do not merely happen to fit the Baptist’s thought, these words constitute the authority for his work.
The fact that the Baptist quotes in a free and an abbreviated way is entirely immaterial. This liberty is constantly used by those who quote. Isaiah writes, “Voice of a crier, In the wilderness prepare ye the way of the Lord, make straight in the desert a highway for our God!” The Baptist declares not that he is such a voice, not that this picture of a voice in some way fits him also; but that he himself is this voice. He even imitates the Hebrew when he says, literally, “I—voice of a crier.” While the parallelism of the Hebrew lines induces us to connect the phrase “in the wilderness” with the verb prepare instead of with “the voice” (A. V.), this makes little difference. The Baptist evidently understands Isaiah to mean that both the voice and the highway are “in the desert,” and, surely, the fact of the fulfillment shows that this is correct.
Lenski, R. C. H.: The Interpretation of St. John's Gospel. Minneapolis, MN : Augsburg Publishing House, 1961, S. 112.

End of Lenski quotation.

Confessing the truth is vital in the Scriptures. The term is used in the famous confession/hymn/poem of 1 Timothy 3:16.

KJV 1 Timothy 3:16 And without controversy [GJ – literally – confessionally] great is the mystery of godliness:
God was manifest in the flesh,
justified in the Spirit,
seen of angels,
preached unto the Gentiles,
believed on in the world,
received up into glory.

Beginning preachers will look at this text and ask, “Why not something about Jesus?” This text is all about Jesus, the turning point in Biblical history.

From the beginning of time the Savior of the world was predicted by God, starting with Genesis 3:15. Because He would come from Israel, Satan pursued that nation until there was nothing left but a stump, at the birth of Jesus. The rule over Judea passed over from the house of David. The spiritual leaders knew that meant the coming of the Messiah. Herod knew and feared that fact.

The new Isaiah would announce the coming of the Messiah, and John the Baptist fulfilled that expectation as well.

The religious opponents bore down on John to make him deny his role. But he confessed and did not deny, but confessed…In Greek class we thought it was funny that John’s Gospel was so repetitive. But the repetition is there for emphasis, to help us remember, and to create a contrast with the opposite.

How many people are asked to confess the truth, yet they make excuses, water down their response, and even deny what they said before?

That is especially true of witnessing the truth about the Christian faith. The religious opponents are in the visible organization, just as they were at the time of Jesus. We know that the religious leadership of the Jews contained followers of Jesus and opponents. That was revealed at his burial, when two of them helped with the funeral arrangements.

The temptation for John was to deny his role and ultimately to deny Christ, but he confessed the truth rather than deny Christ. That led to his death, because being faithful to the Word was not a matter of convenience.

23 He said, I am the voice of one crying in the wilderness, Make straight the way of the Lord, as said the prophet Esaias.

As Lenski mentioned, the fussy scholars want the Bible to follow APA standards and use verbatim quotations and a correct citation. The Word of God can quote the Word of God without the APA. It is the mark of authority to condense and rephrase the words without changing the content.

False teachers use the correct words and change the meaning – saying – no it really means the opposite of what appears before your lying eyes. Insecure false teachers say, “I studied Greek, so I know what it says, and you don’t. In fact, you cannot question anything I say.” Thus the Word of God is set aside for the claims of a third-rate student at a fourth-rate school.

Verse 23 is a great announcement, but also one filled with danger. To confess Christ in the midst of opponents invites hatred, revenge, and suffering. Yet that is exactly what we are expected to do, because the Word of God works upon opponents in two ways. It always creates rebellion in the Old Adam, and no one is immune from that response.

When the Old Adam, our sinful nature, is disturbed, we think about the disturbance and the Holy Spirit works upon us. Those who sincerely listen to the Word are converted and persuaded by God Himself. This change happens when we first become believers, but also when we wander away from the Gospel and when we fall into confusion.

The other response, in rebellion, is to harden the heart against the Word. The deeper people are sunk into falsehood, the greater the antagonism will be. That is why people fear witnessing to the truth, because they know there will be consequences from hardened hearts. That does not mean we have to court opposition. In fact, that seldom needs to happen. Opposition comes knocking, as the religious opponents did. They came to John and asked.

People will ask, out of the blue, “Do you think Jesus is the only way of salvation?” I quote Jesus on that topic. “I am The Way, The Truth, and The Life. No one comes to the Father except through Me.” If they want to argue that, they are arguing against Jesus.

I got into a religious discussion in a hospital waiting room. I was not looking for it. The idea of the Law being required for salvation entered the discussion. I pointed out that it was like an x-ray, good for diagnosis, but useless for treatment. A broken bone is seen by an x-ray, but an x-ray cannot heal it. The Law diagnoses our sinful condition, but only the Gospel of forgiveness can heal it.

So many are raised on salvation by works of the Law that this needs to be said.

John 1: 24 And they which were sent were of the Pharisees. 25 And they asked him, and said unto him, Why baptizest thou then, if thou be not that Christ, nor Elias, neither that prophet?

John was the greatest of all – the Forerunner. As Lenski observed, the Pharisees did not quite realize they were talking to the Forerunner himself, the one immediately before the Christ. And today, many religious scholars have the same problem.

John’s answer emphasized his spiritual role in preparing people for the Messiah. The language used before is akin to the preparation before the visit of an Oriental Emperor. The people were to prepare themselves spiritually through the Word in a similar way.

Lenski:
The figure in Isaiah’s words is that of an oriental king with his retinue for whom the roads are prepared when they are making a royal passage in state. So Christ, now assuming his office, comes. “Such preparation is spiritual. It consists in deep conviction and confession that you are unfit, a sinner, poor, damned, and miserable with all the works you are able to do.” Neither the prophet nor the Baptist are to be understood as intending that men should by their own natural powers make straight the way of the Lord into their hearts, for this would demand the impossible. The power for this spiritual preparation the Baptist himself offered in his preaching and his Baptism, i.e., in these means of grace. Lenski, R. C. H.: The Interpretation of St. John's Gospel. Minneapolis, MN : Augsburg Publishing House, 1961, S. 114.

End of Lenski quotation.

The witness or confession is significant because it is testimony about God’s truth, not man’s opinion.

When people feel obliged to take care of themselves first, they readily compromise and water down God’s truth. That is always the safe bet in the short one, and it will be rewarded.

But where does it end? People imagine they can take one strand and discard that for the moment, because that is the popular thing to do. Where closed communion is the battle, they step away from the clear meaning of the term and invent a new variation. Many like that because it shows an open-mindedness. I remember Klemet Preus discussing it in class at Ft. Wayne. He was teaching. It was obvious from his comments that the issue was open for debate and decided both ways in the LCMS. And yet they said they supported the historic practice of closed communion. They gave lip service, but actual practice was 50/50.

The danger is not so much in the bad practice, but the attitude behind it. Once the attitude is wrong, anything after that can happen. Therefore, doctrinal indifference causes open communion and welcomes a host of other difficulties, until nothing is left.

That reminds me of the Methodist leader who defended a radical (about 80 years ago) by saying, “We can afford one person like that.” That was a clever evasion. It was meant to flatter the denomination – we are so big and strong, so powerful, that one self-destructing radical will not hurt us. We are rich in everything so he cannot hurt us. In a few years the conservative Methodists became the leaders in every radical cause, from Communism to gay ordination. The same author thought it was comical that some Methodists would not pray with a minister who denied the Virgin Birth. How narrow! I am not sure what he thought Christmas involved.

One WELS pastor said, “Everyone knows Larry Olson is a heretic, so he’s harmless.” And yet this harmless heretic has run a synod-wide program based on false doctrine – for decades.

We never know when that moment comes and a witness for the truth will make a significant change in a person’s life. That chance may come and go. Confidence in the truth allows us to speak, knowing that God works through His Word and accomplishes His purpose.

I annoyed a Jewish lady by saying most Reformed rabbis were atheists who believed in nothing. That prompted her to ask her rabbi, and he confirmed what I said. A period of distrust in me led to more trust. She asked a famous liberal theologian about heaven and he had nothing to say. He missed that moment because he had abandoned the Word of God while achieving fame. Now she is a Christian believer. I am not sure when that happened, but she welcomes orthodox Lutheran material.

Gifts can be important. One member gave me “What Luther Says,” and I used that to help with sermons and doctrine. Staying close to Luther made it relatively easy to leave the LCA and to fight Church Growth.

I gave my favorite set of Luther to a Catholic priest at Notre Dame, around 1980. He wrote to say he still reads it. I imagine he reads it more than most Lutheran pastors do.

One Catholic layman said, “Why don’t you join us?” I said, “Because of what you say about the crucifixion.” He wanted an explanation. I said, “According to Catholics, Jesus did not do enough. He died on the cross for forgiveness, but my sins are not paid for. Therefore, His work was incomplete. I have to finish it myself.”

The layman said, “I never thought of that.”

The Word conveys Christ to us and to others. We do not have to be memory experts or theologians to witness the truth God has given us. “Faith makes us bold,” as Luther said. Trusting in the Word lets us speak that truth without excuse or compromise. What people reject is Christ, not us. What people receive with joy is Christ, not us. Yet we have the privilege to share in what the Word does and to see its progress.

Quotations

Advent IV
"Melanchthon, the Hamlet of the Reformation, shrinking from action into contemplation, with a dangerous yearning for a peace which must have been hollow and transient, had become more and more entangled in the complications of a specious but miserable policy which he felt made him justly suspected by those whose confidence in him had once been unlimited."
Charles P. Krauth, The Conservative Reformation and Its Theology, Philadelphia: 1913 (1871), p. 85.
"If we would be Christians, therefore, we must surely expect and reckon upon having the devil with all his angels and the world as our enemies, who will bring every possible misfortune and grief upon us. For where the Word of God is preached, accepted, or believed, and produces fruit, there the holy cross cannot be wanting. And let no one think that he shall have peace; but he must risk whatever he has upon earth--possessions, honor, house and estate, wife and children, body and life. Now, this hurts our flesh and the old Adam; for the test is to be steadfast and to suffer with patience in whatever way we are assailed, and to let go whatever is taken from us."
Large Catechism, The Lord's Prayer, Third Petition, #65, Concordia Triglotta, St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1921, p. 715.
"That forbearance which is a fruit of the Spirit retains its characteristic kindness whether directed toward friend or enemy, toward rich or poor."
Sermons of Martin Luther, 8 vols., ed., John Nicholaus Lenker, Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1983, VI, p. 103.
"Prayer is made vigorous by petitioning; urgent, by supplication; by thanksgiving, pleasing and acceptable. Strength and acceptability combine to prevail and secure the petition."
Sermons of Martin Luther, VI, p. 107.
"The Lord's Prayer opens with praise and thanksgiving and the acknowledgement of God as a Father; it earnestly presses toward Him through filial love and a recognition of fatherly tenderness. For supplication, this prayer is unequaled. Hence it is the sublimest and the noblest prayer ever uttered."
Sermons of Martin Luther, VI, p. 107.
"This, mark you, is the peace of the cross, the peace of God, peace of conscience, Christian peace, which gives us even external calm, which makes us satisfied with all men and unwilling to disturb any. Reason cannot understand how there can be pleasure in crosses, and peace in disquietude; it cannot find these. Such peace is the work of God, and none can understand it until it has been experienced."
Sermons of Martin Luther, VI, p. 111.
"The reference [the Votum] is simply to a disposition to trust and love God sincerely, and a willingness of heart and mind to serve God and man to the utmost. The devil seeks to prevent this state by terror, by revealing death and by every sort of misfortune; and by setting up human devices to induce the heart to seek comfort and help in its own counsels and in man. Thus led astray, the heart falls from trust in God to a dependence upon itself."
Sermons of Martin Luther, VI, p. 111.
"Thus we have two parts, preaching and believing. His coming to us is preaching; His standing in our hearts is faith. For it is not sufficient that He stand before our eyes and ears; He must stand in the midst of us in our hearts, and offer and impart to us peace."
Martin Luther, Sermons of Martin Luther, 8 vols., xd., John Nicholas Lenker, Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1983, II, p. 355. John 20:19-31.
"For the devil will not allow a Christian to have peace; therefore Christ must bestow it in a manner different from that in which the world has and gives, in that he quiets the heart and removes from within fear and terror, although without there remain contention and misfortune."
Sermons of Martin Luther, II, p. 380.
"Joy is the natural fruit of faith. The apostle says elsewhere (Galatians 5:22-23): 'The fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, longsuffering, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, meekness, self-control.' Until the heart believes in God, it is impossible for it to rejoice in Him. When faith is lacking, man is filled with fear and gloom and is disposed to flee at the very mention, the mere thought, of God. Indeed, the unbelieving heart is filled with enmity and hatred against God. Conscious of its own guilt, it has no confidence in His gracious mercy; it knows God is an enemy to sin and will terribly punish the same."
Sermons of Martin LutherVI, p. 93.
"To rejoice in the Lord--to trust, confide, glory and have pride in the Lord as in a gracious Father--this is a joy which rejects all else but the Lord, including that self-righteousness whereof Jeremiah speaks (9:23-24): 'Let not the wise man glory in his wisdom, neither let the mighty man glory in his might, let not the rich man glory in his riches; but let him that glorieth glory in this, that he hath understanding, and knoweth Me.'"
Sermons of Martin Luther, VI, p. 95.
"Now, suppose some blind, capricious individual intrudes, demanding as necessary the omission of this thing and the observance of that, as did certain Jews, and insisting that all men follow him and he none--this would be to destroy equality; indeed, even to exterminate Christian liberty and faith. Like Paul, in the effort to maintain liberty and truth, everyone should refuse to yield to any such demand."
Sermons of Martin Luther, VI, p. 98.
"Christ's kingdom grows through tribulations and declines in times of peace, ease and luxury, as St. Paul says in 2 Cor. 12:9 'My power is made perfect in weakness, etc.' To this end help us God! Amen."
Sermons of Martin Luther, II, p. 99.
"The ultimate purpose of afflictions is the mortification of the flesh, the expulsion of sins, and the checking of that original evil which is embedded in our nature. And the more you are cleansed, the more you are blessed in the future life. For without a doubt glory will follow upon the calamities and vexations which we endure in this life. But the prime purpose of all these afflictions is the purification, which is extremely necessary and useful, lest we snore and become torpid and lazy because of the lethargy of our flesh. For when we enjoy peace and rest, we do not pray, we do not meditate on the Word but deal coldly with the Scriptures and everything that pertains to God or finally lapse into a shameful and ruinous security."
What Luther Says, An Anthology, 3 vols., ed., Ewald Plass, St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1959, I, p. 18.
"The church is recognized, not by external peace but by the Word and the Sacraments. For wherever you see a small group that has the true Word and the Sacraments, there the church is if only the pulpit and the baptismal font are pure. The church does not stand on the holiness of any one person but solely on the holiness and righteousness of the Lord Christ, for He has sanctified her by Word and Sacrament."
Martin Luther, What Luther Says, An Anthology, 3 vols., ed., Ewald Plass, St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1959, I, p. 263. Matthew 24:4-7.
"When you preach or confess the Word, you will experience both without, among enemies, and also within, in yourself (where the devil himself will speak to you and prove how hostile he is to you), that he brings you into sadness, impatience, and depression, and that he torments you in all sorts of ways. Who does all this? Certainly not Christ or any good spirit, but the miserable, loathsome enemy...The devil will not bear to have you called a Christian and to cling to Christ or to speak or think a good word about Him. Rather he would gladly poison and permeate your heart with venom and gall, so that you would blaspheme: Why did He make me a Christian? Why do I not let Him go? Then I would at last have peace."
Martin Luther, What Luther Says, An Anthology, 3 vols., ed., Ewald Plass, St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1959, II, p. 928.
"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, Triglotta. p. 1095)
Francis Pieper, The Difference Between Orthodox And Heterodox Churches, and Supplement, Coos Bay, Oregon: St. Paul's Lutheran Church, 1981, p. 65.
"When a theologian is asked to yield and make concessions in order that peace may at last be established in the Church, but refuses to do so even in a single point of doctrine, such an action looks to human reason like intolerable stubbornness, yea, like downright malice. That is the reason why such theologians are loved and praised by few men during their lifetime. Most men rather revile them as disturbers of the peace, yea, as destroyers of the kingdom of God. They are regarded as men worthy of contempt. But in the end it becomes manifest that this very determined, inexorable tenacity in clinging to the pure teaching of the divine Word by no means tears down the Church; on the contrary, it is just this which, in the midst of greatest dissension, builds up the Church and ultimately brings about genuine peace. Therefore, woe to the Church which has no men of this stripe, men who stand as watchmen on the walls of Zion, sound the alarm whenever a foe threatens to rush the walls, and rally to the banner of Jesus Christ for a holy war.”
C. F. W. Walther, The Proper Distinction between Law and Gospel, trans., W. H. T. Dau, St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1928, p. 28.

The end of middle America? Working class white families are unraveling before our eyes

The end of middle America? Working class white families are unraveling before our eyes

The conservative Lutheran pastors get divorced and remarried. The DPs excuse it. "Husband of one wife" means one wife at a time, according to them.

Oh.

Saturday, December 18, 2010

SP Harrison Says Missouri and WELS
Work with ELCA via LWR.
WELS Says They Left LWR Several Years Ago.
Like WELS Closing Down Church and Change ?



Brett Meyer has left a new comment on your post "MotorSage: My Line in the Sand...":

NmL states, "One can also conclude that WELS and Missouri are in default fellowship with LWF through Thrivent."

The connection is even more direct than working through Thrivent as LCMS Pres Harrison clearly states below:

Pres. Harrison states, "What are these humanitarian activities? The range is very broad, but let me concentrate on just one. The LCMS is a partner with the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA) in Lutheran World Relief (LWR), based in Baltimore, Md.

LWR is NOT a mission agency; it is a humanitarian agency. LWR specializes in international aid and development. Through LCMS World Relief/Human Care, we provide $2 to $3 million a year for humanitarian purposes through LWR. LWR—through the LCMS, ELCA, WELS (Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod) and government support—carries out some $30 million in international aid projects yearly."


http://mylcms.org/pages/internal.asp?NavID=14512

WELSians - Your Diaprax Is Ready To Be Served - By Church and Change




"Leadership - Fostering positive leadership through consensus and team ministry"
http://staffministry.net/resources.php?file=154




Jonathan Favorite Director of Worship Arts CrossWalk Luth. Ministries Phoenix, AZ
Crosswalk - wait I thought Buchholz wouldn't have them in his district?
Our 2011 officers are:
            Chairman – Jonathan Favorite
            Vice Chairman – Kyle Swogger
            Secretary – Ben Carlovsky
            Treasurer – Levi Nagel
http://staffministry.net/resources.php?file=157

Buchholz blames Church and Change on the Boomers, but he has a nest of them himself.

Wait - this just in - the DP is "working on it. Be patient. It takes time."

Feed the Paranoia - That Is My Job






Roland, I finally caught up with my Facebook and saw your friend request. You're still the sua-vey and de bone er guy of yesteryear. I also saw that Greg Jackson was one of your friends. Are you the WELS mole that's been feeding him information :-).-- DK

MotorSage: My Line in the Sand...


Former Augustana Synod congregation, HerChurch is no longer the mother church to conservative Swedes.


MotorSage: My Line in the Sand...

Another exit from ELCA.

The only ones staying with ELCA are the LCMS, WELS, and the Little Sect on the Prairie.

---

Narrow-minded Lutheran has left a new comment on your post "MotorSage: My Line in the Sand...":

Yes, I was told that LCMS has to remain in endeavors with ELCA, right or wrong, because the convention voted for it; and I am wrong to fault the leadership. So WELS and Missouri can continue to badmouth ELCA while working with them through Thrivent and other endeavors. One can also conclude that WELS and Missouri are in default fellowship with LWF through Thrivent. But, I'm an extremist and sectarian (my personal favorite label).

***

GJ - At least you recognize the blackness of your soul, Narrow-minded. That is a good beginning - from their point of view.

This basic concept makes me chortle - If they did not BOHICA for ELCA, Thrivent, and the Daddy Warbucks, a modest increase in proportionate giving would make up for all the losses they fear.

However, they would rather get a pledge during supper at the posh Missouri Athletic Club from one Daddy Warbucks than do real stewardship work in flyover country.

The best management will always be - faithful stewardship of the mysteries of God--the revealed doctrine of the Scriptures.

God is telling WELS, Missouri, and the micro-minis: "I hate your false doctrine, your false teachers, your worship of the Golden Calf."

ELCA Task Force to Suggest Recommendations for Church's Future - News Releases -
Evangelical Lutheran Church in America.
Your Diaprax Is Ready

ELCA Task Force to Suggest Recommendations for Church's Future - News Releases - Evangelical Lutheran Church in America

Diaprax cat can study and fix anything, especially with a Thrivent grant.



ELCA NEWS SERVICE
December 17, 2010

ELCA Task Force to Suggest Recommendations for Church's Future

CHICAGO (ELCA) -- A task force of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA), which has engaged the church's membership in an extensive conversation about the denomination's future, will soon begin preparing its report and recommendations to the ELCA Church Council. The council is expected to transmit to the 2011 ELCA Churchwide Assembly recommendations related to the task force's work.

Task force members will meet here January 28-29, 2011, a key face-to-face meeting prior to issuing their report and recommendations.

In November 2009 the ELCA Church Council approved the charter for the project, "Living into the Future Together: Renewing the Ecology of the ELCA" and appointed a task force. The project task force was asked to study social, economic and other environmental changes in the 20 years since the ELCA was formed and "evaluate the organization, governance and interrelationships among this church's expressions," according to the project charter.

The task force was asked to develop a report and recommendations "that will position this church for the future and explore new possibilities for participating in God's mission," the charter states. The report and recommendations are to be reviewed by the ELCA Conference of Bishops in March 2011 and presented for action to the Church Council, which meets in April 2011.

The task force, which met for the first time in January 2010, focused on two key questions as it gathered information from throughout the church, said the Rev. Diane "Dee" Pederson, St. Cloud, Minn., task force chair:

+ What is God calling this church to be and do in the future?
+ What changes are in order to help us respond most faithfully?

"The task force was committed to beginning a conversation that would invite engagement, ideas, imagination and wisdom from people across this church," she said in an interview. Task force members developed questions on topics such as Lutheran identity, ELCA membership and priorities for ministry, she said. Task force work teams focused on specific topics such as ELCA identity, opportunities, interrelationships, congregations, partnerships, financial resources, and structure and governance.

The task force posted questions online at http://www.ELCA.org/lift on the ELCA project website for response, and it invited responses through a blog at http://liftELCA.org on the Web, Pederson said.

More than 1,000 people responded to the online survey questions, and ELCA Research and Evaluation staff randomly sampled additional pastors and members. Many leadership groups commented to the task force, such as the ELCA Conference of Bishops, the ELCA Church Council, campus ministry staff, college and university presidents, multicultural organization leaders, global mission partners, and youth and young adults. Voting members at more than 40 synod assemblies offered input.

The task force also met with several consultants, held conference calls, and conducted focus groups and interviews. In August it brought together bishops, pastors, leaders from institutions of higher education, ecumenical partners and leaders from various partner agencies to consider mission capacity and funding, Pederson said.

Task force members learned that ELCA members have deep commitments "to our theology, our understanding of justification by grace through faith in Jesus Christ, to sharing the 'Good News,' to theological education and to lay leadership," Pederson said. Members are less clear about Lutheran identity or what it means to be an ELCA member, she said.

The task force invited comment on possible future scenarios for the EL
CA, she said. Its report will likely focus on the roles of congregations and synods, sustainability, mission support funding, and ELCA structure and governance, Pederson added.

While much information has been gathered, there is still time for members to comment to the task force through the website or the blog.

"I've described the process as something that was intended to engage as many people as possible," said the Rev. Richard H. Graham, bishop of the ELCA Metropolitan Washington, D.C., Synod, and task force member. "We want to hear from anyone who wants to give us information."

From his perspective, Graham said, members have expressed a desire to renew congregational life and mission, and "to help congregations understand themselves as places where mission has to take place."

Composting Saves Money and Reduces Waste

Precious, by Norma Boeckler, is our quiet Sheltie.
Precious is a notorious food thief.



bruce-church (http://bruce-church.myopenid.com/) has left a new comment on your post "Roses, Suet, Birds, and Squirrels":

People without compost bins think its a big pain, but if you go to a search engine and type: compost "never fills up," there are a lot of results. People just keep filling the bin and it never seems to fill up, so that's hardly any work. One study says composting reduces is volume by 50 to 75 percent.

The reason compost bins fill up so slowly, is first, much of vegetable matter is water, and as compost breaks down, that is released to the ground and air. Second, a lot of the carbon is turned into CO2 and CH4 (methane) and is lost to the atmosphere! For manure composting, which has been studied most closely, 30% of the overall dry matter is lost due to 53% of the carbon being lost to CO2 and CH4 (94% and 6% by volume, respectively), and 42% of the nitrogen was lost to create nitrous oxide, a gas (N2O):

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/14964356

These correspond to 30.1% of initial DM, 52.8% of initial TC, and 41.6% of initial TN. For WBM, DM loss was 268 kg Mg(-1), TC loss was 154 kg Mg(-1), and TN loss was 1.40 kg Mg(-1), corresponding to 26.5, 34.5, and 11.8% of initial amounts. Most C was lost as CO2 with CH4 accounting for <6%.

http://www.ext.colostate.edu/pubs/garden/07212.html

Composting reduces yard waste volume by 50 to 75 percent.

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GJ - I realized early that hauling away yard trash and buying chemicals to make the yard more fertile was foolish. Organic materials are the best soil amendments, and they arrive free of charge. Leaves, grass, and weeds all contribute to the humus content of any soil type. Healthy soil attracts more birds and insects, which work for free, in contrast to chemical spraying, which wipes out the insect population (most of it beneficial) and decreases the birds feeding on the insects.

Those who build compost find there is never enough, so they borrow leaves and grass from the neighbors. People stop laughing when they see the corn reach 9 feet tall, with pumpkins growing on bushes and under them.