Friday, June 21, 2024

The Unique Metric Is Not Found Anywhere - Except the KJV Bible.
Listen to the Hissing, Spitting, And Groaning Expelled from the New Papacy -
RSV, NIV, ESV, NRSV, Beck, Living and Amplified Toxins.


Metrics are king - or rather queen - in the denominations, the driving and dying force in all the denominations. ELCA strives to be even worse than before, and the Walther Four - LCMS-WELS-ELS-CLC (sic) are nothing more than lint on Velcro. Waltherians stick closely to ELCA because they are on the same winding path downward.

One ELCA genius keeps track of bishops who happen to be women - but this male bishop does not address the gay/lesbian metric, which has its own cheering section: 

Extraordinary Lutheran Ministries - Queer Seminarians & Rostered Leaders in the Lutheran Church

Yet he - Bishop Michael Rinehart - fails to offer the metrics for the consecrated and consecrating rainbow herd of prelates. They are ashamed to tell the truth, or at least to the millions who suffer the apostasy and donate money for support.

WELS warned against the new snip and clip Bibles, offering this graphic above, never minding their own precious NIV monstrosities, backed by their District Popes. The latest NIV included double justification in Romans 3, though the "all are justified" in not in the Greek. There are two major themes in WELS - cross-dressing and lying, both products of the hazing culture 

All the denominations rushed downward after WWII, making fun of the KJV but not telling the truth about their new, semi-shredded translations. The Waltherians were just as bad as the LCA-ALC, just as phony as their Christian News Beck Bibles, which followed the same template as the shredded apostate Bible.

I could stop here, because the case is closed. The barn doors are open and locked in that position, thanks to greed, skirt-chasing millionaires, and Thrivent (in descending order).

Larry's WELS buddy insisted (in Otten's Christian News) that the misled boy never went to Fuller Seminary, though Larry did finish a D.Min. in Church Growth there.


This is how the deliberate Biblical errors are infecting all aspects of congregations:

Fuller Seminary evangelism was led by Donald McGavran, a Disciples of Christ pro-abortion sociologist (grand slam for baseball fans), greatly influencing LCMS, WELS, and ELCA. It nothing more than expensive baloney, marked by devastating losses of their membership.

Fuller kicked out their earlier, feeble inerrancy pledge and shouted at everyone that their weak inerrancy was holding them back from being really significant (unrestrained). Fuller Seminary was glad to re-invent the feminist Bible and disciplined any student or DP who questioned the feminist pastors they were developing.

You know a successful church when the service is followed by an expensive food court. One summary of the Hybels scandal suggested that they had a squadron of like-minded ministers. They were no different from denominational and synodical staff.


WELS and other fools paid big money to Bill Hybels' Willow Creek (cross-free) Church. I was there but not on a scholarship from the Milwaukee hypocrites. After 40 years of adultery, Hybels resigned from all his affiliations, copyrights, and trophies for being a really cool pastor. He is worth is $35 million. Others have taken over his Willow Creek.

Hybels was chasing female staff around the desk while insisting that he had to have feminist Bibles in churches. He started a club for denominational fools, and that seems to be a source of loot too. I know of WELS and LCMS congregations that also affiliated with Willow Creek.

Hybels is a perfect example of Look How Successful I Am! 

Fuller will soon be so loose that they will serve Bud Light on tap, and many seminaries will follow. Notre Dame served beer on tap for their seminary students.

WELS has boasted about having "Bible studies" at bars, and doubtless shares that gimmick with LCMS. 

Daily Luther Sermon Quote - Trinity 4 - Second Sermon - "But the holy Gospel says: Give, and it shall be given unto you; if we do not hold ourselves to this rule, we shall hear the opposite: Steal and rob, and you shall be robbed and stolen from again."

 


Luther's Sermons - Luke 6:36-42.
Fourth Sunday after Trinity, Second Sermon


28. This much is said of the chief meaning of this Gospel, how we are to be merciful also toward our enemies. Now we should also apply it to our own lives, we who want to be Christians and brethren should practice this among ourselves; for it is very necessary also that this admonition be preached to us. Although we are all called Evangelical, I fear that the most of us are heathen under the Christian name. Well, what shall we do about it? We must allow the name to all, although few there be who bear it in truth. For St. Paul in 2 Thessalonians 3:2 says: “For all have not faith”; and Christ himself complains, Matthew 22:14, that many are called but few are chosen. Now, those who are true Christians should with all diligence take this admonition of Christ to heart, that they may not only be friendly toward enemies, but also much more toward those called Christians.

29. Therefore let everyone who goes to the sacrament and pretends to be a Christian take heed to himself that he deceive not himself. For one can now well see what a scraping, grabbing and scratching there is even among those who want to be Christians, from the lowest to the highest stage of society. It is a sin and a shame to hear it. Nearly everyone falls into this shameful greed, and such a state may well be called a swine’s life, for as the swine in the trough, whichever one is the strongest pushes the rest away, as though she wanted to devour all herself, just so it goes in the world today, and everyone goes securely forth, gives nothing whatever and takes all he can get, whether he gets it rightfully or wrongfully, so that the word give, which stands here in the Gospel, has almost disappeared, and instead robbery and theft in homes and in the market have everywhere come to take its place. What unfaithfulness prevails even among day laborers and house servants, how shamefully they earn their bread with malicious unfaithfulness, cheating and overcharging. They do not look upon it as stealing, and yet it is just as much stealing when they labor unfaithfully, as when they steal it out of our purse. This is the way servants and laborers do, and it matters not by what they are called.

30. But how will such people stand in that day when Christ shall ask them, whether they have done according to his admonition? For if Christians are to be merciful to their enemies as Christ here teaches, much more will it become them to show all love and friendship toward their brethren and Christian people; and as they are not to curse their enemies, much less should they curse their friends. Again, if they are not to avenge themselves on unbelievers, but give to them and do them good, much more should they show this kindness to the household of faith. Yes, turn the thing around to rob, to covet, and to take advantage of another wherever one can; this goes on yet in the world with violence. But the holy Gospel says: Give, and it shall be given unto you; if we do not hold ourselves to this rule, we shall hear the opposite: Steal and rob, and you shall be robbed and stolen from again.

31. But our Lord God is so full of resources that he can send misfortune upon a city or a country so that even after they have gathered and hoarded for a long time, some tramp brother or fellow pilgrim comes along, to whom one must give or he will take it himself by force. For it must surely come to this that if we willfully forget that word “give,” our Lord God will make out of it “take.” After such misfortune we strive with all diligence, for wherever the Lord says “give” there we only wish to make out of it “take.” Well then take, steal and rob as long as you will, what will it avail you; things will take a turn some day so that it will be taken from you again.

32. All history teaches us, that when a kingdom, a principality, or a city, has been exalted to the highest pitch and becomes rich, then comes a war, or some other misfortune, so that it again becomes poor. Thus it happens also to individual families and persons; when they rise suddenly and become powerful, they also immediately fall again. I have already observed several who sat amid great possessions, and yet in a short time were thoroughly ruined. Why is this? Because they did not want to give as Christ here admonishes, but much rather took from others, for this reason a change took place with them, that it was again taken from them; as also teaches experience, and the common proverb runs: Goods unjustly won, will not last to the third son, that he may enjoy it. Such things we see daily in all ranks of life; and if it does endure for a time and descends from father to son, yet it sinks with the third heir, for it is a cursed wealth, which has either been obtained by theft or greed.

33. By such daily experience the children of the world ought to become wise and think: Why scratch and scrape so long, you cannot rightfully possess goods obtained by stinginess after all, nor will it prosper in your hands, as you have time and again experienced from one or another.

34. But we Christians should be more influenced by what the Holy Scriptures teach about it. Thus David says, Psalm 37:16-18: “Better is a little that the righteous hath, than the abundance of many wicked,” and the reason immediately follows: “For the arm of the wicked shall be broken, and the Lord upholdeth the righteous. The Lord knoweth the days of the perfect; and their inheritance shall be forever.” As though he would say:

Although a good man may have but little, if he only has it with God and honor, it will be dearer to him than all the treasures of the ungodly. For our Lord God will shower his blessings upon that little, so that it will last to children’s children to the thousandth generation. This is also apparent; for at the present time we find many old and honorable families in the cities, whose possessions have reached to several hundred generations, whereas with others it has disappeared with the third.

We should learn from this and similar passages, and hold to it because it is the truth, that it is better to have thirty dollars with God and honor, than three thousand won without God and with dishonor. For God blesses the little which the righteous have (says Psalm 37:16), so that he may not only possess it with a good conscience, but will also be to his benefit and he will use it so that God may be pleased with it. But the wealth that has been unjustly obtained, may be enjoyed for a time; yet because God’s blessing does not rest upon it, it wears away and loses itself, so that we cannot tell what has become of it; for it has been won by greed and wrong, and as they did not regard it as stealing for one to scrape all together and give nothing away, the rust is entered into it and eats it up, so that it cannot be seen that there ever was a penny there. As also the heathen have learned from experience and said: “By evil acquired, by evil it goes,” “As it is won, so it is gone.”

35. But why say more? One will not grow wise except by his own losses; we let our Lord God promise and threat in vain, but who asks about it?

Though we preach ever so much, Proverbs 11:4: “Riches profit not in the day of wrath; but righteousness delivereth from death,” and Proverbs 5:28: “He that trusteth in his riches shall fall; but the righteous shall flourish as the green leaf;” everyone thinks the while: “Dear Sir, say what you will, if I had money and goods, I would be free from all distress;” they simply make our Lord God a liar. But they will experience sooner than they wish, that they are deceived.

Therefore, my dear friends, let us fear and trust in God, and hereafter be merciful and kind, not only toward enemies as this Gospel teaches, but still more toward our friends and brethren; especially because we hear that our Lord is such an enemy to shameful covetousness, that he will blow upon such ill-gotten gain, so that it will vanish and fly away as the dust before the wind. The prophet Haggai 1:6, says of the miser, that he gathers into a bag with holes; as though he would say: Well, they may gather, but it will do them no good, because they want to get rich by greed even to the injury of others. And Solomon says: The godless man, when he has for a long time gathered wealth in heaps, has such a curse in his house, that he not only does not become better by his wealth, but it also disappears under his hands, as though the rust had devoured it.