Saturday, August 20, 2011

SP Harrison's Campaign Manager -
A Man in Full

McCain is busy at two other blogs while posting on his. He has a divine call to blog, unlike those fake pastors who actually preach and teach each Sunday.

ALPB Forum

I am equally concerned about Paul T. McCain's constant demonizing and hammering of the ELCA. Others here actually attempt to engage in dialogue; but Paul T. McCain only sends condemnations and the mean, pompous, ain't-it-awful postings which are as tiresome as his flacking for his employer. Charles Austin, ELCA Pastor. Retired.

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Steadfast Lutherans (One of the Lobbying Arms of Team Harrison)  

Frankly, PTM, I don’t care about your comment policy. It’s your blog, do anything you please. There.

What I am trying to do is point out to you, that you do, on everyone else’s blogs, what you won’t allow on your own! As enough people have said by now, you contribute a lot of the undesirable behavior here on BJS yourself. It’s embarrassing that you don’t recognize the fact! If you really can’t stand the way this place is run, find yourself another playroom!
Helen

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LutherQuest

Paul T. McCain:
Rick, I know you are a smart guy, so your willful ignorance on this issue is really baffling. You are actually willing to say that LCMS Lutheranism's English Bible tradition trumps the use of the Apocrypha in every Luther Bible since 1534 when it was published?

Seems that the best response to any intelligent information you receive on this point is to respond with silly pictures and comments.



Friday, August 19, 2011

Caleb's Ideas about Free Conferences




I find this interesting that the WELS would actually host a “Free Conference” at New Ulm.

Traditionally, in the past the WELS would squeal like a rat pushed down a snakes throat when invited to a free conference. Thy avoided them within and without the synod in the past; especially here in Milwaukee.

Now they are promoting their own free conferences which I would normally applaud. However, I am distrusting their motives here and I do not know why.

I guess my gut tells me, if there is a “free conference” it should be about compelling subjects where individual pastors and theologians can speak “freely” without representing synods without any rancor or retribution. I suppose if you showed up and announced it in advance you would somehow get “bushwacked.”

I would like to see in a Free Conference………….
Compelling subjects like:

1. What is defined as Lutheranism today. Are there confessional absolutes expressed as written confessions or are they now situational? Or, are those absolutes redefined periodically by the Priesthood and if so what is that definition?

2. Is the Book of Concord still relevant today as a “Quia” Subcription to the norm of Scripture and if not what is? Does a belief system in scripture necessitate a Quia Subscription applied to scriptures in some form of expression? If not, are all confessions irrelevant? Is the process of interpreting Scriptures as the norm that norms all an evolutionary process whose interpretation is the divine providence of the sacradotal priesthood and their perceived theological truths to the ontological, cosmological, and teleological and moral issues of the day?

In short in logic there is a syllogism; If not A then B. What is your B and whatever you define it as; what is it, define it on paper.

In today’s theology, what is meant by the “efficacy of the word” as applied to Lutheran theology. Does this differ in any way to the Reformation fathers interpretation of that phrase? Compare and contrast.

While these plastic priests are contemplating their navels I would like some of this stuff addressed.

Caleb

***

GJ - Several have already wondered why I was not asked to respond about justification. My response was, "Because I know the score."

It is good to have false teachers try to explain themselves in public. They have been hiding in the woodwork too long.

Luther's Sermon on the Unrighteous Servant, Luke 16:
Kelmed from the Baker Set


More Sermons by Martin Luther

A Sermon by Martin Luther; taken from his Church Postil.

[The following sermon is taken from volume IV:292-301 of The Sermons of Martin Luther, published by Baker Book House (Grand Rapids, MI, 1983). It was originally published in 1904 in English by Lutherans in All Lands (Minneapolis, MN), as The Precious and Sacred Writings of Martin Luther, vol. 13. The pagination from the Baker edition has been maintained for referencing. This e-text was scanned and edited by Richard P. Bucher, it is in the public domain and it may be copied and distributed without restriction.]

1. This is truly a Gospel for priests and monks, and will bring them money, unless we prevent it. Before entering upon the consideration of it, we must accustom ourselves to the language used, especially the word mammon. The Jews were acquainted with this word from the Hebrew, and it has come down to us, just like other Hebrew words, as Halleluja, Amen, Kyrie eleison. In German mammon means riches, not simply riches, but a superfluity of riches, whatever is beyond our needs. However, that which is called mammon and that which is not called mammon are distinguished in a twofold way. First, if the estimate be according to that of our Lord God and of the truth, there are many who possess mammon. But if the estimate be that of the world and of man's mind, there are few who possess it. For our leaders in thought have taught in the high schools and even from the pulpit, that everyone should see to his station in life, what be needs, and adjust his possessions accordingly. If he be a man with wife and children, he needs more, for where many persons are there much will be needed. And when we reckon thus, no one has anything to spare, but everyone would rather have more. If one has two thousand guilders he says, this I need for my family, to support myself, my wife and children.

2. In the second place they have taught that one is not bound to help, except in cases of the greatest need. Such teaching entirely overthrows the Gospel, so that no one has been helpful to another; but they have in the meantime built churches; and yet in doing so they did not even wait for the greatest need, until the arches were rent asunder and churches became roofless, but they gave to great excess, spreading their gold upon the walls. To sum up the whole matter, mammon properly means, that a man has more than he needs for his support, so that he can help others without injuring himself.

3. Hence the Lord calls it "The mammon of unrighteousness," because it is daily made use of by the wicked; as it is said: riches develop courage, and the heathen have also called it irritamenta malorum, riches tempt to evil. Again St. Paul says, I Tim. 6:10: "The love of money is the root of all kinds of evil," whence cometh strife, pride, war and bloodshed. Therefore it is also called here the unrighteous mammon, because it is applied to such evil uses, and is a great cause of evil to men.

4. Nevertheless it is God's creature like wine and corn, and the creatures of God are good. Why then does he call them evil? Because they tempt us to so much evil, as Paul says to the Ephesians, 5:16: "Redeeming the time, because the days are evil." Not that the time or days in themselves are evil, but because great evil is done in them. He also says to the Romans, 2:5: "The day of wrath and revelation of the righteous judgment of God." Although the day is good, but because God's wrath will be revealed on that day, the day must take its name from it. And thus, since mammon runs into the service of evil, Christ calls it mammon of unrighteousness, namely, that which we have above our needs and we will not use in helping our neighbor; for this we possess unrighteously, and before God it is stolen goods, for in the presence of God one is bound to give and lend, and suffer himself to be deprived of it. Therefore as the saying runs, the greatest owners of property are the greatest thieves; because they possess far more than they need, and give the least possible to others. So much on the meaning of the word; we now return to the Gospel.

5. We take this parable in a common sense way, without seeking any subtleties in it, as Jerome has done, for it is not necessary to seek a subtle meaning, the pure milk is sufficient. The parable in itself teaches how the steward deprived his master of his property, and artfully, but deceitfully and falsely, appropriated it to himself. For it is riot right, that he, who previously cheated his master out of his property, should also act most deceitfully to secure for himself easy days all his life; let us abide by this explanation. For the Lord concludes that the unjust steward did wisely. He does not praise the thing in itself as good, but blames him for previously squandering his master's goods, and afterwards shrewdly appropriating his property. This however the Lord commends, namely, that he did not forget himself, praising nought but his cunning and shrewdness. Just as when a flirt draws the whole world after her, and I say: she is a clever flirt, she knows her business. The Lord further concludes, that just as the steward is wise and shrewd in his transactions, so should we also be in obtaining eternal life.

6. And that you may understand this, take the passage of St. Paul to the Romans, 5:14, Adam a type of Christ. How can the Apostle compare Adam to Christ, since Adam brought upon us sin and death, and Christ brought righteousness and life? He compares Christ to Adam in regard to origin and source, but not in regard to the fruit and work. For as Adam is the source and chief of all sinners, so Christ is the source and head of all the saints. For we have inherited from Adam nothing but sin, condemnation and the eternal curse; but from Christ we have obtained righteousness and salvation. Now these two are not alike, for sin is punishable, and righteousness is praiseworthy. But he compares them in regard to their origin; just as by Adam sin and death came upon all men, so by Christ righteousness and life come upon us.

7. Thus he compares here the unjust to the just. As the unjust man acts shrewdly, though wrongly and like a rogue, so we also should act shrewdly but righteously in godliness. This is the proper understanding of this parable. For the Lord says: "The children of this world are wiser than the children of light." So that the children of light should learn wisdom from the children of darkness or the world. Just as they are wise in their transactions, so should also the children of light be wise in their transactions. Therefore he adds, "in their generation." Here are truly three great questions, in which our adversaries quote this Gospel against us, when the Lord says:

"Make to yourselves friends by means of the mammon of unrighteousness, that, when it shall fail, they may receive you into the eternal tabernacles."

8. From this they try to conclude, that we must first of all do works to become good. For they say, here we read: "Make to yourselves friends," and this surely means to do works. Secondly, they say, that God here even desires to praise works, and not only that, but also to reward them. For here we read of work and its reward, and nothing is said of faith. In the, third place they claim that Christ here wishes to establish the comfort and help of the saints, when he says: "Make to yourselves friends by means of the mammon of unrighteousness, that, when it shall fail, may receive you into the eternal tabernacles." Thus Gospel is made to directly oppose us, for it says: "Make to yourselves friends." That is, do good works, that they may receive you into the eternal tabernacles. This appears to mean that we should previously merit our reception by them into the eternal tabernacles. These three points the Pope and his priests have claimed strongly for their side, and he has even called his indulgences the mammon of iniquity, mammon iniquitatis, unrighteous mammon.

9. If they thus attack us we must answer. Above all things it must be remembered that there is indeed no doubt whatever, that faith and love are the only source, as you have ever learned, that through faith we become inwardly pious, and we outwardly prove our faith by our works of love. For I have often said, that the Scriptures speak of man in a twofold manner. At one time of the inner man, and then again of the outer man. For the Scriptures properly make distinctions, just as when I speak of a foot, I do not mean a nose. So the Scriptures at one time speak of us as of the Spirit, spiritual, how we must stand before God by faith, for this purpose he sends forth his Word to which we hold, and afterwards he follows or endows with his Spirit. Thus the tree must be good beforehand, as you have recently heard.

10. This godliness cannot be attained by anyone without grace in his heart. If I am to make for myself friends by means of mammon, I must first be godly. For compare these two statements: A corrupt tree cannot bring forth good fruit, and again, a good tree cannot bring forth evil fruit. From which judge for yourself: if I am to do good and give away mammon, I must indeed be first good at heart, for God looketh upon the heart, and as he finds the heart, so he estimates our works. This I say, that men should not cram works into the heart, but let the heart first be good through faith, that the works may flow forth, otherwise you do no one any good; for if you have before given a person anything, it did not come from the heart. Hence the conclusion is, that I must first be good before I can do good. You cannot build from without inward, you do not commence at the roof, but at the foundation. Therefore faith must first be present.

11. Hence the Scriptures speak of us as the outer man, as we in our flesh and blood live among men. Now, that I am good, you do not know, nor do I. Hence I must establish my faith to the satisfaction of myself and of the people, and I must do good to my neighbor in order to prove my faith; thus the outward works are then merely signs of the inner faith. Works do not make me good, but show that I am good, and bear witness that the faith in me is genuine. In this manner must you understand the Scriptures here also, when they say: Give of your mammon and thus make to yourselves friends; that is, do good, that your faith may become approved. So we must also distinguish what pertains to the Spirit and what is the fruit of the Spirit.

12. Luke has described the fruit of faith thus: Give to the poor and make to yourself friends. As though he would say: I will not now speak of faith, but how you should prove your faith. Wherefore do good to your neighbor, and if you can give from the heart you may be assured that you believe. Thus the Scriptures speak at one time of fruits, at another time of faith. Again, they also speak of fruits, when they teach, Mat. 25:42, how the Lord will speak to the lost on the last day: "I was hungry, and ye did not give me to eat; I was athirst, and ye gave me no drink," and the like. This means, you have not believed, as I will prove to you by your own works.

13. The Scriptures in some passages speak of the outward conduct, and in others of the inner. Now if you will apply that which is said of the outward to the heart and confuse matters, you pervert it and do wrong. Hence you must let the distinction remain, and observe it. These expressions: I have been hungry, thirsty, shelterless, naked, sick and in prison, and you have shown me no work of mercy, refer to the external conduct, and signify as much as: you have never exhibited any outward conduct by which you have shown your faith; and to prove this, I appeal to the poor as witnesses. Therefore, faith alone must be present first to make us good, after that good works must follow to prove our piety. This now is one point, namely, concerning works.

14. The second point is far more difficult, when the Lord says: "Make to yourselves friends by means of the mammon of unrighteousness; that, when it shall fail, they may receive you into the eternal tabernacles." You say, our adversaries cry: you say a person shall not do good works to obtain eternal life; behold, here it reads differently. Now, what shall we answer? There are many passages here and there, showing how we wish to have merit on our part. By quoting these passages they intend to disprove to us God's mercy, and to lead us to satisfy God's righteousness by our good works. By all means beware of this, and insist that it is nothing but pure grace and mercy alone, and say: I am a poor sinner, 0 God, forgive me my sins, gladly will I say nothing about my merit, only say thou nothing of thy judgment! Thus David said: "Enter not into judgment with thy servant; for in thy sight no man living is righteous," Ps. 143:2. And just for this reason Christ is given to us as our Mediator. If we wish to enter into judgment before God with our good works, we cast Christ aside as our Mediator, and cannot stand before God. Therefore let him remain our Mediator and abide thou under the shadow of his wings, as Psalm 91:4 reads: "He will cover thee with his pinions, and under his wings shalt thou take refuge." Therefore speak thus: 0 God, I would not merit anything before thee by my own works, but will employ them only to serve my neighbor, and I will depend only upon thy mercy.



15. You must hence remember that eternal life consists of two things, faith and what follows faith. If you go and believe and do good to your neighbor, everlasting life must follow, although you never think about it. Just as when you take a good drink, the taste will follow as soon as you drink, even though you do not seek it. So it is also with hell, the damned do not seek it, but it follows unsought and undesired, and he must inherit it whether he will or no. This St. Paul also says, I Thes. 2:15-16, of the persecuters of the Gospel: They "drove out us, and pleased not God, and are contrary to all men; forbidding us to speak to the Gentiles that they may be saved; to fill up their sins always, but the wrath is come upon them to the uttermost."

As though he would say: They only persecute us to fill the measure of their sins and fairly to deserve hell, and ever urge their sins more and more until they become entirely hardened, and finally have no regard for either God or man.

16. Thus the Scriptures declare here, that we should do good, so that we may be saved; and this is not meant to say, that we must first earn salvation by our works, but that we must believe, and it will follow of itself. Therefore mark well, that you do not take what follows for what goes before, and keep yourself free from the merit of works. Should God give us heaven for our works? No, no, he has already given us heaven freely, out of mere mercy. Therefore give unto the poor, in order that the eternal tabernacles may follow, and not that you may merit them by your works.
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17. Observe then that these passages are explained in two different ways. First, that a man should seek salvation by works, which is false. Second, as a consequence of faith, which is right. Therefore, you are not to seek heaven with any kind of works, but only to do the works freely, then the result, eternal life, will follow of itself without your seeking. For if I should see heaven standing open and could merit it by picking up a straw, I would not do it, lest I might say: Behold, I have earned it! No, no, not to my deservings, but to God be the glory, who has given me his Son to abolish sin and hell for me.

18. In the third place, you should faithfully hold fast to the following words: "That they may receive you into the eternal tabernacles." Behold, they say, here it stands written that they receive us into heaven, how then can you say that we dare not place the saints as mediators before God, and that they cannot help us to heaven? Here observe, that we have but one Redeemer before God, and he is Christ. For thus St. Paul speaks, 1 Tim. 2:5: "For there is one God, one Mediator also between God and man, himself man, Christ Jesus." Again, Christ himself in John 14:6 says: "I am the way, no man cometh unto the Father but by me." Therefore we must not seek our consolation in any of the saints, but in Christ alone, through whose merits alone we and all Saints are saved. Therefore I will not give a penny for St. Peter's merits, that he should help me. He cannot help himself, but whatever he has he has from God by faith in Christ. Now then, if he cannot help himself, how then can he do anything for me? Consequently I must have another, who is Christ, God and man in one.

19. But how can he say: "Make to yourselves friends, that they may receive you into the eternal tabernacles?" This passage we understand from Mat. 25:37-40, where Christ tells us how the King will answer them who will say on the last day: "Lord, when saw we thee hungry, athirst, homeless, naked, sick and in prison? Verily I say unto you," he will say, "inasmuch as ye did it unto one of these my brethren, ye did it unto me." Here the Lord shows who those friends are, namely, the poor and needy. As though to say: when you make them your friends, then you have me as your friend also, for they are my members.


20. Now one thought remains: How will they receive us into the eternal tabernacles, as the text here says? Will they lead us in by the hand? No, but when we come before the judgment seat of God, poor persons whom we have assisted here, will stand in heaven and say: he has washed my feet, he gave me drink, food, clothing and the like. He will certainly be my friend and a witness of my faith, whatever words he may use to declare it. Then a beggar will be more useful to me than St. Peter or St. Paul, for there none of these can help. But when a beggar comes and says: 'My God, this he has done unto me as thy child! that will help me, for God will say: Whatsoever you have done unto these, you have done unto me. Therefore these poor people will not be our helpers but our witnesses so that God shall receive us. By this I would not object to your honoring St. Peter and other saints, for he is a member of Christ and of God. But you do better by giving your neighbor a penny, than by building a church of gold for St. Peter. For to help your neighbor is commanded, but it is not commanded to build a church to St. Peter. Now everything is twisted the wrong way, one goes to a certain passage in St. James, another to Aix-la-Chapelle, another to Rome, to seek help from the departed saints. But the poor people, who are the real sainthood, are left behind lying in the streets. Let this be sufficient on this Gospel.

American Lutheran Mythologies
And the Truth



WELS - LCMS - Seminex - ALC - ELCA. UOJ all the way.
Many people act upon falsehoods and repeat them. For instance, almost everyone seems to think that birds feeding at a bird-feeder will die of starvation if the residents go on vacation for two weeks. The birds do not depend on bird-feeders any more than humans depend on Fritos to stay alive. Nevertheless, the myth of the bird-feeder as songbird heroin continues. These are some of the mythologies spread by ignorance, lies, and PR smokescreens:
  1. The Saxon migration took place for religious freedom. Truth - everyone came over for one reason only, to follow Bishop Stephan.
  2. The Saxon migration created the Lutheran Church Missouri Synod. Truth - Loehe began a group and invited the St. Louis/Perry County associate to join.
  3. C. F. W. Walther discovered Bishop Stephan's adultery and deposed him, taking charge as a heroic savior of the nascent Missouri Synod. Truth - Stephan left after being under house arrest for sexual abuse of his members, taking his mistress along but leaving his wife and children at home. Truth - Walther had to know about the adultery before they left, but he had to skip town himself, for kidnapping his niece and nephew from his father's parsonage.
  4. C. F. W. Walther was an orthodox Lutheran who tried to set everyone straight, thanks to his study of Luther. Truth - Walther was a Pietist who continued his amalgamation of Halle Pietism and Lutheran doctrine.
  5. The Old Lutherans battled the New Lutherans in America. Truth - All the American groups began with Pietism. The lager-Pietists from the Muhlenberg tradition (Pietism aged to perfection) took their Enthusiasm to the next level - revivalism. The General Council split continued their Pietism in some respects but worked toward fidelity to the Lutheran Confessions.
  6. Walther was a hero. Truth - Walther left Europe a criminal and engaged in additional felonies in taking over the Missouri group, including the crimes of robbery, mob action, threatening the life of another person, and kidnapping.
  7. The Syn Conference taught UOJ from the beginning and always has. Truth - The Missouri Synod had a justification by faith catechism in German in the early 1900s and still publishes a KJV catechism which is justification by faith. Gausewitz wrote a justification by faith catechism (German and English), which was used by the Synodical Conference until WELS replaced it with the UOJ Kuske monstrosity.
  8. WELS, Missouri, and the Little Sect are not in fellowship with ELCA. Truth - they have been happily working and planning together for decades, largely through LWR and Thrivent (AAL-LB) functions.

Thursday, August 18, 2011

Two Foundational Truths of Biblical, Lutheran Doctrine:
All Errors Can Be Judged from These.
Efficacy and the Means of Grace


Lutheran writing today is completely frustrating for faithful pastors and laity. Many can detect the political game-playing and legalistic nonsense paraded about as discussion. The solution for this is simple, basic, and undeniable.

There are two foundational truths upon which all of Christian doctrine rests. If one or the other is denied, everything else will be in error. Those truths are:
  1. The efficacy of the Word alone.
  2. The Means of Grace.

The Lutheran Reformers did not like to use the plural word - doctrines. That suggests a group teachings where an individual can select this or that from the cafeteria display. There is a single revealed, clear, harmonious and unified truth - one Christian doctrine. Variations are errors, and they stem from denying the efficacy of the Word alone and the Means of Grace. The Scriptures clearly teach these truths and the Book of Concord confesses them.




The Holy Spirit works only through the Word of God and never apart from the Word of God. As Isaiah 55:8-11 clearly teaches, the effect of the Word is inevitable, never without result, never failing, never lacking in God's will. This truth shows us why God was able to fashion the universe out of nothing in six 24-hour days. The Son of God is that creating Word, John 1:1ff. That Word declares us forgiven through faith.

Enthusiasts of all stripes deny the exclusive work of the Holy Spirit through the Word - openly, blatantly, shamelessly. And Lutherans run to these religious whores to be taught by them - Leonard Sweet, Mark Driscoll, Craig Groeschel, Bill Hybels, Andy Stanley, and many more. When Lutherans study under these false teachers and ask them to be featured speakers at Lutheran conferences, they are saying, "We join you in denying the efficacy of the Word alone."

When we think that faithful preaching and administering the Means of Grace result in failure because our membership does not climb, our parking lots do not shine black in the sun, and our coffers do not fill up, we are still denying the efficacy of the Word, even if we have a token allegiance to that truth.




God prepared us for the Means of Grace throughout the Old Testament, giving mankind physical signs of His power and grace, from the rainbow in the sky to the Burning Bush. The Gospel comes to us in the invisible Word of teaching and preaching, the visible Word of Holy Baptism and Holy Communion. Absolution is also a sacrament of forgiveness, often categorized under Holy Baptism. These instruments are the only way in which God grants us forgiveness of our sin, but they are generously bestowed.

Running to Baptists for training in evangelism is a clear, bold denial of the Means of Grace. Peter only denied Jesus three times, and he repented. The Lutherans trained by Andy Stanley, Ed Stetzer, and Rick Warren deny Jesus many times - without repenting. Those Lutherans mock infant faith, mock the efficacy of the Word in creating faith in a baby's heart, and mock the forgiveness freely given believers by the visible Gospel.

Studying under non-Lutherans is subtle way to undermine, deny, and repudiate the Real Presence in Holy Communion. How can someone consecrate the elements with the efficacious Word and offer them to communicants while sitting down with scofffers (Psalm 1)?

No one has to doubt where this has led. So-called Lutheran congregations hide their confession of faith, their baptismal font, and their communion service. They replace the Scriptural liturgy with bad rock music and ditch the sermon for a mix of law salesmanship and amateur entertainment.




As long as their bellies are full and their pensions are funded, these conservative Lutheran leaders continue to lead everyone to and fro in a religious farce. The last act of this bawdy comedy climaxes forcing bad Biblical translations on a trusting public. "We know Greek and you do not! We know Hebrew and you do not! So you must go along with us as we take away the Means of Grace and the efficacy of the Word."

Seminary Cost Analysis Getting Attention at Steadfast Lutherans




I personally don’t care for Ichabod’s theology. By providing the link that you want zapped, I wanted to highlight how silly it is for pastors to engage in personal attacks. It alienates the laymen, and it does nothing to solve the ongoing problems within the LCMS.

The LCMS should carefully consider Jackson’s analysis of seminary education:
http://ichabodthegloryhasdeparted.blogspot.com/2011/05/lutheran-seminary-fraud-students-are.html

http://steadfastlutherans.org/?p=15546

Lutheran Seminary Fraud 

***

GJ - First of all, the seminary tuition analysis has been provided by someone else, who has carefully compiled the information. Anyone wanting to attend a Missouri seminary should inform himself first about costs and his graduation present - "No call for you. Pay your $50,000 student loan."

Secondly, the response about getting rid of the link is interesting. If they read something they do not like, they want to keep everyone else from finding out.

McCain promised to give everyone a vacation from his vapid, bitter comments, but he is all over ALPB, Steadfast Lutherans, and who knows what other websites.

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Brett Meyer has left a new comment on your post "Seminary Cost Analysis Getting Attention at Steadf...":

Rev. Paul McCain:
August 17th, 2011 at 19:02 | #4 Reply | Quote I wonder if Pastor Rossow is at all concerned about how stupid the comments posted here by “Mames” and “Carl Vehse” make Brothers of John the Steadfast look?

Guess not.

Mames:
August 17th, 2011 at 21:23 | #8 Reply | Quote @Rev. Paul T. McCain #4 who are you and why do you ridicule valid concerns. We have our confessions and many with collars ignore it and NOTHING is done about it. We have seen how futile it is to wait for clergy to fix things. It will take “stupid” lay confessionals to do the job.

Ghastly representation for Concordia Publishing House from McCain!

Mainline UOJ Means Being in Fellowship with Everybody,
Just as WELS and Missouri Are in Fellowship with ELCA.
Very Cool But Easy To Deny

Gradye Parsons

"I didn't borrow the stole over the suitcoat look from Gradye. He borrowed it from me, Brett."

ELCA Blog

“Since 1997, this church has establishes full-communion relationships with six partner churches,” said the ELCA Presiding Bishop Mark Hanson, adding that these relationship are bearing fruit within synods and among congregations.

The ELCA is in full communion agreements with the Moravian Church, the Presbyterian Church USA, Reformed Church in America, the United Church of Christ, The Episcopal Church, and the United Methodist Church.

Hanson introduced the Rev. Gradye Parsons, the Stated Clerk of the Presbyterian Church USA, who addressed the assembly.

***

GJ - ELCA is in fellowship with every group except the NALC and LCMC, comprised of those congregations driven out of ELCA by the Lavender Mafia.

Hanson is the Godfather of Lavender Mafia.

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Historic greeting from the Islamic Society of North America

Posted on August 18th, 2011 by assemblynews 
ELCA Presiding Bishop Mark Hanson welcomed Dr. Sayyid M. Sayeed, national director for the Office for Interfaith and Community Alliances of the Islamic Society of North America.

Hanson said this is the first time an ELCA Churchwide Assembly has welcomed and heard from an Islamic leader, representing the largest Islamic organization in the United States.

“Peace be with you,” said Dr. Sayeed. The assembly responded with, “and also with you.”

“It is certainly an historic honor to be with you today,” Sayeed told the assembly. “Today the ELCA has broken [stereotypes] when it established a committee on Lutheran-Muslim relationships, and that committee has [shared] that we love you.” The assembly applauded in response.

Free Conference -
A Chance To Learn and Confess the Truth



November 9-10 at Martin Luther College's Auditorium in New Ulm, MN; first presentation at 10:30 a.m. 11/9

Presentation #1

(10:30 a.m., November 9; reactions follow)
"Is there any genuine Lutheranism left in American Lutheranism?" And "Can it be brought to bear?" Mark Braun (Wisconsin Lutheran College, Milwaukee) will read an essay by Mark Noll originally entitled, "American Lutherans Yesterday and Today," from Lutherans Today: American Lutheran Identity in the 21st Century, Eerdmans, 2003.
Reactions by John Pless (Concordia, Ft. Wayne), Gaylin Schmeling (Bethany, Mankato)


Presentation #2

(1:30 p.m., November 9; reactions follow)
"Lutheranism is catholic and evangelical," by David Scaer (Concordia, Ft. Wayne)
Reactions by Mark Mattes (Grand View College, Des Moines), Mark Schroeder (WELS President)


Presentation #3

(3:30 p.m., November 9; reactions follow)
"Lutheranism's Chief Article--Justification by Faith and Its Flipside--Bondage of the Will," by James Nestingen (North American Lutheran Church)
Reactions by Joel Fredrich (Martin Luther College, New Ulm), Scott Murray (LC-MS Vice President)


Presentation #4

(9:00 a.m., November 10--Martin Luther's Birthday!; reactions follow)
"Luther's Doctrine of the Word: The Incarnate Word in the Written Word," by John Brug (Wisconsin Lutheran Seminary, Mequon)
Reactions by Steven Paulson (Luther, St. Paul), Dan Metzger (Old Zion Lutheran Church, Philadelphia)

 How did that peacock get in the Photoshop of that beautiful bird?

***
GJ - I lived in New Ulm for three years. MLC was always kind and gracious to me. They bought some of my books and told me when a library sale was on. I found it amusing that James Tiefel's first cousin, the CLC's Paul Tiefel, was always spewing out stories about how I was slandering WELS. The CLC will be gone sooner than the ELS, happy to be a footnote in history, because most people will say, "The what?"

O When the Saints, Go Marching Out,
All the Profs Begin To Shout!



"We built this city with fools like you."
 

The New NIV is far worse than the old NIV. The old NIV got rid of the sacraments, but WELS and Missouri did not mind. The Missourians wonder why their own clergy are fleeing to Rome. The latest unloading of Marian piety by Weedon and McCain suggest that the next exodus is being prepared at this moment. A segment of the LCMS is now celebrating the Assumption of Mary. Perhaps they are downplaying the actual event, but oh how delicious it was to have the Assumption fall on a Sunday, to mark the Virgin Mary as one of the saints.

Magic comes down to this - misdirection of the eye. Nothing magical ever happens on stage, but we enjoy someone getting us to look in one direction while he opens latches or switches objects. A good magician makes us see something other than the truth.

For instance, for a small fee, I bought coins that snapped together perfectly. They were solid and one was real. With practice, I could push them together so that the double-faced coin (the deceiving one) locked into the real coin. The concept was simple. Show the audience the big, heavy coin. Show the face of the deceiving coin but not the obverse. When they snapped together, the deceiving coin disappeared. They called this trick "Scotch and soda" because people would say, "I can make a coin disappear if you buy me a scotch and soda."

The magic at Mequon and P. U. (Pewaukee Universalists) Towers is similar. First they say, "All literal translations are bad." But no translation is absolutely literal. Just watch the video above, linked in the caption. When the action of the video is sung in the lyrics, everything is nonsense. That is called a literal video, and I find them fun to watch. The KJV is not absolutely literal but it is precise, word for word.

In contrast, a paraphrase like the NNIV can go anywhere with the meaning of each verse. The NNIV is Gnostic, because the hawkers are grabbing the Holy Spirit by the shoulders and shouting, "This is what you really meant! Right? Right!"

Once they get people to recite, "All literal translations are bad," the congregations have no choice but the awful new paraphrases being marketed by greedy publishers.

Readers are disgusted that Wisconsin Lutheran Seminary is hotter than Georgia asphalt for the New NIV. Once Ninevah is installed at Northwestern Publishing House, doctrinal clarity is doomed. That will be no different than proving Stalin was right because Pravda said he was correct.

Experiment

Wednesday, August 17, 2011

ELCA's Finances -
The Canary in the Coal Mine



Christina Jackson-Skelton has served as ELCA treasurer since February 2002. She will begin a new position as executive director for the Mission Advancement unit on Sept. 1.

“Since I last addressed the assembly, we have gone through a difficult financial period for this church, but I am pleased to begin by reporting that the churchwide organization completed fiscal years 2009 and 2010 with revenue exceeding expense in its current budgeted operations,” she shared with the Churchwide Assembly.

As part of her report, Christina shared slides that contained condensed highlights of financial results. Here’s some highlights of the treasurer’s report:

Total revenue available for current operations decreased from $76.5 million in 2009 to $66.8 million in 2010 – a negative variance of $9.8 million or 12.8 percent, she said.

Operating expenses of approximately $64.2 million in 2010 reflect a decrease of $8.4 million from 2009. These expenses were favorable to the operating budget in both years, meaning expenses were kept within the approved spending level.

“Revenue minus expense resulted in a positive variance of approximately $3.9 million in 2009 and $2.6 million in 2010. Net revenue in excess of expense – a positive bottom line – is important to us financially because it maintains cash reserves, assures sufficient liquidity and covers capital expenditure needs. Careful budgeting, contingency planning and controlled spending have been essential over the past three years in order to maintain a positive balance of income to expense,” she said.

Mission support income – the unrestricted income from congregations through synods to the churchwide organization – declined from $59.7 million in 2009 to $52.6 million in 2010, a negative variance of $7.1 million or 11.8 percent.

“Mission support is the foundation upon which the churchwide operating budget is built, representing almost 80 percent of total current fund revenue in any given year,” she said.

All other categories of revenue, representing the remaining 20 percent of total revenue available for current operations, decreased from $16.8 million in 2009 to $14.1 million in 2010.

A pie chart on revenue illustrated that the percentage of income received in 2010 by major source featured that mission support represented approximately 79 percent of current revenue available for budgeted expenses in 2010. Other major sources of current revenue included missionary sponsorship, endowment distributions, bequests and trust income, Vision for Mission appeal, the Mission Investment Fund, grants, investment income and other.

Following four years of consecutive increases in ELCA World Hunger (which is not part of the current operating revenue and expense), 2009 and 2010 income was down, with 2010 closing at $17.7 million, a decrease of $1.8 million from 2009. “Some of the prior increases were driven by extraordinarily high levels of gifts from bequests and trusts for ELCA World Hunger – beyond what would be considered a sustainable budget level,” Christina said.

With ELCA World Hunger income down in the first three quarters of 2010 and critical program support at risk, a call went out to church leaders and through ELCA networks and you, the church, responded, resulting in all-time best for December ELCA World Hunger income, so that the year closed down, but considerably better than earlier projections with vital program support protected, the treasurer said.

Bishop Martin Stephan Forum Linked



I have linked the Bishop Martin Stephan Forum with the blog URLs. The Stephan book, which I have read, is quite illuminating about the origins of Missouri Lutherans. 

 
The Stephan migration was organized by a Halle Pietist
including his mistresses and two kidnapped children on the passenger list, 
but not Mrs. Stephan. She stayed home.


Here is an early account of the society's many scandals, which were not exactly a secret.
Synods are the product of their histories. The LCMS presents a fantasy as its history and denounces any factual accounts. For instance, the Stephan website is managed by a self-described lesbian. But the issue remains - is the material factual or not?

Here is an honesty test for Walther's heirs. Everyone should read the LCMS-ELS-WELS accounts of the current ELCA convention. Gape in awe as all three church bodies mourn the sad decline of ELCA, even though all three sects work with ELCA, pay ELCA money, and repeat ELCA's bromides about homosexuality.

Pope John the Malefactor - A Grabau Disciple


Brett Meyer has left a new comment on your post "Loehe Gets a Hall at Ft. Wayne, But Who Is Grabau?...":

If anyone is a disciple of Grabau it would be ELS President Moldstad who violently usurped Christ's authority and maliciously undermined Pastor Preus' ministry and eventually had him removed from the Pastoral office.

I was mocked by ELS Pastor Dalke for describing the heinous actions of President Moldstad as violent.

After a little research I produced the following quote which I believe vindicates my use of the adjective and condemns the apathy shown by the ELS clergy.

(C.F.W. Walther’s article posted in Der Lutheraner, 1867), “As our readers know, Pastor Grabau shamefully dismissed and expelled his former so-called 'Deacon' (Diakonus), Pastor Hochstetter, from his office when he no longer wanted to allow himself merely to be Grabau's compliant slave. Grabau himself dismissed Hochstetter with no "appearance of right," without any due process, simply by the brutal authority of his trustees whom he urged on and mislead into such action. This was all the more shameful because earlier Pastor Grabau himself had battled against this sort of thing as if against a barbarism when the Trustees here in America had ventured to establish and dismiss pastors, to open and close churches, to promise church property according to their own wishes to this or that party that pleased them, and in addition to misuse the authority given to them thorough the civil laws in several of our states. Pastor Grabau, who earlier apparently battled for the holiness of the preaching office, committed a horrendous crime against a sacred thing, a robbery of the church, when against all right he carried out this violent expulsion of a Christian preacher, a minister of Christ and His church. It appears to him also, now that the deed is done, not to have been an especially praiseworthy thing to do. It seems his conscience accused him and bit at him and the thought came to him that he had revealed and branded himself before the entire church, indeed, before the entire world to be an enemy of all divine and Christian order (wherever these stand in the way of his plans and especially of his desire to rule).

In light of Walther's own history this also seems self condemning.

***

GJ - The ELS condemned itself by re-electing the Mankato Mauler. One early writer in American Lutheranism said this about removing a pastor, paraphrased - There are three valid reasons to remove a minister:

1. Failure to do his pastoral duties.
2. Leading a scandalous life.
3. Teaching false doctrine.

However, he also cautioned that when valid reasons are provided, there must be due process, to avoid the papal actions of a Moldstad or the supine attitude of a Little Sect on the Prairie.

WELS DP Buchholz bragged that he could remove any pastor at any time, by fiat. His predecessor did that eight times. Somehow all the Church and Change Shrinkers survived, as they have under Buchholz.

The same disgusting violence has been used against various laity recently, no longer kept as a secret, as the evil and corrupt leaders used to command.

Name a Shrinker leader and I will show how he prospered under the leadership of SP Mark Schroeder and Jon Buchholz. Kelm? Gunn? Witte?

29A wrote: "I remember my mother was never treated right by these clowns. They are like Luther said they destroy men's souls."

Loehe Gets a Hall at Ft. Wayne,
But Who Is Grabau?



narrow-minded has left a new comment on your post "Hoosier Daddy":

Thanks for the Loehe articles. Were it not for a hall named after him at Ft. Wayne, who would know anything about him? On the other hand, the mere mention of Walther's name results in mass prostrations in the LCMS.

There's not much info on the web regarding Grabau/Buffalo. Were they theologically solid? The only info I can find is the bad-mouthing for episcopal polity (Hint: Hyper-Euro).






The life of Grabau can be found here. He is identified with the Buffalo Synod, which merged into the old ALC of 1930 (Iowa, Ohio, Buffalo merger).
 

People will enjoy reading more about the Buffalo Synod. Here is more information.

More about the old synods can be found here.
 
Buffalo is probably most influential as a foil for Missouri's attitude about the ministry, carried over into WELS. Seeing these controversies at a distance, one is reminded of cardboard cut-outs on sticks, each one flailing away at the other. Many would be happy to be in the old Buffalo Synod today. Instead they find the Syn Conference a pathetic imitation of Willow Creek. Walther went out of his way to alienate other Lutherans and denounce them, but that worked so well in the past for him, in getting rid of Bishop Stephan.

Next I will be identified as a Loehe fan or Grabau disciple. That is the contentious spirit that Walther bequeathed to his sect and its imitators. If I quote Lenski, who is still a favorite exegete across synod lines, I "worship Lenksi."

Walther earns the credit for the toxic legalism of the Syn Conference, especially in its remnants. The CLC (sic) worries that the American Legion is a church, so no one can be a member of the American Legion. Incest is not a problem, but the American Legion is anathema. Likewise, Thrivent is bad - unless one belongs to a big congregation that enjoys Thrivent benefits. Fleischer excommunicated Wehrwein on the spot for daring to question the double-standard. Does that sound familiar to Syn Conference victims?

Everything is available on the Net. Lutherans are interested. The daily page-reads here are around 1700 in the midst of summer vacations. The Intrepids are standing up to the pathetic leadership of The Sausage Factory. Simply discussing things in the open is a new experience for many Lutherans.

I appreciate the questions.




Missouri's position on ordination is blatantly anti-Confessional. 
That has no effect on the Bronze Age Missourians. 
Notice how Melanchthon connected ordination to the efficacy of the Word.
 



 
----

rlschultz said... 
 
"Simply discussing things in the open is a new experience for many Lutherans."
This was difficult to do before Al Gore invented the Internet. The syn conference bullies could get away with murder, and less, because so many of their antics were done in secret. If a mere lay person caught a whiff of it and tried to go public, or at least ask for clarification, they were promptly beaten down. Like true victims of abuse, they found it difficult to break the cycle. Progress is being made because the cost of knowledge has been lowered significantly.

---

Sherlock Holmes 2929 has left a new comment on your post "Pope John the Malefactor - A Grabau Disciple":

As I leafed through the Grabau articles, one name leaped out at me: "Kudu Don" Patterson. Patterson seemed to take his cue on treating congregational members from Grebau. What do ya' think, Joe? 

 ---

Sherlock Holmes 2929 has left a new comment on your post "Loehe Gets a Hall at Ft. Wayne, But Who Is Grabau?...":

I must agree with rischultz here. I think about how "California" and the Kokomo families suffered their persecution alone. At least Rick Techlin and the Krohns can tell the world. I know it may not be much comfort, but at least it's some. Some light, no matter how small, has been shown on the Syn Conference bullies

The Wisconsin Sect Has Not Changed in 100 Years



From the Protes'tant Conference

The Protes'tant Conference developed out of a series of controversies within the Evangelical Lutheran Joint Synod of Wisconsin and Other States. These controversies revolved around various actions of synodical officials and reached their climax in 1926, with the Beitz Paper, a conference paper in which the Rev. W. F. Beitz protested what he saw as spiritual tyranny and dead orthodoxy in the life of his church. The controversy eventually resulted in the suspension from the Synod of forty pastors. The suspended men, known as Protes'tants because of their protest against conditions within the Synod, organized the Protes'tant Conference in 1927.

Today it is clear that the controversy had been building up for a long time. There were in the Wisconsin Synod two divergent approaches to theology, and the final rupture came because of a rejection by the Synod of the theological viewpoint that had developed at its theological seminary at Wauwatosa, Wisconsin.

The Wauwatosa Theology, as it has been called, developed under the leadership of Prof. J. P. Koehler, whose work was mainly in the direction of historical and exegetical emphasis over against the then dominant stress on dogmatic theology.

Since the turn of the century the Wauwatosa Seminary had been veering away from the dogmatical approach. Koehler pointed out that since the 17th century, Lutheran theology had tended to draw its life from the scholastic method of the orthodox dogmaticians. Thus Scripture was approached with preconceived notions and a methodology that made free exegetical work psychologically impossible. Only when Lutheranism liberated itself from this approach could the life of the church be revitalized and the doctrinal controversies, which had continually plagued American Lutheranism, be transcended.

An earnest attempt was made at Wauwatosa to teach church history in terms of the total history of culture and to bridge the gap between sacred and secular. But what was involved in the Wauwatosa Theology and in the Protes'tant Controversy was much more that a method in theology, viz., a strong emphasis upon self-analysis and self-criticism. The life of the church must in all its manifestations be continuously subjected to thorough analysis. Especially must there be an effort to cut through surface manifestations to understand the influences that are molding the essential character of the church.

The Beitz Paper was a sharp and concrete expression of the self-criticism embodied in the Wauwatosa Theology. It asked the pointed question whether the life of the Synod was not being governed more by the Law than by the Gospel. It did not attack the doctrinal position of the Synod, although the effect was certainly to challenge the prevalent view that evangelical practice is somehow guaranteed by precise and orthodox doctrinal formulations.

The general reaction within the Synod was unfavorable to the Beitz Paper. Charges of false doctrine and slander were leveled against the author, especially by synodical officials. The Protes'tants, on the other hand, maintained that the intent of the Beitz Paper was obvious and contended that it was only part of a much larger question, and that it must be judged in its historical setting. Protes'tants have denied that either Beitz or his supporters were at variance with the objective doctrinal position of the Wisconsin Synod and have insisted that the slander charge was not substantiated.

The officials of the Synod took the position that a paper must be judged by its bare words and not by its antecedents. The Protes'tants' desire to discuss the Beitz Paper only in terms of the larger issues was denied. In essence that was a repudiation of all the Wauwatosa Theology represented. The Wisconsin Synod suspended Pastor Beitz for false doctrine. All who supported him were likewise suspended, some for false doctrine and others for insubordination. This verdict included also those who protested the action of the Synod. Even J. P. Koehler, although he had been critical of the Beitz Paper and of certain actions by Protes'tants, was ousted from his professorship and from the Synod. In the end the Wisconsin Synod repudiated the total thrust of the Wauwatosa Theology.

The Protes'tant Conference has existed since 1927, as a loose organization of the suspended men. The conference has made no attempt to organize itself as a new Lutheran Synod or to carry on any program of expansion. By means of its bimonthly periodical, Faith-Life, it has rather sought to preserve, cultivate, and develop the heritage of the Wauwatosa Theology.

Additional sources of information:
The Faith-Life Society

"A Brief History of the Protest'ant Controversy" by Pastor Philemon Hensel is contained in the pages of Faith-Life, September/October and November/December 2000 (LXXIII, No. 5 and 6)

The History of the Wisconsin Synod
The introduction of the above mentioned title by Prof. Leigh Jordahl is especially noteworthy.


Encyclopedia of the Lutheran Church
Vol. 3 p. 1978. Augsburg, 1965.

--Leigh Jordahl

Hoosier Daddy

Here is an ELCA article about Loehe.
 
The practical seminary in Ft. Wayne was founded because of Loehe, who was also responsible for starting Wartburg Seminary, home of the Iowa Synod.

Loehe is supposed to be bad, bad, bad, and St. Walther is regarded as the ultimate Lutheran. Otten was miffed that Loehe was getting a little bit of publicity, with a conference devoted to the founder rather than the kidnap-usurper.

Was there a Loehe League to compete with the Walther League?
Is there a shrine to Loehe like Walther's?


Loehe was a true leader, serving in a no-account location but changing it through his investment in church missions. He began the group that invited the Stephanites to join.

Modesty set aside, as it always was among the Walther disciples, the new group was eventually called the Lutheran Church Missouri Synod.

But if anyone asks a Missouri Synod member, "Who's your daddy?"
The honest answer is, "Loehe."

I wonder when SP Harrison will come clean about Walther's criminal activities.

To Die For - As Tyndale Did?,
Or To Moo with the NNIV?

"The NNIV from Murdoch or the ESV from the Calvinists/National Council of Churches? I am double-minded! There is no third choice, right? right?"


The document can be downloaded here, if it does not kelm properly.



Philemon
Special Thanks to John Dyer’s Exhaustive Comparison of NIV 1984, tNIV, and NIV 2011

NIV1984
NIV2011
ESV
NIV84 à 2011 notes &amp;amp; general translation notes
1:1
Paul, a prisoner of Christ Jesus, and Timothy our brother, To Philemon our dear friend and fellow worker,
Paul, a prisoner of Christ Jesus, and Timothy our brother, To Philemon our dear friend and fellow worker
,


Paul, a prisoner for Christ Jesus, and Timothy our brother, To Philemon our beloved fellow worker
Neutral
1:2
to Apphia our sister, to Archippus our fellow soldier and to the church that meets in your home:
also to Apphia our sister
, to

and
Archippus our fellow soldier

and to the church that meets in your home:
and Apphia our sister and Archippus our fellow soldier, and the church in your house:
Neutral
“and” better reflects Greek καὶ
1:3
Grace to you and peace from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ.
Grace
and peace
to you
and peace
from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ.
Grace to you and peace from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ.
Neutral
Better English word order
1:4
(same in NIV2011)
I always thank my God as I remember you in my prayers,
I thank my God always when I remember you in my prayers,
Neutral
1:5
because I hear about your faith in the Lord Jesus and your love for all the saints.
because I hear about your
love for all his holy people and your
faith in the Lord Jesus
and your love for all the saints
.
because I hear of your love and of the faith that you have toward the Lord Jesus and for all the saints,
Unsure
Substitution of “his holy people” for “the saints” – τοὺς ἁγίους.
1:6
I pray that you may be active in sharing your faith, so that you will have a full understanding of every good thing we have in Christ.
I pray that
you

your partnership with us in the faith
may be
active
effective in sharing deepening your faith, so that you will have a full understanding of every good thing we have in share for the sake of Christ.
and I pray that the sharing of your faith may become effective for the full knowledge of every good thing that is in us for the sake of Christ.
Slightly Stronger
“partnership” reflects κοινωνία - KJV:  “communion”.

“deepening your understanding” reflects ἐπιγνώσει – KJV: “acknowledgement”.

“for the sake of Christ” reflects an elliptical use of εἰς Χριστόν.

Don’t know how “we share” is a better English/accurate translation. Would prefer rendering “in us for the sake of Christ.” (See ESV)
1:7
Your love has given me great joy and encouragement, because you, brother, have refreshed the hearts of the saints.
Your love has given me great joy and encouragement, because you, brother, have refreshed the hearts of the
saints

Lord’s people
.
For I have derived much joy and comfort from your love, my brother, because the hearts of the saints have been refreshed through you.
Unsure
Substitution of “the Lord’s people” for “the saints” – τῶν ἁγίων.
Weakness:
Would much prefer ESV’s correct use of the passive voice “refreshed through you”. We are mere tools of God’s good work.
1:8

Therefore, although in Christ I could be bold and order you to do what you ought to do,
Accordingly, though I am bold enough in Christ to command you to do what is required,
Neutral
1:9
yet I appeal to you on the basis of love. I then, as Paul—an old man and now also a prisoner of Christ Jesus—
yet I
prefer to
appeal to you on the basis of love.
I then,

It is
as none other than Paul—an old man and now also a prisoner of Christ Jesus—
yet for love’s sake I prefer to appeal to you—I, Paul, an old man and now a prisoner also for Christ Jesus—
Slightly Stronger
“prefer to” reflects μᾶλλον

Τοιοῦτος ὢν ὡς Παῦλος – Lit: “Being such a man as Paul”.
1:10
I appeal to you for my son Onesimus, who became my son while I was in chains.
that I appeal to you for my son Onesimus, who became my son while I was in chains.
I appeal to you for my child, Onesimus, whose father I became in my imprisonment.
Neutral
1:11

Formerly he was useless to you, but now he has become useful both to you and to me.
(Formerly he was useless to you, but now he is indeed useful to you and to me.)
Neutral
1:12

I am sending him—who is my very heart—back to you.
I am sending him back to you, sending my very heart.
Neutral
(Both NIV and ESV are valid renderings of the metaphor.)
1:13

I would have liked to keep him with me so that he could take your place in helping me while I am in chains for the gospel.
I would have been glad to keep him with me, in order that he might serve me on your behalf during my imprisonment for the gospel,
Neutral
1:14
But I did not want to do anything without your consent, so that any favor you do will be spontaneous and not forced.
But I did not want to do anything without your consent, so that any favor you do
will be spontaneous and

would
not
seem
forced but would be voluntary.
but I preferred to do nothing without your consent in order that your goodness might not be by compulsion but of your own accord.
Slightly Stronger
“not seem forced” reflects μὴ ὡς κατὰ ἀνάγκην – Lit: “Not as concerning necessity”.

“voluntary” reflects κατὰ ἐκούσιον – Lit: “concerning willingness”.
1:15
Perhaps the reason he was separated from you for a little while was that you might have him back for good—
Perhaps the reason he was separated from you for a little while was that you might have him back
for good

forever
For this perhaps is why he was parted from you for a while, that you might have him back forever,
Stronger
“forever” reflects αἰῶνιον. A better word to use, in light of faith.
1:16
no longer as a slave, but better than a slave, as a dear brother. He is very dear to me but even dearer to you, both as a man and as a brother in the Lord.
no longer as a slave, but better than a slave, as a dear brother. He is very dear to me but even dearer to you, both as a
fellow
man and as a brother in the Lord.
no longer as a slave but more than a slave, as a beloved brother—especially to me, but how much more to you, both in the flesh and in the Lord.
Slightly Weaker
Not necessarily bad, but inaccurate: “fellow” does not exist in the Greek. καὶ ἐν σαρκὶ καὶ ἐν κυρίῳ - Lit: “both in flesh and in [the] Lord. (see ESV &amp;amp; KJV)
1:17

So if you consider me a partner, welcome him as you would welcome me.
So if you consider me your partner, receive him as you would receive me.
Neutral
1:18

If he has done you any wrong or owes you anything, charge it to me.
If he has wronged you at all, or owes you anything, charge that to my account.
Neutral
Martin Luther notes as Paul takes over the entire debt of Onesimus, so did Christ take over our entire debt.
1:19

I, Paul, am writing this with my own hand. I will pay it back—not to mention that you owe me your very self.
I, Paul, write this with my own hand: I will repay it—to say nothing of your owing me even your own self.
Neutral
1:20

I do wish, brother, that I may have some benefit from you in the Lord; refresh my heart in Christ.
Yes, brother, I want some benefit from you in the Lord. Refresh my heart in Christ.
Neutral
1:21

Confident of your obedience, I write to you, knowing that you will do even more than I ask.
Confident of your obedience, I write to you, knowing that you will do even more than I say.
Neutral
ὑπακοή is not necessarily best translated “obedience”. (The Greek does not imply being given a command, as “obedience” does. Paul has not given any commands.)
1:22

And one thing more: Prepare a guest room for me, because I hope to be restored to you in answer to your prayers.
At the same time, prepare a guest room for me, for I am hoping that through your prayers I will be graciously given to you.
Neutral
1:23

Epaphras, my fellow prisoner in Christ Jesus, sends you greetings.
Epaphras, my fellow prisoner in Christ Jesus, sends greetings to you,
Neutral
1:24

And so do Mark, Aristarchus, Demas and Luke, my fellow workers.
and so do Mark, Aristarchus, Demas, and Luke, my fellow workers.
Neutral
1:25

The grace of the Lord Jesus Christ be with your spirit.
The grace of the Lord Jesus Christ be with your spirit.
Neutral

Mequon, you are not worthy to hold Tyndale's Bible (the KJV). We all know you hate anything connected with Luther or Melanchthon.