Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Was UOJ Always Taught in WELS?
Definitely Not!

This hissing cockroach is not as disgusting as false doctrine.



A pastor did a comparison of catechisms today in preparing for a lesson on the Third Article (I believe in....the forgiveness of sins). He has a number of catechisms [Luther's obviously being the one and only] on his shelves. He was interested if there were any shifts in the presentation of material [questions, selection of supporting passages, phraseology) between the WELS "Gausewitz"(Copyright 1956) and the WELS "Kuske" (Copyright 1982, 1989, 1998). In the following K=Kuske, G= Gausewitz. The "#'s" refer to the respective editions. His comments are in [ ].

His reason for doing the comparison is that the Gausewitz version was the catechism used for his own confirmation classes in the early-mid 1970's. However, the Kuske version has been the official one since the early 1980's. That means a majority of the current WELS pastors who still teach catechism would have used the Kuske version. If they are younger WELS pastors, they would themselves have been instructed along its line, maybe never knowing anything at all about the Gausewitz.

Kuske 253. How many people did God declare righteous? God declared all people righteous. (objective justification) [2 Corinthians 5:19 is offered as a proof passage but not Romans 3:28]

Gausewitz 261. To whom does God forgive sins? God forgives sins to me and all believers. [Romans 3:21-28 is cited as a Scripture reference; Romans 3:28; Romans 10:4 is cited as the Scripture passages. He underlined the divergence between the two. This clearly proves a stated shift. Also note how Gausewitz sticks to Luther's phrasing in the answer.]
______

Kuske 255. Why is it important, then, that the Holy Spirit work faith in me? It is important that the Holy Spirit work faith in me so that I do not trust in my own works but only in the righteousness God gives me by grace in Christ. (subjective justification)

Gausewitz 260 Why do we say that the Holy Ghost forgives sins, whereas we are made righteous before God through the redemption of Christ? The Holy Ghost brings the righteousness of Christ to us by the Gospel and gives us the faith to believe it. [Note that "the righteousness of Christ" is linked with "the faith to believe it." The two are not bifurcated and isolated, by default, from each other.]

______
Gausewitz 262. Where are sins forgiven? Sins are forgiven in the Christian Church on earth. (Ministry of the Keys)

[No similar question is asked in the Kuske catechism. In the UOJ scheme, there is salvation outside the Christian Church? Yes, and apart from the Means of Grace entrusted to the Church!]
______
Gausewitz 263. Why do we say, In the Christian Church on earth? We say this because Christ has given the Gospel to His Church on earth; in the Gospel we have the forgiveness of sins.

[No similar question is asked in the Kuske catechism. In the Gospel, then necessarily implies through the Means by which it is conveyed. Massive, airy universal absolutions apart from the Means rob them of the grace God intends to give through them. Therefore, our confidence of salvation would be divorced from the very Means of Grace God intends to use to create and sustain "justifying faith" as the Confessions put it.]

The above quotations are proof of a discernible shift in WELS catechisms.

***

GJ - Many people are doing research about this topic. This is an excellent example of what many of us suspect - that the UOJ position of WELS hardened and began to dominate. Departures like this are difficult to trace, but WELS members and pastors can figure this out.

The Gausewitz catechism was the normal version for a long time. As I recall from an essay by Slide, it had all the correct attributes for a WELS catechism.

When the new Kuske catechism came out, WELS made that the normative version, and WELS pastors tend to be robotic in accepting new improved whatevers, like the 100 proof hymnal from James P. Tiefel.

See if you can find a Gausewitz and do your own comparison with Kuske. Comments are most welcome.

This is why I have never used a catechism except Luther's own. I do not like Talmudic editions with hundreds of questions and answers. Like the original Talmud, they can be used to obscure the Word of God in the name of teaching it.

WELS pastors have shown repeatedly that they do not grasp the meaning of the Eighth Commandment, how it applies to their own behavior, how it does not apply to addressing false doctrine.

I noticed in reading the new book that the Seminex crowd liked crying Eighth Commandment too. WELS leaders like to brag about how superior they are to Missouri, but they have used the same dishonest or ignorant tactics to advance their own false doctrine.


Comments from Readers

The 19th century Lutherans never critiqued Spener, and they should have.
Spener's unionism and doctrinal laxity grew like kudzu.




LPC has left a new comment on your post "Clueless History of the Missouri Synod Civil War":

James,

Jer 17: 5Thus saith the LORD; Cursed be the man that trusteth in man, and maketh flesh his arm, and whose heart departeth from the LORD.

6 For he shall be like the heath in the desert, and shall not see when good cometh; but shall inhabit the parched places in the wilderness, in a salt land and not inhabited.

7 Blessed is the man that trusteth in the LORD, and whose hope the LORD is.


It does not matter even if the so-called "Steadfast Lutherans" fail.

Faith is a fight. It has nothing to do if the so-called "Steadfast" brings things around because new ones who will pervert the Gospel will sprout so, it is a constant fight.

B.M.

The same goes for each of us, Extra Nos and Ichabod too. Remaining steadfast and faithful to Scripture as the Norm of Christian faith and the Confessions as the Normed Norm the Lord will work His will through the Means of Grace, purely taught and rightly distributed.

Right on, bro. We are not exempted from being faithful to the Scripture and our Confession.

But Christ's Word will never pass away and enduring in the one true faith in Christ alone is a gift of God by the grace of the Holy Spirit no matter what tomorrow brings. That's why we struggle for purity in Christ's central doctrine, His chief article of Christian faith, Justification by Faith Alone

Amen.


LPC

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Brett Meyer has left a new comment on your post "Clueless History of the Missouri Synod Civil War":

James states, "This group gives me hope, but is my hope in vain?"

Yes, if your hope is in the group or in the men and women who are active members.

If your hope is in the bedrock of Scripture, Christ's Word purely taught and Sacraments rightly distributed then No, your hope is not in vain. You're hope is in the right place and with the Christian Church made up of all who, by God's grace, place all their trust in Christ alone we can say, "The Lord's will be done!"

If the Steadfast Lutherans remain faithful to Scripture and the Lutheran Confessions their efforts will always accomplish God's will, whether that is working contrition and faith in those God calls or hardening of the hearts in those God does not call and who reject Christ, His Word, His Church and His doctrines. The Lord's will be done.

The same goes for each of us, Extra Nos and Ichabod too. Remaining steadfast and faithful to Scripture as the Norm of Christian faith and the Confessions as the Normed Norm the Lord will work His will through the Means of Grace, purely taught and rightly distributed. To hope in Christ that things will change, the false teachers will be exposed and rejected, false practice will be exposed and rejected, God's pure Word will be exposed, taught and exalted, right practice will be exposed, supported and promoted is never in vain and always the right thing to do. To expect that it could or would remain that way is not in line with Scripture where in Matt 24 Christ's tells us of the end times when the hypocrites in the church turn against Christ's Word and faithful Church.

But Christ's Word will never pass away and enduring in the one true faith in Christ alone is a gift of God by the grace of the Holy Spirit no matter what tomorrow brings. That's why we struggle for purity in Christ's central doctrine, His chief article of Christian faith, Justification by Faith Alone.

In Christ,
Brett

Clueless History of the Missouri Synod Civil War

Jack Preus, left, seems to be suppressing a laugh 
as his ALC cousin Dave Preus, pontificates.
Dave Preus is now against the ELCA merger,
and so is former LCA president Crumley.

Pastor Herman Otten baffled and thwarted the apostates by quoting them. 
The old joke about Otten was that he was not born, he was Xeroxed.




Power, Politics, and the Missouri Synod: A Conflict That Changed American Christianity

By James C. Burkee, Foreword by Martin Marty

Fortress Press, Minneapolis, 2011, 183 pages. #9780800697921.

Reviewed by Gregory L. Jackson, PhD

Martin Marty sets the tone of this book, in his foreword, where he refers to Pastor Otten as “Mr. Otten.” The Missouri Synod apostates have always insisted on “Mr. Otten” because they do not wish to recognize his ordination, which was valid and proper according to their own polity.

Marty guided the completion of this dissertation, as a “minor” and “neutral” observer. He has never been a minor figure in the Missouri Civil War, and he was hardly a neutral observer. A parallel would be asking Fuller student David Valleskey to write an analysis of the Church Growth Movement.

Fortress once had a reputation for telling the truth in its books, even if the truth involved their own liberal heroes, such as Barth or Tillich. That honesty is missing from Power, Politics, and the Missouri Synod. The ELCA does not like the Missouri Synod; many of its leaders left the LCMS. In fact, Carl Braaten (never accused of orthodoxy) has blamed the Missouri come-outters for making ELCA so radical. They used their minority status to recast the merger into their dream organization.

The famous Seminex, made up of faculty and students who left Concordia Seminary, became the official seminary for the Metropolitan Community Church, a denomination set up exclusively for homosexual and lesbian pastors and members. These intellectual giants of Seminex determined the substance of ELCA with a quota system and other enhancements.

Burkee’s book is well written and difficult to put down, with many good insights into the background of the Missouri Synod conflict. However, he is completely clueless about the cause of the synod’s conflict. If he is not clueless, then he simply dishonest about what caused the split.

From the beginning, the author sets up a Straw Man with  the inerrancy term. His ELCA readers doubtless agree with him that inerrancy is a new term that does not fit the teaching of the Scriptures. Therefore, they will resonate with the concept that the evil Preus brothers used this newly-invented term to grab power and oust the Seminex martyrs.

Inerrancy, Etc.
The Christian Church has always taught the inspiration, authority, and inerrancy of the Scriptures. The old term was “infallible” but the apostates kept watering down the meaning of infallible by saying “infallible in doctrine, but not in history or geography.” As a result, the term “inerrant” was used in its place or added to it. Catholics and  Protestants alike, not to mention the Eastern Orthodox, were in agreement. One pope said the Bible was like Christ, having two natures, divine and human, and yet without error.

Luther defined the Scriptures as “inerrant” and “infallible” in the Book of Concord, the Large Catechism, on Baptism, using the Latin words.

57] Thus we do also in infant baptism. We bring the child in the conviction and hope that it believes, and we pray that God may grant it faith; but we do not baptize it upon that, but solely upon the command of God. Why so? Because we know that God does not lie. I and my neighbor and, in short, all men, may err and deceive, but the Word of God cannot err.” The Large Catechism, Book of Concord, Infant Baptism.

Moreover, the articles of the Creed were never subject to debate in the Christian Church proper until the rationalists began to attack each one. Someone who doubted the Virgin Birth of Christ and the actual resurrection of Christ was not an honored leader, a valued teacher, a man of wisdom and discernment.

The massive response against the Seminex heretics came from the laity and the ministerium realizing that Fuerbringer and his faculty were apostate, mainline Protestants, Unitarians who still used the liturgy – not faithful Lutherans, not proclaimers of the Gospel.

I got to know many of the main characters in this book, although I was newly ordained when most of the events happened and only viewed them from the perspective of an LCA pastor. I have met most of the main figures in this drama: Herman and Grace Otten, Walter Otten, Jack Preus, Robert Preus, Kurt Marquart, John “Warlike” Montgomery, Martin Marty, Walter Maier II, Fred Rutz Sr., Waldo Werning, Ralph Bohlman, Robert Sauer, David Scaer, Father Richard John Neuhaus (and his father), and a few others.




Burkee argues that Missouri has fallen apart because the conservatives won, but the Seminex crowd actually came out on top. The synod no longer has a consistent witness of any kind. This is best illustrated by one of the heroes of the book – Waldo Werning.

Most of the leading figures are introduced with a mini-biography, quite useful. Although Werning is still alive and active, at the age of 90, he is not introduced in the same way. He gave many hours of interviews (p. xv) and emerges as a superman of the conservative movement. Burkee is no Thucydides.

Werning Facts
Werning was an early ecumenist and went back to unionism, so his conservative phase was bracketed by the opposite stance, making him more of a power-seeking opportunity rather than a principled leader. Far from being a conservative, he was an early advocate of Church Growthism from Fuller Seminary, promoting it in every way possible and brutally persecuting anyone who offered him a critique of his Schwaermer doctrine. I know one LCMS pastor who was driven out of two synods because he did not agree with Werning. Concordia Seminary, Ft. Wayne students were told never to confront Werning on anything, or it would be the end of their careers.

In fact, Werning was told he could not teach anymore because no one wanted his classes. He responded by helping to get rid of Robert Preus, acting on behalf of LCMS Synod President Ralph Bohlmann, another supposed conservative who switched sides.

Werning also turned against Otten, although he made so many secret contacts with Otten that the Otten children nicknamed him “Agent X.”


Werning is a major source for this book, but I would not trust a word from him, even if his tongue were notarized.

Secrecy
Burkee does a fine job of revealing the secret deals and gambits of the conservatives, who were always anxious to hide their connections with Otten and Christian News. They wanted the advantages of anonymously submitting their information, gossip, and opinions to the public, through the tabloid.

LCMS President Jack Preus was elected and continued in office because of Christian News. He worked with Otten, met with him, phoned him, attacked him in public and apologized in secret. Otten taped their conversations because he could not trust Preus.

Everyone knew Jack was a double-dealer, but almost all church officials are. They pose as conservatives while rewarding the apostates. I can offer names and dates for similar actions in various synods. Burkee has offered proof for what everyone suspected all along.

Al Barry was elected LCMS president the same way. Paul McCain was the Waldo Werning for that election, talking to Otten in secret and stealthily sending materials to be leaked via Christian News. McCain denied being in contact with Otten, but he bragged about it to me, just as Otten did.

The Seminex bunch lied from the beginning, saying they were faithful and confessional when they knew very well they were not. Tietjen started a foundation (FLUTE)  to support the faculty’s exit from Concordia Seminary, but refused to answer any official questions about it. As an employee of the synod, he owed them answers.

The LCMS gave the Seminex faculty all kinds of chances, allowing them to stay in faculty housing. Burkee did repeat the fact that the glorious day of EXILE, photographed by the press, ended with the students coming back to have their next meal at the seminary – not much of an exile, not a heavy cross to bear!

I asked a Seminex student if they stole all kinds of valuable books from the Concordia Seminary Library. He said, “They were ours!”

Tietjen’s public relations offensive was completely dishonest. He portrayed them as victims, martyrs of a power-made cabal of extremists. The press ate up the phony drama and acted as the Seminex mimeograph room. Nevertheless, Seminex was a flop and got moved to Lutheran School of Theology, Chicago, another failure.

Moving the Structure Around
Jack Preus managed to take away the props for Seminex, by moving the schools around. Once the LCMS colleges could no longer feed students into Seminex, it faded away, even with the extra Metropolitan Community students.

Burkee is correct in showing that this civil war was more of a power play than a principled effort. Its success came from the training and knowledge of the old guard, commonly mocked as Bronze Age Missourians.

When Jack Preus left office, there was no more jousting against liberals in the presidency. His chosen successor, Ralph Bohlmann, was committed to the opposite side (in spite of his image) and soon displayed it. Bohlmann supported the Church Growth Movement with gusto, worked with the LCA/ALC, and moved toward women’s ordination. His lesbian daughter is now an ordained United Church of Christ minister, living with her partner.

Al Barry was no improvement, and the LCMS has recently voted overwhelmingly to work with ELCA.

Great Entertainment
I enjoyed this book immensely, but it should be read with Adams’ Preus of Missouri, and Marquart’s Anatomy of an Explosion. Marquart is good in tracing the doctrinal history of the civil war. Adams is full of background material and anecdotes.

Otten
Herman and Grace Otten are the indispensable leaders in this drama. They put together a newsletter, later a tabloid, with great efficiency and CPA frugality. The value of Christian News, and the pain inflicted, is not the quirkiness or even bizarre nature of the publication. Otten reproduced the actual documents displaying the Unitarian doctrine of his Seminex opponents. Meanwhile, Herman and Grace raised a large brood of kids, built a camp used by many Lutheran groups, and published a few books on the side.

The Left accuses him of doing unethical things, and some details (especially the student days) sound like training camp at CIA headquarters. The Left has done that much and more.

WAM II
The most instructive section of this book was its treatment of Walter Maier II, Ft. Wayne professor and son of the famous radio preacher.

Maier dared to go against Jack Preus, so Jack did the most evil thing I have seen pulled by any church executive – and that is saying something. Jack attacked WAM II as a false teacher, accusing him of denying Objective Justification, which ended Maier’s chance to be Synod President or seminary president. The effort was intended as a complete repudiation and humiliation of WAM II. He also lost the chairmanship of his department.

The irony of this debacle is that Robert Preus stepped up as the new Ft. Wayne president. Robert Preus and the seminary took the false doctrine of Objective Justification from Pietism (and Walther) and made it the norma normans (ruling norm) of the synod. Robert Preus finally repudiated this OJ error in his final book, but the damage has been done. The OJ fanatics of the past cannot face up to their error.

Jesus did say that evil fruit came from evil trees. The old Synodical Conference is paying double for all its sins through their promotion of grace without the Means of Grace.

Who Won?
Clearly, the apostates of Seminex won. Those liberals who remained in Missouri were rewarded with the best positions, just as the signers of the Statement were in days past. The president’s office, already under Jack Preus, called off the war, surrendering while claiming, “We won!”


Under Bohlmann, Barry, and Kieschnick, the conservatives were spanked, shunned, punished, and fired. Werning’s Church Growth Movement was put on steroids, vitamin pills, and energy drinks.

Supposedly, the great doctrinal error of ELCA is Gospel reductionism and Universalism. Everyone is forgiven and everyone is saved.

What is taught in the LCMS, WELS, ELS, and the micro-mini sects? God has already declared the entire world forgiven of its sin (Enthusiasm), and the whole world is saved (Universalism). They will not admit this yet, but they teach exactly what ELCA teaches. That is why the LCMS, WELS, and ELS work so well with ELCA: they believe the same thing.

One solution, employed by Seminex supporter Richard Neuhaus, is to join the Church of Rome. Many LCMS pastors are now following his lead and becoming priests. Some choose Eastern Orthodoxy, which is just one step away.
Father Richard J. Neuhaus, a critic of Church Growth and ELCA fads, became a Roman Catholic priest before he died, taking some Lutheran pastors with him, including the subsequent editor of the Lutheran Forum Letter.

Notorious Iver Johnson - Thou Hast Conquered



Brett Meyer has left a new comment on your post "The Fruit of Decades of Fuller Seminary Study by t...":

The (W)ELS has become laughable and are only a few years behind the side splitting LCMS and "I can't breathe" ELCA in their race for the bottom.

Do you believe the Holy Spirit wasn't primarily teaching the Authority of Christ over His Church when He used the word "head" in Ephesians 5:23?

I don't believe it matters what was being stressed as long as His Authority isn't diminished in an ongoing attempt to minimize the fact that Christ has authority over all creation, that the husband has authority over his wife and that women are not to have authority over the men in the church. The blatant attempt to avoid, and thus offend the feminized (W)ELS masses, clearly teaching the authority God has given the man in marriage, the father in the family and the men in the church is another step toward removing the manhood of Christ, the maleness of God and establishing Her Church in the Lutheran Synods.

***

GJ - The notorious Iver Johnson helped get this going and worked on the WELS hymnal.

Guys - you know what it takes to be a bigshot in WELS.

Don't worry about that DUI ticket. You can still teach at The Sausage Factory.

Grumpy Offers Advice



grumpy has left a new comment on your post "Anonymous Comment on Gossip":

Dr. Jackson,

Perhaps you have simply forgotten.

Here are the rules:

#1. The WELS is always right.

#2. The Laity are NOT allowed to talk about called workers unless the entire world is in attendance to be a witness. This includes criticism, honest questions, suggestions, etc.

#3. Called workers can talk about laity at will. If extremely gracious, the actual name will not be mentioned but enough hints will be given so the person in question can be identified. No need that that person be present when information is spilled.

#4. If the laity are in disagreement to rules 2 and 3, see rule 1.

Anonymous Comment on Gossip

TMoney - the early years - also the current years.



TMoney42006 (http://openid.aol.com/TMoney42006) has left a new comment on your post "Meet the CEO of Church and Change":

I love how you cite Pastor Jenswold as if to suggest that this citation would prove him to be a liar or a fraud. All it proves is that you love gossip and are eager to jump at any story that will give you something to write about.

***

GJ - This person actually has an ID, unlike many who post, where the link is already broken. The ID information is revealing. An AC/DC logo flashes on and off.

That reminds me of the daily comments I got about wasting my time blogging. Someone read the blog every day to say the same thing each day, taking the time to publish the same rant.

This is how it goes, Rocker. I am taking time from a book review to help out your stunted education. A lot of history consists of oral reports, conversations, and interviews where the source is cited.

The typical WELS spin is:
1. Deny the obvious. The sect has been closing schools for years - Mobridge, Prairie, Northwestern. They still cannot fund Mary Lou College, which is an hour's drive drive from Bethany and a day's drive from Willow Creek's Liberal College.
2. The source is one of their guys, who probably got it from SP Schroeder, but somehow this is something I made up on my own.

Meanwhile, the sect has millions to spend on spreading Fuller doctrine among poor Asians who do not know any better.

The Fruit of Decades of Fuller Seminary Study by the Leaders of the Syn Conference

LCMS theologian Marva Dawn
and Herman Otten's sister, Marie Meyer,
control the agenda in Missouri.



Brett Meyer has left a new comment on your post "Women's Ordination Advances Under the Watchful Eye...":

“Heirs together of God’s gracious gift of life.”

4. We do not believe that 1 Timothy 2:12 prohibits a11 women from any exercise of authority over men because St. Paul refers to the sin of Adam and Eve (1 Timothy 2:14) who are identified as husband and wife in Genesis 3:17. The reference to childbearing (1 Timothy 2:15) also indicates that he is discussing the relationships between husbands
and wives.


1 Tim. 2:12 I do not permit a woman to teach or to have authority over a man; she must be silent.
Page 12


7. We do not believe that the word “head,” when used as a metaphor for the husband in the New Testament, primarily stresses the exercise of authority.

Eph. 5:23 For the husband is the head of the wife as Christ is the head of the church, his body, of which he is the Savior.
Page 13

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Brett Meyer has left a new comment on your post "Women's Ordination Advances Under the Watchful Eye...":

WELS Women's Ministry web address is http://www.welswomen.net/

WOMEN GATHER IN THE WORD AT WELS LEADERSHIP CONFERENCE
The first WELS Women’s Leadership Conference was held at Wisconsin Lutheran Seminary in Mequon, Wis. The conference, titled “A Leader . . . Who? Me?” introduced a new Bible study developed by WELS Women’s Ministry Committee, “Heirs together of God’s gracious gift of life.”
http://www.lewistonlutherans.org/home/140003345/140003345/docs/WELS%20News%20-August.pdf

***

GJ - "Heirs Together" is the name of the study by divorced Pastor Stadley, adulterous Pastor Iver Johnson, and Pastor M. Albrecht. They left WELS, taking the property with them, and they won the debate.

Only there was no debate. WELS crumples in the face of apostasy.

Tuesday, February 1, 2011

Women's Ordination Advances Under the Watchful Eye of SP Schroeder



Don't forget to submit names!!!


Any names can just be emailed directly to me at aarondb@hotmail.com.

Thanks,

Aaron Boehm
AZ/CA CAD Chairman
Many thanks to those of you who have submitted names of qualified women in your congregations to serve as Women’s Ministry Congregational Contacts (WMCC).  For those of you who haven’t yet been able to do so, please pass on to the DCAD the name of a woman in your congregation who might fit the following criteria:
Those who are to be considered for positions as WMCC would be women who are faithful in the public use of the means of grace and who have given evidence of a strong personal devotional life. In addition to the spiritual qualities mentioned above, here are other characteristics that would be beneficial for someone serving as a WMCC: 
·       Has an active awareness of women’s ministry within her congregation;
·       Is a team player who will communicate well with her pastor and others in leadership;
·       Has zeal and enthusiasm for women’s ministry;
·       Possesses computer skills that would help her communicate with the district;
Action items for the WMCC would include:
·       Become familiar with the Heirs Together Bible study;
·       Receive information from the WMDC and inform her congregation (the called workers and overall leadership) of Women’s Ministry information and resources available and of Women’s Ministry events occurring nationwide or locally
·       Collect, record and send to the WMDC ideas of women’s ministry events/activities that are working well in her congregation
·       Become familiar with online resources provided by the WMC at www.wels.net/women;
It is our prayer that women’s ministry at all levels will support the work of Adult Discipleship by assisting WELS congregations to equip women to use their gifts to God’s glory and the benefit of his kingdom here on earth (adapted from the WM job description).

WELS Hydra


rlschultz has left a new comment on your post "Proof That Doing the Same Thing Over, and Expectin...":

The CG methods in the WELS have morphed into the mythical hydra. If you cut off one head, two grow in its place. The lack of pastoral care to long time members is good evidence that the congregation has gone to the dark side.

Mr Meyer, you are correct that the laity eat this rat poison as quick as they can. This outreach thing is another head of the hydra. If you oppose it, then you do not care about saving souls. As mentioned in a previous post, it is now called community outreach. What it amounts to is having some sort of how-to series that has to do with life enhancement. Any civic organization could be doing that, and probably do a better job at it. But, the theory is that the community is unaware of the congregation, even though many may drive by it every day. They are so afraid of proclaiming the Gospel, that they have resorted to more gimmickry.

"Infants Are Justified Before They Are Baptized"

You owe us an answer, Jay.
U - O, J!




LPC has left a new comment on your post "Not Even Lutheran":

I would love to hear Jay Webber explain that riddle.

I would love to hear an answer to that too.

LPC

Another Large Church Leaves ELCA



Grace Lutheran Church, Springfield, Ohio

SPRINGFIELD — With 86 percent of its voting members’ approval, Springfield’s Grace Lutheran Church is leaving the Evangelical Lutheran Church in American (ELCA) to become a charter member of the North American Lutheran Church (NALC).

A posting on the church’s website reports the results of the second of two votes the move required.
The website reports that on Jan. 16, of the 292 eligible ballots, “250 eligible members voted to approve the proposal ... an 86 percent majority.”
Seventy-eight percent voted in favor of the move when the first vote was taken Oct. 17. A two-thirds majority was required on both votes.

Senior Pastor Daniel Powell declined comment Monday.
Grace follows Springfield’s Trinity Lutheran Church in leaving the ELCA to become charter congregations in the NALC, decisions that followed the ELCA’s gradual liberalization of its views on homosexuality.
In the summer of 2009, the ELCA voted to give congregations the option of blessing of life-long same-sex unions and hiring homosexual clergy in committed same-sex relationships, reversing the traditional stance that homosexuals are called to remain abstinent. The policies took effect in April 2010.

According to the NALC January newsletter, Grace and Trinity are among 100 congregations that have joined the denomination since its founding in Columbus last summer.
The Grace posting describes the NALC as a “renewed Lutheran community” at “the theological center of Lutheranism in North America ... committed to the authority of the Bible as the inspired Word of God.”

John Brooks, associate executive director of the ELCA News Service, said that as of Jan. 6, 334 congregations had taken successful second votes to leave the ELCA. Before the policy change, the ELCA comprised 10,239 congregations.

The Law as the Means of Grace

Holy Trinity Lutheran Church
Des Moines, Wash.

January 23, 2011
“Love Takes Time” – Week 3
Colossians 4:2-6
Take Time for Your Neighbors!
1. By your earnest prayers
2. By your own actions
Hymns: 241 – 525 – 521
All Scripture quotations from the NIV
Colossians 4:2-6 – Devote yourselves to prayer, being watchful and thankful. And pray for us, too, that God may open a door for our message, so that we may proclaim the mystery of Christ, for which I am in chains. Pray that I may proclaim it clearly, as I should. Be wise in the way you act toward outsiders; make the most of every opportunity. Let your conversation be always full of grace, seasoned with salt, so that you may know how to answer everyone.
Imagine you have been unjustly imprisoned. False accusations have been made against you. You have had no other choice but to appeal to a higher court in the land, so you await your trial, imprisoned indefinitely. What would be on your mind now? What would you be praying about now? Would earnest prayers be rising from your heart to God’s throne for your situation? Would you plead with God that he would see fit to free you? Would you pray that the legal system would work smoothly and justly? Wouldn’t you be praying hard about your situation?
A year passes. No progress has been made in your upcoming hearing. What are your thoughts? Wouldn’t your prayers rise up to God even more earnestly about your situation?

Two years pass. Won’t your prayers be directly to God even more earnestly about your situation? How about after three years? Four years?

Such was the plight of the Apostle Paul. He was under arrest for four years before significant progress was made in his case, two years in Palestine and then two years under house arrest in Rome. What was on his mind? His thoughts in our reading do not drift to his own condition at the time. They don’t plead with God for his quick release. They are not inwardly directed at all, although we would not fault Paul for such prayers. In our reading today, Paul prays for outreach to people who are not believers in Christ! As he writes to the church in Asia Minor in Colosse, he thinks about their neighbors.

As we continue our sermon series called “Love Takes Time,” which our Wisconsin Synod churches are following, we focus on the fact that our Christian love compels us to “Take Time for Our Neighbors!” Using the words of Paul to the Colossians in the New Testament, let us learn this lesson and see:
1. This will involve your earnest prayers
2. This will involve your own actions
1 – Our reading begins: “Devote yourselves to prayer, being watchful and thankful. And pray for us, too, that God may open a door for our message, so that we may proclaim the mystery of Christ, for which I am in chains. Pray that I may proclaim it clearly, as I should.”

If you would like to read the full context of these words that Paul wrote to the Colossian church, you would need to read Acts 21-28. Paul had come to Jerusalem, a very dangerous place for him to be due to the hostility of the Jewish leaders. He was accused unjustly of bringing a Gentile into the Temple area and an uproar arose, instigated by the Jewish leaders. Paul was arrested by the Roman governor, who held him for two years. Paul then decided to appeal to a trial before Caesar himself, a right he held as a Roman citizen. After a harrowing voyage to Rome, Paul ended up being held under house arrest for two years, awaiting his trial. It was under these circumstances that Paul writes the words of our text in a letter he sent to the church at Colosse in Asia Minor.

As we said before, his words amazingly instruct them to think about their neighbors, their fellow men around them who did not know or believe in Jesus as their Savior yet. Paul tells them to “Take Time for Their Neighbor!”

Paul’s words inform them that this will take their prayers. Paul tells them to “devote themselves to prayer,” literally the word for power and strength: “Be strong in prayer.” Paul tells them to be “watchful” in prayer, much like Jesus’ words to “watch and pray.” Paul tells them to have “thanksgiving” as they pray. Amazing words from an unjustly imprisoned man!

Paul tells them they are to pray for two things as they think about their neighbor. First, they were to pray that God would give Paul an open door. The picture, of course, is that God would open up avenues through which people around Paul could hear the message of Jesus Christ, the Savior of the world, so that they could believe in him as their own Savior.

Was it really necessary for the Colossians to pray about that? Aren’t these doors always open? Doesn’t God want all people to hear and believe the message of Jesus Christ, who died for the sin of the world?

It was necessary for the Colossians to pray for this for a few reasons:
God dictates the opportunities to share the message of Christ. You might recall that on his second missionary trip, Paul wanted to travel north of Asia Minor into an area called Bithynia. In Acts 16 it says that “the spirit of Jesus would not allow them” to go in that direction! God’s will eventually became clear that he wanted them to travel west to Greece with the message of the gospel to cities like Corinth, Thessalonica, and Philippi. God dictates the doors that open!
God alone can convert hearts to believe this message. Many of you no doubt remember the memory verse “No one can say, ‘Jesus is Lord,’ except by the Holy Spirit.” Man can witness about the message, but only God can open doors in the heart to believe.

3. Paul currently had limited open doors. Under house arrest, his work of spreading the gospel had not been as free as in years past.

Prayers to God that he would open doors for Paul and the gospel were very fitting!

Paul also tells them to pray that God would help him to “proclaim it clearly, as he should.” Paul did have guards that were around him. Paul was allowed visitors while he was under house arrest. Paul was also going to have the chance to speak for himself in the future when his case was called. He undoubtedly felt the pressure of searching for the right words to speak. Perhaps he might even feel a temptation to soften the message of Christ and his mission as he looked ahead to what he would say. He prayed that God would wing his words.

Let’s pause here to apply this first lesson that Paul taught the Colossians to our own lives. As you consider the theme “Take Time for Your Neighbors,” Paul instructs you that this begins with prayer. “No objections!” you say. “I stand ready to pray for the advancement of the gospel.”

You do? When was the last time you prayed for your own pastor’s Sunday message that he was preparing? When a pastor sits down a week or more ahead of time to begin study and contemplation for a Sunday message, he does it with much fear and trembling. It is the biggest item on his weekly “to do” list. Have you prayed on a Tuesday or Wednesday that God would bless your pastor as he wrestles with the law and gospel he’s been given for that week? The People’s Bible commentary on these verses make an interesting point that many church members might be ready to criticize and critique something with their pastor rather than be ready first to offer God their prayers for him. Your two pastors welcome your prayers to God’s throne for their sermon messages!

Have you prayed for our Holy Trinity Lutheran School students and teachers lately? Every school day religious instruction is being given via Catechism classes, Bible history, or hymnology. Certainly you have been praying about this! Have you prayed for your called teachers to teach clearly and that God blesses their instruction? Have you prayed for the Evergreen Lutheran High School faculty that you support? Have you prayed for our home and world missionaries around the globe who carry the gospel? Surely you have! You have no objections to praying for the advancement of the gospel, right?

The People’s Bible commentary has an interesting thought along these lines. The writer says, “Any number of missionaries have told us that they are convinced that it is only through the prayers of the Christians ‘back home’ that they are blessed with the special strength they need to fulfill their often difficult and dangerous calling. Some of the most cherished encouragement I have ever received in my personal ministry came from a kind and concerned ‘matriarch’ of a large family in my congregation who, before the Lord took her to her eternal home, assured me frequently, ‘Pastor, our family is praying for you.’ ”

Also, have you been praying for our church’s outreach to our own community neighbors? Our Christmas campaign? Our school contacts? Our own members’ words of gospel that they share?

When we realize we have fallen short in our prayers, God lead us to repent! May we thank God that he has sent that gospel message of Christ crucified for us first, to heal our sin-sick soul. Then may we resolve to take time. Take time to pray for the advancement of that gospel through our pastors and called workers and through our congregation!

2– Paul gives us one other way that we can take time for our neighbor in these verses. He writes, “Be wise in the way you act toward outsiders; make the most of every opportunity. Let your conversation be always full of grace, seasoned with salt, so that you may know how to answer everyone.” Time spent is not only going to involve the Colossians’ prayers. It will also involve their actions.

To set the stage for Paul’s words, what exactly were outsiders’ thoughts toward Christians in the Roman Empire? Normally, they were not favorable. Oftentimes Christians were called “atheists” by unbelievers. They were called this because they worshiped an unseen God. They were also labeled as “unpatriotic.” After all, they would not burn incense in worship of the emperor. Christians often did not have a good reputation.

What did Paul encourage them to do, to attempt to win outsiders over for Christ? First, he told them to let their conversation be seasoned with salt. Speak with salt! What did Paul mean? There’s a great difference between food that has salt and food that does not have salt. If you enjoy popcorn, I don’t imagine many of you like your popcorn without a stich (sic) of salt. In fact, it makes it quite unpalatable. I don’t imagine many here would like their eggs without any type of seasoning on them, salt or otherwise. Seasoning can make all the difference in dishes. That’s why a shaker is available right on the counter or the table in many of your kitchens. Paul says that their speech was to have seasoning. It was to be pleasing, gracious, courteous, kind, and palatable. It happened because they were to be “wise” in the way they spoke and acted toward outsiders. James 3 speaks about such Christian wisdom: “The wisdom that comes from heaven is first of all pure; then peace-loving, considerate, submissive, full of mercy and good fruit, impartial and sincere.”

The opposite type of speech would be worldly speech characterized by foulness, impatience, and anger. It would be speech that broke the 2nd Commandment in the use of God’s name and the 8th Commandment in the way words would hurt their neighbor.

Their example in “seasoned” speech was to be Christ himself. Christ represented his heavenly Father perfectly. Christ spoke in love. Yes, Christ spoke clearly and honestly when it came to calling sin a sin, but when he was persecuted and put on trial he did not lash out in sin and anger. The Colossians “seasoned,” pleasant speech would be a good reflection of their Savior and their heavenly Father.

The second directive Paul gives is that they are to “make the most of every opportunity.” This is an interesting Greek phrase in the original language. Literally, Paul uses the word for “buy.” He says that they are to “buy up” time. In our idioms we might say “snap up” the time. Some English translations say “redeem the time.”

Do you like to snap up deals? Have you ever been at the store when there’s a tremendous buy on a certain item and you get ten or twenty of them? You fill your cart because the time is right; do it now! Don’t wait around, for who knows when the deal will be over? That’s how Paul told them to look at their witnessing opportunities toward their neighbor. Make the most of time. Don’t delay! They didn’t know when they’d have another opportunity to speak about the Savior and they didn’t know when the Lord would return to judge the world. Witnessing was an urgent matter!

Does this describe you? Do you think this way when you think about your neighbor and others around you in daily life? Do you have this same concern for your neighbor’s salvation?

How do you view your neighbors to begin with? Answers among you all would vary:
Perhaps your neighbor is the one you just hope to tolerate
Or the one who makes life inconvenient for my family
Or your rival!
Or the one who is disruptive, especially on Friday and Saturday nights
Or is one to avoid
Or are “those slobby people”
Or one you have a “wave relationship” with – They’re the one you wave to (albeit courteously) when they’re in the driveway at the same time, and that’s all the deeper your relationship gets.

Or worse yet, you might not even know who they are.

How would Christ view the people in your neighborhood? We know from Scripture how he viewed people. He looked at the crowds once and had pity on them as “sheep without a shepherd,” meaning that he knew they were religiously lost and misled. He saw the rich young man who loved his riches and “loved him.” He went and talked with a woman at a well who was living in sin with her boyfriend, and as John 4 says, “he had to go through Samaria.” He needed to have that encounter. He hung out with “sinners” and outcasts in society because the sick needed a doctor. That’s how Jesus views your neighbors.

Do you view them in this way? Or do you need to pray, “Jesus, help me see people as you do”? The proof of our concern for them would be in how we have spiritually looked out for our neighbors in the past. How many neighbors did you bring to church as a visitor in the last year? How many neighbors by your home have you mentioned Christ to? Where does a person start?

When we wonder, we need to go back to Paul’s words in Colossians. First, let your conversation be seasoned with salt. Take time to talk to those around you in the neighborhood where God has put you. Don’t let them think for a minute that you are the crabby person down the block, or that you are always too busy or disinterested. Worse yet, would they wonder who you are?

We also make the most of the opportunities we have, snapping up the time. Time is wasting! The Lord’s return is even nearer. How much time do you have? How long will you wait? Go onto their turf in a conversation. Ask them about their life to start a conversation. And look for opportunities to build a bridge to a conversation about Jesus. Your concern and love for them will lead you to think about their eternal wellbeing!

As we close our look at taking time for our neighbors, perhaps you’ll need a time readjustment in your life. Maybe you’ll have to consciously take some time to get to know those around your home. Perhaps you’ll need to set some goals to keep you thinking about it and on task. If so, it will be time well spent for the kingdom of God.

May we learn from Paul’s words today. May we take time for our neighbor:
This will involve your earnest prayers. And this will involve your own actions.
God help us to take time for others, so we can tell them what he took time to do for them! Amen.

Tapped Out the Line of Credit?

The Faith-Tones will entertain at the next annual once-in-a-lifetime appeal.



rlschultz has left a new comment on your post "How Many Shrinker Churches in the Syn Conference W...":

Coming to a Shrinker church near you - bankruptcy! I mean the financial kind. The theological bankruptcy has already happened. As mentioned previously here at Ichabod, my former WElS congregation has engaged in Masonry Evangelism. Pardon the pun, but they have pulled out all of the stops. Naturally, they have brought in Cornerstone for the latest capital appeal and to bring new meaning to the phrase, fleecing the sheep. Now, it is community outreach.

This means getting the unchurched through the doors without the benefit of proclaiming the gospel. There is no need to proclaim forgiveness through the gospel, since all are saved anyways.

But, I wondered why they cut the veteran teacher at their school halfway through the school year. There is a sense of urgency about this. In years past, this congregation would restructure their debt, and borrow against their line of credit to meet their operating expenses. This was even how the cash crop farmers, who are members, ran their business.

But, the congregation had borrowed against their capital appeal funds that were designated for the masonry evangelism. Initially, this seemed odd. My guess is that there no longer is a line of credit to draw from, or it is already been tapped to the limit.

This would explain the cutting of the payroll - almost immediately.

I liken it to the irresponsible extended family member who does not have credit available to him through conventional lending and has to shake down others for cash.

Proof That Doing the Same Thing Over, and Expecting Different Results, Is Insanity



"It's your fault this church isn't growing.
You are afraid of change. That's the problem.
Studies show that growing churches grow because
the laity want them to grow. You don't.
We need some gro-ti-vational programs:
expensive but worth it.
More people will come if we saddle this church with debt.
Cornerstone will show us how."


"CEO OF CHURCH GROWTH"  ?
(from the "Together" WELS e-letter: Feb. 1.; article by President Schroeder)
"Schools Focus on Missions and Evangelism" is the title of President Schroeder's lead story in today's e-letter.  That's funny.  Aren't they supposed to focus on theology and doctrine?  Pastor Schroeder talks of "a mission mindset...students can keep mission work and evangelism as the focus of their lives as Christians and at the heart of what they do in their future ministry."  This seems out of balance with the needs of the congregations these students will serve.  Aren't pastors to teach the Word, administer the Means of Grace, and nurture a knowledge of the Confessions along with evangelism?  This can only be done when called workers are more focused on the Lutheran Christians in front of their faces than they are on the elusive 'targets' who never find their way into a WELS church.  This can only be done when pastors are in each members' home making certain that the spiritual leader of the family is teaching the Catechism to his family.  Maybe then at confirmation time we wouldn't have so many kids bumbling their way through the inquisition.  I wouldn't have confirmed half the kids that my pastors did because they didn't know the faith!
I can vouch for the emphasis on missions for vicars Schroeder talks about.  Our congregation had a vicar fill in one Sunday.  He spent about 5 minutes talking about the need to share the Gospel and about 20 minutes telling us how to get over our fear of talking to people. "Don't be afraid....Don't be shy...It's EASY to talk to people.  It really IS."  Who was this guy?-Pastor Dale Carnegie? 
I'm really not sure why the Synod continues to send me its materials. Schroeder himself knows that we left and why.  I especially don't understand the solicitations for WELS Kingdom Workers, special mission offerings, and for aid to the Seminary that I keep getting. We ALWAYS supported the Synod.  My wife and I tithed during periods of employment and unemployment, and in retirement. When I took my stand and "wrote a letter" last year, who supported the confessional issues I brought up concerning Thrivent and Ski/Glende?  Certainly not the President. And instead of standing by me, my pastor chastized me and attacked us personally when we left the Synod and the congregation.  Now WELS wants my ongoing financial support.  Sorry, but I could NEVER violate WELS' Fellowship Doctrine.  So here's a quarter....call someone who cares.
Cornhusker (proudly) Former WELS.
***

GJ - I heard that speech at Mequon, in homiletics class. Balge was astounded but said very little. The rant came from evangelism class and he knew who taught that - Valleskey. WELS has been nagging its members about outreach instead of proclaiming the Gospel. Gurgle used to do that, but everyone knew how dumb he was. "An empty suit," one WELS pastor said.

Schroeder is supposed to be smart, but he is saying the same things.

Sassy Sue Feeds the Birds

Norma Boeckler created this male cardinal picture, which is just what they look like outside my window.


We are in the middle of the Sno-pocalypse. At dawn we had almost nothing on the ground. A few hours later we had inches on the ground, more falling, and the roads closed. The state highway may be open, but we cannot see it through the snow.

Nevertheless, Sassy Sue and I went out to feed the birds. She was moping, because she loves going out about this time every day. Sassy pranced through the snow and chased some birds out of the bushes. By the time we were done, she was beaming, with snow on her face and back.

Snow and sleet bring out the birds, especially if they have long-term feeding stations. The blue jays were screeching near the backyard squirrel feeder, so I put another ear of corn on the spike. Some corn was left, which told me the squirrels slept in rather than brave the storm. Blue jays like the corn kernels and treat them as nuts, pecking at them while held in their claws.

Sassy and I took sunflower seeds and loose corn to the area under the front porch. Later, plenty of birds were eating from the planter-feeder and also among the rocks.

Near the window, where I work, the cardinals, titmice, and woodpeckers were feeding. Yesterday I filled up the Duncraft feeder and put in another block of suet. The basket lasted about three months, so it is the least expensive feeder. Suet baskets are also handy for those who go away on trips. The suet keeps a number of birds coming at all times. Birds, like people, enjoy plenty of company and stay wary of new or quiet feeding areas.

The ear of corn was eaten to the cob, so Sassy and I replaced it. We also scattered extra seed around the ground and behind the bushes. Birds can navigate the sides of the house with ease, so I often see them around the windows, clinging to the wood with the claws. I wonder if they are looking in to thank me or to remind me.

By coincidence, a small bird came into the garage while I was getting out seed. I had already done some feeding at that point, but neglected the snow covered spot near the garage door. I swept an area clear and put down some fresh seed. It never lasts long.

I noticed before the storm how much bird singing we hear now. One reason for singing is the male bird establishing his territory, but it is still early for that. Male cardinals are feeding together, not competing for females yes. Birds are naturally cheerful and make us feel happy with them. They have no savings, no retirement. Few of them store food, so they start the day hungry but optimistic, singing Matins, praising the Creator.

Everyone knows Sassy at the dog park. She is famous for retrieving and for catching high pop flyballs.
She loves the applause and the praise.

Another Head Fake

Thompson has a real doctorate, a rarity in the Shrinker sorority.



Dr. Glen Thompson has accepted Asia Lutheran Seminary's call to serve as a full-time professor in Hong Kong. Thompson will teach classes in New Testament history and church history. He will also work on preparing courses for non-residential seminary students that can be taught across East Asia.
"By his coming Dr. Thompson enables Asia Lutheran Seminary to serve students beyond Hong Kong," explains Dr. Steven Witte, president of the seminary. "Throughout most of its six-year history students from around the Chinese-speaking world have desired to take courses at Asia Lutheran Seminary. We believe that the additional expertise, experience, and scholarship of Dr. Thompson now make that goal realistic. We are thankful to God and our WELS brothers and sisters for sending another worker out into the harvest field."

***
GJ -
Steve Witte is a founder of Church and Change, from the notorious Fox Valley area. His "doctorate" is a DMin from Gordon Conwell. His final project was a badly written Schwaermer essay. Anyone can get it from Inter-Library Loan.

I don't know much about Thompson, but WELS would never let a Lutheran into the world mission business.

Don't forget readers, lots of men, including DPs, have to travel all over the world to check out these things, burning through more money than Congress before an election.

Not Even Lutheran



Daniel Baker has left a new comment on your post "Words of Wisdom":

I really think that Northwest SD Lutheran's last paragraph sums up the situation nicely. Pastors and teachers are simply not teaching adequately (if at all) what a vital and biblical foundation the written and sacramental Word of God is to the Church.

So-called "Lutherans" like to pretend that they present the Sacraments in their biblical truth and purity, but the reality is that they are diminished to ordinances in the same manner as they are among the Protestant sects. The Sacraments are relegated to bi-monthly (or less) mandates, which is no doubt a prominent factor behind the diminishing use of liturgy - of what use is the mass when its core and chief purpose is removed? What is the Church offering if not our crucified and risen Lord? This is why "Lutherans" are resorting to felt-needs "evangelism."

Likewise, the written Word - though widely acclaimed as of the utmost importance (as it is among the various Reformed/Evangelical sects) - is in reality seen as a document that we need to analyze and examine with our reason; one that we need to "dig deep" into in order to increase our own understanding.

This is a predominant view among Protestants and faux-Lutherans, one which directly conflicts with the work of the Holy Spirit as the life-giving Author of faith and enlightening Sanctifier of souls. We cannot accept the simple truth of the Gospel. No, we have to add SOMETHING to it. It HAS to be more difficult than it seems. Of course, this is a fallacy. As the hymnist wrote: "Nothing can be added, no word on bended knee, beyond the simple Gospel -- My Savior calls for me."

The problem, as always, is anthropocentrism. The first thing that needs to change is our man-centered ideologies with regard to the Word and Sacraments. If that occurs, all the other problems we have in the WELS (and Lutheranism as a whole) will slowly fade away.

***

GJ - Twice a month is quite an improvement over once a month. The Pietistic Lutheran standard was three times a year. In Ontario, which was a blend of orthodoxy and Pietims in the old days, Holy Communion was offered once a month and most people left during the communion hymn.

The Syn Conference is a blend of Pietism and post-Concord orthodoxy. Pietism has been victorious, so now the trendy copy-cat Emergent Church parishes (The SORE, CrossWalk) hide Holy Communion or avoid it altogether.

---

LutherRocks has left a new comment on your post "Not Even Lutheran":

What power is left in the Sacraments when all men are already forgiven according to UOJ; Before they were even born?


***

GJ - They never face their contradictions. Since a baby is justified before he is born, does he "make a decision" as J. P. Meyer said, when he is baptized? I would love to hear Jay Webber explain that riddle.

Monday, January 31, 2011

Words of Wisdom



Northwest SD Lutheran has left a new comment on your post "How Many Shrinker Churches in the Syn Conference W...":

It is always interesting to see things like this. In the world the church is always struggling but never succumbing. The church is a bent reed that will not break and smoldering wick that will not be snuffed out. These are the churches that build upon Christ as the Rock. Many are having economic troubles but if the Church is trusting in the Word of God it will make it through. My church is a perfect example as we will likely sell the current church that is rundown and move to a smaller location or merge with another congregation. God has kept us here by his grace.
But what about those who build on sand like The SORE and others. I do not know where Glende and Ski ever thought that people were going to come and watch their movie when they can go to the one at the non denom movie theater down the road. Even worse they could go to Lakewood in Dallas. Before we know it, Ski and Glende will be heading there too.

The people who go to Church are those who want to go and receive the Word and the Sacrament. In this society we do not have that many who do this on Sundays. I do believe many people want Word and Sacrament they just have not had anyone explain the Word and Sacrament explained the way God explains it in the Bible to them. If people want to go to a movie they will go to one and not to one with the people at the church hosting it. Church is Church and not a movie. The only way a church succeeds is by being a church and not a wet nurse for felt needs. If building size mattered then the churches who change would be succeeding and they clearly aren't.

***

GJ - As Luther wrote, and Walther quoted at the end of Law and Gospel, orthodoxy produces fruit. Faithfulness is success. Although we all fall victim to thinking about material gains, God will provide and He will accomplish His will through the Word.

Meet the CEO of Church and Change

Mark Schroeder, the head of Church and Change. gets a healthy salary, great benefits, and world travel, thanks to WELS offerings.


"But wait," you are saying. "Isn't Mark Schroeder the Sect President?"

Yes, but that is the beauty of Church and Change. They are too cheap to pay their own way. In fact, they started with WELS offering money. That is like poisoning the patient and billing him for the arsenic in advance. But it works for them.

Mark forced Wayne Mueller out as as First VP. Wayne was always a Church Growth leader, even when he lied about CG existing in WELS (but it was confessional if it were, which it weren't).

The First VP was even more obvious - Jim Huebner, son of Al Just's criminal defense lawyer. Stop whining. You read this blog for those asides.

Huebner went to Fuller with Larry Olson and Paul Calvin Kelm, always worked with them, always belonged to the CG sorority in WELS. Huebner is the poster child for Church and Change.

The one, great victory of Schroeder's presidency has been - drumroll - adding Lutheran to the title of FIC, making it FICL, to rhyme with pickle. The content remained all Church and Change, with the worst of the lot represented in each issue: Bivens (Fuller), Aderman (founder of Church and Change), Patterson (don't get me started).

The portable Asian seminary needed a new president. The old one, John Lawrenz, was Church and Change, stepping aside for Steve Witt, another founder of Church and Change.

Meanwhile, both colleges and The Sausage Factory are dominated by Church and Changers. The graduates are impoverished in two ways. First of all, they pay a fortune for a third-rate education. Secondly, they do not get a Lutheran education but an anti-Lutheran brainwashing experience.

Schroeder endorsed the Church and Change feminist conference in his presidential email letter. Guess who the advisors to that group are - Church and Changers.

Meanwhile, he has done nothing about The CORE, plagiarism, and other congregations hiding their anti-Lutheran identity.

Once upon a time, people thought Church and Change would push him out of office. Why? He has done everything they want.

DP Jon Buchholz does the same thing, pretending to be against Church and Change while promoting their cause every chance he gets.

But just wait about 30 years. They are working on it.

And, by all means, write a letter.

---

grumpy has left a new comment on your post "Meet the CEO of Church and Change":

So the honeymoon with Schroeder is over? I thought you used to sing his praises.

One other victory you neglected to mention was that he has saved the prep school system.

I think some cliques within the WELS are so well entrenched and so well connected that, because of the organization of the WELS, it would be nearly impossible to expel them without declaring a civil war within the WELS.

Another issue is somewhat ironic. Whereas the laity are kept in check very quickly if something is perceived as being outside the bounds of WELS doctrine, called workers are given a MUCH more lax environment.

Case in point:

Jeske can be openly involved with a broadcast associated with the Missouri Synod, correct?
Let it be known that some lay members occasionally visit a nearby Missouri Synod church once a month or so in order to worship with friends or relatives, and see how the hammer comes down.

Lastly, I hate to remind Dr. Jackson, but no colleges or preps are closing this year either...ZING!!!!

Grumps

***

GJ - I did not sing Schroeder's praises. I saw a couple of positive moves, but that was it. I thought he needed time. Others have said to me, "I am disappointed. He is ineffective as a leader."

I posted about the closing of schools a few months ago. Church bodies are slow to take action. One person admitted it was already discussed (dividing the college into two other locations) at Mary Lou College. The source is Pastor Jenswold, so ask him what he was talking about. Zing!

Schroeder stopped the outright looting going on at headquarters. I suggest putting RFID tags on the silverware and crockery at Holy Word, Austin, Texas.

Saved the preps? Time will tell. The demographics say otherwise.

One pastor wrote me that three things need to be eviscerated before WELS can survive:
1. UOJ.
2. The school system.
3. The WELSian concept of ministry.

He agreed about this with another WELS pastor.

Many times I pass on the insights of another, whether it comes through email or conversation.

Sunday, January 30, 2011

How Episcopal Is the LCMS?
No Difference with Matt Harrison

Matt's parents knew he would be different when he grew up.


I still get Christian News, so I thought the lawsuit against the ladies in California, to take away their church property, was thrown out of court. Later, I read that the lawsuit was still ongoing.

The synods do not like lawyers and lawsuits, unless they are hiring the lawyers (with your offering money) and suing your congregation. The District Popes are above the law, so try to get them to do what is right when they lie, steal, abuse, and serve as pimps for their adulterous and molesting pastors.

Nevertheless, I thought the lawsuit was over for good when the dream candidate, Matt Harrison, was elected as Missouri Synod President. He replaced the eee-vul Jerry Kieschnick, so everything had to change.

One reader was quick to point out that Missouri is no different from the Episcopal Church in suing to take away congregational property. The degree of harm may be worse with Presiding Bishop Katie, but that is no defense of Missouri's continuing actions.

About 99.9% of the congregations will say, "That is their worry, way out West, in the Land of Fruit and Nuts, not ours."

Everyone has been saying that about one situation after another, for the last 50 years.

Bible Difficulties And Seeming Difficulties - William Arndt




Amazon is one source for the book. Click here for some prices.

Alibris is another source.

This volume is a combination of Bible Difficulties and Does the Bible Contradict Itself?

We will be using this book in a few weeks. It is an excellent resource for defending the faith (apologetics).

How Many Shrinker Churches in the Syn Conference Will Go Insolvent from Masonry Evangelism Loans?

They even spell it different in the South.



In a Sunday sermon, pastor Larry Perkins stood in his church's family-life center and preached to the children in his congregation: Believe in yourself and your future. Never give up the dream that God planted inside you. Never allow failure to stand in the way of success.

The next day, Perkins sat next to his attorney before a bankruptcy official, explaining why his Mission Road Church of God in Christ was unable to pay the $1.6 million it owed the bank for construction of the family-life center in Oviedo.

What was once unheard of — a church declaring bankruptcy — has become increasingly common in this recession as declining collection-plate revenues make it harder to pay the bills.

In addition to Mission Road Church, Agape Assembly Baptist Church in Pine Hills and its economic-development ministry also filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy last month. The church, which is in foreclosure, listed assets of $6.5 million and debts of $6.6 million.



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Agape pastor Richard Bishop did not respond to requests for comment. But according to bankruptcy records, he took out mortgages of $4.9 million on his Pine Hills church and $770,500 on his "parsonage" in 2004. The bankruptcy records show the church's income declined by more than half in only two years — from $764,990 in 2008 to $303,849 in 2010.

In the past year, an estimated 100 churches filed for bankruptcy, including the oldest black church in DeKalb County, Ga., and Robert Schuller's 10,000-member Crystal Cathedral megachurch in California. And churches aren't the only ones — a Boynton Beach synagogue filed bankruptcy last June.

"Churches are going through a very difficult time, but to actually file for bankruptcy is extremely unusual," said Simeon May, chief executive for the Texas-based National Association of Church Business Administration.

Some churches got caught up in the heady days of the 1990s and early 2000s when megachurches proliferated. The money spent on church construction and expansion more than tripled in 10 years, going from $2.8 billion in 1993 to $8.6 billion in 2003, according to the U.S. Census.

Church congregations were part of the same society that wanted supersized houses and the easy loans that made it possible, said John Farina, associate professor of religious studies at George Mason University in Fairfax, Va. In the competitive marketplace of religion, bigger was better and the way to get bigger was to offer members more for their weekly contributions.

"The easy money and the temptation to spend more money than you make affected the churches just like the culture," Farina said.

Limited reserves

Bankruptcy isn't always a case of churches living beyond their means. Churches often operate without large cash reserves. Their mission, as Christian organizations, is to use the money they collect to help others, not to "bury the gold" in a big bank account, said Marc McMurrin, executive director of operations for Northland, A Church Distributed, in Longwood.

"It's a tension between what is the right business decision and what is the right ministry decision," he said. "You need an emergency fund, but you want to put as much resources as you can into the kingdom."

In the past few years, Northland has had to cut its staff from 125 to 75, eliminate programs and postpone a capital campaign because of a drop in contributions from its 10,000 members, McMurrin said. Northland's $43 million building was half paid for when it opened in 2007, but the church can't ask its members to help pay off the church's mortgage when so many are having problems paying their own mortgages, he said.

In hard economic times, there is only so much a church can do to reduce expenses, and only a few ways it can make more money. The Worship Center Church in Pine Hills raised $7,000 by raffling off gift baskets of donated items to offset some of the decline in its Sunday collections, pastor Frank E. Thompson said.

But there's a limit to how many of those fundraisers you can hold, Thompson said. He had to halt plans to open portable classrooms for an after-school program at his church because of a lack of money to pay for the project.

The biggest problem for churches in this recession, Thompson said, was a change in the relationship between banks and churches. In the past, lenders were more willing to work with churches facing financial troubles. Banks knew churches were good investments with relatively little risk of default. Foreclosures were rare, and bankruptcies were practically unknown.

But in this recession, bank consolidation meant fewer local banks with less personal connection with pastors. And those bigger banks were themselves in trouble.

"When churches needed funds, they could go to the bank and say, 'We need a loan,' " Thompson said. "That option is completely gone."

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GJ - I don't mean recruiting at the Masonic Lodge, although ELS retired President George Orvick did that in his last parish.

The WELS officials get their Cornerstone buddies into a congregation. They do a study (for how much money?) and conclude - "You need to spend millions on your building." They offer to raise the money for a huge fee. The congregation will grow just because of the expansion.

Hoo boy - the smell of fresh plaster and carpet glue will bring them prospects running to join, especially when they see the feminist hymnal. A year or two later, the voters complain that the congregation did not grow from adding to the debt!

The Shrinker consultants, vacationing in the Bahamas, say over their cell phones, "What? Can't hear. Bad reception. Sorry."