Wednesday, June 10, 2020

We Are Near the Conclusion


People can believe this thread or not. The statements linked are in harmony with what has been happening.

Once President Trump signed an order for confiscating the assets of those involved in trafficking, a lot of opportunities were created for quietly changing the leadership in America.

We have to assume two basic notions -

  1. Our digital surveillance is massive and world-wide, so the President has access to information no one can even imagine. 
  2. The President has more power than people imagine, not only in directing the course of this country but also our allies. 
However, massive immediate action would have led to civil war soon after the inauguration. The evil leadership was interlocked and positioned well. 

If the corrupt media actually faced the truth, this would be over, but they will cling bitterly to their political friends. Almost all political heavyweights are related closely to someone in the media. The media relatives get access - and the politicians/gubmint managers get news media protection. Where did the robotic Chelsea Clinton go for her first job? - TV news. Where is Obama's Marxist Iranian  aid's daughter working? - TV news. So sweet, so cozy, so fruitful.


I have studied this for the last three years. The ending will be glorious.

Sassy - Let's See the Butterfly Garden Disaster

yellow-yarrow-planting-growing
Yarrow has medicinal qualities and attracts butterflies. 


Sassy and I took our afternoon walk today - she was quite insistent. She is always betting on Ranger Bob being home and not off to work in the late afternoon. We circled back past the pit bulls, who barked their warnings. Sassy casually walked to the fence and muttered something outrageous, so they burst into rage and threats. Sassy trotted away happy.

She walked with me across the front of the Rose Garden, which I watered this morning. A scarlet Bee Balm is blooming in the middle of one Joe Pye plant, making me wonder how it got there. Daisies are getting ready to bloom. Veterans Honor roses are blooming faster than I have seen any rose except Easy Does It.




My neighbor across the street has put bushes along the sidewalk, somewhat like mine. They are often placed there in our neighborhood, probably to discourage shortcuts across the yard. Looking up toward our house, I could see various long-time planting scheme and roses gone wild. There is always a pleasant surprise in the mix. The rugosa rose is thriving, but they always thrive where planted.

The soi-disant Butterfly Garden was earlier a rose garden planted for our sainted neighbor. Later, it was an utterly ridiculous slug garden when I spent time, money, and water on hay bail gardening. Rotting hay being watered was a dream come true for slugs, devoted as they are to moisture and vegetative rot.

After cornering the market on slugs, I planted Hidden Lily, which bloomed and spread. "There is my green fence," I said mistakenly. The winters that killed roses were also effective against Hidden Lily; the last survivor failed to appear this spring.

Sassy checked out rabbit trails in the Rose Garden while I headed up to the Butterfly Garden. I have to be purpose-driven to view it, because that garden is the sunniest and hardest to reach.

One delight after another surprised me.

  1. The Chaste Tree, moved there during a drought, is thriving, blooming in the sun. 
  2. Comfrey is loaded with blooms.
  3. Joe Pye is growing tall.
  4. Yarrow is super-large and healthy, so the flowers should be attractive to butterflies and beneficial insects. 
  5. Shock - a Butterfly Weed bloomed bright orange where I thought it had failed.
  6. The open places seem to be perfect for laying down cardboard and mulch for some additional plants.


PS - Photos are hard to place right now because Blogger is changing all the tools again. I hope they come to their senses, because nothing is working better and some tools are gone.

Dr. Elton Stroh

 A right strawy apostle - Stroh.


TURNAROUND CHURCHES IN THE WISCONSIN EVANGELICAL LUTHERAN SYNOD


by Elton C. Stroh
B.A., Northwestern College, 1974
M.Div., Wisconsin Lutheran Seminary, 1978

A MAJOR PROJECT

Submitted to the faculty in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of DOCTOR OF MINISTRY Leadership and Ministry Management at Trinity Evangelical Divinity School Deerfield, Illinois, May 2014

 Minister of the Means of Grace at Latte Lutheran

 Praised to high heaven in the WELS self-love magazine.

 Stroh's project at its awesome peak

Bethany Lutheran Hymnal - How Precious Is the Book Divine

 Norma Boeckler's Christian Art
Tune - Walder - linked here



"How Precious is the Book Divine"
by John Fawcett, 1740-1817

1. How precious is the Book Divine,
By inspiration given!
Bright as a lamp its doctrines shine
To guide our souls to heaven.

2. It's light, descending from above
Our gloomy world to cheer,
Displays a Savior's boundless love
And brings his glories near.

3. It shows to man his wandering ways
And where his feet have trod,
And brings to view the matchless grace
Of a forgiving God.

4. O'er all the straight and narrow way
Its radiant beams are cast;
A light whose never weary ray
Grows brightest at the last.

5. It sweetly cheers our drooping hearts
In this dark vale of tears,
Life, light, and joy it still imparts
And quells our rising fears.

6. This lamp through all the tedious night
Of life shall guide our way
Till we behold the clearer light
Of an eternal day.

Hymn #285
The Lutheran Hymnal
Text: Psalm 119:105
Author: John Fawcett, 1782
Tune: "Walder"
Composer: Johann J. Walder, 1788



United Lutheran Seminary - Bishop Guy Erwin Is Their New President - 69News

United Lutheran Seminary named Bishop Guy Erwin as their new president.


PHILADELPHIA and GETTYSBURG, Pa.June 9, 2020 /PRNewswire/ -- The United Lutheran Seminary Board of Trustees has named the Rev. Dr. R. Guy Erwin, fourth bishop of the Southwest California Synod of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, as its next president. His appointment is effective August 1, 2020.  Bishop Erwin succeeds interim president, the Rev. Dr. Angela Zimmann.   
"I am so very grateful that the Holy Spirit has brought us to this moment," said Rev. Dr. Peter Boehringer, chair of the ULS Board of Trustees. "With Bishop Erwin's deep commitment to Luther's theology of the cross, and his long history of working for justice, I believe he will lead the way in lifting up before our students and our church a greater sense of how the Gospel of Jesus Christ empowers us to be servant leaders in the world. Our society, indeed, our world is facing incredibly challenging issues. I have no doubt that he will inspire and help shape a new generation of seminarians to lead the church in bringing the Gospel of Jesus Christ to bear on those challenges."
Bishop Erwin is the ELCA's first gay, partnered bishop and the first openly gay male to serve in that office in the churches of the Lutheran World Federation. As an enrolled member of the Osage Nation, on whose reservation he was born in Oklahoma, he is the first Native bishop in the ELCA. In the ELCA Conference of Bishops, he serves on the Executive Committee and as Region 2 liaison bishop to the ELCA Church Council, and as chair of the bishops' Theological and Ethical Concerns Committee.
From 2000 until his election as synod bishop in 2013, Bishop Erwin held the Gerhard and Olga J. Belgum Chair in Lutheran Confessional Theology at California Lutheran University in Thousand Oaks. At Cal Lutheran, he taught in the Religion and History departments, served as faculty chair for two years, and directed the university's Segerhammar Center for Faith and Culture.
"Though I am sad to leave my work as bishop, which I have dearly loved," Bishop Erwin said, "as a life-long educator I rejoice in the chance to work with ULS's remarkable faculty in carrying out the seminary's mission to prepare its students for public ministry and principled engagement in the world. As a historian, I honor what our two predecessor seminaries have meant to the church, and the legacy with which we have been entrusted. At the same time, we stand on the threshold of tremendous changes in theological education, in the life of the church, and in our society, and I embrace the opportunity that this provides for ULS to be a leader in new ways."
During the Reformation anniversary year in 2017, Bishop Erwin was in high demand as a teacher and speaker and gave 30 lectures and presentations in the United States and Germany in addition to his normal duties as bishop. Through the Lutheran World Federation and his work with the Faith & Order Commission of the World Council of Churches, Bishop Erwin maintains an extensive set of international connections, particularly in Germany and the Nordic countries.
Bishop Erwin holds a bachelor's degree from Harvard University and a doctorate from Yale University. He also received a Fulbright grant for two years of study at the University of Tübingen in Germany, and an IREX grant for a year at the University of Leipzig. His doctoral dissertation was on the late medieval roots of Luther's theology of the cross, and his subsequent scholarly work has focused on the religious culture of Lutheranism, particularly its worship and piety, with a special interest in the visual arts and architecture.
"Bishop Erwin's coming to ULS just as we are beginning to wrestle with shaping our life around the seminary's mission statement, means that the seminary will be blessed by hearing his unique voice as it discerns how to best prepare the people who will lead the church in the future," said Rev. Dr. Boehringer.
In 2000, after teaching church history and historical theology at the Yale Divinity School for six years, Bishop Erwin moved to Southern California with his husband, Robert T. Flynn, a West Virginia native and Yale Divinity School alumnus, who has worked in scholarly publishing at Yale University Press, Columbia University Press and the J. Paul Getty Museum in Los Angeles, as well as serving two terms on the Board of Trustees of 1517 Media, the publishing house of the ELCA.
"I join with Rev. Dr. Boehringer in warmly welcoming Bishop Erwin to the ULS community, and look forward to serving in ministry together," said Rev. Dr. Angela Zimmann, who has served as interim president of ULS since December 1, 2019 and will return to her position as Vice President of Institutional Advancement. "With Bishop Erwin's leadership, by the grace of God, United Lutheran Seminary is well-positioned and re-energized for moving forward into a faithful future."
Formed in 2017 by joining the Lutheran Theological Seminary at Gettysburg, founded in 1826 and the Lutheran Theological Seminary at Philadelphia, founded in 1864, United Lutheran Seminary has two physical campuses and a distance learning community, enrolling 350 students and offering seven graduate degree programs, four certificate programs and lifelong learning opportunities. For more information, visit uls.edu.
 Angela Zimmann - https://www.unitedlutheranseminary.edu/faculty-staff/angela-zimmann

Angela Zimmann, the previous interim president of ULS, published - Turning the Noose that Binds into a Rope to Climb: A Textual Search for Rhetorical and Linguistic Gender-Markings in Speech Samples of Three Contemporary Female Orators,as well as numerous articles.