Tuesday, December 9, 2014

Michigan Lutheran Seminary and Martin Luther College -
Explore New Depths of Stupid and Obnoxious in the Latest Video

What Would Schone Wear?
The question on everyone's mind before a video premier.





Published on Dec 1, 2014
Michigan Lutheran Seminary's 2014 Junior night video. This was done by this year's MLC freshman from MLS. Hopefully this shows you the fun things that are available here at MLC!
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GJ - How many words are misspelled in the captions? Two, three? I guess it depends on the state of English in Minnesota.

What an ending to a truly mediocre effort! Goofing around in the chapel and "Our Jesus looks like Russel Crowe."

Consider the video a warning to stay away from WELS schools. This one is even worse than the gay video and the  one where MLC statues come alive, fight and curse.

Juicy Ecumenism Provides Details

These four - ELCA and Episopalian -  have destroyed more congregations
than the Chicago Fire.


WELS and Missouri Are Following ELCA Down the Drain:

Yet since the launch of ELCA its course has been permanently downward.  The ELCA’s own statistics show that after 5,288,048 Lutherans came together in 1987 to form the denomination, only 4,059,785 remained in ELCA in 2011, the latest year of available data.  In all, this is a “staggering loss of over 1.2 million members, or 23% of their membership,” Rev. Kevin Vogts of the conservative Lutheran lay organization Steadfast Lutherans notes.  The number of ELCA congregations has also dropped from 11,138 at the 1987 founding to 9,638 in 2911, a loss of about 13%.  “As they ‘celebrate’ this year the 25th anniversary of the ELCA,” Vogts observes, “the fact is that during that time they have lost more members and congregations than make up many entire denominations!”
Almost every year of ELCA’s existence has witnessed membership loss, particularly the 270,349 and 212,903 leaving in the succeeding years 2010-2011.  The loss of each of these two years averaged more than five percent of ELCA’s total membership.  This followed the 2009 Churchwide Assembly decisions to allow individual congregations “to recognize, support and hold publicly accountable life-long, monogamous, same-gender relationships” and for individuals in such relationships to serve as ELCA leaders.  Only the years 1990 and 1991 ever showed any ELCA membership growth of 1,941 and 4,438 congregants, respectively.
Such membership losses have financial consequences.  Vogts calculates that national ELCA donations in 2008 were $88 million, but dropped to $40 million in 2011.  Luther Seminary in St. Paul, Minnesota, the ELCA’s largest, announced in 2012 a $6 million operating deficit on a $27 million budget.  Reportedly one couple had given $1 million annually to the seminary but stopped after ELCA’s pro-gay decisions.  Luther Seminary had to cancel programs and lay off a third of its staff as a result.
Who needs the Lutheran World Federation?
We have Thrivent to unite us all with Fuller and ELCA.

Freedom - No Longer Tied to the Classroom

I will be able to get more book projects done now.

I was demi-semi-retired, which meant taking all the teaching jobs offered. The problem with working 8 days a week is finding the extra day.

Online classes have increased in number and I may be advising PhD students, so I decided to stop teaching at the local college, a few miles away. So I have upgraded my status to semi-retired.

Teaching undergraduates was a lot of fun. There is really nothing like face-to-face classes. I already had a lot of practice turning angry, ill-advised comments into humor. One of my favorite episodes repeats from time to time - a student argues about my theories of writing (which are hardly original).

I answer, "Only one person in this room is paid to be here. Maybe you should listen to that person."

More than once, the student has said, "Someone can get paid to be here? How does that happen?"

His fellow students answer, "You dummy. The teacher gets paid."

Or, I try to counter worn-out forms of writing by promoting creativity. This will always irritate someone who says, "My last English teacher did not agree with that at all."

So I ask, "And how many books and articles has that teacher published, hmmm?"

"Well, none, I guess."

"I thought so," I answer.

Every so often I had special test days where the students could get candy by answering correctly. This worked out so well that some students  joined our class for a few minutes to snag Snickers, Almond Joys, and PayDays out of the air. I especially enjoyed the young women athletes intercepting the bars aimed at the back row.

For finals I had bags of fresh chips, various flavors, for the classes. I looked at my favorite flavor in horror, at the end of the session - crumbles left. They all laughed. I had two giant bags left in the car.

I banned digital toys of all kinds, which meant they had to listen. No texting was allowed. No Facebooking or Instagramming on laptops or smartphones. Some tried to sleep or slump during class. For that I had a variety of sound effect machines. One was very loud and coveted by other teachers. The other two included a car crash, clapping, a bomb going off, and cheering. When all else failed I simply ordered the student out of the room.

Many claim students have no discipline but I think the problem is spineless teachers, from public school on up. When I began at a community college, the students were steamrolling some instructors about assignments and everything else. I remember one young woman saying loudly, "That's YOUR opinion." I said, "Yes, backed by six earned degrees and six computer certifications." Shoulders slumped. I won.

I had to submit every written assignment to a plagiarism checker, because hardly anyone else does. The public schools ignore the issue. Many instructors do not take the trouble, or they say, "It's part of the culture now." Sad to say, I caught many of the students - some twice in the same class - earning them an automatic fail, a return to the Purgatory of English composition.

Copying from the Net is easy: so is proving it was copied from the Net. Knowing well that no one can accidentally write hundreds of the same words in the same order as another person, I listened to lazy liars deny their plagiarism.

Homeschooled students were easily my best. They listened. They took notes. They revealed an impressive background in reading. They did the assignments on time, and they wrote well - the result of reading so much. They did not cheat to get by.

Being tough on students does not mean being unpopular. They do not respect weak teachers who cave in. The registrar told me at lunch, "All I have to do to fill a class is put your name on it."


Theology Blog Links Doing Well



I set up two groups of links, one for theology, one for gardening. I included theology blogs that I follow and appreciate for various reasons. We should all follow several denominations at once to see what the trends are, since so many organizations work together covertly while marketing their own brands. Hypocrisy is leadership today.

The fun part is this - the latest post goes to the top. Readers can look over the list and find the newest article in the group, thus rewarding the active writers and chastening the slower ones.

Page views have been very high lately, over 3,000 each day.

Yesterday, Blogger recorded 4,500 pageviews - a very big classroom, more like a stadium. If this blog gets more people reading Luther and the Confessions, with the Scriptures, I am pleased.


For Whom Rob Bell Tolls - He Tolls for Thee

The entire article about Rob Bell can be found here.


Rob Bell was a nationally renowned popular Evangelical Michigan megachurch founder and pastor (one of Time’s100 most influential people!) until his 2011 book Love Wins questioned traditional Christian understandings about salvation and damnation. He was following the trajectory of other post-Evangelicals towards liberal Protestantism and well beyond. Bell lost his pastorate and much of his Evangelical following, a fall meriting a New York Times feature.
But Bell is a creative and talented religious entrepreneur in America, where there are always more chances for self re-creation. He moved to California, naturally, continued as a widely read blogger, and accelerated his liberal theological journey, embracing same sex marriage as a “justice issue,” of course, and doubtless much else as he streaked away from orthodoxy. His new book, The Zimzum of Love: A New Way of Understanding Marriage, has been mocked for citing the Bible only three times, further signifying his expansion into a post-Christian frontier. He now surfs at the beach, rejects theological categories, and happily relates to others who’ve escaped the rigid confines of organized religion.

Bell’s self re-creation appropriately led to his joining a nationwide motivational speaking tour called “Life You Want Weekend” appropriately led by America’s high priestess of therapeutic pop religion, Oprah Winfrey, an evident fan of his provocative books and reassuring style.

Now, the Oprah Winfrey Network will this month start broadcasting “The Rob Bell Show,” consummating Bell’s spiritual transfer from Evangelical subculture to The Cult of Oprah. Like Oprah, Bell no longer belongs to or worships at a traditional church, instead operating in a wider reality. “We have a little tribe of friends,” Bell recently told Religion News Service. “We have a group that we are journeying with. There’s no building. We’re churching all the time. It’s more of a verb for us.”




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GJ

No man is an island,
Entire of itself,
Every man is a piece of the continent,
A part of the main.
If a clod be washed away by the sea,
Europe is the less.
As well as if a promontory were.
As well as if a manor of thy friend's
Or of thine own were:
Any man's death diminishes me,
Because I am involved in mankind,
And therefore never send to know for whom the bell tolls; 
It tolls for thee.  John Donne

I have been writing about religious marketeers for years, because Mark and Avoid Jeske follows them so devotedly. Jeske is not the only dullard in Lutherdom, but he has the most visibility.

One only needs to look at the trends in WELS and Missouri to see that the leaders are bewitched by the latest trends or rather - terrified by the future.

They are circling the drain with Rob Bell, who got there first.

The CORE - WELS.
The CORE exists to transform lives for Christ through faith that is Real, Relevant, and Relational.
We deal with life's issues through the lens of God's Word. We come face to face with sin and the havoc it creates in our lives. We celebrate the forgiving, undeserved love of God and how that changes our lives. We sue our own members in court for telling the truth.
We shun them and excommunicate them.