Friday, April 12, 2013

In the Spirit: Crash involving Lutheran Bishop Bruce Burnside captured on video : Wsj

Drunk Sunday afternoon, on his way to a church function,
the ELCA bishop struck down Maureen Mengelt.


In the Spirit: Crash involving Lutheran Bishop Bruce Burnside captured on video : Wsj:


The crash Sunday in Sun Prairie in which Lutheran Bishop Bruce Burnside is charged with killing jogger Maureen Mengelt while driving drunk was captured on video by a surveillance camera at a nearby bar, according to court documents released this week.
The video from Daly’s Bar and Grill, 1086 Emerald Terrace, shows a vehicle traveling down the northbound Highway 151 off ramp at Windsor Road “at a high rate of speed,” according to the criminal complaint filed in the case.
The video shows “a runner traveling east to west across the intersection, and the collision of both,” the complaint states. The vehicle then travels east and out of the camera’s range.
In other news related to the case:
• At least five witnesses saw all or part of the crash, according to the criminal complaint. Four of the five were in vehicles at or near the intersection where the crash occurred. The fifth was traveling behind Burnside’s vehicle on Highway 151.
• At Burnside’s bail hearing Wednesday, his attorney said Burnside’s family would voluntarily surrender Burnside’s passport this week as a way to assure the court that he is not a flight risk.
• In an open letter to the community, Kevin Mengelt, the victim’s husband, said the response from the community has been “overwhelming yet so much appreciated.” He writes: “Thank you Maureen for cultivating this extended family through your actions in life. You’ve left your family with the support they now need to continue without you.”
• Maureen Mengelt’s visitation is today (Friday) from 4 to 8 p.m. at Cress Funeral Home, 1310 Emerald Terrace, in Sun Prairie. The funeral is Saturday at 12:30 p.m. at St. Albert the Great Catholic Church, 2420 St. Albert Drive, in Sun Prairie.


Read more: http://host.madison.com/lifestyles/faith-and-values/religion/in-the-spirit-crash-involving-lutheran-bishop-bruce-burnside-captured/article_e127f76e-dd80-11e0-a645-001cc4c03286.html#ixzz2QJ83L2Dw


'via Blog this'

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http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/fdlreporter/obituary.aspx?n=maureen-mengelt&pid=164149559#fbLoggedOut

Mengelt, Maureen F.

Sun Prairie - Maureen F. Mengelt, 52, died unexpectedly on Sunday, April 7, 2013. She was born to Glenn and Mary Anne (Gross) Curran Sr. in Fond du Lac, Wisconsin. Growing up, she attended Laconia High School, graduating in 1979. She then went on to attend UW River Falls, graduating in 1984 with a degree in Secondary Education. Professionally, Maureen attended the Police Academy in Madison, WI, and served on the Madison Police Force from 1986-1989. This was followed by work in the State Public Defender's Office, followed by work as a private detective. While living in Madison, she met and married Kevin R. Mengelt in 1992. They then moved to Port Edwards, where she taught Social Studies at Port Edwards High School. Kevin and Maureen moved to Sun Prairie in 1995, to raise their family of three children, Megan, Andrew, and Allyson. Included in her family, she surprisingly came to love her cat, M&M, and her dog, Bella. Maureen delayed her career to focus on raising her family, immersing herself in every one of their activities. She was an active parent in Sun Prairie Soccer, Sun Prairie Music (Band, Orchestra, Jazz, Choir), Sun Prairie Hockey, and the Sound of Sun Prairie (Love that Sound!). During this time, she also worked at the Prairie Athletic Club and was most recently employed at Gallant Knight Limousine as a driver. Her busy lifestyle suited her personality perfectly, earning her the nickname "Bing".

Her involvement did not stop at her children's activities. One of her most recognized passions is running. She was a longtime member of the Madison Hash House Harriers and has participated in hundreds of races, ranging from running 10K's with her children to running marathons in Arizona and Utah. Apart from her running, Maureen always carried a passion for people. Whether it be going for a coffee date in an eclectic coffee shop she found, or going up to a new mother to hold her baby, she maintained her outgoing nature and always put others first. The amount of energy Maureen brought into a room could not be ignored. She didn't command attention, but her vitality and dynamic personality invigorated anyone within hugging, coffee-drinking, laughing, listening and soul-searching distance. You couldn't help but feel better and more motivated after a "session" with Maureen. Her fast-paced lifestyle and bubbly personality attracted countless people. The community will deeply feel her loss.

Maureen is survived by her husband and three children, her mother, Mary Anne (Gross) Curran, ten siblings, Robert Curran and his wife, Peggy, of Phoenix, AZ, Jeff Curran, Nanette Longo and her husband, Joe, Kathleen Gregor, all of Fond du Lac, Tim Curran and his wife, Linda, of Rosendale, Lynn LeFever and her husband, Buddy, of Menasha, Glenn Curran and his wife, Brenda, of Ripon, Edward Curran and his wife, Vonnie, Mary Rechek and her husband, Curt, all of Brandon, and Patrice Walgenbach and her husband, John, of Oakfield. Maureen loved and was loved by countless nieces, nephews, great-nieces, and great-nephews. She cherished her time with family and made it a priority to put family first. Preceding her in death were her brother, Terrance Curran, and her father, Glenn Curran Sr.

She will never be forgotten.

A visitation will be held from 4 until 8 p.m. on Friday, April 12, 2013, at CRESS FUNERAL HOME, 1310 Emerald Terrace, Sun Prairie. A Mass of Christian Burial will be held at 12:30 p.m. on Saturday, April 13, 2013, at ST. ALBERT THE GREAT CATHOLIC CHURCH, 2420 St. Albert Drive, Sun Prairie, WI, with Rev. Msgr. Terrance L. Connors officiating. A visitation will also be held at church from 11:30 a.m. until the time of service on Saturday.

Please make a donation in Maureen's name to Mothers Against Drunk Driving (MADD) athttp://www.madd.org/local-offices/wi/.

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http://www.wkow.com/story/21942571/2013/04/11/mengelt-family-thanking-community-for-support


SUN PRAIRIE (WKOW) -- The family of Maureen Mengelt, killed Sunday in a hit and run accident, has issued a letter of thanks to the community.  Mengelt's visitation is set for Friday, her funeral will be on Saturday.  The family's statement is below.
"Maureen, my beloved wife and mother of my children passed away much too early Sunday afternoon. Her quick smile and positive attitude lifted everyone she met.  Her passions were simple but her reach was wide: Family, friends, running, coffee, attending her kid's music programs and sporting events - if she was doing one of these she was happy.  She cared for all of the kid's she came into contact as her own.  She would walk children home from the bus stop to make sure they were safe.  She loved rocking babies and would offer to help any new mother to give them a break (as well as to get her "baby fix").  Each day has been so, so painful as I think of what's now missing in my life.
The response from our community has been overwhelming yet so much appreciated.  The "Red outs" at the schools, meals and snacks from friends, offers from our music programs to play at Maureen's visitation and most of all the amazing number of friends and family who have helped us get through each day has shown me our family is much larger than I have a right to hope for.   Thank you Maureen for cultivating this extended family through your actions in life.  You've left your family with the support they now need to continue without you.
Maureen (or Bing, Mo, Aunt Reenie, Mom) – your whole family loves you and misses you.  Thank you everyone for your support."
----Kevin Mengelt and the Mengelt Family
A memorial fund has been set up in Maureen Mengelt's name at US Bank.  Money will be used to support Sun Prairie high school students in athletics and music programs, areas close to Mengelt's heart, according to family.

More Schools Will Merge, Close, Cozy Up. ELCA council authorizes advisory council on theological education - News Releases - Evangelical Lutheran Church in America

"Diversity is great, but there is not one ounce of gay in me.
Look at this outfit, for pity's sake."


ELCA council authorizes advisory council on theological education - News Releases - Evangelical Lutheran Church in America:


News Releases

ELCA NEWS SERVICE
April 12, 2013
ELCA council authorizes advisory council on theological education
13-19-MRC
     CHICAGO (ELCA) -- Acknowledging a climate of new institutional mergers and collaborations between seminaries and universities, new technologies and degree program designs, economic challenges facing students and educational providers, the Church Council of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA) authorized the formation of an advisory council to address in a holistic way issues on theological education, leadership development, candidacy, call and rostered leaders.

      The council’s action opens a path for renewal of the ELCA’s theological education networks, including a revitalization of work across this church in identifying and preparing women and men “to be formed as servant leaders” now and into the future.

     According to the Rev. Jonathan P. Strandjord, director for seminaries at ELCA churchwide ministries, it is critical that this renewal happens in the next few years as the ELCA enters a period of a “retirement tsunami.” About “40 percent of the roster will retire in the next 10 years,” he told the council.

      “Our work in identifying and preparing new rostered leaders over the next several years is crucial and will have a major impact for many to come,” said Strandjord. Another “thing that really matters, at least as much, is whether we can step up the biblical fluency of our lay leaders in these next years.”

     In its action, the council authorized the Theological Education Advisory Council to:

+ gather board chairs and presidents of ELCA seminaries, ELCA colleges and universities with embedded seminaries, a synod bishop from each seminary board and others to share counsel on priorities and strategic plans, current and new collaboration initiatives and degree program design innovations, and to examine implications for ELCA leadership identification and preparation systems.
+ provide periodic progress reports from the advisory council with updates on new developments in the theological education network to the ELCA Conference of Bishops and the Church Council with a final comprehensive report and possible recommendations to the Church Council by fall 2015 for possible consideration at the 2016 ELCA Churchwide Assembly.

     Speaking to the council about theological education in his report as ELCA presiding bishop, the Rev. Mark S. Hanson asked, “How are we preparing leaders that reflect the face of the church we are committed to become? That takes intentionality, especially when it comes to diversity.

     Hanson told the council that there are “lively conversations taking place regarding what the marks of missional leadership are and how we prepare evangelical leaders who will serve the gospel and God’s mission in a rapidly changing, increasingly connected and richly pluralistic context.”

     In a separate action, the council endorsed in concept a proposed merger between California Lutheran University, Thousand Oaks, Calif., and Pacific Lutheran Theological Seminary, Berkeley, Calif. There are eight ELCA seminaries and 26 ELCA colleges and universities.

      The council also elected members to serve on the board of directors for The Lutheran School of Theology at Chicago, Pacific Lutheran Theological Seminary, and Trinity Lutheran Seminary, Columbia, Ohio, and to the advisory council of Lutheran Theological Southern Seminary, Columbia, S.C., as part of Lenoir-Rhyne University, Hickory, N.C. -- these two institutions merged in 2012. With the merger, Lenoir-Rhyne established a school of theology that will include Lutheran Theological Southern Seminary. The seminary retains its own name and identity while integrating with the larger university system.

      In the past several years, staffs of ELCA seminaries have been working with one another and with other partners to organize their educational administrative work in ways that advance a strong, wide-reaching, sustainable theological education network that meets the leadership needs of a “church in mission.” In this work, ELCA colleges and universities have emerged as particularly important partners.

      In his report to the council, Hanson said that a meeting of ELCA college and university presidents in February “led to two working groups developing proposals for strengthening how there can be greater cooperation between schools and their leaders, including the development of a statement regarding what it means to be an ELCA college or university.” Hanson said he also met with ELCA seminary presidents and other colleagues for an “open and honest conversation about the challenges each school is facing and new opportunities each is exploring,” as well as garnering feedback for a Theological Education Advisory Council.

     In other business, the council:

+ requested a review and further discussion on renewing “Book of Faith” -- an initiative that encourages ELCA members, congregations and synods to become “fluent in the language of faith” and Scripture. The ELCA Congregational and Synodical Mission unit, in consultation with Augsburg Fortress Publishers, has been directed by the council to provide a report and possible recommendations to the Church Council and for presentation to the 2013 ELCA Churchwide Assembly this summer.
+ recommended that voting members of the 2013 assembly adopt the text and implementing resolutions of the proposed social statement, “The Church and Criminal Justice: Hearing the Cries.”
+ recommended that the 2013 assembly approve a 25th anniversary campaign for the ELCA as a major fundraising effort to support congregations, leadership, relief and development and global mission. To prepare for and support the campaign, the council designated $5 million from its reserve funds.
+ requested that the Office of the Presiding Bishop, in consultation with the Office of the Secretary and the Conference of Bishops, facilitate implementation of the Addressing Social Concerns Review Task Force’s recommendations to foster moral deliberation, to increase involvement in the deliberative processes of this church, and to expand the use of ELCA social teaching.
+ affirmed the work of the ELCA Task Force on Women and Justice and granted the task force’s request to extend the time for the consideration of a social statement on women and justice until the 2019 ELCA Churchwide Assembly.
+ approved a revised current fund spending authorization for fiscal year 2013 of $70,731,675. The council also recommended that the 2013 assembly adopt a 2014 current income proposal and an ELCA World Hunger income proposal of $19 million for 2014.
+ endorsed the ELCA World Hunger Steering Committee proposal to revise fundraising guidelines.
+ received revisions to 2013 and 2014 synod Mission Support plans.
+ requested funding for staff to guide the ELCA in observing the 500th anniversary of the Protestant Reformation.
+ affirmed in concept the draft “ELCA Philosophy of Benefits” and the proposed health care plan design options and pricing alternatives as presented to the council by Portico Benefit Services representatives. The council requested final versions for the August 2013 Church Council meeting.
+ approved and adopted amendments to the Constitution of Lutheran Medical Center and approved and adopted the amended Restated Certificate of Incorporation of Lutheran Medical Center -- a not-for-profit, New York-based social ministry organization of the ELCA.
     The council designated New Orleans as the site of the 2016 ELCA Churchwide Assembly.

"Thank you for buying me some new threads,
but the lady's guild did not iron it very well.
What? Did I say something wrong?"


'via Blog this'

WELS SP Mark Schroeder - The Manchurian Candidate



Mark Schroeder began contacting me in August, 2008 and stopped after May, 2010. DP Jon Buchholz, another "conservative" pretender began contacting me in 2008. I imagine they wanted to spin the news, which is what WELS does through Christian News.

I suspect that Schroeder was a Church and Changer from the beginning, a point he denied. Whether he was or not, he has gone overboard to protect, promote, and fund them all.

When Mark was asked about The CORE, he said the situation was distorted by lies, etc - coming mostly from one blog.

I imagine he meant this blog, since no one else has the courage to address The CORE in public. Years ago, a group in that WELS district met on their own to deal with Tim Glende, The CORE, and Pastor Ski. I do not know who they were, because I had nothing to do with them. Supposedly some of them formed a part of the Intrepid Lutherans. District President Engelbrecht treated them like dirt and protected Ski and Glende, to the point of publishing a paper in defense of pastoral plagiarism.

DP John Seifert, who hates justification by faith, is ordering every Michigan District person to quit the Intrepids. Meanwhile, one of his pastors got a free trip to China to visit a founder of Church and Change, who is not under a writ of excommunication. This founder must be a great intellect, by WELS standards, because he published a badly written DMin paper through Gordon Conwell.

Schroeder could not wait to get Paul Rydecki off the ministerial list - and publicize it. WELS pounced on the parish to foreclose on the mortgage. But like his old boss Jeske, Ski has been studied and pondered for years.

Just to clarify for SP Mark Schroeder - I have had a copy of the allegations against Tim Glende and Ski for some time, a careful record of their malfeasance, but an even clearer record of the Synod President's and the District President's.

Engelbrecht and Schroeder have known and done nothing.

Engelbrecht and Schroeder have known the facts and lied about them.

A married couple has repeatedly tried to get DP Engelbrecht to respond. He stonewalls. Rick Techlin could have told them that. The Intrepid group in that area could have told them that as well.

Thanks to the public media we all know that:
1. Ski had to post bond in Milwaukee. Does anyone know the facts about his court appearance?
2. Glende wrecked his first and only solo parish, which can barely pay his monthly bill now to WELS. Glende must be passionate about debt, because he ran a paid-for successful congregation into a deep hole of debt, rebuilt at great cost on the bleeding edge of a cornfield.
3. St. Peter's in Freedom, Wisconsin, a wealthy congregation, got an enormous grant from WELS to buy the stinky, old, failed bar in downtown Appleton for the boys. And WELS also loaned them the money to fix up the place. Ski bragged about that, so blame the lies on him. Should we believe the Appleton newspaper published falsehoods?
4. WELS did NOT reveal the money wasted on the bar. They boasted about other Church and Change projects, but not the failed bar. Should we believe that Schroeder let more than $500,000 be given away and loaned without his knowledge? Is he a poor leader, or a bad liar?

ManchurianCandidate.jpg

The Manchurian Candidate (1959), by Richard Condon, is a political thriller novel about the son of a prominent US political family who is brainwashed into being an unwitting assassin for a Communist conspiracy.
The novel has been adapted twice into a feature film by the same title, in 1962 and again in 2004.

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Greg,

Then why not just publish the document? Why do you need any information from me?

***
GJ -

Joel, you are the conscience of the Valley. Everyone looks to you for the right answer. In spite of various info-bytes from SP Mark Schroeder, no one knows the exact status of Pastor Ski.

Is he suspended? If so, why is this not on the WELS.net site?

Is he on a paid vacation? If so, why not tell everyone on The CORE/St. Peter Cares websties that the church worker made it all up and the couple has been excommunicated, like Rick Techlin?

You have a chance to remove the ugly charge that this blog is only for gossip and rumors. Let's have some verified facts.

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Joel has left a new comment on your post "WELS SP Mark Schroeder - The Manchurian Candidate":

I said it before and I meant it: "I don't know the answers to the questions you are asking." Why is it so hard for you to believe me on that?

"Conscience of the Valley?" Pshaww!!!

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Joel has left a new comment on your post "WELS SP Mark Schroeder - The Manchurian Candidate":

A document would seem to be more reliable than the word of little old me.

Breaking News - Waldo Werning Died - Age 91.
Promoted His Church Growth Business Through Valleskey (WELS) and the ELS


Waldo Werning

WALDO WERNING, CHURCH GROWTH GURU,
MUCH ADMIRED BY DAVID VALLESKEY, WELS



"Introduction to the Church Growth Movement by Lutheran authors, Hunter, Kent R., Foundations for Church Growth (New Haven, MO: Leader Publishing Co., 1983) - the author, an LC-MS clergyman who has now set up his own church growth consulting service, performs the valuable service in this 204 page book of presenting an introduction to church growth goals and terminology. Werning, Waldo, Vision and Strategy for Church Growth, (Chicago: Moody Press, 1977) - Werning, active for years in LC-MS stewardship work, explains the foundations, presuppositions and principles of church growth and then shows how a congregation can benefit from making use of certain church growth principles - of the two books listed in this category, Werning's is the more practical." 
Prof. David J. Valleskey, Class Notes, The Theology and Practice of Evangelism, PT 358A p. 6. 

Church Growth at Ft. Wayne
"In an initial burst of enthusiasm reflecting Preus's concern for missions, the Fort Wayne faculty had petitioned the 1977 convention of the Missouri Synod to have each of its subdivisions or districts "make a thorough study of the Church Growth materials." What is more, the districts were to be urged to "organize, equip, and place into action all of the Church Growth principles as needed in the evangelization of our nation and the world under the norms of the Scriptures and the Lutheran Confessions." By the time of the 1986 synodical convention, however, the same faculty, while appreciating the "valuable lessons of common sense" to be learned from Church Growth, asked that "the Synod warn against the Arminian and charismatic nature of the church-growth movement."
            Kurt E. Marquart, "Robert D. Preus," Handbook of Evangelical Theologians, ed., Walter A. Elwell, Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1995, pp. 353-65. Reprinted in CN, 6-26-95, p. 21.  

Wagner, Pentecostal Baptist, Likes Werning’s Work
Who’s Who in Church Growth!
"Waldo Werning is director of the Stewardship Growth Center of Fort Wayne, Indiana, and an adjunct professor at Concordia Theological Seminary, Fort Wayne. He teaches a seminar course and conducts seminars which focus on 'supply side stewardship,' integrating church growth principles with a stewardship program."
            C. Peter Wagner, ed., with Win Arn and Elmer Towns, Church Growth: The State of the Art, Wheaton: Tyndale House, 1986, p. 274.         

Like A Mighty Shallow Creek
"A second example of this homogenization is Waldo J. Werning's Vision and Strategy for Church Growth, published by Moody Press in 1977." [Ed. note: The foreword is by C. Peter Wagner. Werning studied at Fuller.] "Werning is a Missouri Synod Lutheran executive. Although Werning's denominational publishing house did not publish his book, it is nevertheless an attempt by Werning to create an instrument for church growth among Missouri Synod Lutherans. If you read Werning, you can readily see that he is exceedingly eclectic, drawing from everywhere, including his own tradition."
            Delos Miles, Church Growth, A Mighty River, Nashville: Broadman Press, 1981, p. 33f.      

OK, I Joined the Group To Get the List of Suckers
Lutheran members of the North American Society for Church Growth: Harold S. Drageger, Grace Lutheran, Visalia, CA; Bradley Hoefs, King of Kings Lutheran, Omaha, NE; Kent Hunter, Church Growth Center, Corunna, IN; Elmer Matthias, Emeritus Concordia St. Louis, MO; Dale Olson, Cross of Hope Lutheran, Ramsey, MN; Waldo J. Werning, Stewardship Growth Center, Ft. Wayne, IN; Gregory L. Jackson, Columbus, OH. Doris M. Wagner, Fuller Theological Seminary, December 10, 1991 

WELS Noticed and Liked
"There are other church growth programs which have been developed along more conservative lines. Here we are thinking of adaptations of McGavran's principles such as developed by Waldo J. Werning of The Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod. In his study entitled "Vision and Strategy for Church Growth" Werning has modified some of McGavran's extreme positions. Using some of his own adaptations Werning has conducted many seminars and workshops in applying church growth principles to a local congregational setting in America." [Werning is Who's Who in Church Growth]
            Ernst H. Wendland, "Church Growth Theology," Wisconsin Lutheran Quarterly, April, 1981, 78, p. 117.      

Valleskey Loves Werning’s Doctrine
"Introduction to the Church Growth Movement by Lutheran authors, Hunter, Kent R., Foundations for Church Growth (New Haven, MO: Leader Publishing Co., 1983) - the author, an LC-MS clergyman who has now set up his own church growth consulting service, performs the valuable service in this 204 page book of presenting an introduction to church growth goals and terminology. Werning, Waldo, Vision and Strategy for Church Growth, (Chicago: Moody Press, 1977) - Werning, active for years in LC-MS stewardship work, explains the foundations, presuppositions and principles of church growth and then shows how a congregation can benefit from making use of certain church growth principles - of the two books listed in this category, Werning's is the more practical."
            Prof. David J. Valleskey, Class Notes, The Theology and Practice of Evangelism, PT 358A p. 6.       

Be Silent, Jackson!
"I would not say this publicly, but I will tell privately that I received a phone call from a WELS pastor who said that some claim that there are several WELS pastors in your Circuit who are into church management and some kind of church growth (and possibly even funded by some agencies) and that some believe that you are trying to get at them and a few others in WELS, and that is why you are writing the articles. Whatever the facts are, your entering into this fray, it seems to me, will not open up channels for God to use your very good talents in WELS in profitable ways."
            Waldo J. Werning, Letter to Gregory Jackson, August 23, 1989 (Letter stamped in red: CONFIDENTIAL CONFIDENTIAL)        

Werning on Werning
"A basic resource to study is Waldo J. Werning, Vision and Strategy for Church Growth, available from the Stewardship Growth Center, 1914 Wendmere Lane, Ft. Wayne, IN, 46825."
            Waldo J. Werning, Renewal for the 21st Century Church, St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1988, p. 160. 

"False ecumenism wants organizational unity instead of Scriptural unity."
            Waldo J. Werning, The Radical Nature of Christianity, Church Growth Eyes Look at the Supernatural Mission of the Christian and the Church, South Pasadena: William Carey Library, 1975, p. 101.  

"Unscriptural fellowship means acceptance of differences in doctrine, which are ignored by conducting joint religious acts and worship."
            Waldo J. Werning, The Radical Nature of Christianity, Church Growth Eyes Look at the Supernatural Mission of the Christian and the Church, South Pasadena: William Carey Library, 1975, p. 102f. 

"Ted Raideke, formerly Key 73 director and now program director for Project Philip, wrote us about the evanglistic mission of the World Home Bible League...." Waldo J. Werning, The Radical Nature of Christianity, Church Growth Eyes Look at the Supernatural Mission of the Christian and the Church, South Pasadena: William Carey Library, 1975, p. 131.

"One of the fastest-growing congregations in the United States has been Coral Ridge Presbyterian Church of Ft. Lauderdale, Fla."
            Waldo J. Werning, The Radical Nature of Christianity, Church Growth Eyes Look at the Supernatural Mission of the Christian and the Church, South Pasadena: William Carey Library, 1975, p. 134. 

"'World Vision International in an international Christian humanitarian service agency committed to meeting human physical and spiritual need in the name of Christ.'" Waldo J. Werning, The Radical Nature of Christianity, Church Growth Eyes Look at the Supernatural Mission of the Christian and the Church, South Pasadena: William Carey Library, 1975, p. 141. "Churches fail to grow when leaders become victims of a fatalistic attitude and defeatism. Also, they fail to grow when they become prisoners of their buildings and lose their mobility, confining their activities within the walls of the sanctuary." [No cell groups?]
            Waldo J. Werning, The Radical Nature of Christianity, Church Growth Eyes Look at the Supernatural Mission of the Christian and the Church, South Pasadena: William Carey Library, 1975, p. 157f.         

"C. Peter Wagner writes that 'the indispensable condition for a growing church is that it must want to grow.'" [C. Peter Wagner, "What Makes Churches Grow?" Eternity (June 1974), 17.]
Waldo J. Werning, The Radical Nature of Christianity, Church Growth Eyes Look at the Supernatural Mission of the Christian and the Church, South Pasadena: William Carey Library, 1975, p. 158.

"Mission outreach and church growth are thwarted and retarded by too much dependence on paid workers, by too little training and participation of lay people, by too little sensitivity to the authority and strategy of the Holy Spirit, by acceptance of small results long after the large response should have been expected. The church is also hurt when goals are inarticulate, inadequate, immeasurable, or unattainable."
Waldo J. Werning, The Radical Nature of Christianity, Church Growth Eyes Look at the Supernatural Mission of the Christian and the Church, South Pasadena: William Carey Library, 1975, p. 158.       

"Mission outreach and church growth are thwarted and retarded by too much dependence on paid workers, by too little training and participation of lay people, by too little sensitivity to the authority and strategy of the Holy Spirit, by acceptance of small results long after the large response should have been expected. The church is also hurt when goals are inarticulate, inadequate, immeasurable, or unattainable."
Waldo J. Werning, The Radical Nature of Christianity, Church Growth Eyes Look at the Supernatural Mission of the Christian and the Church, South Pasadena: William Carey Library, 1975, p. 158.       

"Donald McGavran offered us the following essay on 'The Unique and Radical Nature of the Church Growth Movement.'"
Waldo J. Werning, The Radical Nature of Christianity, Church Growth Eyes Look at the Supernatural Mission of the Christian and the Church, South Pasadena: William Carey Library, 1975, p. 159. 

"Your church will grow by God's grace because members will want it to grow in obedience to God's will and because you are using strategy and methodology in making disciples. Then nongrowth will be called nongrowth, and growth will be accepted as a gift from God."
Waldo J. Werning, The Radical Nature of Christianity, Church Growth Eyes Look at the Supernatural Mission of the Christian and the Church, South Pasadena: William Carey Library, 1975, p. 159.         

"Dr. McGavran offers the following 'Ten Prominent Emphases in the Church Growth School of Thought.'" [Six and one half pages of direct quotes from McGavran follow.]
Waldo J. Werning, The Radical Nature of Christianity, Church Growth Eyes Look at the Supernatural Mission of the Christian and the Church, South Pasadena: William Carey Library, 1975, p. 160.

"Dr. McGavran offers the following 'Ten Prominent Emphases in the Church Growth School of Thought.'" [Six and one half pages of direct quotes from McGavran follow.]
Waldo J. Werning, The Radical Nature of Christianity, Church Growth Eyes Look at the Supernatural Mission of the Christian and the Church, South Pasadena: William Carey Library, 1975, p. 160.

"Jack McAlister, founder and president of World Literature Crusade, has also developed a unique and radical Gospel mission. This missionary agency is attempting the impossible in reaching every home on earth with the Gospel and Christian literature."
Waldo J. Werning, The Radical Nature of Christianity, Church Growth Eyes Look at the Supernatural Mission of the Christian and the Church, South Pasadena: William Carey Library, 1975, p. 166.         

"Steer clear of foolish discussion which lead people into the sin of anger with each other. 2 Timothy 2:14, 16 Living Bible."
Waldo J. Werning, The Radical Nature of Christianity, Church Growth Eyes Look at the Supernatural Mission of the Christian and the Church, South Pasadena: William Carey Library, 1975, p. 200. 

"Francis Schaeffer, the most prolific Christian writer of our day, affirms that historic Christianity has something important to say to the modern world."
Waldo J. Werning, The Radical Nature of Christianity, Church Growth Eyes Look at the Supernatural Mission of the Christian and the Church, South Pasadena: William Carey Library, 1975, p. 212.

"Harley Swiggum, the founder and director of the Bethel Bible Series, wrote us: 'I as one member of the body of believers believe so fervently in the need for Biblical study for adults in the Christian family because as we pursue Biblical study we are confronted directly with the Person Jesus Christ and the presence and the power of the Holy Spirit, and in that confrontation we are remolded into persons who by nature of our faith have a deeper compassion for all of humankind's needs as well as a power and a faith relationship to be used by God in a historical process to minister to those needs.'" [Ed. note: This is a rehash of liberal European encounter theologians, such as Martin Buber, and Hans Balthasar, a student of Barth the Adulterer. See Concordia's Lutheran Cyclopedia under "Encounter."]
Waldo J. Werning, The Radical Nature of Christianity, Church Growth Eyes Look at the Supernatural Mission of the Christian and the Church, South Pasadena: William Carey Library, 1975, p. 86.  

"The Bethel Series uses an approach which some congregations have utilized to good advantage. It has some unique and attractive features...It provides a base or springboard from which to pursue a depth study of God's Word, accenting the necessity of seeing the various parts of the Biblical message in their direct relationship to the historical context in which that message was given." [Ed. note - Bethel Bible is a unionistic program which accepts any interpretation of the Bible except inerrancy. Rev. Swiggum opposed inerrancy and promoted evolution.]
Waldo J. Werning, The Radical Nature of Christianity, Church Growth Eyes Look at the Supernatural Mission of the Christian and the Church, South Pasadena: William Carey Library, 1975, p. 86.     

"This is not a handbook on how to do certain things, not offering us gimmicks, procedures, models, and the like, although there is much of practical material to be found throughout. It is rather a theology of church growth and missions." [foreword by Robert Preus]
Waldo J. Werning, The Radical Nature of Christianity, Church Growth Eyes Look at the Supernatural Mission of the Christian and the Church, South Pasadena: William Carey Library, 1975, p. 9.          

"The New Testament tells of this koinonia as a togetherness to share, to participate together, with Jesus in the center. This it is that makes it the church and not just another organization." [Ed. note - Koinonia in the New Testament means fellowship with God, chiefly through Sacrament of Holy Communion. Koinonia does not mean cell groups and coffee hours.]
Waldo J. Werning, The Radical Nature of Christianity, Church Growth Eyes Look at the Supernatural Mission of the Christian and the Church, South Pasadena: William Carey Library, 1975, p. 92.        

"Cell groups of Christians fellowshiping together date back to the first century, for it was largely through the activities of little groups or cells of believers that the message of Jesus Christ spread throughout the Roman Empire."
Waldo J. Werning, The Radical Nature of Christianity, Church Growth Eyes Look at the Supernatural Mission of the Christian and the Church, South Pasadena: William Carey Library, 1975, p. 93.

"Koinonia should always be explosive or radical, driving one deeper into the church of the Lord Jesus Christ, and then driving one out into the world to fulfill the mission of the church."
Waldo J. Werning, The Radical Nature of Christianity, Church Growth Eyes Look at the Supernatural Mission of the Christian and the Church, South Pasadena: William Carey Library, 1975, p. 94.

"Waldo Werning has made an outstanding contribution to the church growth movement in America with Vision and Strategy for Church Growth...Working out of the models established by Donald McGavran and the School of World Mission at Fuller Seminary, Waldo Werning breaks new ground in developing ways that church growth principles can be applied directly to American churches." [Foreword by C. Peter Wagner]
Waldo J. Werning, Vision and Strategy for Church Growth, Second Edition, Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1983, p. 5.       




Pope John the Malefactor - Emmaus Conference - Abusing the Election Article To Argue UOJ?



Emmaus Conference:


Unity in Controversy…Controversy in Unity:
The Election Controversy and its application to the inroads of pietism in modern Lutheranism.


April11-12, 2013
Lecturer: John A. Moldstad Jr., President, Evangelical Lutheran Synod

The Reverend John A. Moldstad Jr. has been President of the Evangelical Lutheran Synod since 2002. Before becoming President, he served as a Professor at Bethany Lutheran Theological Seminary in Mankato, MN from 1994-2002. During the final four years of his tenure there, he also served as the synod’s Vice President. He has been the shepherd of congregations in Sioux Falls, South Dakota; Lake Havasu City, Arizona; and Oregon, Wisconsin. He is also the author of the 1992 Evangelical Lutheran Synod convention essay His Truth For Our Youth and the People’s Bible Teachings book Predestination: Chosen in Christ published by Northwestern Publishing House.

President Moldstad received his Master of Divinity degree from Bethany Lutheran Theological Seminary in 1980 and an in 2002 a STM from Wisconsin Lutheran Seminary in Mequon, Wisconsin.

Moldstad and his wife Joslyn live in Mankato, Minnesota and they are the proud parents of 7 children.

Reactors
The Reverend President Matthew C. Harrison
President, The Lutheran Church - Missouri Synod,
St. Louis, Missouri
Schroeder
The Reverend President Mark G. Schroeder
President, Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran
Synod, Milwaukee, Wisconsin


'via Blog this'

WELS Member - Rep. Kind throws support behind gay marriage

WELS member Ron Kind.
Rep. Kind throws support behind gay marriage:


Wisconsin Congressman Ron Kind is the latest lawmaker to join a chorus of support for gay marriage rights.
Kind, a La Crosse Democrat, made the announcement Thursday morning on his Facebook page, saying in part, “My 18-year marriage to Tawni has taught me that we’re both stronger because we love and support each other. I support marriage equality, because if two people want to make a lifetime commitment to love and care for one another, then the government shouldn’t stand in the way.”
Kind said the Supreme Court deliberations on the Defense of Marriage Act and California’s Proposition 8, as well as inquiries from constituents, prompted him to state his position, though he said it is consistent with his stance on other issues of equality.
“I just think that the second-class citizenship has not worked well for our country throughout our history,” Kind said. “We’ve looked back at it with embarrassment.”
Kind, who belongs to the Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod that condemns homosexuality, stressed the difference between law and church doctrine.
“We’re not dictating people’s religion or religious doctrine,” he said. “You can’t force churches to marry people within their congregation. … But when you start singling people out for treatment, it doesn’t work well.”
First introduced in 2009, the Respect for Marriage Act would repeal the Defense of Marriage Act, which says states do not have to recognize same-sex marriages approved in other states.
Though Kind is the last Democrat in Wisconsin’s Congressional delegation to voice support for gay marriage, the move drew praise from local LGBT advocates.
“I think it’s fantastic,” said Jackson Jantzen, executive director of the Seven Rivers LGBT Resource Center, who noted that lawmakers are finally taking notice of the changing public sentiment.
A February poll of 1,799 Wisconsin voters — as well as 679 usual Republican primary voters — found opposition to same-sex marriage has narrowed to just 46 percent, compared with 44 percent in favor. One in 10 said they hadn’t made up their minds.
And nearly three-quarters said they support some form of legal recognition for gay couples — 39 percent favoring marriage equality and 32 percent civil unions, according to the survey by Public Policy Polling.
A March survey by Marquette Law School found 42 percent think same-sex couples should be allowed to marry, while 26 percent support civil unions.
That represents a notable swing from 2006, when Wisconsin voters overwhelmingly approved a constitutional amendment banning same-sex marriage. (The amendment passed by just 152 votes — less than 0.4 percent — in La Crosse County.)
Polls show support for gay marriage is strongest with young voters and in more urban areas.
In smaller urban markets — which include La Crosse-Eau Claire — sentiment was almost evenly split, with a third supporting marriage, a third civil unions and 30 percent no recognition.
The Human Rights Campaign, the nation’s largest organization supporting equal rights for gays and lesbians, counts 176 House members and 54 Senators who publicly support marriage equality.
Kind joins the other three Democrats in Wisconsin’s Congressional delegation who support same-sex marriage. None of the six Republicans do.
Rep. Tim Walz, a Democrat who represents southern Minnesota’s 1st District, also supports gay marriage.
Minnesotans rejected a constitutional amendment to ban gay marriage last fall, and the Legislature is considering proposals to legalize it.
Cindy Killion, who is president of the Seven Rivers LGBT Resource Center board and lives in Fountain City, Wis., said if Minnesota passes the marriage bill, she and her partner of 17 years are moving across the river.
“We want to go to La Crosse,” she said. “But now La Crescent is looking better.”


'via Blog this'

Joel Hochmuth and Mark Schroeder denounced ELCA for being
honest about their homosexual stance.
When I linked the letter, which they sent out jointly,
the link disappeared. Co-inky-dink.


He looks familiar.
***

GJ - When SP Schroeder was told about an active homosexual WELS pastor, he said, in effect, "Write a letter."

Defenestration of Paul Kuske Reveals the Leadership Skills of the Twelve WELS Apostates



Just so you know - Paul Kuske is not one of my disciples. Too bad people even think that way. The clergy today want to bully and control people. All I want to do is get people to:
1. Read Luther's English Bible (the KJV).
2. Know the Book of Concord, the best one-volume commentary on the Bible.
3. Study the best Lutheran theologians, chiefly Luther and the Concordists, but also some post-Concord leaders.

When I heard that WELS Michigan DP John Seifert publicly stripped Paul Kuske (of his emeritus status), my response was, "A planted story. I am supposed to report this so they can deny it and call me a liar." Nothing is too low for WELS leaders - nothing.

But a number of WELS people insisted it was true, giving circumstances (announced at the latest conferences) and agreeing in the details (not in the written report). It seems that Kuske, retired, got the teachers in his Saginaw, Michigan school "upset" over the issue. Seifert struck back.

On the one hand, WELS takes years to study and not act on something bad, dangerous, illegal, stupid, unethical, or anti-Christian.

But when the WELS leaders hear justification by faith, those same lazy sluggards rise up with the wrath of God and strike, without embracing the opportunity to study the issue and resolve it Biblically.

They never "discovered" that all the leaders were sent to Fuller Seminary to learn Church Growth from an anti-inerrancy faculty. They never found out that Larry Olson had a drive-by DMin from Fuller when they installed him in a sincecure at Martin Luther (sic) College in New Ulm.

VP Paul Kuske was Floyd Luther Stolzenburg's
advocate in Columbus and wrote a reference letter for  Floyd
to get back into the ministry - while denying it.


Kuske has discovered that the methods he used so gleefully can be used against him as well. Seifert will learn eventually too. Those who escape the consequences of their apostasy on earth will face graver consequences in the life to come.

If everyone who cited the Eighth Commandment would
read this first, that would be great.