Saturday, July 12, 2025

Rain Barrel Update

 




When rain is predicted, the rain-barrel observers start asking me questions. The containers work best when all the barrels and buckets have rainwater to share before the storm. 

At 4 AM Charlie wanted to go out but not too long. We kept hearing rumbling but no rain. That arrived at 7 AM, and now the backyard is a lake again.

The timing was perfect for the backyard because we have so many barrels and buckets. That gives the roses a good start for the rain and fresh nitrogenated water for the next round.

My mother never let the teachers in on the alternative solution - let the chlorinated water from the school evaporate the chlorine in the pitcher for one day. Flowers would rather have de-chlorinated (that is, unbleached) plants. They thrive.

Storm Rumbling Above Us


Archbishop Elizabeth Eaton put her name on the vaccination card, definitely a turning point toward poor health and a questionable governmental panic.

Eaton's pyrrhic victory put ELCA 100% in the danger zone.


Charlie Sue was awake early today and ready to check out her backyard domain. We heard the distant thunder an hour ago, but it was more like the rumbling of a Thanksgiving meal, but without the food. Opening the back door had her looking tentatively and soon after... racing back into the house, waiting for a serious breakfast of Science Diet with some bacon bits. She is now cuddled among her three MyPillows, keeping her eye on me.

That reminds me of an evening outdoors in Phoenix where several dogs competed  around the picnic tables for the food. I made sure a smaller dog could get a grilled hamburger. I hid it behind my back, but I soon felt the soft and gentle capture of my entire hand. No threats, no growls, just the firm resolve of the largest dog. It was not a good time to argue grilled hamburger vs. one surviving hand. 

Phoenix has a lot of good qualities, especially in the sunny winter, but the July extremes are difficult to tolerate. What could motivate an entire, shrinking denomination to gather itself for an ELCA convention, which they now call "an assembly?" Imagine walking short distances in the late July afternoon, loud yelping because of the radiant baking concrete, pious admonitions to drink plenty of water, ambulances for the ambulatory.



More than half of the 1988 ELCA merger has disappeared - and not to LCMS or WELS or the Little Chapel on the Prairie. I listened to the Michigan ALC-LCA discuss the gay quota they were establishing while ELCA was formalizing the plan with lawyers.  That blossomed in 2009, known for the lightning-struck cross and the demi-semi-outrage of the "conservative" bishops.

LCMS and WELS work in harmony with ELCA - Thrivent, US.AID, and who knows what shenanigans









They all work together via Fuller Seminary, US.AID, Thrivent, and the Love That Dare Not Speaks Its Name.

Daily Luther Sermon Quote - Trinity 4 Epistle - "These marks or signs, Paul instructs, all Christians as well as himself must exhibit, not painted on a wall but branded in their flesh and blood. They are made when inwardly the devil affrights and assails us with all manner of terrors and overwhelming afflictions, and at the same time outwardly the world slanders us as heretics, laying her hand to our throats whenever possible and putting us to death."

 




Fourth Sunday After Trinity .—Consolation in Suffering and Patience. Waiting for the Revealing of the Sons of God. Romans 8:18-22


5. And in the verse preceding our text he tells us that as our blissful inheritance through brotherhood and joint-heirship with Christ is not a mere fancy and false hope of the heart, but a real inheritance, so our sympathy must amount to real suffering, which we take upon ourselves as befitting joint-heirs. Now Paul comforts the Christian in his sufferings with the authority of one who speaks from experience, from thorough acquaintance with his subject. He seems to view this life as through obscurities, while beholding the life to come with clear and unobstructed vision. He says: “For I reckon that the sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory which shall be revealed to usward [in us].”

6. Notice how he turns his back to the world and his face to the future revelation, as if seeing no suffering anywhere, but all joy. “Even if it does go ill with us,” he would argue, “what indeed is our suffering in comparison with the unspeakable joy and glory to be revealed in us? It is too insignificant to be compared and unworthy to be called suffering.” We fail to realize the truth of these words because we do not see with our bodily eyes the supreme glory awaiting us; because we fail to grasp fully the fact that we shall never die but shall have a body that cannot suffer nor be ill. If one could conceive the nature of this reward he would be compelled to say: “Were it possible for me to suffer ten deaths by fire or flood, that would be nothing in comparison to the future life of glory. What is temporal suffering, however protracted, contrasted with eternal life? It is not worthy to be called suffering or to be esteemed meritorious.”

7. In this light does Paul regard suffering, as he says, and he admonishes Christians to look upon it similarly. Then shall they find the infinite beyond all comparison with the finite. What is a single penny measured by a world of dollars? though this is not an appropriate comparison since the things compared are both perishable. The suffering of the world is always to be counted as nothing measured by the glorious and eternal possessions yet to be ours. “I entreat you, therefore, beloved brethren,” Paul would say, “to fear no sufferings, not even should it be your lot to be slain. For if you are actually joint-heirs, it must be your fortune, a part of your inheritance, to suffer with others. But what is your pain measured by the eternal glory prepared for you and obtained by the sacrifice of your Savior Jesus Christ?

It is too insignificant to be contrasted.” So Paul makes all earthly suffering infinitely small — a drop, a tiny spark, so to speak; but of yonder hoped-for glory he makes a boundless ocean, an illimitable flame.

8. Why cannot we take his view of the insignificance of our afflictions and the magnitude of the future glory? The extravagance of our conduct is apparent in the fact that but a harsh word uttered by one to his fellow will make the injured one ready to overturn mountains and uproot trees in his resentment. To them who are so unwilling to suffer, Paul’s word of encouragement here is wholly unintelligible. Christians are not to conduct themselves in this impatient manner. It ill becomes them to make extravagant complaint and outcry about injustice. “But,” you say, “I have truly suffered injustice.” Very well, so be it. But why do you make so much of your sufferings and never give a thought to what awaits you in heaven?

Why not exalt the future glory also? If you desire to be a Christian, truly it will not do to conduct yourself in this impatient manner. If you must air your grievances, surely you may do it quietly and decorously.

9. In this life it must be otherwise than in the life of glory. If you essay to be a joint-heir with the Lord Jesus Christ and do not suffer with him, to be his brother and are not like unto him, Christ certainly will not at the last day acknowledge you as a brother and fellow-heir. Rather he will ask where are your crown of thorns, your cross, the nails and scourge; whether you have been, as he and his followers ever have from the beginning of time, an abomination to the world. If you cannot qualify in this respect, he cannot regard you as his brother. In short, we must all suffer with the Son of God and be made like unto him, as we shall see later, or we shall not be exalted with him in glory.

10. Upon this same topic Paul addresses also the Galatians (Galatians 6:17): Henceforth let no one confuse me, say nothing to me about the doctrine that friendship is rewarded on earth; for I bear branded on my body the marks of my Lord Jesus Christ. His reference is to the signs in ancient paintings of Christ, where the Savior was represented as bearing his cross upon his shoulders, with the nails, the scourge, the crown of thorns and other emblems in evidence. These marks or signs, Paul instructs, all Christians as well as himself must exhibit, not painted on a wall but branded in their flesh and blood. They are made when inwardly the devil affrights and assails us with all manner of terrors and overwhelming afflictions, and at the same time outwardly the world slanders us as heretics, laying her hand to our throats whenever possible and putting us to death.