Friday, December 1, 2023

Good Food Still Works And Reduces the Budget/Waist/Waste

 

"OK. Which one of you guys is rejecting Happy Meals?"

Fellow chubbies and chubbetts. It took me a long time and plenty of reading to grasp the hideous contrast between American eating and nutritious eating.

My vegetable consultant urged me to keep eating meat, and Charlie Sue seconded the motion. I was never a vegetarian, vegan, or roots addict. However, I think some meat and eggs are good for balance.

I have become a salt shopper - I look at the salt level for all foods, and some are scary. Salt tastes good, too good, but leads to blood pressure and other problems. A can of beans can have 120, 240, 480, or 1000 mg of salt. Pizzas? - don't even ask.

I decided to keep butter - in the fridge. I used to find lots of ways to incorporate butter in many things, especially toast. Keeping the butter as cold and hard as a banker's heart has reminded me how all oils enter the body and stay for a long time, like loans. Butter is not bad by itself, rather harmless, but serves as a gateway drug, improving cakes, scrambled eggs, toast, casseroles, vegetable dishes, desserts, etc.

Colas, juices, and fizzy water are a combination of sugar, fake sugar, and salt, so I no longer purchase them. If they could add butter or margarine to drinks, they vendors would.

I might have one dessert a week now, but no longer will friendly visitors mock me for having a deep freezer dedicated to ice cream products. That is a running joke and it makes me laugh too. 

Here are the categories for a day's food:

Breakfast - one toast, no butter, two eggs, black coffee. 

Lunch - the typical supreme meal:

  • Spinach and collard leaves or turnip greens - always;
  • Mushrooms, definitely every day;
  • Blueberries daily;
  • A handful of walnuts daily;
  • Sweet peas frozen;
  • Onions, green and red peppers;
  • Flax seed and maybe sesame seeds;
  • One sausage shared with Charlie each lunch;
  • One can of low salt garbanzo beans.
Supper, usually with 4+ fresh fruits from afternoon to evening - 
  • Apples or oranges or bananas
  • Citrus
  • Fresh pineapple in cold season
  • Spinach alone if really hungry
  • Bananas for falling asleep

All these foods are medicinal, tasty, and satisfying, but the Harpies of Happy Meals will call out as we drive by the fast-food joints, rags stuffed in our ears: "Come back, Ulysses! We will give you everything you crave - grease-burgers with salt, drinks with salt and sugar, desserts loaded with sugar and salt and fake sugar." 


WELS Synod President Video Blocks Snip

 

Labor-intensive Internet video captures were made easier recently with two commands, one to snip, the other to paste. Most still allow that, but in WELS, the commander's image is sacred and not subject to copying, lest its powers be weakened. I had to search my thousands of graphics to recover this one, where Mark Schroeder tried to look animated on film.


The big event is a new WELS gimmick, which should work as blissfully as aping the Church Growth Movement and abusive hazing. Martin Luther College, aka Dr. Martin Luther College, will train people to be teachers without the burden of coming to the campus. This seems to be aimed more at those who want certification but cannot afford moving to the coldest small town in the states - and the weather is pretty bad too.

That sounds like "online classes" to me, but distance education was new 20 years ago. The question is whether there is a need for more teachers or for more paying students at a failing college. No, I am not being cruel - just practical. The LCMS - with far more people, money, and campuses - is closing colleges faster than the Rite Aid pharmacies.

WELS and ELS are loaded with demographic charts that show them competing for the same potential students. WELS has a beeyootiful new gym. ELS has an enormous new gym, $17 million or so. 

Christina and I went through the muddy years with enlarging high schools and remodeling Augustana College's ancient small gym (demolished soon after we enrolled). The demographics then were - Boomers - 25% of the population.

I recall my father's jeremiad about expensive new businesses, mall stores at that time. Dad reminded us of the stores entering and leaving the deluxe Duck Creek Plaza, now 60 years old. He would shout in the car - "How are they going to support a store when the mall makes them pay a huge rent? They look great but they will go bust in a year or two." Now a mall is more like a mole growing on the end of one's nose. 

I would love to hear the frank discussions about higher education. They are apparently lacking. 

"What is the bottom line?"





Mark Schroeder's buddy, Steve Spencer, started up the "Intrepid" Lutherans, but Steve was the first to quit and run for cover. WELS is not very good at cloak and dagger efforts - more like the hearty beer drinkers below.






Daily Luther Sermon Quote - Advent 1- "Blessed he who thus knows Christ in him and believes in him. He cannot be afraid of him, but has a true and comforting confidence in him and entrance to him."

 



Complete sermon -> Luther's Sermons - Matthew 21:1-9.

First Sunday in Advent. Christ Enters Jerusalem: or Faith; Good Works; and the Spiritual Meaning of This Gospel


35. In the Hebrew language the two words meek and lowly do not sound unlike, and mean not a poor man who is wanting in money and property, but who in his heart is humble and wretched, in whom truly no anger nor haughtiness is to be found, but meekness and sympathy. And if we wish to obtain the full meaning of this word, we must take it as Luke uses it, who describes how Christ at his entrance wept and wailed over Jerusalem.

We interpret therefore the words lowly and meek in the light of Christ’s conduct. How does he appear? His heart is full of sorrow and compassion toward Jerusalem. There is no anger or revenge, but he weeps out of tenderness at their impending doom. None was so bad that he did or wished him harm. His sympathy makes him so kind and full of pity that he thinks not of anger, of haughtiness, of threatening or revenge, but offers boundless compassion and good will. This is what the prophet calls lowly and the Evangelist meek. Blessed he who thus knows Christ in him and believes in him. He cannot be afraid of him, but has a true and comforting confidence in him and entrance to him. He does not try to find fault either, for as he believes, he finds it; these words do not lie nor deceive.

36. The word “just” does not mean here the justice with which God judges, which is called the severe justice of God. For if Christ came to us with this who could stand before him? Who could receive him, since even the saints cannot endure it? The joy and grace of this entrance would thereby be changed into the greatest fear and terror. But that grace is meant, by which he makes us just or righteous. I wish the word justus, justitia, were not used for the severe judicial justice; for originally it means godly, godliness.

When we say, he is a pious man, the Scriptures express it, he is justus, justified or just. But the severe justice of God is called in the Scriptures:

Severity, judgment, tribunal.

The prophet’s meaning, therefore, is this: Thy king cometh to thee pious or just, i.e., he comes to make you godly through himself and his grace; he knows well that you are not godly. Your piety should consist not in your deeds, but in his grace and gift, so that you are just and godly through him.

In this sense St. Paul speaks, Romans 3:26: “That he might himself be just, and the justifier of him that hath faith in Jesus.” That is, Christ alone is pious before God and he alone makes us pious. Also, Romans 1:17: “For therein is revealed a righteousness of God from faith unto faith,” that is the godliness of God, namely his grace and mercy, by which he makes us godly before him, is preached in the Gospel. You see in this verse from the prophet that Christ is preached for us unto righteousness, that he comes godly and just, and we become godly and just by faith.

37. Note this fact carefully, that when you find in the Scriptures the word God’s justice, it is not to be understood of the self-existing, imminent justice of God, as the Papists and many of the fathers held, lest you be frightened; but, according to the usage of Holy Writ, it means the revealed grace and mercy of God through Jesus Christ in us by means of which we are considered godly and righteous before him. Hence it is called God’s justice or righteousness effected not by us, but by God through grace, just as God’s work, God’s wisdom, God’s strength, God’s word, God’s mouth, signifies what he works and speaks in us. All this is demonstrated clearly by St. Paul, Romans 1:16: “I am not ashamed of the Gospel of Christ; for it is the power of God (which works in us and strengthens us) unto salvation to everyone that believeth. For therein is revealed a righteousness of God,” as it is written in Habakkuk 2:4: “The righteous shall live by his faith.” Here you see that he speaks of the righteousness of faith and calls the same the righteousness of God, preached in the Gospel, since the Gospel teaches nothing else but that he who believes has grace and is righteous before God and is saved.

In the same manner you should understand Psalm 31:1: “Deliver me in thy righteousness,” i.e. by thy grace, which makes me godly and righteous.

The word Savior or Redeemer compels us to accept this as the meaning of the little word “just.” For if Christ came with his severe justice he would not save anyone, but condemn all, as they are all sinners and unjust. But now he comes to make not only just and righteous, but also blessed, all who receive him, that he alone as the just one and the Savior be offered graciously to all sinners out of unmerited kindness and righteousness.

38. When the Evangelist calls his steed a burden-bearing and working foal of an ass he describes the animal the prophets mean. He wants to say: The prophecy is fulfilled in this burden-bearing animal. It was not a special animal trained for this purpose, as according to the country’s custom riding animals are trained, and when the prophet speaks of the foal of the ass it is his meaning that it was a colt, but not a colt of a horse.

II. CONCERNING GOOD WORKS.

39. We have said enough of faith. We now come to consider good works. We receive Christ not only as a gift by faith, but also as an example of love toward our neighbor, whom we are to serve as Christ serves us. Faith brings and gives Christ to you with all his possessions. Love gives you to your neighbor with all your possessions. These two things constitute a true and complete Christian life; then follow suffering and persecution for such faith and love, and out of these grows hope in patience.

40. You ask, perhaps, what are the good works you are to do to your neighbor? Answer: They have no name. As the good works Christ does to you have no name, so your good works are to have no name.

41. Whereby do you know them? Answer: They have no name, so that there may be no distinction made and they be not divided, that you might do some and leave others undone. You shall give yourself up to him altogether, with all you have, the same as Christ did not simply pray or fast for you. Prayer and fasting are not the works he did for you, but he gave himself up wholly to you, with praying, fasting, all works and suffering, so that there is nothing in him that is not yours and was not done for you.

Thus it is not your good work that you give alms or that you pray, but that you offer yourself to your neighbor and serve him, wherever he needs you and every way you can, be it with alms, prayer, work, fasting, counsel, comfort, instruction, admonition, punishment, apologizing, clothing, food, and lastly with suffering and dying for him. Pray, where are now such works to be found in Christendom?

42. I wish to God I had a voice like a thunderbolt, that I might preach to all the world, and tear the word “good works” out of people’s hearts, mouths, ears, books, or at least give them the right understanding of it. All the world sings, speaks, writes and thinks of good works, everyone wishes to exercise themselves in good works, and yet, good works are done nowhere, no one has the right understanding of good works. Oh, that all such pulpits in all the world were cast into the fire and burned to ashes!

How they mislead people with their good works! They call good works what God has not commanded, as pilgrimages, fasting, building and decorating their churches in honor of the saints, saying mass, paying for vigils, praying with rosaries, much prattling and bawling in churches, turning nun, monk, priest, using special food, raiment or dwelling, — who can enumerate all the horrible abominations and deceptions? This is the pope’s government and holiness.

43. If you have ears to hear and a mind to observe, pray, listen and learn for God’s sake what good works are and mean. A good work is good for the reason that it is useful and benefits and helps the one for whom it is done; why else should it be called good! For there is a difference between good works and great, long, numerous, beautiful works. When you throw a big stone a great distance it is a great work, but whom does it benefit? If you can jump, run, fence well, it is a fine work, but whom does it benefit? Whom does it help, if you wear a costly coat or build a fine house?

44. And to come to our Papists’ work, what does it avail if they put silver or gold on the walls, wood and stone in the churches? Who would be made better, if each village had ten bells, as big as those at Erfurt? Whom would it help if all the houses were convents and monasteries as splendid as the temple of Solomon? Who is benefited if you fast for St. Catherine, St. Martin or any other saint? Whom does it benefit, if you are shaved half or wholly, if you wear a gray or a black cap? Of what use were it if all people held mass every hour? What benefit is it if in one church, as at Meissen, they sing day and night without interruption? Who is better for it, if every church had more silver, pictures and jewelry than the churches of Halle and Wittenberg? It is folly and deception, men’s lies invented these things and called them good works; they all pretend they serve God thus and pray for the people and their sins, just as if they helped God with their property or as if his saints were in need of our work. Sticks and stones are not as rude and mad as we are. A tree bears fruit, not for itself, but for the good of man and beast, and these fruits are its good works.