Saturday, August 1, 2015

Scott Barefoot Is Sharing Again




Dr. Jackson,

Not sure if you noticed this or not...

In the picture from Scott Barefoot's FACEBOOK page that showed Caleb Schmiege and some Lutheran youths...

A few of them (directly behind Caleb and slightly to the right) are giving the "devil" sign....extended index finger and pinky finger, other 2 fingers held down by the thumb.

Most commonly seen during heavy metal concerts...

The exception is in Texas, where some say this is the symbol for the Texas Longhorn sports team...


Grumps,

***

GJ - You are right, Grumpy, and there are several obscene signs as well.

---

A parting word:

Some adults just NEVER learn that trying to be "COOL" with the younger generation does NOT work...

Grumps

Mystery Plant Revealed - Lantana.
Fibonacci Numbers and Creation

The little black Lantana berries should have given the plant away.
The photo is from this blog Kasey's Korner - which I have linked on the left.


The tiny flowers of Lantana open up like trumpets at first.
Butterflies love this plant.
I have never purchased many garden seeds or potted flowers before. Therefore, I more like the farmer who just jumped off the beet wagon.  Readers may know that many farmers know their business quite well but not the gardening side. Traditionally, that was left up to his wife, who grew the flowers and vegetables she wanted in her own plot.

My tobacco farmer relatives on the German side had no idea why mulching with tobacco leaves was hurting the tomato plants. When I told them the plants were cousins and they were giving tomatoes tobacco wilt, I assumed the role of gardening genius. They also confessed to plowing up this weird plant with enormous roots - a beautiful stand of asparagus.  Of course, asparagus is ferny late in the season, but we eat the spears that come up in the spring.

I saw this interesting plant at Walmart - on sale - and the gardening clerk could not identify it. The label was missing and two identical hanging plants were both reduced 50%. My verbal description failed to alert the readers - lacking a photo - so I decided to do research at Lowe's, where I had some more mulch waiting with my name on it.

The plant looked minty, and the leaves were fragrant. That did not help the readers. The tiny flowers were trumpet like at first and became black berries. That did not stir up an ID - only more requests for photos.

Lantana with butterfly -
Texas promotes smartscaping to preserve native plants and animals.

Lanatana - Another Butterfly Plant

This plant belongs to the Verbena family. The aromatic leaves make it unpleasant for deer and other pests, and birds eat the berries and plant them. The tiny flowers attract butterflies, so this is a great flower to add to the garden.

I bought the hanging basket because it was on sale. Those who like to hang plants should consider doing this for butterflies on the patio or deck.

Caring for Lantana Plants

While newly planted lantanas require frequent watering, once established, these plants require little maintenance and are even tolerant of somewhat dry conditions. In fact, a good soaking about once a week should keep them relatively happy...
To encourage reblooming, cut the tips (deadhead) periodically. Overgrown plants can be given new life by cutting back a third of their growth. They will bounce back quickly. Regular pruning of the plant usually takes place in spring.

People wonder where all the butterflies and ladybugs went as they spray their yards for mosquitoes. Lady Bird Johnson began beautification efforts which still benefit many areas, as people learn to plant native species and enjoy the wildflowers of their area.

Spraying for bugs will eliminate the 95% beneficial ones in order to eliminate the few that annoy and come back anyway.

I have noticed a direct connection between easy-to-grow plants - like Shasta Daisies and Lantana and Feverfew - and the growth of beneficial bugs in the garden. But of course, this requires study. The places where most plants can be bought are managed by the vendors (tomatoes out, lantanas in) but clerked by kids who know more about the Call of Duty and Grand Theft Auto video games than they do about the plants they pretend to sell.

When we were tearing down the straw bales for my pitiful potato crop, Little Helper said, "Look, dad, watch out - a spider!" I said - "He won't harm you." The abundance of straw meant a great feeding zone for spiders and other beneficials. That environment was far too helpful for slugs, as I read about before, so I decided against it for the future.

Diversity of habitat allows for a diversity of creatures. Our language gives us away, even when people want to have their Tourette outbursts about evolution and global warming. Creatures are the product of Creation by the Word.



Genesis 1:24 And God said, Let the earth bring forth the living creature after his kind, cattle, and creeping thing, and beast of the earth after his kind: and it was so.
25 And God made the beast of the earth after his kind, and cattle after their kind, and every thing that creepeth upon the earth after his kind: and God saw that it was good.
John 1:3 All things were made by him; and without him was not any thing made that was made.

No greater lab can be found than the garden itself. Look at Lantana, the flower I never grew before - plant it and the butterflies will arrive to sip its nectar. The birds love the tiny berries, and the plant spreads to support even more butterflies.

Extra Floral Nectar - New To Me

EFN was entirely new to me when I read the Walliser book quoted below. Certain plants - with sunflowers as the champion - produce nectar outside the blooms, so it is called Extra Floral Nectar. This delightful sweet substance for insects attracts and feeds beneficial insects, often called natural enemies by Walliser.

EFN can be produced by members of many common plant families, including Rosaceae (roses, strawberries), Euphorbiaceae (euphorbias, poinsettias), Asteraceae (asters), Liliaceae (lilies), Fabaceae (peas, beans), Curbitaceae (squash, cucumbers, melons), and Asclepiadaceae (milkweed). In my garden I can readily spot EFN production sites on my elderberries, fruit trees, beautyberries, peonies, sunflowers, morning glories, impatiens, and hibiscus. EFN is, in fact, a very important extra nutrient source for natural enemies, especially when prey are scarce. Being on the lookout for EFN production sites on your own plants can lead to some interesting interactions with insects. As you can see, nectar isn’t nearly as simple as we think. Plants know what they are doing. They have evolved to intersect with the insects they rely on in many striking and spectacular ways. [Evolution Tourette alert]

Walliser, Jessica (2014-02-26). Attracting Beneficial Bugs to Your Garden: A Natural Approach to Pest Control (Kindle Locations 1488-1494). Timber Press. Kindle Edition. 


EFN and tiny flowers are both important because they attract and feed the insects we want the most. A tiny insect cannot maneuver in the large flowers, but favors the small ones instead. Sunflowers are not really large flowers, but a massive gathering of tiny flowers arranged delightfully in Fibonaci spirals. Sunflowers are not content--something that goes along with plants knowing!--to have hundreds of tiny flowers - they also grow EFN outlets very early, so they are doing beneficial insect work even before they bloom.

That Massive Pile of Decomposing Straw
I have plans for the remains of the straw bale garden. The abundant growth of weeds only encouraged me, because strong weeds mean healthy soil - plus some extra weeding and muttering.

The Veterans Honor roses will move to a new circle around the maple tree, when they are dormant, late fall or early spring.

The raspberries will continue to grow and sprout in the heavily mulched area.

The bargain roses will serve as the sunny garden border. Two of them are the very tall and abundantly flowering Fireworks roses. They seemed gangly and annoying at first, but now in full bloom are exactly what their name suggests.


Veterans Honor Rose.


WELS Documented - Instead of the PR Blather Funded by Thrivent

More Hoenecke, Less Jeske

Friday, July 31, 2015


More of this & Less of that in the Synod


Results from our latest survey have been coming in all day and we will be posting additional results for your evaluation over the next few days.

To begin with though, on our survey, we asked, "What would you like to see more of in the Synod" and "What would you like to see less of in the Synod".

We will start compiling those results on this page so everyone can see and discuss them.

What you would like to see more of in the Synod:
  • Communion every Sunday every Service
  • Pastors who seek out Private Confession & Absolution 
  • Pastors who catechize their flocks on the great benefit of Private Confession & Absolution 
  • More chanting as found in the Altar Book 
  • More prayer services (daily office) during the week 
  • More home visitation 
  • More organ, piano, cellos, trumpets, harps
  • More a Capella singing in church and at home 
  • First communion offered to prepared catechumens when they are ready, not at 14 cause they're 14
  • Local WELS pastors getting to know their local LCMS counterparts 
  • Pastors, not lay people, hitting the streets and neighborhoods knocking on doors 
  • Above all, fathers praying with their children and wives at home every day 
  • Actual confessionalism, actual unity, actual walking together
  • Historic liturgy and use of the lectionary

What would you like to less of in the Synod: 
  • Illumines, Crosswalks, COREs, etc. 
  • Evangelical books, speakers 
  • Stop being afraid of being small or losing the young folks 
  • Baby boomers 
  • Pastors who aren't willing to consider denying communion to unprepared young people (and old people) 
  • Staff ministers 
  • "WELS" Evangelical rocking youth rallies 
  • Pastors who won't read the Confessions and de facto don't hold onto them with a quia subscription
  • Contemporary songs
  • Churches that want to look like non denominationals
Impressive lists. The image I have of WELS is pastors in t-shirts and jeans, Christian pop songs, no liturgy.

More Gausewitz, Less Glende

---

More Luther, Less Joel Osteen


Thursday, July 30, 2015


Millennials Want It: The Demand for a Confessional Lutheran Convention


Our latest survey results:
  
Over 90% of the respondents to our survey would like to attend a strictly Confessional Lutheran Millennial Convention. Furthermore, over 50% of those would travel over 500 miles to attend with an average of 5 or more attending from their congregation.

Confessional Lutheran
Millennial Convention
Young people today have been marketed to all their lives, and they can see past gimmicks and tricks. They don’t needchurch to pretend to be something it’s not – an entertainment venue, a relationship course, a nightclub. They find it refreshing to enter a building which openly proclaims itself as a worship space, to take part in ceremonies and rhythms which unashamedly focus on worship. They’ve swapped the salesman’s pitch for simple sacraments.


In an era of continuous rapid change, young people are seeking to feel grounded and connected to their past. In the midst of chaotic change and technology, there is a strong desire to be rooted and grounded in traditions of the past.

What do Millennials want to learn at a Confessional Lutheran Convention?
The top three items include:
   1. Study of the Historical Lutheran Liturgy
   2. Study the Book of Concord
   3. Confessional Lutheran Meets Today’s Social Issues

Millennials are leaving churches in droves; why don’t we give them what they want?
1/3 of American adults under 30 state they have no religious affiliation and 88% of the religiously unaffiliated say they're not looking for a religion that is right for them.

LCMS offers it and it’s overwhelmingly popular; why doesn’t WELS?

Age Bracket of our Current Rallies:
1. WELS International Youth Rally – Around High School Age
2. ELS with the LYA Rally – Around High School Age
3. WELS Regional Youth Rallies – Start as young as 4th Grade

The need exists for an actual Millennial Convention for the 17-29 age group.

Currently Offered at our Rallies (We're NOT saying these are bad, but simply that they reach a different audience):

1. WELS International Youth Rally - Morning Devotions, Optional Breakout Sessions, Daily Excursions off Campus
2. ELS with the LYA Rally – Classes that include Pottery, Photography, Cartoon Drawing

Meanwhile the LCMS Higher Things offers 14 Worship services, 123 breakout sessions (68 unique), plus evening entertainment during their Tuesday to Friday Convention.

The need exists for a WELS Millennial Convention that offers multiple worship services with the Lord’s Supper; a chance to dig deep into the Book of Concord, Historical Liturgy, Adiaphora Traditions, Social Issues, & Bible translations.

Not Competing; but Complimenting
A Millennial Convention of this sort would NOT compete with what both the WELS and ELS already does, and is very successful at, but rather this would compliment it by filling in the missing gap and giving Millennials’ what they keep asking for.


More pastors, fewer sausage factory clones.

Thursday, July 30, 2015

Creation Gardening - Bailing Out on Straw Bales

You want a close-up of a slug instead?

Straw bale gardening is all the rage. Lowe's had a semi-trailer 2/3rds empty when I bought mine very early in the spring. We had snow afterwards, so that  was really faux-spring, but a good time to get the bales rotting.

Later I learned that the funny trails across the bales were slug paths - an ill omen indeed. I eventually used beer traps to kill a bunch, and some critter drank all the beer and ate the slugs. That happened in the front yard but not in the back, so it was more likely a dog.

The potatoes began to grow once it warmed up, and the vines looked great. I had some grassy weeds, which later went nuts in the sun as the vines died down.

The results were pathetic, with a few potatoes, mostly found by our helper and his son, who found digging through the bales a bit of fun. The bales turned into soft, dark compost, but the slugs had their way with most of the produce.

Straw bales use too much water to keep their dampness, and their nature is paradise to slugs. As someone said, the end result is a lot of compost, so bales are not all bad, just not my choice for potatoes. I will try potatoes again next year in soil. They are "apples of the earth" in French, not "apples of the straw."

Companion plants get along the same way,
one hugging the other.



Corn Ears Forming
I bewailed the lack of corn two weeks after planting, but the corn sprouted after four weeks. I was pessimistic, but most of the corn made a good showing and ears are forming now in perfect corn weather - blazing hot and humid.

I will plant corn again next year, but later, so the soil is thoroughly warm.

Beans and many early vines were eaten by rabbits. Rabbits - not beans and vines - are all over the place. I squirted water (by accident) on baby bunnies hiding in the front rose garden and Sassy followed one, gently nosing it along to get acquainted. Sassy does not hurt other animals, so her Dale Carnegie nose approach is pretty funny to watch. A pet duckling was equally unimpressed with her, several years ago. Chickens squawk and semi-fly to avoid that cold nose exam.

Mr. Lincoln


Roses Do Not Like Corn Weather
I was anticipating a great bloom cycle in the KnockOut roses, which continue to grow like weeds, but the heat makes the blooms finish up too fast. However, the traditional hybrid tea roses are doing well and producing bouquets to give away almost every day.

The roses are quite varied in how they bloom. The white John Paul II roses are brilliant in the sunshine and fragrant, astonishingly productive. They do not last as long when cut, but they make an interesting contrast with the other colors. No other rose has produced as many flowers so consistently. They were aphid ravaged on the first bloom cycle and almost perfect afterwards, thanks to beneficial insects going to town on the aphids.

Mr. Lincoln is the fastest growing rose with spectacular, fragrant blooms. My latest find was one large cane with three perfect buds. I cut that one for Mrs. Ichabod, who loves Mr. Lincoln almost as much as me.

Peace also came under attack by the aphids and bounced back. They bloomed at once with flowers that reminded me of why it is still one of the all-time favorites.

Veterans Honor is a pure red rose that looks impossibly beautiful in the full sun, like red velvet. The rose is fragrant and lasts long when cut.

I have had a little mildew - no surprise with five inches of rain at a time - and blackspot, which rain brings out of the varieties prone to the fungus. I have not treated either problem, except to prune off blackspot and drop the affected parts in the nearby grass.

This is how I feel with grassy weeds to pull.

Grassy Weeds Galore
Grassy weeds have partied as much as the rabbits this year, rocketing through the mulch in many places. Unlike many gardeners - mere dabblers - who curse weeds, I think of them as green fertilizer aching to be composted on the spot. We have added layers of Jackson Mulch in some spots, like the first rose garden, and started with cardboard on other parts.

The original sunny garden, which went all crabgrass last year, is now covered with soft straw compost. Once that settles down, we will find ways to combine it with newspapers and cardboard to compost into the soil for next year. Slugs will be put in their place by the beneficial bugs.

Strawberries smell great, but I cannot eat them.
Fortunately, every creature loves them.


Tomatoes - Good for Blood Pressure
Cherry tomatoes are very productive and fun to eat. They are high in potassium, which reduces blood pressure. I had a great reading this morning after making them a regular part of the diet, adding bananas and other good things into the mix.

Both of us like ripe garden tomatoes, almost as much as slugs and squirrels. The answer is to pull in the green ones, keep them with bananas, and ripen them in a box of bananas and tomatoes. A paper bag also works, but they are so rare I would have to buy some on Amazon for $1 each. Instead, I use Amazon boxes.

In fact, any cardboard box of any size is bound to stay here rather than get picked up in the recycle bin.

So I open the ripening box, which smells bananish, and pull out ripe tomatoes to eat whenever the urge strikes me. All I have to do is keep putting the green ones in, sometimes waiting for the break when they start to color. Mrs. I got a large, perfect red one from outdoors, solid red with no damage from slugs or tree rats. She said it was delicious.

Stumped? You need more time in the garden,
less time playing Candy Crush.


Paper Training the Rustic Fence
Our helper and Little Helper wanted to do more work, so I gave them all the cardboard to paper train the rustic fence.

We laid out the dead tree parts in a nifty fence with all kinds of branches and irregularities poking up and out for the birds. The concept was dead tree on the ground for soil creatures and toad shelters, branches sticking up for bird perches.

The initial result was a stand of weeds all around the rustic fence, where the mower did not reach. The Jackson Rose Farm staff lifted the pieces of the tree - with some help from me - and placed cardboard over the weedy area. Fence pieces went back on top. That will suppress weeds while adding more compost to the soil.

The rustic fence is the beginning of the Wild Garden, which we will carpet with cardboard and newspaper, the top part covered for compost and autumn leaves. If all goes well, the Wild Garden will feature some berry plants, various beneficial insect and bird plants,  and sections for Monarch butterflies and hummingbirds.

Our helper said, "Less mowing, more trimming, but always a new job to do." That sums it up. Rather than boring grass, we will have many exciting plants and a large collection of interesting plants and creatures.



Selective Diversity
I knew when "Diversity Training" began in various institutions that another agenda was behind it. They really mean Selective Diversity - allowing the Left to determine the only form of expression allowed, since anything else is a hate crime - like the novel 1984, where thought can be a crime.

Selective Diversity has no room for God, the Creation, or diversity of thought. The idea is control, and the results are the same as spraying down the yard with various toxins to achieve the photogenic garden of Photoshopped gardening magazines.

The Founders of our country believed in Creation and in religious freedom. Now that Creation itself is a thought crime, not allowed in science, the schools, or mainline denominations, religious freedom is also being exterminated, one diversity program at a time.


Wednesday, July 29, 2015

Walther Is Better Than Lutheran Scholastics? - Extra Nos

The post below - from Dr. Cruz reminds me of an obscure pastor
Engelbert Schaller, saying the same thing about Walther -
CFW stated his theses and never supported them, never dealt with the Scriptures.
That caused me to delay and start over on Thy Strong Word,
so I could start with the manuscripts and the efficacy of the Word.

Waltherians consider CF Dub Dub better than Lutheran Scholastics?

That is right dear friends, UOJ Waltherian Huberites consider CF Dubya Dubya, better theologian than Gerhardt, Leyser, Hunnius and more.
Credits: Dr. Ichabod - via the LCMS.

Well, what can I say but...WOW.

How could you pay homage and so much respect to the guy who has inferior exegetical abilities than Hunnius or Gerhardt? The guy who relied on translations rather than deal with the original Greek and Hebrew? Did the Old Orthodox Lutherans rely on translations? No, they were careful exegetes skilled in the original languages.  How could one lean on Walther rather than the ones who were there in the writing of the Formula of Concord?

Now, Walther could be correct in some area against the Lutheran Scholastics - but that would be an accident, a stroke of luck but not due to skill.

I am skeptical of Lutherans who easily dismiss Old Orthodox Lutherans. Yet today I hear Lutherans who criticise Luther, and even somewhat embarrassed of him when in fact they have not read Luther himself.

Frankly when you survey the things CFW said I would label him as unconscious Calvinist.

You might object to me and say - wait a minute LPC - CFW Walther wrote against Calvinism and criticised Calvinists. Well, you see Evangelicals criticise Calvinism too but their denial and separation of the Holy Spirit from the Word and from the Sacraments make them unconscious Calvinists.

Ever heard of false flags? You could raise the flag of Lutheranism but behind the scene you have another flag in your left arm, the real one, which undermines the one you have raised. Now far be it from me that CFW was a purposeful false flagger. Sincere people could be wrong and could have adopted a position just like the position they have been attacking.

I would like you to read this old post on the critique of Walther's method and his lack of exegetical abilities.

Fortunately it is only in the USA were Walther is revered -  for example a pastor I interact with, from German origin who migrated to Australia, is as skeptical towards Walther as I am. Another pastor gave snide remarks about the teachings of Walther. I would not be surprised to hear from an American Lutherans tell me that those people are heretics for doubting Walther.

Why is Walther considered the guru of American Lutheranism? Walther's method was to quote Luther, the Confessions and the Lutheran Fathers. In doing so, it gave his would be hearers an air of Walther being faithful to the Lutheran Orthodox tradition. When in fact he was actually mis-quoting them, and in real fact, his position contradicted them! We must remember that when Walther was a disciple of Stephan, Stephan's followers drank with loyal fervour the sayings of Stephan, when Stephan was booted out of the scene, the same unquestioning loyalty simply transferred the Walther.

This is the explanation of Dr. Karl Edwin Kuenzel...(emphasis mine).

... Walther’s method of citing Luther and the Lutheran dogmaticians...  was wrong both in principle and in practice. The problem was that unlike Luther, who stressed the Bible and the study of the Bible, Walther’s positions neither rested directly on Scripture nor did they lead one directly into it. Instead he strongly stressed, to the extreme, the importance of Luther and the Lutheran Confessions and the Lutheran fathers, and certainly much more than he cited God’s Word. Utilizing this format Walther led people to think that the matter under discussion or being presented had been established sufficiently by the quotations from Luther and the fathers; therefore it was unnecessary to study ScriptureThis format actually hampered people in their use and study of the BibleAnd eventually, it has come to the point where the citation theologians not only quote Luther and the old fathers but now they have also included Walther and others as proof of the doctrinal stand. As pastors, theologians, and theological students took up the study of doctrinal maters in subsequent years the subject of study was not as much a study of the Bible as it was a study of old synodical reports and conference and convention essays. And now quotations from these, not the Bible, are frequently used to support doctrinal positions.
...
However, it was unsettling to have Walther take a firm stance on a matter citing the Lutheran fathers as his proof, yet not realizing that at the same time his position was in contradiction to what they had written

I think the reason why UOJers hold to Huber's view of Justification is because to them Walther believed it and has already established the issue and therefore, it is settled with no need to unearth (for them) or review the issue. Walther believed it, we should too. Duh?

I tell you what, do you want to be accepted by "confessional" American Lutherans? Pay homage to Walther and quote him too... Lord have mercy.


WELS Convention Pushes Three-Day View Total To 11,400



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