Monday, September 11, 2023

Efficacy - One Word To Cure Our Ills, Listen to the Rain.

 

Charlie Sue and I watch documentaries together. Last night we finished a series on Napoleon, finishing with a lengthy explanation of the Battle of Waterloo. The British under Wellington were being clobbered all day long until the end of the day, when the French threw down their weapons and ran to save their lives.

Historical narratives are fascinating, because so often the richest and most powerful nations seem to have it all and then collapse into ruin. We see that today in the Lutheran sects, only a few steps behind the old mainline denominations (Presbyterian, Northern Baptists, Methodists, Episcopalians, United Church of Christ, Roman Catholics) and their own leader/partner/idol - ELCA.

"I'm Liz Eaton. The rest of the Lutherans - LCMS, ELS, WELS -  follow our example. They share the same programs with us through Thrivent. Ask Gregory Lee Jackson, CLU, if it ain't so."

Rome's aqueducts still work, after 2000 years, but Italy's greatest dam and reservoir collapsed after three years. 

Today we will watch the inevitable march of a great storm heading toward the South and the East, another coming from the West. NW Arkansas will get some rain but not much borrowed energy from Hurricane Lee. That is the key to all storms - energy. The Lord of Creation organized storms in such a way that heat builds them to release lakes of water, blankets of snow, sleet and hail. All rain begins as snow, but the snow usually melts. Hail is a dangerous combination of rain, ice, and snow making the worst kind of partnerships.

Scriptures a Dead Letter: No Energy?

Calvinism has dominated Protestantism, to take away the efficacy of the Scriptures. The King James Version was translated for all denominations, serving as the standard for the English language and correct translation. Twenty flavors of the Bible are perfect for the apostates, each having their own little book to sell.

Zwingli and Calvin 

  • Make the Scriptures subordinate to reason, so rationalism leads to Unitarianism - no Trinity;
  • Consider the Bible a "dead letter" that needs to be helped, enhanced, made germane and interesting. "The statue in the garden points the way" - so they say about the Bible - "but cannot make something happen."
  • The Reformed consistently teach that the Scriptures are dead, lifeless, and incapable unless man makes them germane, relevant, or appealing by his effort. The Reformed  compare  the Scriptures to a statue of Hermes or a road-sign, which points the way but does not give the individual the power to go in that direction.



Daily Luther Sermon Quote - Trinity 15 - God or Mammon. "...He worries and fears lest the money be stolen; but the same person can do without the Gospel through a whole year."

 


Trinity 15 Complete Sermon - God or Mammon. Exhortation Against Avarice and Anxiety for Temporal Things, and an Incentive to Faith.

1. In this Gospel we see how God distinguishes Christians from heathen. For the Lord does not deliver these teachings to the heathen, for they could not receive them, but to his Christians. However, he does not consider those Christians, who only hear his Word, so as to learn it and be able to repeat it, as the nuns do the Psalter. In this way satan also hears the Gospel and the Word of God, yea, he knows it far better than we do, and he could preach it as well as we, if he only wanted to; but the Gospel is a doctrine that should become a living power and be put into practice; it should strengthen and comfort the people, and make them courageous and aggressive.

2. Therefore they, who only thus hear the Gospel, so that they may know it and be able to speak about the wisdom of God, are not worthy to be classed among Christians; but they, who do as the Gospel teaches, are true Christians. However, very few of these are found; we see many hearers, but all are not doers of the Gospel. We wish now to examine more closely what kind of doctrine the Lord teaches in this Gospel. First, he begins with a plain, natural example, so that we all must confess it is true; experience also teaches the same to everybody. He says: “No man can serve two masters: for either he will hate the one, and love the other: or else he will hold to one, and despise the other.”

3. Now he, who tries to serve two masters, will do it in a way that cannot be called serving at all; for it will certainly be as the Lord here says. One can indeed compel a servant to do a certain work against his will and he may grieve while doing it; but no one can compel him to do it cheerfully, and mean it from the bottom of his heart. He of course does the work as long as his master is present, but when he is absent, he hurries away from his task, and does nothing well. Hence the Lord desires our service to be done out of love and cheerfully, and where it is not done thus, it is no service to him: for even people are not pleased when one does anything for them unwillingly. This is natural, and we experience daily that it is so.

Now, if it be the case among human beings that no one can serve two masters, how much more is it true in the service of God, that our service cannot be divided; but it must be done unto God alone, willingly and from the heart; therefore the Lord adds: “Ye cannot serve God and mammon.”

Norma A. Boeckler



4. God cannot allow us to have another Lord besides himself. He is a jealous God, as he says, and cannot suffer us to serve him and his enemy.

Only mine, he says, or not at all. Behold now how beautifully Christ here introduces the example: “No man,” he says, “can serve two masters; for either he will hate the one, and love the other; or else he will hold to one and despise the other. Ye cannot serve God and mammon.” As if to say: as it is here in man’s relations to his fellows, so it is also before God.

5. We find very few, who do not sin against the Gospel. The Lord passes a severe judgment and it is terrible to hear that he should say this of us, and yet no one will confess, yea, no one will suffer it to be said that we hate and despise God and that we are his enemies. There is no one, when asked if he loves God and cleaves to him? would not reply, yes, I love God. But see how the text closes, that we all hate and despise God, and love mammon and cleave to it. But God suffers us to do this until his time; he watches the time and some day he will strike into our midst with all violence, before we can turn around. It is impossible for one, who loves gold and earthly possessions and cleaves to them, not to hate God. For God here contrasts these two as enemies to one another, and concludes, if you love and cleave to one of these two, then you must hate and despise the other. Therefore, however nicely and genteelly one lives here upon earth and cleaves to riches, it cannot be otherwise than that he must hate God; and on the other hand, whoever does not cleave to gold and worldly goods, loves God. This is certainly true.

6. But who are they that love God, and cleave not to gold and worldly possessions? Take a good look at the whole world, also the Christians, and see if they despise gold and riches. It requires an effort to hear the Gospel and to live according to it. God be praised, we have the Gospel; that no one can deny, but what do we do with it? We are concerned only about learning and knowing it, and nothing more; we think it is enough to know it, and do not care whether we ever live according to it. However, on the other hand, one is very anxious when he leaves lying in the window or in the room a dollar or two, yea, even a dime, then he worries and fears lest the money be stolen; but the same person can do without the Gospel through a whole year. And such characters still wish to be considered as Evangelical.

7. Here we see what and who we are. If we were Christians, we would despise riches and be concerned about the Gospel that we some day might live in it and prove it by our deeds. We see few such Christians; therefore we must hear the judgment that We are despisers of God and hate God for the sake of riches and worldly possessions. Alas I That is fine praise We should be ashamed of ourselves in our inmost souls; there is no hope for us! What a fine condition we are in now! That means, I think, our names are blotted out. What spoiled children we are!