ICHABOD, THE GLORY HAS DEPARTED - explores the Age of Apostasy, predicted in 2 Thessalonians 2:3, to attack Objective Faithless Justification, Church Growth Clowns, and their ringmasters. The antidote to these poisons is trusting the efficacious Word in the Means of Grace. John 16:8. Isaiah 55:8ff. Romans 10. Most readers are WELS, LCMS, ELS, or ELCA. This blog also covers the Roman Catholic Church, Eastern Orthodoxy, and the Left-wing, National Council of Churches denominations.
Martin Luther Sermons
Bethany Lutheran Hymnal Blog
Bethany Lutheran Church P.O. Box 6561 Springdale AR 72766 Reformation Seminary Lectures USA, Canada, Australia, Philippines 10 AM Central - Sunday Service
We use The Lutheran Hymnal and the King James Version
Luther's Sermons: Lenker Edition
Click here for the latest YouTube Videos
Saturday, May 2, 2020
Luther's Second Sermon on Jubilate Sunday
THIRD SUNDAY AFTER EASTER.
SECOND SERMON.
KJV John 16:16 A little while, and ye shall not see me: and again, a little while, and ye shall see me, because I go to the Father. 17 Then said some of his disciples among themselves, What is this that he saith unto us, A little while, and ye shall not see me: and again, a little while, and ye shall see me: and, Because I go to the Father? 18 They said therefore, What is this that he saith, A little while? we cannot tell what he saith. 19 Now Jesus knew that they were desirous to ask him, and said unto them, Do ye enquire among yourselves of that I said, A little while, and ye shall not see me: and again, a little while, and ye shall see me? 20 Verily, verily, I say unto you, That ye shall weep and lament, but the world shall rejoice: and ye shall be sorrowful, but your sorrow shall be turned into joy. 21 A woman when she is in travail hath sorrow, because her hour is come: but as soon as she is delivered of the child, she remembereth no more the anguish, for joy that a man is born into the world. 22 And ye now therefore have sorrow: but I will see you again, and your heart shall rejoice, and your joy no man taketh from you. 23 And in that day ye shall ask me nothing. Verily, verily, I say unto you, Whatsoever ye shall ask the Father in my name, he will give it you
CHRIST’S SUFFERINGS AND RESURRECTION; THE COMFORT CHRIST MINISTERS TO HIS DISCIPLES WHILE IN SORROW, AND THE JOY OF THE WORLD.
1. First, we will consider this narrative in the simplest manner, as it occurred after the Last Supper, while the Lord was in the garden on the way with his disciples to his last sufferings and death. In this historical narrative of today’s Gospel the Lord preaches his death and resurrection to his disciples, the words of which narrative the disciples at the time failed to understand, these words being to them dark sayings and totally hidden from them — an experience that may easily be ours, those of us who are not yet firmly established in the faith. What, however, hindered the beloved disciples from understanding the narrative? This, namely, that they thought Christ was about to establish a temporal kingdom which would make an impression upon the world, and move along in pure, perpetual life, not in death, of which he here speaks when he says: “A little while, and ye behold me no more.” As if he wished to say: I will be with you yet a little while longer, perhaps to midnight; after that I will die and be buried, and be taken out of your sight, so that you will see me no more. But again a little while and ye shall see me; that is, on the third day I will arise again and see you again, and ye shall see me again.
2. This is the sense according to the history, and they are very cold words if not understood in a spiritual way. Yet the Lord also comforts his disciples and says that they will be sorrowful because of his departure but their sorrow will soon have an end. It will be with them as with a woman who lies in the pangs of childbirth; as soon as she is delivered of the child, she forgets her pain. And although this is plain and easy to understand, yet the disciples did not understand how they should fare, what the Lord meant to teach them by these words and by this parable; for such words they had never before heard. But these sayings seem simple to us now, since we often preach and apply them. Were not this the case they would be as dark to us as they w. ere to the beloved disciples. Therefore, let us carefully examine these words and first consider what it means to go to the Father
3. To go to the Father means nothing but to enter upon a new life. As if Christ were to say: I will leave this life of time, of the senses, of nature and of death, and will enter upon the immortal life, where the Father will make all things subject to me, where there is no sleep, no eating, no drinking, as while I lived in the body, and yet the flesh and blood, which I took from the virgin Mary, will continue. That is, I will take to myself a spiritual government to rule the hearts of believers in spirit and faith, and not found, as you imagine, a temporal kingdom. To this spiritual rulership I cannot come except by the way of death. But, as I said, the disciples did not understand it; they thought they would lose the Lord entirely when he died.
Hence they fell into grief and sorrow.
4. Now, here we must take heed, and also learn something from this, lest we read this narrative in vain. To the beloved disciples the greatest pain and sorrow were not that they should never again see the Lord in the body, but the fact that their hearts had lost the Lord was a greater distress and calamity. They were happy to behold the Lord in the body, but they clung much more to him with their hearts. Hence they also thought: If he disappears from our eyes, he will also disappear from our hearts. Just so was it with their joy. To see him again in the body was not the true joy; that they could hardly expect. But that they received him again spiritually and by faith into their hearts, as Savior and Comforter, was their true comfort and joy. For when he is believed in as the Savior the heart rejoices, and aside from this belief there is no help, no counsel, nor any comfort at hand.
5. This we see in the case of the beloved disciples when they fled and forsook and denied the Lord, and shockingly fell into the sin of unbelief.
Then there was no longer a Savior before their eyes. Comfort had departed, Christ had fallen out of their sight, counsel and help were no longer present, and they would have had to remain in this grief and doubt forever had Christ not again caused them to rejoice; for besides this Savior there is none other. Hence, when he is removed there is no other comfort to be had, and nothing but anxiety, need, despair and hell itself must be there. This was the real anxiety, grief and sorrow of the disciples.
6. What agony and grief, think you, they must have had when they recalled the kindness and friendship of the Lord, and the good deeds he did them, and that they were all so unfaithful to him! Then their hearts confessed:
Aye, how friendly and lovingly he associated with us and showed us all exceptional love and friendship! And we have acted thus toward him, have forsaken him and are forsaken by him. Like unfaithful villains, we have denied him, have misused his teachings and grace. What will become of us?
We dare not appear before God, neither can we stand before man, much less before Satan. There is now no consolation. The Savior has departed.
We are in a hopeless, condemned and lost state. Observe, the beloved disciples stood in such anxiety, need and grief that no fasting, no praying, no chastisement, could have helped them. All was lost.
7. In like manner God deals with his children today. Whenever he wants to comfort them, he first plunges them into similar anxiety and temptation. It is agony unbearable when the conscience passes sentence against one. The heart and every refuge fail and anxiety penetrates every nook of the conscience. Anguish and fear consume the marrow and bone, flesh and blood, as the prophet David often laments in his Psalms.
8. But Christ does not let his disciples be long in such anguish and need.
He had said, “And again a little while, and ye shall see me.” This happened on Easter, when he appeared to them and offered them his peace, by which he comforted them and they forgot all the distress, fear and need which they had endured for the little while, until the third day. Narratives like this we should remember when we are in anguish and need, and have lost all hope of comfort. When man is troubled by an evil conscience because of his sins, the heart thinks it is eternal pain; and so it is, also, as man calculates, for he sees no end of it. He thinks God is against him and will not help him, and he himself will not allow God to help him. He looks about and finds no succor from any creature. Yea, he thinks all creatures are his enemies. Therefore, the heart soon concludes and says: Here is eternal anguish, here there will be no change, here there is no help, no comfort. God and everything are against me. In truth it is not so, but it is only a transition. It will not last long. If we can only keep quiet for a little time, he will surely not remain away long with his comfort. This is the Lord’s meaning when he here says to the disciples: “A little while and ye behold me no more,” namely, when ye are steeped in anguish and trouble. “And again a little while, and ye shall see me,” namely, when I shall visit you with my consolation and cause you to rejoice.”
9. Since the holy disciples experienced what it was to be overwhelmed by anguish and want, we must not think that it will be better with us. God will not make an exception in our case. But let us remember that Christ foretells to his disciples their fall, fear and sorrow, and also comforts them in order that they may not despair. Thus we should likewise comfort ourselves and allow the same to be spoken to us, so that when we are taken captive by sin and feel our consciences troubled and burdened, we do not despair; but rather remember it will not continue long. Therefore this is a very comforting Gospel to all troubled and terrified consciences. First, because Christ promises here he will not let them be captives to their misery very long; then, because he shows such kindly friendship to them — casts them not quickly from his presence, although they do not at once learn and understand his discourse; but bears with them, instructs them and deals with them most tenderly.
10. Therefore, should a person come into like fear and misery of conscience, he ought to call to mind these words, and say: Well, a change is taking place. Christ says, A little while and ye shall see me again. It will not last long. Keep calm. It is a matter of only a short time and then Christ will permit us to see him again. But where the conscience is so terrified, one cannot grasp nor understand these words of comfort, even if he hears them. Such was the case with the disciples here. While they were in trouble they could not understand these words. It requires an effort if one is to comfort such terrified and troubled consciences. Hence the Lord uses a parable to explain his former words, in order to establish the disciples firmly in them. He takes an example of a woman in the labor of childbirth, and in such labor that she does not die from it, but brings a happy sight to the world. This is also very comforting and is spoken in order that the disciples may not despair when overtaken by temptation or fear, but may remember that, like a woman lying in travail, it will soon have an end; it is pain for only an hour or so. Christ thus, by means of this parable, makes their sorrow and trouble sweet and beautiful to his disciples.
11. Now we must carefully consider this example. As it is here, so is it in temptation, and especially in the perils of death. Notice how God deals with a woman suffering in childbirth. There she is left alone in her pain by everybody, and no one can help her. Yea, nothing whatever is able to rescue her from her agony; that rests in the power of God alone. The midwife and others around her may indeed comfort her, but they cannot avoid the agony. She must go through it, and venture and freely hazard her life in it, not knowing whether she shall die or recover, because of the child. There she is truly in the perils of death and completely encompassed by death. This parable St. Paul also uses in 1 Thessalonians 5:3, when he tells the Thessalonians how the day of judgment will suddenly fall upon them, just like the pangs of a woman in travail, and they will not be able to escape.
12. Just so it is also when the conscience is in agony or when one lies in the perils of death. Then neither reason nor anything else can help. No work, whether this or that. There is no comfort. You think you are forsaken by God and everybody; yea, you imagine how God and everything are against you. Then you must restrain yourself to quiet and cling only to God, who must deliver you. Besides him nothing else, neither in heaven nor upon the earth, can deliver. The same God gives his help when he thinks it is time, as he does to the woman in travail. He gives her cheer when she no longer thinks of her pain; then joy and life are where death and all distress reigned before. In like manner God makes us happy, and gives us peace and joy where before there were misery and all kinds of sorrow. Therefore, Christ here presents to us all this example, and comforts us with it, in order that we may not despair in the time of death and temptation. It is as if he wanted to say to us: Dear man, when fear, sorrow, temptation and tribulation come, doubt not, despair not. It is only for a little time. When these are over, then follow their fruits, peace and joy.
13. In such sorrow and distress the beloved disciples were when the Lord departed from them. They were forsaken by everybody. They had no place of refuge. They stood in the gate of hell, expecting every hour to meet death; and they heard the judgment of God, thinking they had sinned and must now be given over to Satan. But immediately after his resurrection Christ comes and causes them to forget all their affliction and heartsorrow.
Then they become happy and go and bring forth fruit, and bestir themselves to help all mankind to the same joy. It is a beautiful example and a comforting passage of Scripture for all who experience temptation and trouble. Such should remember that Christ says: “A little while and ye behold me no more and again a little while, and ye shall see me,” and never forget the Gospel of the woman in travail, who gladly goes through all and soon reaches the goal.
14. This Gospel thus arms us for temptation and tribulation, and the sum of it is, that Christ the Lord reveals himself to his own as pure love and friendship, so that they are comforted. This may ever be the case with us, since we know, and from this Gospel learn, that Christ will not forsake those overwhelmed by the perils of death and the temptations of conscience, but will come and comfort them just as he does here his disciples, not leaving them long in their distress. There is truly still hope for one who is terrified in conscience and is troubled because of his sins. But when one doubts and falls into such presumption that he feels in his heart: “There is no hope for me. It cannot be otherwise. I must be condemned.
There is no help nor comfort left, do as I will” — when man is brought to this and hazards everything, it is a terrible fall. May almighty God ever protect us against such a fall! Though the sin be ever so great, if only one does not doubt he will be in no trouble. God will surely rescue him in his own good time.
15. Thus, you have heard here of two kinds of sorrow: The first, that of the disciple when deprived of the bodily presence of Christ; the other, our own, when his spiritual presence departs from our hearts. The first sorrow Christ removed by his resurrection; the other he removes when he causes the conscience again to rejoice. Of this he here speaks further, and says: “Verily, verily, I say unto you, that ye shall weep and lament, but the world shall rejoice: ye shall be sorrowful but your sorrow shall be turned into joy.”
And immediately following the parable he adds: “And ye therefore now have sorrow: but I will see you again, and your heart shall rejoice, and your joy no one taketh away from you.”
16. Here the Lord means the joy with which the conscience is again comforted and made to rejoice when Christ becomes known as a Savior.
For then sorrow, sin, death, hell and all misfortune vanish. And this is not a worldly joy, as the world rejoices, sings and dances over success, but it is a heavenly and eternal true joy before God, and truly well pleasing to God.
Of this joy the prophet says in Psalm 68:3: “But let the righteous be glad; yea, let them rejoice with gladness.” And Christ says here to his disciples: “And your joy no one taketh away from you.” How does this come about? Thus: When Christ stands again before your eyes, and the conscience finds that it possesses the Lord, from whom it expects everything good, then nothing more can be done for him; for who will harm the heart that is thus established upon Christ? Of what should one be afraid as long as he can say: My Lord Jesus Christ is Lord over all things; over death, hell, Satan, and over everything in heaven and upon earth? As St. Paul also defiantly boasts in Romans 8:31-39. “What then shall we say to these things? If God is for us, who is against us? He that spared not his own Son, but delivered him up for us all, how shall he not also with him freely give us all things? Who shall lay anything to the charge of God’s elect? It is God that justifieth; who is he that condemneth? It is Christ Jesus that died, yea rather, that was raised from the dead, who is at the right hand of God, who also maketh intercession for us. Who shall separate us from the love of Christ? shall tribulation, or anguish, or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or peril, or sword? Even as it is written, For thy sake we are killed all the day long; We were accounted as sheep for the slaughter. ( Psalm 44:23).
Nay, in all these things we are more than conquerors through him that loved us. For I am persuaded, that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor principalities, nor things present, nor things to come, nor powers, nor height, nor depth, nor any other creature, shall be able to separate us from the love of God, which is in Christ Jesus our Lord.”
17. These were the words of St. Paul. In the same spirit David also speaks in Psalm 27:1-3, and says: “Jehovah is my light and my salvation; whom shall I fear? Jehovah is the strength of my life; of whom shall I be afraid?
When evildoers came upon me to eat up my flesh, even mine adversaries and my foes, they stumbled and fell. Though a host should encamp against me, my heart shall not fear: though war should rise against me, even then will! be confident.” And in Psalm 23:1-4 he says: “Jehovah is my shepherd; I shall not want. He maketh me to lie down in green pastures; he leadeth me beside still waters, tie restoreth my soul: he guideth me into the paths of righteousness for his name’s sake. Yea, though! walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil; for thou art with me; thy rod and thy staff, they comfort me.”
18. Behold, how courageous and defiant is this man! Who gave him such a valiant and defiant courage? or whence did it come to him? From the Savior alone. And the more we are driven from him, the more we cling to him. The more injury, misfortune and sorrow people cause us, the more we rejoice, for this joy is eternal; and the more they tear us from it, the greater it becomes.
19. Now the question may be asked, can one fall from this joy? Yes. And as soon as we fall, eternal pain is at hand, out of which, although it is in its nature eternal, yet God rescues his own. Thus the joy continues forever, but as long as the person is upon the earth he may fall from it. You should understand it thus: Christ is my Savior, if! so believe and confess. This joy is to me an eternal joy so far as I remain in it. But when Christ departs out of the heart, then the joy also departs. The grace continues, but the conscience can easily fall. I tell you this to the end that you may not be offended in the future when many of you shall fall from the Gospel and deny Christ. For wherever Christ shall be with his joy and comfort, there the cross and persecution are also soon at hand. But I fear we have neither the joy nor the persecution, since we so little appropriate the Gospel. We continue ever in our old nature and despise the dear and precious treasure of the Gospel; therefore God will visit us with greater punishment than he did the Jews, namely, with blindness and error. As Paul says to the Thessalonians: “And for this cause God sendeth them a working of error, that they should believe a lie: that they all might be judged who believed not the truth, but had pleasure in unrighteousness.” 2 Thessalonians 2:1-12. For God cannot allow his Gospel to be disgraced. That one should stumble he will indeed allow, but for one thus to despise his mercy he will not permit, and it is not right that he should. Therefore, it is to be feared that heresy and working of error will come, so that no one will know what is the trouble, as is already evident and will become still more so. May God restrain Satan and save us from such a visitation! Amen.
Labels:
Luther's Sermons
Buying Power versus Saving Wisdom
![]() |
Power? Yes. Wisdom? No. |
Buying Power
The virus scare, now thoroughly debunked, has resulted in a vast exercise of smile filtering. As the hollowed statistics became known, the pressure to wear a face mask increased. They are perfect covers for smiles, and the layers of paper extinguish them even better. They make my glasses fog over and inhibit oxygen use. After some time in the doctor's office, waiting, I said to Mrs. Ichabod, "Take the mask off and breathe a while." We did until the oncology walked in with his mask on."Shields up!" I warned and we covered our faces again.
Millions of masks remind me of the futile synod lust to buy power. Those who covet positions outside of parish work play the political game of being everyone's friend. In power, they harness the wealth of the members by selling them irrevocable insurance trusts and the name plate on buildings.
The synodical leaders must be quite valuable, because they get enormous salaries, benefits, tax free housing allowances, deluxe travel and food expenses. They deserve it because they are handling so much money - the theme that has sunk so many businesses with deluxe home office buildings and other delights.
Once in, they buy power through threats. Anyone who even questions the agenda must be punished, as a lesson for all would-be critics. The leaders make their hostility known to friends, associates, and family members of the potential critic. If that person does not like the treatment, the same thugs say, "He is bitter."
This seemed to be working well, since the "conservative" leaders pictured above kept their jobs and enormous, undeserved salaries and perks. However, the virus panic and the house arrest of America made entire segments of earnings disappear. The oil glut emergency was no difference than the collapse of Hula Hoops, but on a larger scale. Once people stopped buying Hula Hoops, they could be bought for a dime each. Displays of hundreds of colored hoops could be seen outside bike shops and retail stores.
Mindless conformity works well in the ELS-WELS-LCMS sects. Each one is a microcosm of Fuller Seminary's liberal Calvinism. The sudden drought in donations will make their fragile systems cave in faster, expose their weaknesses sooner, and forever change the Lutheran landscape.
Saving Wisdom
Matthew 6: 19 Lay not up for yourselves treasures upon earth, where moth and rust doth corrupt, and where thieves break through and steal:
20 But lay up for yourselves treasures in heaven, where neither moth nor rust doth corrupt, and where thieves do not break through nor steal:
21 For where your treasure is, there will your heart be also.
I remember with advantages the lavish Schwan indulgence funds wasted on the ELS, WELS, and LCMS. When the unrepentant St. Marvin died suddenly, the money men had a collective heart attack. But they soon they realized they would receive even more loot - for a little while. They should have meditated on "In a little while, you will see Me no more." Mammon should be capitalized, no?
In copying all the public domain hymns into The Bethany Lutheran Hymnal Blog, I realized how overwhelming the treasures are in that book alone. Did I know all the hymns written by Luther, Gerhardt, Melanchthon, Loy, Kingo, and other Lutherans? (No.) How many were rescued from obscurity by translators Winkworth and Neale? (More than I realized) My favorite - how many were written by bishops Heber, Ken, How, and Wordsworth? (Let me check. I never knew Ken, How, and Wordsworth were bishops.)
Can you picture any bishop today writing a hymn? Those men in The Lutheran Hymnal were very active in serving others and took the time to write classic hymns praising God and honoring Christ.
Need I say that Lutheran hymnals continue to get worse and more expensive? WELS is putting 25 Calvinist pop hymns into their latest disaster, enriching a husband and wife who need no funding.
The irony today is that anyone can get the best Lutheran works for free, including
- 11 volumes of Luther's sermons, plus many more books.
- Most of the American Lutheran classics as ebooks - the Lutheran Library Publishing Ministry.
- Many of those books as inexpensive print books on Amazon, edited by The Lutheran Librarian, Alec Satin.
Almond Joy
- Fiber: 3.5 grams
- Protein: 6 grams
- Fat: 14 grams (9 of which are monounsaturated)
- Vitamin E: 37% of the RDI
- Manganese: 32% of the RDI
- Magnesium: 20% of the RDI
- They also contain a decent amount of copper, vitamin B2 (riboflavin) and phosphorus.
This is all from a small handful, which supplies only 161 calories and 2.5 grams of digestible carbohydrates.
Almonds could be viewed as the energy snack, while walnuts serve as the heart-healthy snack that satisfies. Those who like to do some research should look at the real cost and actual ingredients of so many health bars.
If almonds are so much a pound, how much are the granola or diet or fitness or health bars per pound? Manufactured food is very expensive, because it is wrapped in paper and promoted in the media. Quality and taste are minimal. Bad ingredients can be expected.
I actually bought some coconut enhanced almonds. The best of both worlds? No. They were sweetened and yukky to eat, neither almondy nor coconutty.
I bought two large containers for walnuts (first) and almonds (second). I buy in bulk, so I have an inexpensive source of snack food loaded with nutrition.
Friday, May 1, 2020
ELCA Goes Full-Bucky in Declaring Its Universalism:
WELS-ELS-LCMS-CLC (sic) in Doctrinal Fellowship with ELCA
![]() |
They made Emmaus rhyme with Betray Us, endorsing the Bucky-Webber proclamation of universal salvation without faith - Objective Justification. |
Multiple Benefits of Walnuts - NUTrition -
Better Yet - Nut Attrition
![]() |
Health Benefits of Walnuts - good, factual explanations |
Impressive Benefits of Walnuts
- Memory enhancement - Omega 3 and 6 fatty acids
- Depression help - Omega 3 fatty acids
- Improve fertility
- Hair and nail health
- Cancer prevention
- Improved motor function
- Skin health
- Heart health
- Weight management
- Energy from B vitamins
- Antioxidants - only blackberries have more
- Diabetic control - good fats - monounsaturated and polyunsaturated fats
- Bone health - absorption of calcium
- Good for digestion - intestinal improvements
Harvard Medical - Health Benefits of Walnuts
Nuts seem to be promoted mainly as a snack item or a dessert ingredient. A doctor repeatedly told one of our members to make walnuts a regular food item, even a daily food selection.
I may be a food pioneer, because I enjoyed frequent trips to the walnut and coconut boxes in the basement of the bakery. They were 50 pound boxes of the highest grade walnuts and coconut. Dad encouraged me to grab a handful when hungry. I was the family coconut fan, asking for coconut covered donuts and coconut flavored everything else. Toasted coconut rolled into glazed cake donuts? - yes, the prime ingredient in Barlow donuts, which were named after the local radio star and country music singer (not to mention the Big Red gum commercial).
When the diet of walnuts came up recently, I began eating them almost daily - and looking at the research. I linked the research above to let people do their own reading. The best presentation is linked under the walnuts photo.
![]() |
I was a food pundit before there were food pundits. Could the benefits of walnuts be God's design? |
Thursday, April 30, 2020
The Devil and Daniel Webster - 1941 Movie

In the second month of our house arrest, we came across the 1941 movie, "The Devil and Daniel Webster," Turner Classic Movies.
The plot is simple. Jabez Stone made a deal with Scratch to enjoy great wealth for a certain time, the end of which making Stone's soul the property of the aforementioned Scratch.
Jabez began neglecting his wife, spoiling his son, and drawing his neighbors into contracts they could not fulfill. Once he had his grand house, beautiful lady companion, and mysterious friends, the error of his deal began to grow on him.
Fortunately, the legendary Webster stopped by and insisted on Scratch facing a trial on the merits of the original contract. Scratch is played with devilish delight by the father of the famous director John Houston. The judge and jury are members of Scratch's lower kingdom, and Webster's objections are struck down.
Scratch loses his case because Webster convinced the jury of traitors that, if they had a chance to take back their deals, they would have voided their contracts with the devil.
At the end, Scratch, always prowling about, steals the fresh peach pie and sits in the tree, looking for prospects as he eats his stolen fruit. He points at the audience and grins.
Lessons Learned?
The synod leaders who watched the movie probably missed the point. They previously made their deals to dance with the Spirit of This Age. They have brought ruin and damnation from their lust to find easy answers. Now they only ask, "Are the rest of the church bodies hurting as badly as we are? Find the reasons why.""I feel blessed to be affiliated with WELS." |
The Little Sect on the Prairie has already admitted it will be a footnote in history in a few years. Its abusive brother, WELS, is busy with a survey that will distract people for a few more weeks.
"What are some specific, measurable, achievable, realistic, timely goals for our Father Below?" |
Here are the ways LCMS-WELS-ELS-CLC (sic) self-destructed for quick money and instant results.:
- Our more-better hymnal will be popular because less Lutheran.
- Our removal of the KJV and sales of the NIV/ESV replacements will make us rich.
- St. Marvin of Schwan wants earthly honors and heavenly absolution, so we will praise him out of perdition.
- Sermons, the liturgy, hymns, and creeds bring us down. Our Fuller, Trinity Divinity, and Willow Creek dummies will teach us to liberate our Lutheran sects with safe sects, without catching anything bad.
- Our estate plundering counselors will seize the money built up by traditionalists so we can spend it on experiments, new ideas, and motivate counselors with juicy commissions.
The S.M.A.R.T goals worked and they shunned those who dared to object. |
Labels:
Apostasy,
The Devil and Daniel Webster
Wednesday, April 29, 2020
Greek Lesson - Wednesday Night - 7 PM Central Daylight
ReviewParsing Tool Linked Here
30 ουτος εστιν [περι ου εγω ειπον] "οπισω μου ερχεται ανηρ ος εμπροσθεν μου γεγονεν, οτι πρωτος μου ην"
31 καγω ουκ ηδειν αυτον, αλλ ινα φανερωθη τω ισραηλ; δια τουτο ηλθον εγω εν τω υδατι βαπτιζων
Notice - I did not know him repeated in v. 33.
32 και εμαρτυρησεν ιωαννης, λεγων, οτι "τεθεαμαι το πνευμα καταβαινον ωσει περιστεραν εξ ουρανου, και εμεινεν επ αυτον"
33 καγω ουκ ηδειν αυτον αλλ [ο πεμψας με βαπτιζειν εν υδατι] εκεινος μοι ειπεν εφ ον αν ιδης το πνευμα καταβαινον και μενον επ αυτον ουτος εστιν ο βαπτιζων εν πνευματι αγιω
Three-fold description, Trinity. See verse 1 - Lenski calls that the tolling of giant bells, The Word, The Word, The Word.
34 καγω εωρακα και μεμαρτυρηκα οτι ουτος εστιν ο υιος του θεου
35 τη επαυριον, παλιν ειστηκει ο ιωαννης - και εκ των μαθητων αυτου δυο
36 [και εμβλεψας τω ιησου περιπατουντι,] λεγει "ιδε ο αμνος του θεου"
NEW
37 και ηκουσαν αυτου οι δυο μαθηται λαλουντος και ηκολουθησαν τω ιησου
38 στραφεις δε ο ιησους και θεασαμενος αυτους ακολουθουντας λεγει αυτοις τι ζητειτε οι δε ειπον αυτω ραββι ο λεγεται 'ερμηνευομενον διδασκαλε που μενεις
δε - post-positive, so in our minds it belongs before the οι
39 λεγει αυτοις ερχεσθε και ιδετε; ηλθον και ειδον που μενει και παρ αυτω εμειναν την ημεραν εκεινην; ωρα δε ην ως δεκατη
40 ην ανδρεας ο αδελφος σιμωνος πετρου εις εκ των δυο των ακουσαντων παρα ιωαννου και ακολουθησαντων αυτω
41 ευρισκει ουτος πρωτος τον αδελφον τον ιδιον σιμωνα και λεγει αυτω ευρηκαμεν τον μεσσιαν ο εστιν μεθερμηνευομενον ο χριστος
More on Nutrition
![]() |
My first birthday surprise implied I would get to eat it all. |
Several people wrote that they enjoyed posts on nutrition, so I am taking that as a mass movement in favor of good food.
The first part is financial. The way to fund good food at home is ending most buying of junk and restaurant food. Both kimds encourage over-eating their over-salted, over-carboed, over-sugared food. The money spent at a hamburger place for one person would purchase food for a great meal for two or more at home. The leverage grows with the emporium:
- McDonalds - $7 or more per person.
- Panera - $10 or more per person.
- Restaurant - $20 or more per person.
Sassy says I am late for the walk.
I am back. Someone (name withheld) said, "There is something about men and ice cream. So appealing at night."
Ice cream definitely has one purpose - making someone crave even more ice cream. I am blaming the corn sugar, but there is also a host of pleasant memories, fostered by those wonderful stores where the atmosphere is one of vanilla, cream, chocolate, and fruit toppings.
In contrast, protein and vegetables are filling, satisfying, and give long-lasting energy. That is the key, because older people may crave fast acting sugars, but they do not use them up effectively and feel sluggish as a result.
![]() |
In the family Dairy Queen photo (we had one) - I am the only one really promoting the product. |
Publishing Plans for the Rest of the Year
- The Bethany Lutheran Hymnal Blog will be edited, improved, and garnished with author information and lists. That might culminate in a book of the top hymn texts (250-300). Norma A. Boeckler is adding illustrations, and she helps with every single project.
- I have started Understanding Luther’s Galatians: Graebner’s Translation - where I am going to add my commentary on OJ versus the Chief Article, with the complete text of the shorter Galatians.
- I will write The American Calvin: CFW Walther. The parallels with Calvin are overwhelming. Comparisons with Luther are underwhelming. Walther's Election without Faith will be addressed.
- A group of us will work on Bible texts and translations, to help explain the disaster of the NIV/ESV money machine and its devastating effect on Christian doctrine.
- Projects get modified, added, dropped. I think the focus should be mostly Scriptural since that is so widely neglected.
- I have a folder for Word documents. When I retitle my older books as public domain in that folder, those files will be available for people to use freely in translations, edited versions, etc.
Labels:
Martin Chemnitz Press
Come On Man, That Storm Was All Hat And No Cattle!
![]() |
"Come on man, that storm was all hat and no cattle! My tummy rumbles are louder." |
They broke into television shows from the afternoon on, playing the klaxon horn. Soon arriving - 60 mph winds, possible hail and tornadoes. The radar image - Photoshopped? - was a red bow bearing down on us, like a wolf on the fold.
After all that drama, all we heard was a low rumble, a little rain, and no winds.
Beforehand, we had time outside on the front porch, to view the garden. Sassy shared crackers with Ranger Bob. We drank Brazilian coffee and talked about the upcoming scenario. Sassy has her own favorite spot for making a bed and enjoying BelVita crackers. Chris opened the door but stayed inside.
The previously shy Joe Pye plants are stretching up for the sun, green and loaded with energy from a winter of mulch and rain. The various alium clumps are just starting to open their petals. Several roses have followed the Easy Does It bushes in blooming.
The second iris has bloomed, but the rest of the row remains undecided. Daisy bunches are up, and Hosta are all around the roses and hummingbird feeders.
Last year the wild roses came up first, but this year they are second to the others. We will soon dig up the wild roses because they bloom only once and follow by growing long, spindly canes that scratch flesh and latch onto clothing.
Once the Crepe Myrtles leaf out, I snip off all seeds (or empty pods) left over.
If I have a task in the kitchen, I start by pouring some sunflower seeds on the garbage barrels. Stale crackers are bound to bring starlings too. Soon I can look out the windows and see starlings breaking up crackers and flying off with smaller pieces. One bro watched the cracker being hammered and flew off with his piece immediately.
Feeding is heavy before and after a storm, so I get to watch a parade of creatures at work.
![]() |
Self-Portrait of the Artist. |
Labels:
Creation Gardening
Tuesday, April 28, 2020
Westphal Smoked Out Calvin - From Thy Strong Word
![]() |
Joachim Westphal |
Calvin’s Doctrine
To understand the crypto-Calvinist (secret Calvinist) Lutherans, we need to examine the teachings of John Calvin about the Means of Grace. Not surprisingly, some of the most revealing statements come from his polemic, Against Westphal, named for the Lutheran Joachim Westphal (1510-1574) who taunted Calvin for some time to bring out his actual views.370 The cryptoCalvinists of today loudly moan about “Christian-bashing”— a term they adapted from homosexual activists—when someone asks for doctrinal clarity. It is easy to see from Against Westphal that polemical literature is beneficial in distinguishing between sound and false doctrine.371 Schaff said this about Westphal’s doctrinal publications: “The controversy of Westphal against Calvin and the subsequent overthrow of Melanchthonianism completed and consolidated the separation of the two Confessions.” Calvin called Westphal “a mad dog.”372
J-718
John Calvin, Against Joachim Westphal: "The nature of baptism or the Supper must not be tied down to an instant of time. God, whenever He sees fit, fulfills and exhibits in immediate effect that which he figures in the Sacrament. But no necessity must be imagined so as to prevent His grace from sometimes preceding, sometimes following, the use of the sign."373~Benjamin Charles Milner, Jr., Calvin's Doctrine of the Church, Leiden: E. J. Brill, 1970, p. 121.
There Must Be Divisions
KJV 1 Corinthians 11:18 For first of all, when ye come together in the church, I hear that there be divisions among you; and I partly believe it. 19 For there must be also heresies among you, that they which are approved may be made manifest among you.It was good for Westphal to annoy Calvin and even better for Calvin to answer Westphal honestly. Similarly, when it was rumored that Luther had given up his Biblical views about the Lord’s Supper, he responded with his Brief Confession on the Lord’s Supper, another superb document. Today, the massive doctrinal indifference in the Lutheran Church is a direct result of people studiously avoiding all doctrinal conflict. We lose our spiritual muscle tone through lack of effort just as we lose normal muscle tone from inactivity. The inactive person loses not only the ability to exert himself but also the will to try. Lutherans have become so lazy and inert that they would rather suffer from false teachers, soul murderers and wife murderers, than object to the most obnoxious heresies in their midst. Pastors fear for their tiny pensions, but not for their sheep being attacked by wolves. Synodical professors quake at the thought of returning to the parish, so they promote Reformed doctrine and methods in the name of making their institutions strong, though they are dying.
To understand the secret Calvinists, let us look first at Calvin’s openly taught doctrine. Calvin wrote well and published his errors over a long span of time. He continued to revise and expand his Institutes of the Christian Religion and completed a commentary of every book of the Bible. Sadly, his Biblical commentaries are bought and used by many Lutheran pastors today. This tragedy was encouraged by the Biblical inerrancy wars of the early 1900s. Once Lutherans began to be assaulted by highly educated proponents of Biblical error and contradiction, they turned to highly disciplined Calvinist scholars who had already been through the same trials. Lutherans did not stop to think that Calvinistic rationalism brought Unitarian doctrine to the Presbyterians earlier, while Lutheran doctrine repelled it. Therefore, Lutherans turned to Calvinists as allies against the common enemy of doubt.374 But using human reason to cure the problem of doubt is akin to drinking brine to slake one’s thirst.
Calvin’s rationalism can be summarized by four foundational errors:
A. Enthusiasm—Separating the Holy Spirit from the Word.
B. Extra-calvinisticum—Denying that the finite can contain the infinite.
C. Double predestination—Teaching that all people are either predestined to damnation or predestined to salvation, God’s “horrible decree,” before or after the fall of Adam. Calvinists are divided on the timing of the decree, which is unrecorded in the Scriptures.
D. Law/Gospel confusion.
Enthusiasm
Calvin’s Enthusiasm and its effect upon Lutheran doctrine are reason enough for writing this book and listing so many citations on the subject. Calvin, like Zwingli, scornfully rejected the Biblical doctrine that the Holy Spirit is always at work in the Word and never works apart from the Word (Isaiah 55:8-10). Calvin replaced the Biblical teaching of the efficacious Word and Sacraments with his peculiar notion of the Sovereign Holy Spirit working independently of the Means of Grace, either before or after or not at all! The Calvinists are never completely consistent about this, because they believe in preaching, teaching, and publishing. But they take care to deny the efficacy of the Word at every chance, as did their most famous modern church father Karl Barth (1886-1968). 355
J-719
"The means of grace are thus limited for Barth. The preacher descending from the pulpit can never quote Luther and say with joyful assurance that he has preached the Word of God. Of course, he can hope and pray; but he can never know whether the Holy Spirit has accompanied the preached Word, and hence whether his words were the Word of God. To know this, or even to wish to know it, would be a presumptuous encroachment of man upon the sovereign freedom of God."~Hermann Sasse, Here We Stand, trans. Theodore G. Tappert, Minneapolis: Augsburg Publishing House, 1946, p. 161.
J-720
"The Sacraments are not mere symbolic expressions by which faith is strengthened (Calvin), nor are they mere acts of confession of faith (notae professionis, Zwingli), but are effective means by which God sows faith in the hearts of men."~Walter G. Tillmanns, "Means of Grace: Use of," The Encyclopedia of the Lutheran Church, 3 vols., Julius Bodensieck, Minneapolis: Augsburg Publishing House, 1965, II, p. 1506.
Barth, the official theologian of Fuller Seminary, was an apostate who rejected the doctrines of the Christian faith while making a tidy profit from his publication efforts, aided by his mistress, Charlotte Kirschbaum.375 He moved her into his house over the strenuous objections of his wife [GJ -like Bishop Stephan, Walther's idol] and also lived with Charlotte in a mountain cabin every summer. Barth is the epitome of the Church Growth expert: unfaithful to God, unfaithful in marriage, treacherous, vain, boastful, and eager to impose silence on his critics. After opposing the Nazis from the safety of Switzerland during WWII, Barth betrayed his loyal followers in Eastern Europe and told them to submit to the authority of the Communists. He and his lovely assistant, Charlotte, had been reds all along, as the historical documents show.376
J-721
"When intent upon establishing their peculiar tenets, Calvin and Zwingli likewise preferred rational argumentation to the plain proofs of Holy Writ. Their interpretation of the words of the Sacrament is but one glaring instance; but there are many more. The schools and the denominations which they founded became infected with this same disease of theology."~Martin S. Sommer, Concordia Pulpit for 1932, St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1931, p. iii.
J-722
~John Calvin, Commentaries, Amos 8:11-12: "...we are touched with some desire for strong doctrine, it evidently appears that there is some piety in us; we are not destitute of the Spirit of God, although destitute of the outward means."~ Benjamin Milner, Calvin's Doctrine of the Church, Heicko A.Oberman, Leiden: E. J. Brill, 1970, p. 109. CO, XLIII, 153. 356
J-723
“Wherefore, with regard to the increase and confirmation of faith, I would remind the reader (though I think I have already expressed it in unambiguous terms), that in assigning this office to the Sacraments, it is not as if I thought that there is a kind of secret efficacy perpetually inherent in them, by which they can of themselves promote or strengthen faith, but because our Lord has instituted them for the express purpose of helping to establish and increase our faith. The Sacraments duly perform their office only when accompanied by the Spirit, the internal Master, whose energy alone penetrates the heart, stirs up the affections, and procures access for the Sacraments into our souls. If He is wanting, the Sacraments can avail us no more than the sun shining on the eyeballs of the blind, or sounds uttered in the ears of the deaf. Wherefore, in distributing between the Spirit and the Sacraments, I ascribe the whole energy to Him, and leave only a ministry to them; this ministry, without the agency of the Spirit, is empty and frivolous, but when He acts within, and exerts His power, it is replete with energy. ...then, it follows, both that the Sacraments do not avail one iota without the energy of the Holy Spirit; and that yet in hearts previously taught by that preceptor, there is nothing to prevent the Sacraments from strengthening and increasing faith.”~John Calvin, Institutes of the Christian Religion, 2 volumes, Grand Rapids: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, 1970, I, p. 497. Also cited in Benjamin Charles Milner, Jr., Calvin's Doctrine of the Church, Leiden: E. J. Brill, 1970, p. 119. Institutes. IV.xiv.9.
J-724
“We must not suppose that there is some latent virtue inherent in the Sacraments by which they, in themselves, confer the gifts of the Holy Spirit upon us, in the same way in which wine is drunk out of a cup, since the only office divinely assigned them is to attest and ratify the benevolence of the Lord towards us; and they avail no farther than accompanied by the Holy Spirit to open our minds and hearts, and make us capable of receiving this testimony, in which various distinguished graces are clearly manifested… They [the Sacraments] do not of themselves bestow any grace, but they announce and manifest it, and, like earnests and badges, give a ratification of the gifts which the divine liberality has bestowed upon us.”~John Calvin, Institutes of the Christian Religion, 2 volumes, Grand Rapids: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, 1970, I, p. 503. Institutes, IV, XIV, 17.
J-725
“But assuming that the body and blood of Christ are attached to the bread and wine, then the one must necessarily be dissevered from the other. For the bread is given separately from the cup, so the body, united to the bread, must be separated from the blood, included in the cup.”~John Calvin, Institutes of the Christian Religion, 2 volumes, Grand Rapids: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, 1970, I, p. 570. Institutes, IV, XVII, 18.
J-726
John Calvin, Institutes IV.xvii.19: "We must establish such a presence of Christ in the supper as may neither fasten Him to the element of bread, not enclose Him in bread, not circumscribe Him in any way (all of which clearly derogate from His heavenly glory)...."~Benjamin Charles Milner, Jr., Calvin's Doctrine of the Church, Leiden: E. J. Brill, 1970, p. 128.
357
J-727
John Calvin, True Method of Reforming the Church: "The offspring of believers are born holy, because their children, while yet in the womb, before they breathe the vital air, have been adopted into the covenant of eternal life."~Benjamin Charles Milner, Jr., Calvin's Doctrine of the Church, Leiden: E. J. Brill, 1970, p. 123.
GJ - That sounds like the Preuss quote that Robert Preus loved so much, cited with slavering approval by Cascione and McCain, Ft. Whine graduates.
J-728
"To remain properly humble while firmly rejecting all erroneous teachings regarding the means of grace, we should remind ourselves how even Christians who teach and, as a rule, also believe, the correct doctrine of the means of grace, in their personal practice very often lose sight of the means of grace. This is done whenever they base the certainty of grace, or of the forgiveness of sin, on their feeling of grace or the gratia infusa, instead of on God's promise in the objective means of grace. All of us are by nature 'enthusiasts.'"~Francis Pieper, Christian Dogmatics, 3 vols., trans., Walter W. F. Albrecht, St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1953, III, p. 131.
Extra-Calvinisticum
The haughty spirit that denies the efficacy of the Word will also invent new doctrines. One is called the extra-calvinisticum, Calvin’s assertion that the finite cannot contain the infinite: finitum non capas infiniti. In other words, the finite forms of bread and wine cannot hold the infinite, the body of Christ. The same declaration makes the two natures, human and divine, united in the one person, Christ, impossible. In fact, both Zwingli and Calvin had serious problems with Christology. Their rationalistic denials of what Christ has clearly promised in the Word and Sacraments led to the Unitarianism (Socinianism) of their later disciples.
J-729
"...it is exceedingly difficult to prevent this low view from running out into Socinianism, as, indeed, it actually has run in Calvinistic lands, so that it became a proverb, often met with in the older theological writers—'A young Calvinist, an old Socinian.' This peril is confessed and mourned over by great Calvinistic divines. New England is an illustration of it on an immense scale, in our own land."~Charles P. Krauth, The Conservative Reformation and Its Theology, Philadelphia: The United Lutheran Publication House, 1871, p. 489.
358
Double Predestination, Limited Atonement, Arminianism
Theological discussions often begin with Calvin’s doctrine of double predestination, which was published in his first edition of the Institutes and every edition thereafter. Double predestination is really secondary to Enthusiasm in harmfulness. However, one can hardly untangle the chaos created by one conflict after another in opposition to the Scriptures. Double predestination teaches that God decreed a minority saved and a majority damned before the creation of the world or perhaps after the fall of Adam. Associated with double predestination is the concept that Christ died only for the elect and not for the sins of the world, a teaching which is called the limited Atonement. Anyone who dwells on the core of Calvin’s teaching and applies it consistently must wonder why he would listen to the Word, which is dead, or receive the Sacraments, which are dead, when the Holy Spirit will work before or after the Means of Grace, but not necessarily through them. A Calvinist must either be proud and secure, since he is taught “once saved, always saved,” or he is anxious and fearful that he has been predestined for damnation. The comictragic novels of Peter DeVries, such as Slouching Toward Kalamazoo and The Blood of the Lamb, catch this spirit of Grand Rapids Calvinism.
J-730
"As a matter of fact, however, also in the doctrine of predestination Zwingli and Calvin were just as far and as fundamentally apart from Luther as their entire rationalistic theology differed from the simple and implicit Scripturalism of Luther. Frank truly says that the agreement between Luther's doctrine and that of Zwingli and Calvin is 'only specious, nur scheinbar.' (1, 118.) Tschackert remarks: 'Whoever [among the theologians before the Formula of Concord] was acquainted with the facts could not but see that in this doctrine [of predestination] there was a far-reaching difference between the Lutheran and the Calvinistic theology.' (559.) F. Pieper declares that Luther and Calvin agree only in certain expressions, but differ entirely as to substance. (Dogmatics, III, 554.)"
~F. Bente, Concordia Triglotta, Historical Introductions to the Symbolical Books of the Evangelical Lutheran Church, Concordia Publishing House, 1921, p. 209.
J-731
"Calvin and his adherents boldly rejected the universality of God's grace, of Christ's redemption, and of the Spirit's efficacious operation through the means of grace, and taught that, in the last analysis, also the eternal doom of the damned was solely due to an absolute decree of divine reprobation (in their estimation the logical complement of election), and this at the very time when they pretended adherence to the Augsburg Confession and were making heavy inroads into Lutheran territory with their doctrine concerning the Lord's Supper and the person of Christ,—which in itself was sufficient reason for a public discussion and determined resentment of their absolute predestinarianism."~F. Bente, Concordia Triglotta, Historical Introductions to the Symbolical Books of the Evangelical Lutheran Church, Concordia Publishing House, 1921, p. 195f.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)