Tuesday, January 13, 2015

Judge Refuses To Lower Bishop Heather Cook's Bail.
Bishop Remains in Jail


Mug shot versus Photoshop of Bishop Heather Cook.

BAC Chart for Women
Women
Approximate Blood Alcohol Percentage
DrinksBody Weight in Pounds
90100120140160180200220240
0.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00Only Safe
Driving Limit
0.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00Only Safe Driving Limit
1.05.05.04.03.03.03.02.02.02Driving Skills
Significantly
Affected

Possible
Criminal
Penalties
2.10.09.08.07.06.05.05.04.04
3.15.14.11.10.09.08.07.06.06
4.20.18.15.13.11.10.09.08.08
5.25.23.19.16.14.13.11.10.09
6.30.27.23.19.17.15.14.12.11Legally
Intoxicated

Criminal
Penalties
7.35.32.27.23.20.18.16.14.13
8.40.36.30.26.23.20.18.17.15
9.45.41.34.29.26.23.20.19.17
10.51.45.38.32.28.25.23.21.19
Death Possible
Subtract .01% for each 40 minutes of drinking.
One drink is 1.25 oz. of 80 proof liquor, 12 oz. of beer, or 5 oz. of table wine.

This information is taken from Virginia Tech Alcohol Abuse Prevention website.
[ GJ -  She weighs 250 pounds, so she had more than 10 drinks.]
"She does admit to an alcohol problem," Cook's defense lawyer, Jose A. Molina, revealed at Cook's bail hearing Monday, according to the Baltimore Brew.
The confession comes just weeks after church officials claimed that their investigation into Cook's background, which revealed a 2010 DUI conviction in which Cook was so drunk she couldn't complete a sobriety test, was just "one mistake." Church officials also said Cook didn't have a problem with the bottle prior to her elevation to the second-highest ranking position in the Diocese of Maryland last spring.
"As part of the search process, Bishop Cook fully disclosed the 2010 DUI for which charges were filed resulting in a 'probation before judgment.' After extensive discussion and discernment about the incident, and after further investigation, including extensive background check and psychological investigation, it was determined that this one mistake should not bar her for consideration as a leader," noted the Diocese of Maryland in a statement on Dec. 30, just days after the Dec. 27 crash that claimed Palermo's life.

WELS Seminary Professor James P. Tiefel - Photoshop.

Judge Refuses to Lower $2.5 Million Bail for Heather Cook; Bishop Forced to Remain in Jail


http://www.christianpost.com/news/bishop-heather-cook-spends-weekend-in-jail-after-failing-to-make-2-5-million-bail-for-drunk-driving-manslaughter-132448/

Embattled Episcopal Bishop of Maryland Heather Cook, 58, who was formally charged with the drunk driving death of 41-year-old married father of two, Thomas Palermo, last Friday, spent the weekend in jail after failing to clear the hefty $2.5 million bail set by a district court commissioner.
In highlighting the charges Friday, Baltimore's new State's Attorney, Marilyn J. Mosby, said at a press conference that Bishop Cook, who's the first female bishop in the Episcopal Diocese of Maryland and the second highest-ranking official in the diocese, had registered a staggering .22 blood alcohol level shortly after the Dec. 27 incident that killed the beloved father.
The charges, which include driving under the influence, causing an accident due to texting while driving, and leaving the scene of a fatal accident, could see the bishop spending more than 20 years in prison and $20,000 in potential fines.

Episcopalians Ignore the Elephant in the Room.
Lutherans Deny the Elephant Ever Existed

Team Wendland will make this happen in WELS, with John Brug's help.


Episcopal Executive Council scuttles News Conference even as Bishop Cook languishes in Jail

Maryland Bishop's plight ignored while Executive Council deliberates other issues
By Mary Ann Mueller
VOL Special Correspondent
www.virtueonline.org

Bishop Cook's record was hidden from clergy and laity,
not unlike the tactics of WELS and the LCMS,
not to mention the Little Sect on the Prairie

January 13, 2014
The Episcopal Church has developed a habit of ignoring obvious. This time, while meeting in Linthicum Heights, Maryland, a suburb of Baltimore, the Executive Council ignored the elephant -- in this case purple elephant in the room -- Bishop Heather Cook (Maryland suffragan) who was charged with several felonies including distracted drunken driving while texting which resulted in the death of Thomas Palermo. On Friday (Jan. 9) she landed in the Baltimore women's jail on a $2.5 million bail. If convicted of the all the felonies and accompanying traffic violations the besieged Maryland bishop could be facing more than 20 years in prison.

All of this on-going criminal and legal intrigue was swirling around even as the Episcopal Executive Council gathered to meet at the Maritime Institute Conference Center over the weekend from Jan. 9-11 almost two weeks after Bishop Cook was involved in a deadly car-bicycle accident that captivated the local Baltimore media generating daily front page headlines and nightly television news coverage.

The Baltimore Sun reported that "... the council didn't discuss a high-ranking Maryland bishop who was recently charged with manslaughter in the death of a bicyclist last month."

When the local media attempted to grill Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori about Bishop Cook and how the Executive Council was going to deal with the Bishop Cook's developing legal problems they got short shrift.
"Heather Cook has not been a topic of this meeting because this is a business meeting," replied Presiding Bishop Jefferts Schori as reported by the Baltimore Sun.

Another journalist interpreted the Presiding Bishop's comment to mean: "We have so many more important things to do that are of much more urgency," even though Title IV charges have been filed which could strip Bishop Cook of her all her orders and leave her defrocked.

Bishop Cook, like the Roman Catholic bishop in Arizona,
drove away from a fatal DUI accident.
She was forced to return after 45 minutes, hiding in her gated development.


The Executive Council meets quarterly, frequently at Linthicum Heights. This was the first meeting in 2015 and Bishop Cook's legal entanglements were furthest from their collective minds. Instead the Executive Council focused on Cuba, racism, the 2016-1018 draft budget and the Blue Book report for the upcoming General Convention.
House of Deputies President the Rev. Gay Clark Jennings who described Bishop Cook as a mere "acquaintance" said she was familiar with the Maryland suffragan when Heather Cook was the Diocese of Easton's Canon to the Ordinary. At one time Clark was Canon to the Ordinary in the Diocese of Ohio. The HOD President also said that Palermo and his family were remembered in the prayers of the church.

The Executive Council has met in Linthicum Heights several times because of the ease of making transportation connections with the airlines and Amtrak.

"It is not uncommon to have meetings in this location," noted Executive Officer of the General Convention Canon Michael Barlowe. "The food is great. And BWI (Baltimore-Washington International) airport has lots of flights coming in."

Usually when an Executive Council or the House of Bishops gather the meetings do not end on a Sunday as it did this time.

The media who cover the Executive Council and HOB are used to a concluding Internet news conference call. The telenews conference is prefaced by opening remarks usually by the Presiding Bishop and other HOB officers or HOD officers such as HOD President Clark and Canon Barlowe, after which the media who are present are allowed to ask one question of the participants.

Scheduled for Sunday were the usual line up of the Presiding Bishop, House of Deputies President and General Convention Executive Officer. However the media conference was inconveniently scheduled.
"The media conference from the Executive Council of The Episcopal Church is planned for Sunday, January 11, at approximately noon Eastern," Public Affairs Officer Neva Rae Fox advised the interested media late Saturday morning.

This timing conflicted with both regularly scheduled Sunday morning church activity as well as the pregame show and kick off to the Green Bay Packers-Dallas Cowboys NFL divisional playoff game.

When asked why there was a noon news conference rather than later in the day, after normal morning church events let out, Fox replied: "So sorry but there are a number of schedules that are being juggled to accommodate the conference."

"Many of you have recused yourself from tomorrow's media conference for scheduling reasons. Therefore, it is cancelled," Fox e-mailed about two hours later. "However, in lieu of gathering, I offer an alternative. I invite you to e-mail a question or two to me and specify who you would like to answer it. I will facilitate your request. Deadline for accepting questions will be noon tomorrow (Sunday)."

This writer was interested in the spiritual welfare of Bishop Cook and how she was weathering the situation she found herself in so I sent in an e-mail question directed to Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori.
"As the Presiding Bishop of The Episcopal Church and the pastor of pastors and the bishop to bishops, and being in Linthicum Heights, Maryland, (outside of Baltimore) have you seen Bishop Heather Cook in her time of need, and have you been able to bring her pastoral and sacramental care?"

Sunday evening Fox e-mailed this reply: "Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori: 'Our work of prayer and pastoral care continues -- for Heather Cook, for the Diocese of Maryland, and for the Palermo family'."
The Presiding Bishop did not directly answer "yes" or "no" to the first part of the question posed to her: "... have you seen Bishop Heather Cook in her time of need?"

In fact the answer she gave for the second part of the question was basically the same answer she gave theBaltimore Sun last week: "Currently, we are following the disciplinary processes of the church, and we are providing pastoral care. We hold Bishop Cook, the Diocese of Maryland and the Palermo family in our prayers." The quote was also picked up by the Episcopal New Service when it finally tackled the breaking story 12 days after the accident happened and Bishop Cook was placed on paid administrative leave by Bishop Eugene Sutton (XIV Maryland).
The Christian Post, one of the publications which has taken an active interest in the Bishop Cook hit and run story Monday (Jan. 12) quoted Fox to say: "Prayers were sent up for Heather Cook, the Palermo family and the Diocese of Maryland."

It is reported that Bishop Cook spent the weekend in protective custody in the Women's Detention Center and was "on lock down" but that she "has been talking on the telephone." She appeared, via video link, at her bond hearing Monday afternoon.

Posted visiting hours for the Baltimore City Detention Center are Tuesday through Saturday from 10 a.m. until 1:45 p.m. and again from 3 until 4:45 in the afternoon. However no visitors are allowed on Sundays and Mondays.
The Presiding Bishop has already turned her attention to Jerusalem, Cyprus and The Gulf writing to Episcopal congregations and explaining that their Good Friday offering will be channeled to the Province of Jerusalem and the Middle East. She also wrote that she has joined 100 of her fellow brother and sister bishops (sans Heather Cook) in supporting President Barrack Obama's Immigration Executive Action.

"All persons equally deserve the ability to pursue their dreams and contribute to their communities and families with liberty, dignity, and freedom," she penned.

Mary Ann Mueller is a journalist living in Texas. She is a regular contributor to VirtueOnline

***
GJ - The WELS and LCMS answer is to deny anything happened by saying nothing. WELS still claims Al Just was innocent of murdering his wife, even though Just was convicted of his heinous crime, serving about five years.

WELS out and out lied about Floyd Stolzenburg. VP Kuske laughed about it. Jay Webber was happy to associate with Stolzenburg in exchange for money for Ukraine. Kelly Reagan, trained LCMS, is happy to pose as part of the staff of the Masonic congregation.


Born forgiven should be the name of the Emmaus Conference,
where Jay Webber will share how little he knows about Lutheran doctrine.

Look at Adult Education in the Synods and Find the Agenda.
See the WELS Documented Blog for Proof

Not Madam Mueller, but WELS Pastor Adam Mueller,
where children are encouraged to put women's makeup
on the pastor and church council members.


From WELS Pastor Steve Spencer:

Notice that there are no meetings where a Pastor can learn: "How to return your congregation to every-Sunday communion;" "How to introduce the Lutheran Practice of Private Confession in your congregation;" "How to lower the age of First Communion for the spiritual benefit of your children;" "How clergy clothes aid in outreach;" "Why the Crucifix is still 'Lutheran';" "How to encourage your congregation in using the Sign of the Cross in their daily lives;" "Why Icons are more than mere decorations for the church building;" "What the Common Cup teaches us about Holy Communion;" "Kneeling is not just for Romans;" etc....... Sad, all these "fixes" for our churches and members, and very few are any different from what one would get from any sectarian church down the street. In fact, the sectarians do all this way better than we do. Meanwhile, the actual and real "fixes" - in the Means of Grace - are almost an afterthought within the church that should be the champion of these Means. We have lost our way. In our rush to ape the "successful" sectarians, we have pretty much turned our backs on our Lutheran and Apostolic heritage. And for this we expect God's blessings?! Read Malachi 1 - and weep.

Very wise observation, Pastor Spencer. As simple-minded a post this may be, it touches upon the shift WELS has taken. We may teach how important the Means of Grace are, but by our actions we don't rely upon it. I was saddened this past weekend as I saw the tweets and Facebook posts coming from your neck of the woods. Glowing reviews of a Christian leadership conference that trumpeted business tactics and statistics, rather than the Means of Grace. And I also noticed on the WELS Kingdom workers Facebook page how one WELS member who dared disagree with this way of thinking was soundly told how wrong he was. Anyone ready to have a discussion about this?

WD2


  1. Spencer's comment from January 13 at 7:16pm shows clearly he's a sacerdotalist.
    Reply
  2. For those who may not know what Sacerdotalism is, here's the definition: "Religious belief emphasizing the powers of priests as essential mediators between God and humankind."

    Is that really what Pastor Spencer was emphasizing? I, for one, don't think so.


    WD2
    Reply
  3. Spencer is equating outward observance with a return to the means of grace. He's also promoting practices that have been rejected by confessional Lutherans, such as infant communion. A church can have a solid law and gospel, means of grace ministry without reverting back to the outward practices of Catholicism. Does Spencer believe that the means of grace are only valid when an ordained clergyman administers them? He used to refer to himself as "Father," just like a Catholic priest. Does he still do that? Does he still want people to call him that? Folks should be careful to realize that a faithful means of grace ministry, faithful to the Word and the Lutheran Confessions, does not automatically mean a return to Roman Catholic practices and emphases.
    Reply
  4. What I said was, "Meanwhile, the actual and real "fixes" - in the Means of Grace - are almost an afterthought within the church that should be the champion of these Means." I did not say what we need is to rely on the pastor as some kind of necessary go-between between the people and their God. Indeed, the Lutheran Confessions expressly reject this, as do I. The brave name-calling anonymous commentor obviously has no idea either what the Confessions teach or what a sacredotalist actually teaches. The other usual charge made in this connection is "Romanism," which is just as inaccurate, as all the practices I mentioned were already in place and the norm in the world-wide Christian Church long before the Roman Papacy and its false teachings took over a good portion of the visible church. Again, the Means of Grace really do work - maybe not always the way we silly humans want them to - but they always work the way God wants them to work, and isn't that the whole point of the church?!
Notice the name change in WELS, from Adult Education to Adult Discipleship.
These four blokes are only part of the Mark Jeske Mob.

According to Slick Brenner, Wayne Mueller was pushed out of teaching at the Sausage Factory because of his Reformed doctrine. (Ditto Joel Gerlach) So WELS gave Wayne a big raise and put him in charge of Perish Services (aka proven methods of killing Lutheran doctrine and worship). When Wayne was promoted again to First VP (hefty salary), he was replaced by Bruce Becker (drive-by DMin), who now works openly with Mark Jeske.

When Wayne Mueller took over Perish Services, he immediately changed two job titles: Youth Education became Youth Discipleship. Adult Education became Adult Discipleship. The word disciple is pivotal for the Church Shrinkage Movement, which hectors people to "make disciples who make disciples" instead of preaching the Gospel of justification by faith and administering the Sacraments. Church Shrinkage has always assumed the cell group model of Pietism, and WELS has trampled over the other sects in rushing into Fuller's world and chasing the mirages with a vengeance.

ELCA went from women's ordination to gay ordination
to women running all the schools. Here is the first woman to head a dying seminary.
WELS is eager to follow ELCA.


Adult Education
I decided to study adult education methods for a master's degree. What really matters is the content, and that has been heavily skewed to the left, ever since FDR's presidency. The Church Shrinkers work exactly like the Leftists in politics. They have the same methods and want to reverse everything with the same mindless passion.

I remember seeing the LCMS Michigan District's committee name - Evangelism and Church Growth. Aha, we do not want people to think of Evangelism being The Gospel, but Evangelism meaning the doctrinal content of Fuller Seminary pea-brains and hot-air merchants. The Fuller disciples do make Fuller disciples. The Lutherans (even ELCA) have spent millions at Fuller Seminary, Willow Creek, and Trinity Divinity School.

Therefore, esteemed alumni of Fuller, WC, and Trinity have the same mocking attitude toward Lutheran doctrine and worship that their mentors exude. James Huebner (Wayne Muller.2) is another Fuller devotee who has mocked the efficacy of the Word in his sad, confused publications, but he is First VP anyway. And he often leads people down the dark pathways he has trod - Adult Discipleship.

Why are so many conferences held throughout WELS? There is a constant effort to drum the ideology of Mark Jeske, Paul Kelm, and Larry Olson into every remaining noggin in the sect. They should hurry, because WELS will not last much longer under the current leadership.

WELS is an interesting study because of its small size and lust for brain-dead conformity. Missouri pastors can always point to their alternative groups and lobbies, but they are traveling down the same well-greased road.

Missouri will end up like the Episcopal Church, lots of money in the vault, very few members in church.

"We love the diversity that agrees with our iron-fisted rule."
Episcopal and Lutheran motto.

Seeds and Plants Provoke Comments and Questions


When I posted this photo of Bee Balm on Facebook, one classmate wrote, "That is a hybrid."

She is a fan of native plants, so I asked her, "Do you eat hybrid sweet corn or Indian maize?" No answer has been posted so far. I am waiting patiently.

Another classmate said she grew Bee Balm once, but it was covered with a white powdery growth. I guessed it was mildew from being crowded, and she said, "Yes, it was crowded next to another, bigger plant - in a corner."

Bee Balm likes air circulation and plenty of sun, but hers was planted where it would get neither, so mildew had a chance to take over.

Peas love the cold and sweet soil, and they have shallow roots. I once grew them where we had gravely soil because it did not run counter to their needs. They can be planted as soon as the soil can be dug, not on Good Friday, the common day used (but one that varies wildly from year to year).

Once they are done, beans can take over and growth

Plants that love cold generally do poorly in the heat. Spinach and lettuce are best growing in cold rainy weather and bolt (go to seed) in the hot sun. Spinach grown on hot days is just terrible, bitter and tough to eat. Early spring spinach, planted in the fall, is crunchy and 10x better than the best in any grocery store.

When the spinach fails in the heat and sun, many substitutes can be eaten instead - such as goosefoot, Malabar spinach, dandelion greens (without herbicides, thanks), and beet greens/Swiss chard. Chard is a beet, and growing it is a snap.

Some plants get sweeter or better from the cold - carrots and some root crops, plus Brussel Sprouts.

Weeds, Plants, or Mulch
A patch of soil is either going to grow plants or weeds, or be mulched. If the sun strikes it and rain falls, something will grow.

In the desert, some seeds do not germinate until the rare summer when a lot of rain falls. Then oceans of wildflowers rise up to bloom fast, set seed, and die again. References to plants dying fast in the New Testament are examples of desert growth - flowering fast and dying soon after.

In the rest of the country, something is always ready to grow in a given area. The previous generation lined up their rows of plants in their gardens, used posts and string to mark straight rows, planted them like soldiers being reviewed like soldiers, and hoed the weeds all summer, removing those dastardly weeds and throwing them away.

Some used soil as a mulch, effectively breaking up the fungi strands that were trying to feed the roots. And still the weeds grew.

One alternative is to plant wide rows, crowding the plants. They become a type of mulch, shading the soil and preventing a place where weeds and grow. The same area can produce a lot more food per square foot. Weeds are cut to add to the mulch between rows.

Ruth Stout and Mulching
Ruth Stout promoted the idea of heavily mulching the garden, which creates compost on the spot, holds moisture in the soil, blocks most weed growth, and feeds all the soil creatures and fungi. Moreover, the birds will see a mulched area as a perfect place to feed on bugs.

The mulch has to be thick or be fashioned as Jackson Mulch, starting with a layer of newspapers. Otherwise the weeds are halted at first, then rear up as on steroids, fed by all the goodness of mulch.

Last year we began Jackson Mulch as the solution to planting roses in the lawn. Rototilling was fraught with problems and digging up the whole area was daunting. So we planted roses in the lawn, covered all the grass with newspapers and added wood mulch on top. We enjoyed beautiful roses, almost no weeds, and no insect damage worth mentioning. No spraying, no weeding, no fertilizing except through mulching on top of grass.

Weeds Are Overly Feared
So many gardeners are afraid of weeds. We planted tomatoes and sunflowers in the sunny garden and used wood mulch right on the grass - no newspapers. Yes, the crabgrass roared through it in time. Tomatoes kept growing in the crabgrass and we pulling many good ones out of there. Some pumpkins were planted too later, but they grew happily in the bed of crabgrass. The sunflowers grew, bloomed, and went to seed. I did not like it fancy (but weak) variety and decided to buy the giant sizes ones for the next crop.

When one patch of the rose garden developed a patch of weeds, since we expanded hastily, we added bags of mulch on top of some additional newspapers. We did get some short-term slime mold, nicknamed "dog vomit" because of its looks. But that went away quickly.

Wood in all forms will promote fungi growth, and fungi are good for the soil and plants. The Queen of England's private garden aims at promoting fungi growth for that very reason. Mrs. I says she understands my British heritage better whenever a gardening show is on. Where else can one find 700 year-old lawns and organic gardening expertise?

Seeds Are Arriving
Amazon sells seeds, so it is easy to find rare kinds and get a shipment for a few dollars. I will use the hardware store for ordinary plants, but the right seed is hard to find at any given location. Supplies quickly fade from the Net, too.

Doubtless I have ordered too many seeds, but that will only mean sharing them with others. Who does not want to grow 15 foot sunflowers? Or a few pumpkin vines? Or strange looking gourds?

My most interesting case of the new happened when I bought true Snow on the Mountain as seed, because I wanted to compare that to Goutweed, which many call Snow on the Mountain. Gardeners were always offering me Goutweed (sometimes called Bishop's Weed) because it grows and spreads in the shade. I had my packet of seed of the actual flower (not the shade-weed) but did not plant it. So I opened it and threw the seed into an area where bulb flowers were growing. Later, the most beautiful and delicate flower rose up next to the garage.

Goutweed is found on lists of hated, aggressive plants. Many pass-along plants like Goutweed are shared because they are easy to grow and therefore difficult to eradicate.