Tuesday, September 1, 2020

Hymn - Jesus Priceless Treasure

Johann Franck is second only to Paul Gerhardt.

"Johann Franck (b. Guben, Brandenburg, Germany, 1618; d. Guben, 1677) was a law student at the University of Köningsberg and practiced law during the Thirty Years' War. He held several positions in civil service, including councillor and mayor of Guben. A significant poet, second only to Paul Gerhardt in his day, Franck wrote some 110 hymns, many of which were published by his friend Johann Crüger in various editions of the Praxis Pietatis melica. All were included in the first part of Franck’s Teutsche Gedichte bestehend im geistliche Sion (1672)."


"Jesus, Priceless Treasure"
By Johann Franck, 1618-1677







1. Jesus, priceless Treasure,
Fount of purest pleasure,
Truest Friend to me.
Ah, how long in anguish
Shall my spirit languish,
Yearning, Lord, for Thee?
Thou art mine, O Lamb divine!
I will suffer naught to hide Thee,
Naught I ask beside Thee.

2. In Thine arms I rest me;
Foes who would molest me
Cannot reach me here.
Though the earth be shaking,
Every heart be quaking,
Jesus calms my fear.
Lightnings flash And thunders crash;
Yet, though sin and hell assail me,
Jesus will not fail me.

3. Satan, I defy thee;
Death, I now decry thee;
Fear, I bid thee cease.
World, thou shalt not harm me
Nor thy threats alarm me
While I sing of peace.
God's great power Guards every hour;
Earth and all its depths adore Him,
Silent bow before Him.

4. Hence, all earthly treasure!
Jesus is my Pleasure,
Jesus is my Choice.
Hence, all empty glory!
Naught to me thy story
Told with tempting voice.
Pain or loss, Or shame or cross,
Shall not from my Savior move me
Since He deigns to love me.

5. Evil world, I leave thee;
Thou canst not deceive me,
Thine appeal is vain.
Sin that once did blind me,
Get thee far behind me,
Come not forth again.
Past thy hour, O pride and power;
Sinful life, thy bonds I sever,
Leave thee now forever.

6. Hence, all fear and sadness!
For the Lord of gladness,
Jesus, enters in.
Those who love the Father,
Though the storms may gather,
Still have peace within.
Yea, whate'er I here must bear,
Thou art still my purest Pleasure,
Jesus, priceless Treasure!

Hymn #347
The Handbook to the Lutheran Hymnal
Text: Matthew 13: 46
Author: Johann Franck, 1655
Translated by: composite
Titled: "Jesu, meine Freude"
Composer: Johann Crueger, 1649
Tune: "Jesu, meine Freude"


Three Days of Slow Rain - Just What We Need





I did everything short of waxing the car and watering the roses to bring on the rain yesterday. The jeremiad posted about the drought helped, even if I had to eat crow in the postscript.

We are on the second day of a three day rainstorm, ideal for the roses and the new crop of Borage, the little herb flower for courage. I was not looking for a new crop, but I found a large, half-empty bag. I put all the cute Joe Pye behind the maple. I played sower and the seed and scattered Borage across the pile. They were watered first to germinate them. Now the rain is soaking them with usable nitrogen and moisture. At the bottom of the pile will be soil creatures basking in the shade, since they hate the sun.

Mold will form in the pile and provide food for sum. Tragically, the most active feeders become the most desired food. The food chain works its way up until the birds are perching on the pile to enjoy big fat bugs and high-protein earthworms. The earthworm is all muscle, so he provides in several ways. He is tiger-meat for newborn birds and their parents. When he dies, he leaves a deposit of usable nitrogen compounds. During his life he aerates the soil, allows rain to penetrate more deeply, and uses his calcium glands to sweeten the soil. That makes the soil better for most plants and for all earthworms.

A Mormon engineer marveled at the design of the earthworm and wondered how that happened. I said. "God created them that way." He was startled and not apparently in a good way. For many today, the intricacies of a single creature is quite a marvel, but they do not consider that the design suggests a Designer. Even more so, the way everything works together is miraculously effective.

One thing I learned from Jessica Walliser was the way in which flowers attract insects and how beneficial insects are called to the scene when pests threaten. One call to arms is the sound of munching. Another is a set of chemical signals the flowers set off. Leaving this all alone, forgetting the pesticides, means the parents will make a home near the place where their children can grow up and be healthy. So the mother lays her eggs near, on, or  - shudder - inside the pest. The babies hatch and eat their way to adulthood. Most adults enjoy adult food, so various plants encourage their mature needs.

This bounty of insects prospers with rain and sun, so we are having a great time.

When the Military Gardening Group met last, Ranger Bob said, "Most people like to visit nature centers. You built one."

We were watching the Hummingbirds and bees.


Another Rough Draft Installment - Walther, the American Calvin:
A Synod Built on Felonies



Walther Myth – Against Cell Groups

CFW Walther and his older brother were involved in cell groups from the beginning. In the rationalistic church of their father, they felt a need for something closer to the Bible. Their university training was largely rationalistic and Pietists were called “mystics,” a derogatory term.
The Walther circle consisted of men who gathered in a cell group and were led by two  Pietistic gurus. The first leader - H. Johann Gottlieb Kuehn - was very strict; he moved away and died. Kuehn was true to Pietistic notions of the time and had his disciples mortify the flesh. Walther took this so seriously that he was on the verge of dying. [Zion, details]
The cell group looked for another Pietistic leader when Kuehn died. They affiliated with Pastor Martin Stephan, Dresden. The massive Stephanite migration to America makes no sense apart from the unification they gained from their cell group identification. They were not only just friends, but obedient disciples of one Pietistic master, then another. The situation reminds me of the concept in India of the guru, a term we borrow and use rather lightly. The guru establishes a lifelong master-disciple relationship which demands complete and unquestioning obedience.
Being a Pietist in a rationalistic state church unified them as a minority, a persecuted minority. The Walther circle were refused divine calls - and in some cases -  they refused to accept one. They were set apart and different, a higher order. As one Pentecostal expressed it, “I was baptized and went to church, but I was not a Christian until…”

The Moment of Universal Absolution – Objective Justification

Walther’s moment came when he wrote to Stephan for advice. He was in a state of physical and spiritual agony, without a spiritual leader. When he read the response from Stephan, Walther felt his life was saved. Stephan’s concept became his, and Walther taught it the rest of his life. Stephan, like the Halle Pietist Rambach, taught that the entire world was absolved the moment Christ rose from the dead.
Pietism scorned the Means of Grace, because the cell group was their means of grace. The invisible Word of teaching and preaching, the visible Word of Baptism and Communion – they were institutional laws far beneath the grace of the intense prayer group, Bible study group experience.
1 Timothy 3:16
Someone must start with the distortion of Objective Justification to see it in 1 Timothy 3:16 And without controversy great is the mystery of godliness: God was
manifest in the flesh,
justified in the Spirit,
seen of angels,
preached unto the Gentiles,
believed on in the world,
received up into glory.

The Halle explanation (contrary to Chemnitz) claimed the entire world was absolved from sin the moment Christ rose from the dead. The Spirit is often used instead of the Word because the Word and Spirit always work together. The Scriptures proclaim many times over that Jesus was without sin, which is why He rose from the dead. Mortal, sinful men must die, but not the spotless Lamb of God, who died in our place. Jesus was declared to be righteous, quite different from declaring the entire world innocent, before and without the Gospel Word.

This error, which John Brenner teaches as the truth, became the background for Walther’s Election without Faith. Objective Justification and Election without Faith became enormously divisive among Lutherans in America, but that has subsided with the leaders – and ELCA – preferring election and salvation without faith.

The Early Martin Stephan

Stephan was born a Bohemian, a Pietist. His people were driven out of Bohemia by the Catholics, and the exclusion made permanent by the evil Jesuits. Bohemia, not far from Dresden, is where Count von Zinzendorf established and protected his Bohemian Pietists. Zinzendorf gave the land in Dresden where the Bohemians were buried, where they worshiped in a chapel. Because their movement was known for cell groups, largely made illegal in Europe for the trouble they caused, this church was able to call its own pastor and conduct cell group meetings on the church property. Thus they called Stephan and he exploited his privileges by holding meetings in public places where it was easier for mischief to develop.

Stephan married a woman from a wealthy, accomplished family. She bore him many children and opposed his adultery without breaking up the family.
Early Stephan developed a reputation as a leader who promoted the Scriptures and the Lutheran Confessions, in an age like ours, where neither one was respected by the elite and influential in the visible church. Stephan became known as a powerful and influential preacher. His cell groups and counseling gathering a second church, in a sense, of those outside the original parish who wanted to hear Stephan speak.

The Unspoken Scandal Shreds the Myths

The LCMS leaders know that Stephan’s problem was more than immorality. This is not in the written records but is the Rosetta Stone that explains the turmoil and timing of Stephan riot and kidnapping, the rise of his second-in-command, CFW Walther.
Stephan was not merely an adulterer. Being a good counselor to many is often accompanied by fragile egos expressing thanks or manipulating men exploiting emotions and dependency. He contracted syphilis at some stage, gave this horrid disease to some of his children, and lost his position when Walther exploited the syphilis break-out among the young women in the Stephanite cult in America.
No one wants to admit this.[1] Even the Stephan family memoir skips over this fact, though it is quite frank and yet fair in its treatment of everyone involved. However, syphilis explains many aspects of Stephan’s life and final days.

1.      He went to spas for his rash, which is one of the common symptoms of syphilis.

2.  Several of his children suffered from syphilitic symptoms, which the father would have transmitted to their mother. They died young in institutions.

3.      Stephan’s many walks, often accompanied by young women, suggest his discomforts.

4.      Stephan became quite morose and angry during the ocean voyage, and an angry bitter sermon he gave on his ship proclaimed the followers were not worthy of him.

5.      Stephan became irrational and grandiose in America, quite impractical, which led to additional financial hardship. He insisted on starting in America as a bishop and drew up his contract, which CFW Walther signed (but not Walther’s brother).

6.      Just as the police were suspicious of Stephan in Dresden, so were the residents who noticed no wife, but a number of women hanging around the bishop in St. Louis.

7.      Everyone in the Walther circle knew the bishop was a flagrant adulterer, but they concocted a story that they suddenly found out after a blistering sermon on sin caused a woman to confession her adulterous affair with Stephan.

8.      The cause of the riot against Stephan, which Walther organized, was the heart-breaking scandal of young women condemned to slowly die, unmarried, from the disease their leader gave them.

9.      Stephan’s main mistress came over in the same ship with Stephan and his son. She also crossed the river to join him in his last days in Illinois.



[1] People in St. Louis have researched this and shared the information, so it is an oral tradition backed up by fact.



Monday, August 31, 2020

New Rough Installment - Walther, the American Calvin -
A Synod Build on Felonies



Pietism, Good and Bad

Pietism was a reaction against the dry, philosophical, and belligerent arguments of Calvinists against Lutherans. This period of time is unfortunately called Orthodoxy, and its Lutheran authors are called Orthodox Lutherans, a misleading term. The best of Biblical theology took place during the Reformation – the German Reformation. The movements in other countries were called reformations but they were secondary and often at odds with the Reformation itself.

The Reformation included Luther, Melanchthon, Andreae, Chemnitz, Chytraeus, Selnecker, and finally Gerhard, who was late and yet worked with Chemnitz on the Harmonies. Afterwards, the Lutheran authors became influenced to some degree by the non-Lutherans. Orthodoxy became what Luther warned against, a return to elaborate dogmatic arguments using Latin terminology, far removed from the Scriptures.

Spener caught the spirit of the times by emphasizing individual piety, Biblical study, prayer, and good works. His worst mistakes, which came from his ecumenical outlook, were the promotion of the cell group and the demotion of doctrinal correction. Spener was truly an ecumenical theologian, so popular that no one dared to criticize him directly.

The Twin Monsters

The cell group, now universally promoted by the LCMS-WELS-ELS, is the cow bird egg laid in the Lutheran nest. As ornithologists know, the cow bird avoids the hard work of nest-building. Instead, she lays her egg in another’s nest. The baby hatches early and the other eggs are destroyed. The adoptive mother raises a cow bird, not her own children. Thus we have the “conservative” Lutherans criticizing Pietism at every opportunity while foolishly promoting Pietism in its cell group programs, largely copied by the Calvinists teaching at Fuller Seminary. Cell groups are also quite popular among the Pentecostals, charismatics, and Roman Catholics.

Cell group members consider themselves to be the Real Church. The congregation exists only to serve as a host and gathering place for the cell groups.

The existence of a cell group, especially one led by laity, is certainly going to be unLutheran and anti-Lutheran. Cell group material is generated by cell group leaders, by many denominations, and they are energized by a spirit of all faith confessions being equal. One cell group promoting pastor – a conservative Lutheran - said of his congregation, “I don’t care what they are studying, but they must be in a cell group.” He was notorious for copying his sermons verbatim from other denominations and posting them on the Net as his own.

When I warned one woman against attending a “Lutheran” cell group, she became angry. I said, “Ask more about infant faith and infant baptism,” which was being discussed. That Lutheran cell group leader refused to let anyone discuss infant baptism, which she opposed. She closed the discussion by saying, “I am in charge here.”
Walther Myth – Against Cell Groups
CFW Walther and his older brother were involved in cell groups from the beginning. In the rationalistic church of their father, they felt a need for something closer to the Bible. Their university training was largely rationalistic and Pietists were called “mystics,” a derogatory term.

The Walther circle consisted of men who gathered in a cell group and were led by two Pietistic gurus. The first one was very strict; he moved away and died. They looked for another Pietistic leader and affiliated with Pastor Martin Stephan, Dresden. The Stephanite escape to America makes no sense apart from the unified sense they gained from their cell group identification.

Being a Pietist in a rationalistic state church gave them unity in being a minority, a persecuted minority. They were refused divine calls and in some cases refused to accept one.

Even the Weeds Are Parched - No Rain Yet.
Is That Thunder or My Stomach Rumbling?

California Dreamin' Rose

Our weather reports seem to be what we want and need, but not what we get. I see days filled in with rain symbols, but nothing so far. "Midnight will be our storm," I told Mrs. Ichabod.

"Nothing happened," as ELDONA and WELS like to say.

Poke Weed plants have drooped so badly, they look like they have been sprayed. I kept our pet Poke going with mulch and extra rainwater. It branches out gracefully with berries for the birds. Apart from the very late Beauty Berries and Crepe Myrtle seeds, we are low on natural food.

So why is the Rose Garden not dead? some ask.

  1. The garden has been mulched with cyprus, leaves, and cardboard for years. Organic matter stores moisture.
  2. A lively soil population is involved in a constant exchange of water and minerals as generations grow and die. Tiny critters are storage units for plant nutrition and hydration.
  3. Fungus is the main route for exchanging carbon from the plants to give plants nutrition and water.
  4. Deep roots take water much lower for storage.
  5. I save rainwater and put it on needy plants.
  6. I use the sprinklers to supplement.
All I need to do is follow what God established in the Six-Day Creation. Every creature and plant has a purpose. If I let them do their work, my work is largely done. I do not need to till the soil. I can provide soil improvements by keeping the dead leaves and borrowing my neighbor's. Insect pests are thwarted by beneficial insects

  • feeding their young with the bad bugs, 
  • by spiders, and 
  • by companion planting.


The worst part of August, now departing, is the heat that shortens the bloom life of the roses. They open and wilt fast. However, autumn rains may leverage their maturity and extra care. 

Each rose will get its collar of cardboard (egg crate egg holders, cardboard boxes) and fresh mulch, either cyprus, peat humus, or both. This eliminates weed competition and allows the few strands vying for sunlight to get snipped.

Contrite and humble, I will consider what I did wrong in 2020 and improve the results, though I only do .0000001% of the work.

The weather will be cooler, making pruning and harvesting the flowers a lot more fun.

 Red Knock Out Rose on a Lincoln Town Car hood


Lo! - Boomage

The moment I posted this on Facebook - BOOM! I looked outside and saw heavy rain in the darkness, lit by our big backyard light (LED, seldom on). I stepped into the rain to kick more cans into the waterfall from the roof!

Philippines - Bethany Lutheran Rice Mission.
It's Going To Be a Rice Day

 Is anyone else hungry for some rice dishes? Rice Krispies?



Despite the difficulties of travelling due to strict checkpoints and endless permits,  the rice donated by Bishop Gregory L. Jackson and his friends  finally arrived and was distributed in the mountain. 



Thanks to our friends for caring and sending rice to our members who are in need of food during these trying times.




Last week, unfortunate things happened because one jeep travelling from the city fell in a very high cliff. One died, however; a miracle still happened because most of the passengers survived and are now recovering. Five Lutheran members [from another congregation] were included in that accident. We ask everyone to pray for our brothers and sisters for their fast recovery. Hoping to visit them soon if weather and my health condition is okay.

I am planning to go home to distribute rice also to my relatives and to preach the Gospel too.  I should have traveled today but I felt sick and the weather is not favorable this time. 



God bless to all the donors and more power to Bishop Jackson.

***

September Is Rice Month


"NATIONAL RICE MONTH

We celebrate National Rice Month throughout the entire month September. With over 40,000 kinds that grow on every continent, except on Antarctica, we have 30 days to discover as many varieties as possible!
Rice is the oldest known food still consumed today. Rice was first grown about 130 million years ago in the south-eastern part of Asia.  The Chinese word for rice is the same word used for food. However, rice is more than food; it’s part of the national culture. Many cultural customs date back to the days of wet rice cultivation. The historic commitment to group harmony is a predominate custom of the original culture for communal rice cultivation. In China, young girls are told that they must eat all the rice on their plate because each grain of rice represents a pockmark on the face of their future husband!  Interestingly, Chinese and Japanese heritage both cultivate rice as a part of their culture.
Rice-n-Roll
Rice is the second highest grain produced worldwide after maize (corn). Nearly 85% of rice consumed in the U.S. is grown domestically is six states: Arkansas, California, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, and Texas. Rice is a complex carb, low in fat, making it very healthy to eat!
There are four types of rice and each is different from one another:
  • White rice is the most common and the inferior rice of the four. So, unlike other rice varieties, white rice has little nutrients, making it the least healthy.
  • Brown rice is a whole grain rice rich in thiamine, iron, and zinc. Because of this, brown rice has a chewy texture and gives a fuller feeling after eating.
  • Black rice full of rich nutty, earthy flavors. Interestingly, scientists classify black rice as a different species from white and brown rice. On a nutritional level, black rice is an excellent choice for diabetics, as it has a very low glycemic index.
  • Red rice is similar to black rice on the nutrient scale, except it provides more antioxidants to the body. The antioxidants found in red rice attribute to the rich red color of the rice.
HOW TO OBSERVE
There are several ways to celebrate National Rice Month. Preparing some jambalaya, fried rice or rice pudding for the family is a great way to celebrate at the kitchen table! While shopping for rice, look at what varieties available. Mix and match to create your own delight!
Use #NationalRiceMonth in social media correspondence.
HISTORY
U.S.A. Rice designated September National Rice Month to encourage the use of the small but mighty grain in our daily dining."

Saturday, August 29, 2020

The Twelfth Sunday after Trinity, 2020. Mark 7:31-37


The Twelfth Sunday after Trinity, 2020


Pastor Gregory L. Jackson


https://video.ibm.com/channel/bethany-lutheran-worship



The Hymn #175                When I Survey the Wondrous Cross (Hamburg)
The Confession of Sins
The Absolution
The Introit p. 16
The Gloria Patri
The Kyrie p. 17
The Gloria in Excelsis
The Salutation and Collect p. 19

Almighty and merciful God, of whose only gift it cometh that Thy faithful people do unto Thee true and laudable service, grant, we beseech Thee, that we may so faithfully serve Thee in this life that we fail not finally to attain Thy heavenly promises; through Jesus Christ, Thy Son, our Lord, who liveth, etc.

The Epistle and Gradual       
The Gospel              
Glory be to Thee, O Lord!
Praise be to Thee, O Christ!
The Nicene Creed             p. 22
 Miracles, Faith, and Love        

The Preface p. 24
The Sanctus p. 26
The Lord's Prayer p. 27
The Words of Institution
The Agnus Dei p. 28
The Nunc Dimittis p. 29
The Benediction p. 31

The Closing Hymn #123                       Our God Our Help   

 Norma A. Boeckler




In Our Prayers and Announcements
  • Andrea Anderson's second birthday is next Sunday.
  • Active treatment - Mary Howell, Randy Anderson, Christina Jackson, Rush Limbaugh
  • Diagnosis - Kermit Way, Pastor Jim Shrader
  • God's blessings on the Philippine Rice Mission with Pastor Palangyos
  • Those recovering from Hurricane Laura and storms in the South and Iowa.
                        
Norma A. Boeckler

KJV 2 Corinthians 3:4 And such trust have we through Christ to God-ward: 5 Not that we are sufficient of ourselves to think any thing as of ourselves; but our sufficiency is of God; 6 Who also hath made us able ministers of the new testament; not of the letter, but of the spirit: for the letter killeth, but the spirit giveth life. 7 But if the ministration of death, written and engraven in stones, was glorious, so that the children of Israel could not stedfastly behold the face of Moses for the glory of his countenance; which glory was to be done away: 8 How shall not the ministration of the spirit be rather glorious? 9 For if the ministration of condemnation be glory, much more doth the ministration of righteousness exceed in glory. 10 For even that which was made glorious had no glory in this respect, by reason of the glory that excelleth. 11 For if that which is done away was glorious, much more that which remaineth is glorious.

KJV Mark 7:31 And again, departing from the coasts of Tyre and Sidon, he came unto the sea of Galilee, through the midst of the coasts of Decapolis. 32 And they bring unto him one that was deaf, and had an impediment in his speech; and they beseech him to put his hand upon him. 33 And he took him aside from the multitude, and put his fingers into his ears, and he spit, and touched his tongue; 34 And looking up to heaven, he sighed, and saith unto him, Ephphatha, that is, Be opened. 35 And straightway his ears were opened, and the string of his tongue was loosed, and he spake plain. 36 And he charged them that they should tell no man: but the more he charged them, so much the more a great deal they published it; 37 And were beyond measure astonished, saying, He hath done all things well: he maketh both the deaf to hear, and the dumb to speak.

Twelfth Sunday After Trinity

Almighty and everlasting God, who hast created all things: We thank Thee that Thou hast given us sound bodies, and hast graciously preserved our tongues and other members from the power of the adversary: We beseech Thee, grant us Thy grace, that we may rightly use our ears and tongues; help us to hear Thy word diligently and devoutly, and with our tongues so to praise and magnify Thy grace, that no one shall be offended by our words, but that all may be edified thereby, through Thy beloved Son, Jesus Christ, our Lord, who liveth and reigneth with Thee and the Holy Ghost, one true God, world without end. Amen.

Luther on the Epistle text - Here


Background for the Gospel Lesson, Mark 7:31-37
Medical doctors may have a better grasp of miracles than others, since they experience them, beyond all hope. I told our MD-PhD friend at Yale Medical School that certain theologians would not believe a miracle happened unless it could be reproduced in a lab. Dr. Wenger said, "That is the very definition of a miracle - it cannot be reproduced in a lab!"

The Gospels clearly connect the miracles of Jesus with His divine Word. The miracles demonstrated to the disciples and the crowds His divinity. His teaching of the Word had a powerful effect, and still does, and His miracles gave thousands a concrete example of what the Word can do.

Paul wrote specifically about the efficacy of the preached Word. 
1 Thessalonians 2:13 For this cause also thank we God without ceasing, because, when ye received the word of God which ye heard of us, ye received it not as the word of men, but as it is in truth, the word of God, which effectually worketh also in you that believe.

The Word itself has the power to change people forever, the miracles encourage us to consider how much God can do and how quickly He can accomplish His will.


Miracles, Faith, and Love

KJV Mark 7:31 And again, departing from the coasts of Tyre and Sidon, he came unto the sea of Galilee, through the midst of the coasts of Decapolis. 32 And they bring unto him one that was deaf, and had an impediment in his speech; and they beseech him to put his hand upon him.

This Gospel lesson is an example of faith and love, how the two go together. Our world is saturated with talk of love without faith. When that prevails, it is sanctimony - a pose of holiness based upon certain criteria at the moment. That cannot be true love for others, because the good fruit only grows on good trees - faith. That would be clear to a country where most people raise their own food, but it is less obvious for those who think of food as sections in the grocery store.

We have Butterfly Bushes, which are known for shade and attracting butterflies. I looked at one and it seemed to be something else. Right in the midst of the genuine branches was a hardy, six-foot Mimosa, looking very much like its surroundings but not quite. I despaired of pulling it out, so I went to the base and cut it there.

So many came to Jesus that sometimes He had to stay away from the crowds. Why did they come to Him from all over? They heard His words of mercy and forgiveness through faith in Him. They saw Him heal others, and great multitudes were fed where no supply of food was available. 

I read a classic book called the Sand Arabs, about a British man who lived among the Arabs in the driest, most empty part of the world. Many suffered from eye problems, so they came to him from all over to be treated with his salves. He did not do this as a requirement of his job. He was filled with wonder about the needs of these people. Anyone with dry eyes from glaucoma or allergies can imagine how much that relief meant to those who flocked to him.

In this case, the man was deaf and could not speak well, so he could not easily find his way to be healed, so certain people took him, based upon their faith in Jesus and their love for him as a friend or relative.

They begged Jesus to lay His hands on their deaf friend. That phase alone unites their faith in the Savior with their kindness toward their friend. Who knows exactly how this came about! The land was filled with stories about Jesus' spiritual and healing power. He was the ultimate Sower and the Seed, planting faith in the hearts of many and seeing the fruits of faith spring up many times over.

Faith in Jesus is so powerful that it shoves aside the evil and temptations of this world. God scorns what the unbelieving world covets. And the unbelieving world scorns what delights God. Jesus says very clearly in John - God loves those who love His Son. This by itself is a great blessing and teaches us that we are surrounded by the power and goodness of God. Then we have the spiritual vision and wisdom to discern between good and evil, right and wrong, love and sanctimony (holier-than-thou fake love). 

The scorn, insults, and even vendettas of the unbelievers are only proofs of their hatred of faith in Christ. The worst of it comes from those who strike the pose of religious experts. But their faces twist in mirth when they hear someone express sincere faith in the Scriptures. They say something like, "I used to be like that, in Sunday School! But I grew up."

What chance did this man have, since he could not hear and could not express himself? His life was nothing but frustration and humiliation from those who mocked him and treated him as worthless. Our sainted member in a wheelchair said, "People think I know nothing because I am in a wheelchair. That is how I reported a number of crimes to the police. People acted like I was not there or not able to understand, even when they were busted for their crimes." That was a real burden for someone so bright, to feel the scorn and hear the ignorant words of those who lacked faith and love.

33 And he took him aside from the multitude, and put his fingers into his ears, and he spit, and touched his tongue;

"Oho!" say the rationalists. "Here is Mark treating Jesus as a magician. That is something we can call historically accurate." Yes, there are lots of contradictions among the rationalists there, and the scorn leads people to feel squeamish about this miracle. 

1. Jesus took the man aside from the multitude. He lived in a world of confusion, and the crowd was bound to wave, shout, and make faces at him. I have experienced that in group photos. Everyone wants to help and it distracts everyone, without any special problems.
2. Jesus put His fingers into the man's ears. Since the man could not hear, this was an indication of what Jesus was going to do. Likewise, we know from the words that we are justified by faith in Him alone, but the visible Gospel of baptism and communion make that real visually and in our sense.
3. and Jesus spit, and touched his tongue; this is the other indication - Jesus would heal the man's speech problem. Someone who never heard properly would have problems shaping his words, a delicate matter for brain-to-voice coordination. Anyone who has made a verbal slip - and I know this well - realizes how delicate this connection is.

The isolation from the crowd made it clear that this is Jesus' miracle alone, not to be mixed with someone else saying, "I did it." Or - "The man did it alone." 

Miracles are very important, and they should dwell on our minds just as much now as then - perhaps more. We are too willing to grant all power to science when we still profess that we do believe God is in charge of all things, and always for the good.

34 And looking up to heaven, he sighed, and saith unto him, Ephphatha, that is, Be opened. 35 And straightway his ears were opened, and the string of his tongue was loosed, and he spake plain.

The man suffered all his life and felt a great blessing from being relieved of his maladies, which made him no less a leper than the lepers were, outcast, lonely, ridiculed.

God's miracles are abundant, and we should trust in them and see how He chooses to work. How many miracles do we need to realize they can happen at any time and in the most remarkable way? We pray for others because we know God intervenes and helps, often beyond all human reason and science.

Meanwhile, the everyday miracles should be treasured as well. Baptism places the Gospel Word in our hearts and seals us as members of God's Kingdom. Holy Communion is receiving the body and blood of Christ in the common elements of bread and wine.

They are symbols, true, but more than symbols. They are the active work of the Word in visible form. 

Today Sassy and I walked out route and saw how Ranger's Bob lawn was brown from the drought. We do not water lawns in our neighborhood, so we see bare clay appear in some places - like our backyard former lawn, which was once solid clover.

On our walk, I looked at the house being fixed up, where no one had watered anything for weeks and saw color. Can that be? We walked over and saw three roses in bloom, three more than the entire Jackson Rose Farm. One was perfect and two were starting to fade. 

Notice that Jesus spoke the divine Word - "Be opened!" Whatever is not, can be, through the Word. The Logos spoke the Word in Creation and nothing was made apart from Him, Jesus, the Logos.

In great and small ways, the Word is always at work. The Gospel Word -

  • Speaks our forgiveness, received through faith;
  • Protects us against spiritual opposition;
  • Strengthens us against temptation;
  • Shows fruitfulness in all we do.
36 And he charged them that they should tell no man: but the more he charged them, so much the more a great deal they published it;

20. The people bring the poor man to the Lord, the Lord takes him to a special place, lays his fingers into the man’s ears, spits, and touches his tongue with the spittle, looks up toward heaven, and sighing, says, Ephphata, that is, Be opened! This is a lovely picture, and its meaning is good. For by those who here bring the deafmute to the Lord, the office of the ministry is meant. Ministers and the Apostles lead the poor consciences of men to God. This is done in three ways, by preaching, by a godly life, and by intercession. With the Word and preaching, they are brought to God; a godly life serves to show the Word so much the mightier in its power. But the Word itself leads to Christ, though it be preached by a sinner. Yet, a good life serves as an emphasis and a furtherance of the Gospel; while a wicked life dulls its edge. Their third duty, to pray for the people, likewise leads them on the road both to faith and to works.

21. Now if the Word go on its way in this threefold manner, it cannot fail to bring forth fruit, as God says, Isaiah 55:11: “My Word, that goeth forth out of my mouth, shall not return to me void.” This is indicated by the action of the pious persons who carry the mute into Christ’s presence; this signifies the ministers, who bring forward the sinner; then God appears, giving growth and increase, as Paul says, 1 Corinthians 3:7, He opens the sinner’s eyes, ears, and mouth. This happens in a wink of the eye, for God’s Word is like lightning, which in a moment passes from sunrise to the ends of the earth. Thus when such persons are brought to God, he gives them grace to believe.

Tell no man
This is often debated. The Gospel of Mark emphasizes Jesus hiding Himself because the crowds were do great. He also had a divine duty to train the disciples. Even the disciples say to Jesus, "Stop praying. We have work to do." One student said, "I never head that; where is it?" And I told him.

Mark 1 - 35 And in the morning, rising up a great while before day, he went out, and departed into a solitary place, and there prayed. 36 And Simon and they that were with him followed after him. 37 And when they had found him, they said unto him, All men seek for thee.
So the charge of silence can be seen as slowing down the masses coming to Him to perform miracles. Others see it as paradoxical intention, to initiate more speaking of the miracles. However, it is plain and simple - someone who saw or experienced such a miracle would have to speak about it. That is true of our own miracle baby in the congregation. And I have seen many more examples in various ways. Faith does not cause the miracle - faith moves us to trust in miracles. God gives miracles to unbelievers, but they do not see them. 

Jesus fed the multitudes more than once. Paul gathered support for the poor in Jerusalem.
The Word causes miracles so that people thank God for their blessings.


37 And were beyond measure astonished, saying, He hath done all things well: he maketh both the deaf to hear, and the dumb to speak.

I appreciate the miracle summaries because they are markers to show us the reason why ferocious opposition built up against Jesus. Everyone talked about the miracles, and those miracles confirmed the divine power and glory of Jesus' sermons. In contrast, the rabbis of the time had some miracles to the credit, but their teaching was nothing like Jesus' Word. 

When we consider how God has helped us, through prayer in the Name of Jesus, we can see how much He accomplishes over time. No matter what we ask, He supplies far more than we imagined. Trials and troubles are overcome, and the things we cannot solve are solved by God alone, against our human wisdom, strength, and judgment.

Here is a funny little example. The moment I began teaching at a university, I wondered how soon I would be too old for them. That was 18 years ago. I kept wondering where the cut-off would be. Suddenly, online was required of every institution this year and the universities lined up courses in advance. Often we are like the statement in The Joys of Yiddish - "I know God will provide. But will He provide until He provides."

Nobody could have been a vision-caster to imagine what a small group of people could do, scattered around the country. God has done it through His Word, and the upshot of this is people thanking God for food from heaven, giant bags of rice, their staple of life.

The Feeding of the Multitudes continues through the Word.