Friday, January 12, 2024

Wolves and Finance Videos

 

 Videos are here.

I have not watched these Wolves and Finance videos, which were recently linked through another website, but I watched the background interview of the forgeries in general.

I find these stories intriguing because they are so much like the Lutheran synods - ELCA, CLC (sic), WELS, ELS, LCMS, ELDONA, the Church of Rome, etc. Money and power are seductive, so outrageous lying is used to replaced the truth with something so blatant that no one dares to question it.

When the Roman Catholics found their funds being drained by abuse lawsuits from congregations, they sent the money to designated entities where it could be kept safe from the verdicts against them. 

The Lutherans are no different, just more scattered. It's a good thing they all have Thrivent , eh?

Daily Luther Sermon Quote - Water into Wine - "But the greater part remain in their works and dwell on the border, achieving neither good works nor faith, shielding themselves behind the shine and glitter of works."

 

Paolo Veronese


Click here -> Complete Sermon - Changing Water into Wine - Second Sunday after Epiphany 


III. THE SIGNIFICANCE OF THIS MARRIAGE.

22. In the third place, we must briefly touch upon the spiritual significance of the text. This marriage and every marriage signifies Christ, the true bridegroom, and Christendom, the bride; as the Gospel lesson of Matthew 22:1-14 sufficiently shows.

23. This marriage took place in Cana of Galilee; that is, Christendom began in the days of Christ among the Jewish people, and continues still among all who are like the Jews. The Jewish nation is called Cana, which signifies, zeal, because it diligently practiced the Law and zealously clung to the works of the Law, so that even the Gospel lessons always call the Jews zealots, and especially St. Paul in Romans 9 and Romans 10. It is natural too that wherever Law and good works are, there zeal will be and contention, one claiming to be better than the other, first of all, however, opposing faith which cares naught for works and boasts only of God’s grace. Now wherever Christ is there such zealots will always be, and his marriage must be at Zeal City, for you always find by the side of the Gospel and faith work-righteous people and Jewish zealots who quarrel with faith.

24. Galilee signifies border or the edge of the country, where you pass from one country into another. This signifies the same people in Zeal City who dwell between the Law and the Gospel, and ought to emigrate and pass from works to faith, from the Law into the Christian liberty; as some also have done, and now still do. But the greater part remain in their works and dwell on the border, achieving neither good works nor faith, shielding themselves behind the shine and glitter of works.

25. Christ’s being bidden to the marriage signifies that he was promised long ago in the Law and the prophets and is earnestly expected and invoked to turn water into wine, fulfill the Law and establish faith, and make true Galileans of us.

26. His disciples are bidden with him; for he is expected to be a great King, hence to need apostles and disciples in order to have his Word freely and fully preached everywhere. Likewise, his mother is the Christian church, taken from the Jews, who herself most of all belongs to the marriage, for Christ was really promised to the Jewish nation.

27. The six waterpots of stone, for the purification of the Jews, are the books of the Old Testament which by law and commandment made the Jewish people only outwardly pious and pure; for which reason the Evangelist says, they were set there after the Jews’ manner of purifying, as if to say: This signifies the purification by works without faith, which never purifies the heart, but only makes it more impure; which is a Jewish, not a Christian or spiritual purification.

28. There being six waterpots signifies the labor and toil which they who deal in works undergo in such purification; for the heart finds no rest in them, since the Sabbath, the seventh day, is wanting, in which we rest from our works and let God work in us. For there are six work-days, in which God created heaven and earth, and commanded us to labor. The seventh day is the day of rest, in which we are not to toil in the works of the Law, but to let God work in us by faith, while we remain quiet and enjoy a holiday from the labors of the Law.

29. The water in the pots is the contents and substance of the Law by which conscience is governed, and is graven in letters as in the waterpots of stone.

30. And they are of stone, as were the tables of Moses, signifying the stiffnecked people of the Jews. For as their heart is set against the Law, so the Law appears outwardly to be against them. It seems hard and difficult to them, and therefore it is hard and difficult; the reason in that their heart is hard and averse to the Law; we all find, feel and discover by experience that we are hard and averse to what is good, and soft and prone to what is evil. This the wicked do not feel, but those who long to be pious and labor exceedingly with their works. This is the significance of the two or three firkins apiece.

31. To turn water into wine is to render the interpretation of the Law delightful. This is done as follows: Before the Gospel arrives everyone understands the Law as demanding our works, that we must fulfill it with works of our own. This interpretation begets either hardened, presumptuous dissemblers and hypocrites, harder than any pot of stone, or timid, restless consciences. There remains nothing but water in the pot, fear and dread of God’s Judgment. This is the water-interpretation, not intended for drinking, neither filling any with delight; on the contrary, there is nothing to it but washing and purification, and yet no true inner cleansing. But the Gospel explains the Law, showing that it requires more than we can render, and that it demands a person different from ourselves to fulfill it; that is, it demands Christ and brings us unto him, so that first of all by his grace we are made in true faith a different people like unto Christ, and that then we do truly good works. Thus the right interpretation and significance of the law is to lead us to the knowledge of our helplessness, to drive us from ourselves to another, namely to Christ, to seek grace and help of him.

32. Therefore, when Christ wanted to make wine he had them pour in still more water, up to the very brim. For the Gospel comes and renders the interpretation of the Law perfectly clear (as already stated), showing that what belongs to us is nothing but sin; wherefore by the law we cannot escape sinning. When now the two or three firkins hear this, namely the good hearts who have labored according to the law in good works, and are already timid at heart and troubled in conscience, this interpretation adds greatly to their fear and terror; and the water now threatens to rise above the lid and brim. Before this, while they felt disinclined and averse to what is good, they still imagined they might yet succeed by their good works; now they hear that they are altogether unfit and helpless:, and that it is impossible to gain their end by good works. That overfills the pot with water, it cannot hold more. This is to interpret the Law in the highest manner, leaving nothing but despair.

33. Then comes the consoling Gospel and turns the water into wine. For when the heart hears that Christ fulfills the law for us and takes our sin upon himself, it no longer cares that impossible things are demanded by the Law, that we must despair of rendering them, and must give up our good works. Yea, it is an excellent thing, and delectable, that the Law is so deep and high, so holy and righteous and good, and demands things so great; and it is loved and lauded for making so many and such great demands.

This is because the heart now has in Christ all that the Law demands, and it would be sorry indeed if it demanded less. Behold, thus the Law is delightful now and easy which before was disagreeable, difficult and impossible; for it lives in the heart by the Spirit. Water no longer is in the pots, it has turned to wine, it is passed to the guest, it is consumed, and has made the heart glad.

34. And these servants are all preachers of the New Testament like the apostles and their successors.

35. The drawing and passing to the guests is, to take this interpretation from the Scriptures, and to preach it to all the world, which is bidden to Christ’s marriage.

36. And these servants knew (the Evangelist tells us) whence the wine was, how it had been water. For the apostles and their successors alone understand how the law becomes delightful and pleasant through Christ, and how the Gospel by faith does not fulfill the Law by works, every thing being unchanged from what it formerly was in good works.

37. But the ruler of the feast does indeed taste that the wine is good, yet he knows not whence it is. This ruler of the feast is the old priesthood among the Jews who knew of naught but works, of whom Nicodemus was one, John 3:9; he indeed feels how fine this cause of Christ would be, but knows not how it can be, and why it is so, clinging still to works. For they who teach works cannot understand and apprehend the Gospel and the actions of faith.

38. He calleth the bridegroom and reproacheth him for setting on the good wine last, whereas every man setteth on last that which is worse. To this very day it is the surprise of the Jews that the preaching of the Gospel should have been delayed so long, coming first of all now to the Gentiles, while they are said to have been drinking the worse wine for so long a time, bearing so long the burden and heat of the day under the Law; as is set forth in another Gospel lesson. Matthew 20:12.

39. Observe, God and men proceed in contrary ways. Men set on first that which is best, afterward that which is worse. God first gives the cross and affliction, then honor and blessedness. This is because men seek to preserve the old man; on which account they instruct us to keep the Law by works, and offer promises great and sweet. But the outcome is stale, the result has a vile taste; for the longer it goes on the worse is the condition of conscience, although, being intoxicated with great promises, it does not feel its wretchedness; yet at last when the wine is digested, and the false promises gone, the wretchedness appears. But God first of all terrifies the conscience, sets on miserable wine, in fact nothing but water; then, however, he consoles us with the promises of the Gospel which endure forever.

Thursday, January 11, 2024

TLH #362 - My Soul's Best Friend, What Joy and Blessing

 


"My Soul's Best Friend, What Joy and Blessing"
by Wolfgang C. Dessler, 1660-1722


1. My soul's best Friend, what joy and blessing
My spirit ever finds in Thee!
From gloomy depths of doubt distressing
Into Thine arms for rest I flee.
Then will the night of sorrow vanish
When from my heart Thy love doth banish
All anguish and all pain and fear.
Yea, here on earth begins my heaven;
Who would not joyful be when given
A loving Savior always near!

2. For though the evil world revile me
And prove herself my bitter foe
Or by her smile seek to beguile me,
I trust her not; her wiles I know.
In Thee alone my soul rejoices,
Thy praise alone it gladly voices,
For Thou art true when friendships flee.
The world may hate but cannot fell me;
Would mighty waves of trial quell me,
I anchor in Thy loyalty.

3. Through deserts of the cross Thou leadest;
I follow, leaning on Thy hand.
From out the cloud Thy child Thou feedest
And givest water from the sand.
I trust Thy ways, howe'er distressing;
I know my path will end in blessing;
Enough that Thou wilt be my Stay.
For whom to honor Thou intendest
Oft into sorrow's vale Thou sendest;
The night must e'er precede the day.

4. My soul's best Friend, how well contented
Am I, reposing on Thy breast;
By sin no more am I tormented
Since Thou dost grant me peace and rest.
Oh, may the grace that Thou hast given
For me a foretaste be of heaven,
All anguish and all pain and fear.
When I shall bask in joys divine!
Away, vain world, with fleeting pleasures;
In Christ I have abiding treasures.
Oh, comfort sweet, my Friend is mine!

Hymn #362
The Lutheran Hymnal
Text: Song of Solomon 5:16
Author: Wolfgang C. Dessler, 1692, cento
Translator: composite
Tune: "Wie wohl ist mir"
1st Published in: Geistreiches Gesangbuch
Town: Halle, 1704


TLH #615 - A Rest Remaineth for the Weary




"A Rest Remaineth for the Weary"
by Johann S. Kunth, 1700-1779


1. A rest remaineth for the weary;
Arise, sad heart, and grieve no more;
Tho' long the way and dark and dreary,
It endeth on the golden shore.
Before His throne the Lamb will lead thee,
On heav'nly pastures He will feed thee.
Cast off thy burden, come with haste;
Soon will the toil and strife be ended,
The weary way which thou hast wended.
*Sweet is the rest which thou shalt taste.

2. The Father's house has many a dwelling,
And there will be a place for thee.
With perfect love His heart is welling
Who loved thee from eternity.
His precious blood the Lamb hath given
That thou might'st share the joys of heaven,
And now He calleth far and near:
"Ye weary souls, cease your repining,
Come while for you My light is shining;
*Come, sweetest rest awaits you here!"

3. O come, come all, ye weak and weary,
Ye souls bowed down with many a care;
Arise and leave your dungeons dreary
And listen to His promise fair:
"Ye bore your burdens meek and lowly,
I will fulfil My pledge most holy,
I'll be your Solace and your Rest.
Ye are Mine own, I will requite you;
Tho' sin and Satan seek to smite you,
*Rejoice! Your home is with the blest."

4. There rest and peace in endless measure
Shall be ours thro' eternity;
No grief, no care, shall mar our pleasure,
And untold bliss our lot shall be.
Oh, had we wings to hasten yonder--
No more o'er earthly ills to ponder--
To join the glad, triumphant band!
Make haste, my soul, forget all sadness;
For peace awaits thee, joy and gladness,--
*The perfect rest is nigh at hand.

Hymn #615
The Lutheran Hymnal
Text: Hebrews 4:9
Author: Johann S. Kunth, 1730, cento
Titled: "Es ist noch eine Ruh' vorhanden"
Tune: "Wie wohl ist mir"
*Variant tune
1st Published in: Geistreiches Gesangbuch
Town: Halle, 1704



Request for More Nutritional Insights

 


I post my weight every so often on the Internet calendar. The key is lb since the numbers change, drifting down and fattening up for a time, starting in 2020. The key was my diabetic blood sugar, as predicted years before, and the perfect cholesterol number due to walnuts. A doctor told one of our church members that a handful of walnuts was required daily, and I complied with a side order of ice cream. The cholesterol went down as the blood sugar went up, so I identified the culprit with ease - me.

Dr. Joel Fuhrman, though a bit fanatic, as many prophets are, woke me up with his book Eat To Live. His Super Immunity book is perhaps even better with descriptions of how foods become medicine when allowed. Fuhrman shocked me with the overwhelming and inexpensive nutritional bonanza of frozen chopped greens, frozen vegetables, fresh fruit, nuts, seeds, and Ciceros in a can. Americans love lots of bread and hummus but go YUK! about chick peas in a can. Silly - Cicero's Latin name is chick pea.





A grocery store provides all the worst kinds of food that hurts us, because highly processed foods are loaded with salt, fat, and sugar, simultaneously removing the medicine God created - leafy greens, vegetables, fresh fruit, nuts, and seeds. Guess which group costs the most per ounce!

I grocery shop now - no more Schwan's -for salt. Beans and pizzas are good for salty shock and awe. I can get canned Ciceros with 120 mgs of salt per serving. Many beans sold by Bush are at 480 mgs per serving. One new rogue can of beans (which I own but do not eat) is rated at 1050 mgs of salt per serving. Our bodies store excess salt, which promotes high blood sugar. Walmart sells Dr. Pepper beans at a very high level, though not as saline as 1050 mgs. 

This Fuhrman-centric change really has to be a long-term project, gradually removing certified sugar-salt-fat Ft. Knox products - expensive by definition, protected against any threat. Go down the frozen vegetable display - IGNORE THE NEARBY CHOCOLATES! - you will find many frozen vegetables and fruits, highly priced and loaded with added sugar and salt. The frozen, low cost vegetables are often SEASONED SEPARATELY! Yes, the cash cost is ginned up for a few pennies of added salt, added sugar, and various spices. 

We do not crave food so much as we crave food we are used to eating. Therefore, slipping out of the clutches and bad health of Dames Sugar-Salt-Fat will entice us to go back and plunge into the Slough of Despond (Pilgrim's Progress). I went back to pizza and some ice cream when I was driving someone almost daily to the hospital. However, Herr Schwan helped by making a lot of their frozen foods excessively expensive and salty, fat taken for granted. I told the the very nice driver to her face that they were delivering very unhealthy and fabulously overpriced food, combined with really bad management - not at her level, but above. I bought one more package of "good" chocolate ice cream at the grocery store and discovered it was one of those fake ice creams, so bad that squirrels would not touch it. Thank you Stinko Corrupted Fake Ice Cream. 

Needless to say, Herr Ronald McDonald is now an orphan. I found unpleasant symptoms from the salt-sugar-fat and a repeat of the symptoms with Kettle Corn at the store (salt- corn sugar-fat). 

Good Craving

Now that I have confessed so much about toxic unhealthy food, let me encourage people who are trying to shift to greens, beans, vegetables, fresh fruit, nuts, and seeds. 

Changing food choices at once is impossible, but that has made many individuals criminally wealthy by promoting rigid, fanatical, trademarked formulas. My opinion - drop one terrible food at a time or reduce a favorite in amounts eaten in a week, substituting greens, beans, and fresh fruit - all three are nutritious and non-fattening.

Super Secret Stew

  1. I include one meat serving per day, because omitting meat makes one weak and slow. Not having breakfast is dumb - not as foolish as eating at McDonalds or Starbucks - but still dumb, promoting raging replacements to serve a cavernous hunger.
  2. Charlie Sue and I have one egg each morning, one tiny toast for me (no butter) and Science Diet for her. That is good for many hours.
  3. I started greens and beans lunch with Dr. Fuhrman and have continued it - daily - for two years. I now slice some sausage into the stew and Charlie gets some from me by hand while we eat. 
  4. One smoked sausage sliced is the beginning, and they flavor the stew, heated with a little water. Daily.
  5. Frozen greens, daily, are currently chopped spinach and turnip greens, sometimes collards. Laugh all you want, they have almost no calories, no fat, not sugar, lots of fiber, and a lot of nutrition.
  6. Ground flax seed, daily, is early since I am prone to forget this ingredient unless it is overdone. Ground flax seed is considered anti-cancer. 
  7. Anise is wonderful in stew, and so is Italian seasoning.
  8. Blueberries, daily, are anti-cancer and all around good. Three handfuls.
  9. Anti-cholesterol walnuts are daily, one handful and sometimes repeated as an evening substitute for ice cream. 
  10. Mushrooms, daily, are anti-cancer and delicious in stew. 
  11. Lima beans, daily, are good and add to the nutritional mix.
  12. Onions, green and red peppers were foundation when I began make stew, and I still favor the mix, which is considered anti-cancer and part of the rainbow collection of vegetables.
  13. Tomato paste, daily, provides a base for the stew and is possibly help for the eyes.
  14. The last is a can of Ciceros. They are worked into the stew, which is heated up during the additions.
  15. I use a two-quart pan and usually eat all of it, with the very bottom being shared by Charlie.

Downloaded from the NSA






Tom Fisher Knows the Biblical Evidence Better Than Seminaries

 

 Sheep from Tom Fisher's farm are threatened by the upcoming severe cold weather. May God watch over those flocks, In Jesus' Name. Amen.


Dear Pastor Jackson,

Please pray God will protect me and my animals during the bitterly cold temperatures of the next several weeks. 

I am purposely stuck on page 189 of your book on the King James Bible. God grant us all the faith of Yale's Nils Dahl who said, "The text! The text! We have the text!" 

The greatest danger of 2024 is the persistent "Lutheran" liars who say we cannot be certain of any text. 

We MUST be certain of the text if we want to be Christian!

God chose the text during the reformation: the TEXTUS RECEPTUS, King James Bible, Luther's Bible.

In contrast the "Lutheran" liars choose the corrupted text that God REJECTED during the reformation: VATICANUS and its corrupted offspring: NIV, ESV, NKJV, Beck's, NASB, RSV, etc. And SINAITICUS was a 100% forgery.

I think these persistent liars are not afraid to speak a word against God the Holy Ghost and the text He has chosen: TEXTUS RECEPTUS, King James Bible, and Luther's Bible.

In Christ,

Tom Fisher

Daily Luther Sermon Quote - Water into Wine - "Hence the highest thought in this Gospel lesson, and it must ever be kept in mind, is, that we honor God as being good and gracious, even if he acts and speaks otherwise, and all our understanding and feeling be otherwise., For in this way feeling is killed, and the old man perishes, so that nothing but faith in God’s goodness remains, and no feeling."

 


Click here -> Complete Sermon - Changing Water into Wine - Second Sunday after Epiphany 

Wedding at Canna - Paolo Veronese, 1563


16. This is where faith stands in the heat of battle. Now observe how his mother acts and here becomes our teacher. However harsh his words sound, however unkind he appears, she does not in her heart interpret this as anger, or as the opposite of kindness, but adheres firmly to the conviction that he is kind, refusing to give up this opinion because of the thrust she received, and unwilling to dishonor him in her heart by thinking him to be otherwise than kind and gracious-as they do who are without faith, who fall back at the first shock and think of God merely according to what they feel, like the horse and the mule, Psalm 32:9. For if Christ’s mother had allowed those harsh words to frighten her she would have gone away silently and displeased; but in ordering the servants to do what he might tell them she proves that she has overcome the rebuff and still expects of him nothing but kindness.

17. What do you think of the hellish blow, when a man in his distress, especially in the highest distress of conscience, receives the rebuff, that he feels God declaring to him: “What have I to do with thee?” Quid mihi et tibi? He must needs faint and despair, unless he knows and understands the nature of such acts of God, and is experienced in faith. For he will act just as he feels, and will not think of God in a different way and mean the words. Feeling nothing but wrath and hearing nothing but indignation, he will consider God only as his enemy and angry judge. But just as he thinks God to be so will he find him. Thus he will expect nothing good from him.

That is to renounce God with all his goodness. The result is that he flees and hates him, and will not have God to be God; and every other blasphemy that is the fruit of unbelief.

18. Hence the highest thought in this Gospel lesson, and it must ever be kept in mind, is, that we honor God as being good and gracious, even if he acts and speaks otherwise, and all our understanding and feeling be otherwise., For in this way feeling is killed, and the old man perishes, so that nothing but faith in God’s goodness remains, and no feeling. For here you see how his mother retains a free faith and holds it forth as an example to us. She is certain that he will be gracious, although she does not feel it.

She is certain also that she feels otherwise than she believes. Therefore she freely leaves and commends all to his goodness, and fixes for him neither time nor place, neither manner nor measure, neither person nor name. He is to act when it pleases him. If not in the midst of the feast, then at the end of it, or after the feast. My defeat I will swallow, his scorning me, letting me stand in disgrace before all the guests, speaking so unkindly to me, causing us all to blush for shame. He acts tart, but he is sweet I know. Let us proceed in the same way, then we are true Christians.

19. Here note how severely he deals with his own mother, teaching us thereby not only the example of faith mentioned above, but confirming that in things pertaining to God and his service we are to know neither father nor mother, as Moses writes in Deuteronomy 33:9: “He who says of his father and of his mother, I know them not, observes thy Word, Israel.” For although there is no higher authority on earth than that of father and mother, still this ends when God’s Word and work begin. For in divine things neither father nor mother, still less, a bishop or any other person, only God’s Word is to teach and guide. And if father and mother were to order, teach, or even beg you to do anything for God, and in his service that he has not clearly ordered and commanded, you are to reply: Quid mihi et tibi? What have I and you to do with each other? In this same way Chris there refuses absolutely to do God’s work when his own mother wants it.

20. For father and mother are in duty bound, yea, God made them father and mother for this very purpose, not to teach and lead their children to God according to their own notions and devotion, but according to God’s command; as St. Paul declares in Ephesians 6:4: “Ye fathers; provoke not your children to wrath: but nurture them in the chastening and admonition of the Lord;” i.e. teach them God’s command and Word, as you were taught, and not notions of your own.

Thus in this Gospel lesson you see the mother of Christ directing the servants away from herself unto Christ, telling them not: Whatsoever I say unto you, do it; but: “Whatsoever he saith unto you, do it.” To this Word alone you must direct everyone, if you would direct aright; so that this word of Mary (whatsoever he saith, do it) is, and ought to be, a daily saying in Christendom, destroying all doctrines of men and everything not really Christ’s Word. And we ought firmly to believe that what is imposed upon us over and above God’s Word is not, as they boast and lie, the commandment of the church. For Mary says: Whatsoever he saith that, that, that do, and that alone; for in it there will be enough to do.

21. Here also you see, how faith does not fail, God does not permit that, but gives more abundantly and gloriously than we ask. For here not merely wine is given, but excellent and good wine, and a great quantity of it. By this he again entices and allures us to believe confidently in him, though he delay. For he is truthful and cannot deny himself; he is good and gracious, that he must of himself confess and in addition prove it, unless we hinder him and refuse him time and place and the means to do so. At last he cannot forsake his work, as little as he can forsake himself — if only we can hold out until his hour comes.

ELCA's United Lutheran Seminary Graduate Preaches without Faith or Christ

 

"She was the director of a Wabash grant exploring the use of deliberative dialogue in congregations and theological education.  An ardent advocate for faith-based climate and environmental activism, Dr. Schade has partnered with organizations such as ecoAmerica’s Blessed Tomorrow, the BTS Center, Creation Justice Ministries, and the Interfaith Center for Sustainable Development to create resources and programming to support clergy preaching about environmental issues  Dr. Schade is also conducting a longitudinal research study about ministry, preaching, and social issues that has surveyed thousands of clergy and laity since 2017."

Preaching builds bridges in a divisive time

As we get closer to the annual meeting, we will share more details about the other topics we will address, particularly around building bridges with the LGBTQIA+ community and with preachers in emerging and non-traditional settings (e.g., itinerant preachers, chaplains, lay preachers, etc.)

In the meantime, if you are a preacher or a teacher of preachers, I invite you to think about the many ways in which preaching builds bridges. Especially as we are heading into another presidential election year that portends to be divisive, building bridges is essential. Sermons already link the biblical text, theology, and context in organic ways.  As we expand and deepen our work toward diversity, equity, inclusion, and justice, we welcome the multiple ways that our members and practicing preachers will build bridges through their ministries of pastoring, preaching, teaching, and research.

Wednesday, January 10, 2024

Composting to Save Planet Earth

 


More ecological headlines and plans remind me of a locked ward at a secure, carefully watched institution. If no one can get out, they will not frighten normal people. But now these people are in charge of powerful entities where everyone must go along with the plan.

I saved the photo of the compost barrel being blessed at the Lutheran School of Theology at Chicago, long ago when this blog was young. I hope they took the barrel along to their newly rented spaces. They had to sell their brutalist building to stay afloat, and they gladly sold their pipe organ as well. Their twin seminary (Presbyterian) joined the same Roman Catholic group of schools, selling their part of the complex to U. of Chicago, as LSTC did.

Yale Divinity School is also trying to be one shining ecological light in the gloom of fossil fuels. YDS writes about everything except theology.


 "NEW HAVEN —  Sustainability is a key tenet in the philosophy of the Yale Divinity School, but out in the world, philosophy doesn't always translate into action. This fall, the Divinity School will break ground on a "living building" residence hall that will house students in a manner designed to give back more to the environment than it takes.



How the Christian Faith Was Turned into Mockery by the Mainline Denominations -
Including the Lutherans, Worst of All.

 


The starting date of the debacle - the Revision of the KJV - is 1881, almost 150 years ago. The British and Americans agreed to improve the King James Bible in a joint effort. Westcott and Hort, genuine crackpots, sent their version of the Greek New Testament to all the experts - secretly, ten years earlier. No one outside the Revision "experts" could read it, and the Westcott Hort Greek New Testament (which I own) had no notes to explain their fantastical corruptions of the text. For example, they began Mark as - "The beginning of the Gospel of Jesus Christ..." omitting the Son of God. Their version is also where the second Gospel ended at Mark 16:8, omitting the Empty Tomb and the Resurrection of Christ. 

This is still done today, by putting a spin on Mark 16:9-20, much like the Virgin Birth of Christ, Isaiah 7:14. The RSV began with the translation "young woman" and backslid to virgin (with "or young woman" in the footnote) when everyone objected. But the RSV brought back "young woman" in the text - and put "or virgin" in the footnote.  

One needs Hebrew, Greek, English, and biblegateway.com to discover all the scheming and lies of the academic crowd. Very few seminarians have serious language study, and even those people are saturated in the apostasy which began to take over in 1881. I was quite confused when my first Greek New Testament (Westcott Hort) differed from the American Bible Society's version in my college class.  

The 1881 Revision of the King James Version was such a flop that no one would buy it, once the truth came out, and no one could figure how to edit it, so it was an international flop. However, the theological experts were blinded by science and gradually approved growing doubts about the Trinity, miracles, the divinity of Christ, and faith in Jesus Christ. 

The Lutheran Librarian, Alec Satin, pointed out that the KJV is not "Shakespearean." The poet had a larger vocabulary than any other English author, including John Milton. The KJV is from that era, but the final version, largely the original work of William Tyndale, was polished by 50 of the greatest language experts in England. The aim was clarity for reading out loud in church, making it equally powerful for individual reading as literacy caught up with the printing press. Today we have a growing illiteracy scheme for modern Bibles, called Everyone Knows, Anything Goes. Modern Bibles often use a larger vocabulary than the KJV, doubtless in the hopes of keeping their efforts profitable and flexible.

The synod presidents, all poorly educated, lack the authority to use only one Bible and do their best to sell whatever is truly obnoxious. Matt the Fatt is just an MDiv. Liz Eaton went to Harvard for music. Mirthless Mark Schroeder, the high school principal, went to a repeat-after-me seminary in Mequon, where questioning the NIV was blasphemous. That same NIV (the classic one) was replaced with one even worse, but including the startling claim by the Apostle Paul, in Romans 3, that "all are justified." No wonder the WELS abusive sect is scraping the bottom.

The Lutherans are worst of all because they long to be like the chief managers of apostasy. Name a Lutheran trend and it will reveal itself as 10 years later than the rest of the denominations, 20 years later than the Unitarian-Universalists. Lutheran managers of all synods mock the Reformation of Luther, Melanchthon, and Chemnitz by drooling over the errors of Zwingli, Calvin, Robert Schuller, and the Pope

If you want to lose your faith in Jesus Christ, attend a Lutheran seminary - ELS, WELS, LCMS, ELCA. They used to charge almost nothing for an education. Now their raging hatred of the truth allows them to extract as much money (and debt) as possible. 

There are two popular responses to the Reformation - the smirk and the furious attacks. Judgment Day has already arrived. 



Daily Luther Sermon Quote - Water into Wine - "But whenever the need is felt, He does not at once hasten and bestow what is needed and desired, but delays and tests our faith and trust, even as He does here; yea, what is still more severe, He acts as though He would not help at all, but speaks with harshness and austerity."

 

 

Bartolomé Estebán Murillo, Spanish


Click here -> Complete Sermon - Changing Water into Wine - Second Sunday after Epiphany 


14. But whenever the need is felt, he does not at once hasten and bestow what is needed and desired, but delays and tests our faith and trust, even as he does here; yea, what is still more severe, he acts as though he would not help at all, but speaks with harshness and austerity. This you observe in the case of his mother. She feels the need and tells him of it, desiring his help and counsel in a humble and polite request. For she does not say: My dear son, furnish us wine; but: “They have no wine.” Thus she merely touches his kindness, of which she is fully assured. As though she would say: He is so good and gracious, there is no need of my asking, I will only tell him what is lacking, and he will of his own accord do more than one could ask.

This is the way of faith, it pictures God’s goodness to itself in this manner, never doubting but that it is really so; therefore it makes bold to bring its petition and to present its need.

15. But see, how unkindly he turns away the humble request of his mother who addresses him with such great confidence. Now observe the nature of faith. What has it to rely on? Absolutely nothing, all is darkness. It feels its need and sees help nowhere; in addition, God turns against it like a stranger and does not recognize it, so that absolutely nothing is left. It is the same way with our conscience when we feel our sin and the lack of righteousness; or in the agony of death when we feel the lack of life; or in the dread of hell when eternal salvation seems to have left us. Then indeed there is humble longing and knocking, prayer and search, in order to be rid of sin, death and dread. And then he acts as if he had only begun to show us our sins, as if death were to continue, and hell never to cease. Just as he here treats his mother, by his refusal making the need greater and more distressing than it was before she came to him with her request; for now it seems everything is lost, since the one support on which she relied in her need is also gone.

16. This is where faith stands in the heat of battle. Now observe how his mother acts and here becomes our teacher. However harsh his words sound, however unkind he appears, she does not in her heart interpret this as anger, or as the opposite of kindness, but adheres firmly to the conviction that he is kind, refusing to give up this opinion because of the thrust she received, and unwilling to dishonor him in her heart by thinking him to be otherwise than kind and gracious-as they do who are without faith, who fall back at the first shock and think of God merely according to what they feel, like the horse and the mule, Psalm 32:9. For if Christ’s mother had allowed those harsh words to frighten her she would have gone away silently and displeased; but in ordering the servants to do what he might tell them she proves that she has overcome the rebuff and still expects of him nothing but kindness.

Tuesday, January 9, 2024

The Great Synodical Land Confiscation - You Pay, They Cash In.
And They Liquidate Your Estates, Too!

 

 In a few decades there will be plenty of cash locked up in endowments, foundations, and similar hidey-holes, but few active congregations left. The right family name - or orientation - gets to lounge around at headquarters, if they still exist.

A pastor (name withheld) reminded me of the fantastic scheme all the synods have conjured up. They may start with some prospects for an area, or just bring in a pastor to get started.  The land and the first unit are decided by the synod, and the mortgage burden is given to the congregation. 

In some areas, values go up so quickly that the land can be sold for a juicy profit. The members have paid their share, often for years. The synod says, "Sadly, we have to close you down, but we will let you vote on the cash from the value of the property, where it goes." My eyes are already tearing up.

Here is another scheme, which I mentioned before. The synod eyes a million dollar property with only a few members. Or - they will put in an incompetent pastor who will drive down the membership to almost nothing. One way or another, they invested only a little money and saw a bountiful bundle of cash. 

A pastor might be the last full-time worker, and the synod might let the problem be handled with pulpit supply. They look at those situations with gimlet eyes. Over cocktails staff will say to one another, "Give it a few years and we can sell the property for a bundle."

If that is not enough, the synod will visit wealthy members and sell Irrevocable Charitable Trusts (aka Annuities) to them. Once the contract is signed, nobody can change it, which is the meaning of Irrevocable. The federal gubmint is a bit strict on such things, a real bonus for the liars selling the annuities. The synods recruit people to do this, thereby enriching "Giving Counselors" and themselves.

One of my contacts told me the "Giving Counselors" had to earn an insurance license first (Thrivent, another gubmint law). They tend to leverage their amateur treasure-seeking to expand their client lists and their financial futures. The "Giving Counselors" always get paid a commission for annuities old - another gubmint law.

WELS sicced "Giving Counselors" on DP Nitz' members, not telling him, of course. He was not happy, but only objected in a muffled, timid way. 

 

WELS managed to go broke while splurging from Marvin's Schwan Song.

Did the LCMS consider future overhead for the Purple Palace International Center?
The swan is an uncomfortable reminder about their favorite donor. Refrain from Marvin
Schwan's Forbes interview, please.



Which two bosses are prone to nervous eating?
All three work as one with
Thrivent Insurance and Irrevocable Trusts,
not to mention evangelism, worship, etc.

The Trouble with Lemon Meringue Pie - Denominations Today,
Especially the Lutherans

 


All lemon meringue pies are divided into three parts. The ideal crust is homemade and a delicacy by itself. Now that pie crusts are available on their own, the homemade, fresh crust is rare. 


The lemon filling itself can be obtained from many sources. 


Home-made meringue? A package deal is more likely today.

The Church Growth Movement is a lasting reminder of the lemon meringue pie, even at its best, when mothers made them from scratch for the big events. Any child will say, "What is this white stuff?" They are expected whipped cream and get whipped air instead.

"Oh, that is meringue, vey difficult to do exactly right." 

"But it's nothing but air, Auntie."

That is the first ingredient in the Church Growth Movement and related magic acts. They pretend to be something and are nothing at all, once examined.



The filling of a lemon pie is a strange balance between the lemon flavor and the aftertaste. Lemon and acid may work well together, but the background taste is often bad and lasting. 

All the efforts of the Church Growth swamis leave a definite sour aftertaste, one that is difficult to remove. One congregation president listed all the things his previous congregation did for evangelism, and it was a long list. I asked, "How did it work out?" He said, "Nobody came because of it," and he was trying to argue that we should do the same things. In fact, we had people drive from 50 miles away because a genuine Lutheran church was difficult to find in Columbus.

The crust of a pie is similar to the foundation of a parish. The best ingredients and the right care will turn out a pie crust that rivals the rest of the dessert. A congregation needs the correct Bible, the KJV, not a Burglar Bible where key doctrines are stolen by the skillful knives of the "modern" translations. Hymns and worship should highlight the Means of Grace rather than entertainment, soft drinks, and snacks. Preaching, teaching, and visiting are basic to the work of the Gospel. 



Daily Luther Sermon Quote - Water into Wine - "This is the way of faith, it pictures God’s goodness to itself in this manner, never doubting but that it is really so; therefore it makes bold to bring its petition and to present its need."

 Paolo Veronese, 1563

Click here -> Complete Sermon - Changing Water into Wine - Second Sunday after Epiphany 


10. What then is moderation? Reason should teach that, and cite examples from other countries and cities where such pomp and excess are unknown.

But to give my opinion, I would say a farmer is well adorned if for his wedding he have clothes twice as fine as he daily wears at his work; a burgher likewise; and a nobleman, if he have garments twice as costly as a townsman; a count, twice as costly as a nobleman; a duke, twice as costly as a count, and so in due order. In like manner food and drink and the entertainment of guests should be governed by their social position, and the purpose of the table should be pleasure not debauchery.

11. Now is it a sin to play and dance at a wedding, inasmuch as some declare great sin is caused by dancing? Whether the Jews had dances I do not know; but since it is the custom of the country, like inviting guests, decorating, eating and drinking and being merry, I see no reason to condemn it, save its excess when it goes beyond decency and moderation.

That sin should be committed is not the fault of dancing alone; since at a table or in church that may happen; even as it is not the fault of eating that some while so engaged should turn themselves into swine. Where things are decently conducted I will not interfere with the marriage rites and customs, and dance and never mind. Faith and love cannot be driven away either by dancing or by sitting still, as long as you keep to decency and moderation. Young children certainly dance without sin; do the same also, and be a child, then dancing will not harm you. Otherwise were dancing a sin in itself, children should not be allowed to dance. This is sufficient concerning marriage.

II. THE DOCTRINE AND EXAMPLE OF LOVE AND OF FAITH.

12. In the second place, to return to. our Gospel lesson, we here see the example of love in Christ and his mother. The mother renders service and takes the part of house-keeper: Christ honors the occasion by his personal presence, by a miracle and a gift. And all this is for the benefit of the groom, the bride and the guests, as is the nature of love and its works.

Thus Christ lures all hearts to himself, to rely on him as ever ready to help, even in temporal things, and never willing to forsake any; so that all who believe in him shall not suffer want, be it in spiritual or temporal things; rather must water become wine, and every creature turned into the thing his believer needs. He who believes must have sufficient, and no one can prevent it.

13. But the example of faith is still more wonderful in this Gospel. Christ waits to the very last moment when the want is felt by all present, and there is no counsel or help left. This shows the way of divine grace; it is not imparted to one who still has enough, and has not yet felt his need. For grace does not feed the full and satiated, but the hungry, as we have often said. Whoever still deems himself wise, strong and pious, and finds something good in himself, and is not yet a poor, miserable, sick sinner and fool, the same cannot come to Christ the Lord, nor receive his grace.

14. But whenever the need is felt, he does not at once hasten and bestow what is needed and desired, but delays and tests our faith and trust, even as he does here; yea, what is still more severe, he acts as though he would not help at all, but speaks with harshness and austerity. This you observe in the case of his mother. She feels the need and tells him of it, desiring his help and counsel in a humble and polite request. For she does not say: My dear son, furnish us wine; but: “They have no wine.” Thus she merely touches his kindness, of which she is fully assured. As though she would say: He is so good and gracious, there is no need of my asking, I will only tell him what is lacking, and he will of his own accord do more than one could ask.

This is the way of faith, it pictures God’s goodness to itself in this manner, never doubting but that it is really so; therefore it makes bold to bring its petition and to present its need.

More ELCA Youth Shenanigans - Protestia - From Tom Brock

ELCA Bishop Liz Eaton and her friends took over their synod and got their rewards. The synod moved downward from 5.3 million members to half that number. Thrivent and the Siebert Foundation gather ELCA, LCMS, and WELS managers for many joint teaching opportunities. PS - My editor tells me, "Don't say leaders. They are not leaders. They are managers."


For 2024, the Teen Gathering theme will be “Created to Be”. “We are created to be free—to work for justice for all our siblings”. You will notice the ELCA now shies away from calling people “brothers and sisters” because that is too binary and excludes transgender people, so instead we get “siblings”. Teens are told to introduce themselves in this way, “Hi, my name is ________ and I use the pronouns __________.” Teens are told to “honor everyone by calling them by the name and pronouns they feel comfortable with…You might be surprised to learn that someone in your group has been longing to introduce themselves to you in this way!” 

Sessions of the Teen Assembly will begin with a “Land acknowledgement”, stating that the Assembly is being held on land stolen from Native Americans.

A big theme of the Youth Gathering will be to teach teens to become “disruptive to injustice”. Teens are told to discuss “what injustices you have experienced” and are told “We are created to be disruptive, to work for justice for all our siblings”. Youth are taught “interrupting phrases” such as “We don’t say things like that here” to “help them disrupt an unjust situation”.

In a nod I believe to the LGBT movement, teens are told to “be authentic and bring our whole selves”. Then comes this strange statement: “Our host city, New Orleans, has always been its true, authentic self…. New Orleans was built to host and be a city where all God’s children come together.” I’m not sure how the ELCA knows this. Teens are asked in small groups “What would it mean for you if your congregation became a Reconciling in Christ congregation?” Reconciling in Christ is the movement that promotes all things LGBT in the ELCA. It is no secret how the ELCA wants to influence teens here.

 ELCA clergy-critters wait eagerly for the next generation.