Thursday, January 30, 2025

Helped Patton's Troops - Got a Loan To Come to America

 

Veteran's Honor Rose reminds our military of their sworn duty.

My wife and her sister were born in poverty and lived for a time in a refugee camp. Her parents borrowed the funds to come across to America. They paid the entire amount back and helped more of the family settle in the States. One uncle joined the US Army.

They all studied to become American citizens, the pride of their lives.

The sisters were coaxed to attend a local state university, and some urged Valparaiso. Christina insisted on Augustana College in Rock Island, within walking distance of my house. We met on the first day in English class and I was asked by my brother about that meeting. I said, "I met a red-head and I'll ask her out and maybe marry her." Decades later, when Christina talked about this, a Moline friend at the same dorm said Chris kept calling my name that week.

Look at Your Tax Dollars - Going to Lutheran Refugee and Immigration Services
Now - GLOBAL REFUGE and THRIVENT!



 





Former - Lutheran Refugee And Immigration Services



Why an 85-Year-Old Charity Needed a New Name

Lutheran Immigration and Refugee Service rebranded as Global Refuge to put the spotlight on its mission — and boost fundraising.




Global Refuge

In 2023, Global Refuge (formerly Lutheran Immigration and Refugee Services (LIRS)) opened the Camino a Casa program in Guatemala to offer specialized services for youth repatriated from the United States or Mexico. The program addresses reintegration challenges such as poverty, violence, and a lack of economic opportunity through comprehensive case management, access to educational and vocational training, financial assistance, and mental health support for youth and their families, promoting stability and fostering a sense of belonging for Guatemalan youth returning home.

This grant supports the Camino a Casa program in Guatemala, which promotes economic empowerment, social mobility, and diverse, inclusive communities through a three-prong system: pathway building, career navigation, and harnessing the power of champions and coalitions.

Support from the Thrivent Charitable Community Fund and generous gifts our donors help make this possible. For collaborative funds, Thrivent Charitable conducts an invitation-based grantmaking process. For more information visit our nonprofit resources.

Do Not Read Luther For Cute Sayings!

 


The Reformation reminds us of Luther, Melanchthon, and Chemnitz - so why am I even mentioning them? After all, if knowledge of Luther is withered away now, how much worse is content about the other two teachers? 




How many preachers of any church body struggle to find some witty snippet at the end of November? The clergy are more likely to make fun of those three professors above, who risked their lives, changed Europe, and spread the Gospel to the world.




The percentage of Luther students is so small that anyone can attack the basics of the Gospel of Faith. The Lutheran (sic) synod leaders began waddling after Rome many decades ago, because Rome is cool. 

One LCA pastor from many decades ago said this about his fellow seminary students at Philadelphia Seminary (now United), "Him? He was the only high church guy who wasn't gay!" Indeed - the most inclined students at Waterloo bragged about their group of seminarians putting on the display robes and prancing around the Fortress Press Store. Almy is the target now - and OH! what prices!




So we have a collision now. Anyone can have a truckload of printed worthwhile Luther books, and even more books through the marvels of digital reproductions like PDF - and through the spoken Word. The collision is the lack of use, whether heard, read, or inwardly digested.

Here is a concise collection of Lenker's Luther Sermons.

I am sprinkling some Luther quotations on this page, because I am too weak to resist the combination of Gospel and graphics.


This was Photoshopped from the Planet of the Apes movie, where the hero realizes Planet Earth is so destroyed that the Statue of Liberty is half-buried. Thus the Lutheran Church with its papal lusts, Calvinist errors, and Waltherian dogma.

 Year around, no?


Daily Luther Sermon Quote - Epiphany 4 Epistle - "Solomon’s words (Ecclesiastes 7:17), “Noli nimium esse justus,” “Be not righteous overmuch.” Here is where we leave unperceived the beam in our own eye and proceed to remove the mote from our neighbor’s eye. Laws without love make the conscience timid and fill it with unreasonable terror and despair, to the great injury of body and soul."

 


Fourth Sunday After Epiphany. Christian Love and the Command to Love. Romans 13:8-10 

LOVE FULFILS THE LAW.

“For he that loveth his neighbor hath fulfilled the law.”

7. Having frequently spoken of the character and fruits of love, it is unnecessary to introduce the subject here. The topic is sufficiently treated in the epistle lesson for the Sunday preceding Lent. We will look at the command to love, in the Law of God. Innumerable, endless, are the books and doctrines produced for the direction of man’s conduct. And there is still no limit to the making of books and laws. Note the ecclesiastical and civil regulations, the spiritual orders and stations. These laws and doctrines might be tolerated, might be received with more favor, if they were founded upon and administered according to the one great law — the one rule or measure — of love; as the Scriptures do, which present many different laws, but all born of love, and comprehended in and subject to it.

And these laws must yield, must become invalid, when they conflict with love.

Of Love’s higher authority we find many illustrations in the Scriptures.

Christ makes particular mention of the matter in Matthew 12:3-4, where David and his companions ate the holy showbread. Though a certain law prohibited all but the priests from partaking of this holy food, Love was empress here, and free. Love was over the Law, subjecting it to herself. The Law had to yield for the time being, had to become invalid, when David suffered hunger. The Law had to submit to the sentence: “David hungers and must be relieved, for Love commands, Do good to your needy neighbor. Yield, therefore, thou Law. Prevent not the accomplishment of this good. Rather accomplish it thyself. Serve him in his need. Interpose not thy prohibitions.” In connection with this same incident, Christ teaches that we are to do good to our neighbor on the Sabbath; to minister as necessity demands, whatever the Sabbath restrictions of the Law. For when a brother’s need calls, Love is authority and the Law of the Sabbath is void.

8. Were laws conceived and administered in love, the number of laws would matter little. Though one might not hear or learn all of them, he would learn from the one or two he had knowledge of, the principle of love taught in all. And though he were to know all laws, he might not discover the principle of love any more readily than he would in one. Paul teaches this method of understanding and mastering law when he says: “Owe no man anything, but to love one another”; “He that loveth another hath fulfilled the law”; “If there be any other commandment, it is briefly comprehended in this saying, namely, Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself”; “Love worketh no ill to his neighbor”; “Love is the fulfilling of the law.” Every word in this epistle lesson proves Love mistress of all law.

9. Further, no greater calamity, wrong and wretchedness is possible on earth than the teaching and enforcing of laws without love. In such case, laws are but a ruinous curse, making true the proverbs, “summum jus, summa injustitia,” “The most strenuous right is the most strenuous wrong”; and again, Solomon’s words (Ecclesiastes 7:17), “Noli nimium esse justus,” “Be not righteous overmuch.” Here is where we leave unperceived the beam in our own eye and proceed to remove the mote from our neighbor’s eye. Laws without love make the conscience timid and fill it with unreasonable terror and despair, to the great injury of body and soul.

Thus, much trouble and labor are incurred all to no purpose.

ELCA's Death Spiral - Signaled by Liz Eaton's Election in 2013 -

 


Reconciling Works via Clint Schneckloth's substack.

"Beloved Children of God,

For over 50 years ReconcilingWorks has advocated for the acceptance, full participation, and liberation of all sexual orientations, gender identities, and gender expressions within the Lutheran Church. This is holy work for holy people.

In one week, the world has experienced the Trump Administration - through Executive Orders - try to remove, deny, and endanger the lives of our Transgender, Nonbinary, Genderqueer, Intersex, and Gender Nonconforming siblings. Just by saying there are only two genders does not make it true. We have a God who exists beyond a binary.

Trump's recent actions against the LGBTQIA+ community could not be further from the Gospel message of love, welcome, inclusion, and liberation.

1. Declaring there are only two genders, male and female.

2. Banning Transgender people from military service.

3. Ending gender affirming care for anyone under the age of 19.

ReconcilingWorks will continue to work with our 1,150+ Reconciling in Christ congregations and ministries to be a public witness in word and action, working against the dangers of White Christian Nationalism, discrimination, and erasures of people groups. We call upon all of our Reconciling in Christ partners - congregations, synods, and other ministries - to amplify your own voices in support of your LGBTQIA+ siblings. Now is the time to speak up and speak out, joining our voices and actions with those of Christians and members of other faith communities who also support God's beloved LGBTQIA+ children."








May the God of love and liberation hear our lament. May each of us be bold in our witness. May we all work to bring an end to this attack against people God has named beloved.

Signed,

ReconcilingWorks: Lutherans for Full Participation




ELCiC Bishop Susan Johnson












Wednesday, January 29, 2025

Daily Luther Sermon Quote - Epiphany 4 Epistle Lesson - "Another obligation is love, when a Christian voluntarily makes himself a servant of all men. Paul says (1 Corinthians 9:19), “For though I was free from all men, I brought myself under bondage to all.” This is not a requirement of human laws; no one who fails in this duty is censured or punished for neglect of legal obligations. The world is not aware of the commandment to love; of the obligation to submit to and serve a fellowman."

 



Fourth Sunday After Epiphany. Christian Love and the Command to Love. Romans 13:8-10 


FOURTH SUNDAY AFTER EPIPHANY


TEXT:

ROMANS 13:8-10. 8 Owe no man anything, save to love one another: for he that loveth his neighbor hath fulfilled the law. 9 For this, Thou shalt not commit adultery, Thou shalt not kill, Thou shalt not steal, Thou shalt not covet, and if there be any other commandment, it is summed up in this word, namely, Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself. 10 Love worketh no ill to his neighbor; love therefore is the fulfillment of the law.

CHRISTIAN LOVE AND THE COMMAND TO LOVE.

1. This, like the two preceding epistle lessons, is admonitory, and directs our attention to the fruits of faith. Here, however, Paul sums up briefly all the fruits of faith, in love. In the verses going before he enjoined subjection to temporal government — the rendering of tribute, custom, fear and honor wherever due — since all governmental power is ordained of God.

Then follows our lesson: “Owe no man anything,” etc.

2. I shall ignore the various explanations usually invented for this command, “Owe no man anything, but to love one another.” To me, clearly and simply it means: Not as men, but as Christians, are we under obligations. Our indebtedness should be the free obligation of love. It should not be compulsory and law-prescribed. Paul holds up two forms of obligation: one is inspired by law, the other by love.

Legal obligations make us debtors to men; an instance is when one individual has a claim upon another for debt. The duties and tribute, the obedience and honor, we owe to political government are of this legal character. Though personally these things are not essential to the Christian — they do not justify him nor make him more righteous — yet, because he must live here on earth, he is under obligation, so far as outward conduct is concerned, to put himself on a level with other men in these things, and generally to help maintain temporal order and peace. Christ paid tribute money as a debt (Matthew 17:27), notwithstanding he had told Peter he was under no obligation to do so and would have committed no sin before God in omitting the act.

3. Another obligation is love, when a Christian voluntarily makes himself a servant of all men. Paul says (1 Corinthians 9:19), “For though I was free from all men, I brought myself under bondage to all.” This is not a requirement of human laws; no one who fails in this duty is censured or punished for neglect of legal obligations. The world is not aware of the commandment to love; of the obligation to submit to and serve a fellowman.

This fact is very apparent. Let one have wealth, and so long as he refrains from disgracing his neighbor’s wife, from appropriating his neighbor’s goods, sullying his honor or injuring his person, he is, in the eyes of the law, righteous. No law punishes him for avarice and penuriousness; for refusing to lend, to give, to aid, and to help his wronged neighbor secure justice. Laws made for restraint of the outward man are directed only toward evil works, which they prohibit and punish. Good works are left to voluntary performance. Civil law does not extort them by threats and punishment, but commends and rewards them, as does the Law of Moses.

4. Paul would teach Christians to so conduct themselves toward men and civil authority as to give no occasion for complaint or censure because of unfulfilled indebtedness to temporal law. He would not have them fail to satisfy the claims of legal obligation, but rather to go beyond its requirements, making themselves debtors voluntarily and serving those who have no claims on them. Relative to this topic, Paul says ( Romans 1:14), “I am debtor both to Greeks and to Barbarians.” Love’s obligation enables a man to do more than is actually required of him. Hence the Christian always willingly renders to the state and to the individual all service exacted by temporal regulations, permitting no claims upon himself in this respect.

5. Paul’s injunction, then, might be expressed: Owe all men, that you may owe none; owe everything, that you may owe nothing. This sounds paradoxical. But one indebtedness is that of love, an obligation to God.

The other is indebtedness to temporal law, an obligation in the eyes of the world. He who makes himself a servant, who takes upon himself love’s obligation to all men, goes so far that no one dares complain of omission; indeed, he goes farther than any could desire. Thus he is made free. He lives under obligation to no one from the very fact that he puts himself under obligation to all. This manner of presenting the thought would be sustained by the Spirit in connection with other duties; for instance: Do no good work, that you may do only good works. Never be pious and holy, if you would be always pious and holy. As Paul says ( Romans 12:16), “Be not wise in your own conceits”; or ( 1 Corinthians 3:18), “If any man thinketh that he is wise among you in this world, let him become a fool, that he may become wise.” It is in this sense we say: Owe all men that you may owe no man; or, “Owe no man anything, but to love one another.”

6. Such counsel is given with the thought of the two obligations. He who would perform works truly good in the sight of God, must guard against works seemingly brilliant in the eyes of the world, works whereby men presume to become righteous. He who desires to be righteous and holy must guard against the holiness attained by works without faith. Again, the seeker for wisdom must reject the wisdom of men, of nature, wisdom independent of the Spirit. Similarly, he who would be under obligation to none must obligate himself to all in every respect. So doing, he retains no claim of his own. Consequently, he soon rises superior to all law, for law binds only those who have claims of their own. Rightly is it said, “Qui cedit omnibus bonis, omnibus satisfecit,” “He who surrenders all his property, satisfies all men.” How can one be under obligation when he does not, and cannot, possess anything? It is love’s way to give all. The best way, then, to be under obligation to none is, through love to obligate one’s self in every respect to all men. In this sense it may be said: If you would live, die; if you would not be imprisoned, incarcerate yourself; if you do not desire to go to hell, descend there; if you object to being a sinner, be a sinner; if you would escape the cross, take it upon yourself; if you would conquer the devil, let him vanquish you; would you overcome a wicked individual, permit him to overcome you. The meaning of it all is, we should readily submit to God, to the devil and to men, and willingly permit their pleasure; we are to insist on nothing, but to accept all things as they transpire. This is why Paul speaks as he does, “Owe no man anything,” etc., instead of letting it go at the preceding injunction in verse 5, “Render therefore to all their dues, etc.

Tuesday, January 28, 2025

Every Nation Has Border Security - Look It Up in the US Constitution

 

Tom Fisher's KJV Farm - Snow Storms Now Rain To Follow

 


Dear Pastor Jackson,

Please pray God will fully restore my health and strength.  Working in the extreme cold with 20 to 30 mile an hour winds has been very hard on me and my livestock. Now another severe weather change to rain and mud plus cold. Pray God will keep me healthy and safe as I work in very tough weather.

Especially pray God will make me healthy enough to begin writing articles again, and most importantly finish my Christmas letters to my brothers, nieces, and nephews, and relatives, and friends.

Thank you for posting my article on President Trump's Inauguration speech! I am working on another article on God's Word in the King James Bible. Very important I complete it, but I need better health.

In Christ,

Tom Fisher


A lamb in May, 2024.


The Purple Vatican Has Spoken



Rick Strickert (Carlvehse)
Senior Member
Username: Carlvehse

Post Number: 11321
Registered: 10-2003

Posted on Monday, January 27, 2025 - 5:16 pm:   Edit Post Delete Post Print Post

From the 2023 LCMS Handbook, Bylaw 6.2 Recognized Service Organizations, one of the three classes of recognized service organizations (RSO) is an educational service organization (Section 6.2.2 (b)):


quote:

An educational service organization, under the Scriptures and Lutheran Confessions, operates a Christian school (other than one governed solely by a Synod congregation or congregations), camp (with Christian programming), or the like. (Schools governed solely by Synod congregations, by virtue of their recognition as such by their districts, do not need recognized service organization status and have the rights and responsibilities of parish schools without obtaining recognized service organization status.)


However, here is an excerpt from a January 24, 2025, news article, "Luther Classical College Continues to Pursue Relationships within LCMS after Submitting RSO Application":


quote:

"Luther Classical College recently received notice from the Chief Administrative Officer (CAO) of The Lutheran Church—Missouri Synod (LCMS) that the college’s application for Recognized Service Organization (RSO) is being denied consideration. Notable RSOs include Lutherans for Life, Wittenberg Academy, and the Consortium for Classical Lutheran Education, each of which includes, like LCC, rostered LCMS clergy on its board of directors. However, CAO Felix Loc’s letter interprets Synod bylaws to disallow institutions of higher education from applying for RSO status. As previously communicated through other synodical channels, LCC interprets those bylaws differently and believes they allow the possibility for a college to seek RSO status."


In the meantime, there is a Gottesblog article, "In Harmony With the Doctrine and Practice of the LCMS?" about a RSO, Lutheran Community Services Northwest, in the Northwest District, pushing a Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Action Plan, a Pride mindset to serve LGBTQ clients, and their proclamation of "LCSNW undaunted by new President’s anti-immigrant orders."

These kinds of woketardian shenanigans do not occur without the knowledge and consent of the President of the Missouri Synod.
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Rick Strickert (Carlvehse)
Senior Member
Username: Carlvehse

Post Number: 11322
Registered: 10-2003

Posted on Monday, January 27, 2025 - 7:14 pm:   Edit Post Delete Post Print Post

Here is CAO Loc's January 20, 2025 letter announcing that Luther Classical College is not eligible for RSO status. The letter states:


quote:

LCC, as acknowledged in the LCC announcement, is not a college of the Synod and not a CUS institution. Bylaw 3.10.6.6, adopted by the Synod congregations at the 2023 Synod Convention, allows and provides a means for a college or university that is not part of CUS to request to join CUS. That is the option available to LCC if it is interested in pursuing the possibility of being a college of the Synod and a CUS institution. This information was repeatedly communicated to LCC before the enclosed announcement was made.


However Bylaw 3.10.6.6 states:


quote:

A college or university that is not a Concordia University System institution may request to join the Concordia University System.


The Bylaw does not require a non-CUS college or university to join the CUS or forbid a non-CUS college or university from applying to become an RSO instead. And prior to the 2023 Synod Convention, the bylaws did not contain anything about a non-CUS college or university joining the Concordia University System.

Ever Wonder How an Unusual Flower Appeared?

 

Snow on the Mountain

The Daily Luther Sermon Quote has reached beyond the 400 mark, depending how the label system works. 

  1. At first I thought the blog posting of entire sermons was a good way to get Lenker's Luther's Sermons around. 
  2. Later I had the help of many editors - plus the art of Norma Boeckler - to print the volumes. 
  3. Recently I began the Daily Luther Sermon Quote to wake up clergy and laity.

If no one read the short passages, I would still be reading them. Once upon a time i had a packet of Snow on the Mountain. I had no quick place for planting the seeds, so I tossed them into the bulb collection around the garage...and forgot. One day I saw a peculiar weed among the flowering bulbs. My squinty eyes examined the weed and revealed the surprise - Snow on the Mountain - not the stuff grown in the shade (Bishop's Weed). Everyone wanted to give me Bishop's Weed but they were shocked they only grew something with such a coarse name.

Bishop's Weed - "Although it has extremely vigorous growth and invasive tendencies, bishop's weed is useful in the right setting. If you are looking for an easy-to-grow groundcover to quickly fill a confined space, consider this plant [weed]."

Today I pulled volume 1 of Luther's Sermons off the shelf, to make sure I had the passage that I enjoyed, one of those surprises. The donor gave me the set and just celebrated her anniversary, so I sent some flowers.



Tom Fisher - On Trump's Inaugural Address

 


The MOST important statement made by President Trump during his inauguration speech:

"We will not forget our country!"

"We will not forget our constitution!"

"AND WE WILL NOT FORGET OUR GOD!!!!"

"Can't do that!"

President Trump emphasized this ONE statement with the STRONGEST heartfelt conviction and firm resolve:

"AND WE WILL NOT FORGET OUR GOD!!!!!"

He emphasized this statement more than any other, making it clear that the success of everything he said depended upon this broad foundational statement. 

This foundational statement echoed his continuous urgent plea for American's to buy and read the KING JAMES BIBLE. He urged American's to PRAY more. He urged American's to greet one another with, "MERRY CHRISTMAS" , believing the TRUE meaning of this greeting: that God sent His ONLY BEGOTTEN SON to be our Savior. In his own words President Trump preached Christ to America and the world in his Christmas Greetings.




As Lutheran Christians we need to follow President Trump's example and clearly express our Christian faith with our family and friends. Share KJV Bible verses with your sons and daughters, mom and dad, grandfather and grandmother, brothers and sisters, aunts and uncles, friends, and distant relatives. TELL THEM WHAT GREAT THINGS GOD HAS DONE FOR YOU IN YOUR BAPTISM. 

I have found that writing Christmas letters focused on quoting KJV Bible verses and clearly expressing the great things God has done for us is the best way to share your Lutheran Christian faith with your family and friends. 

I am way behind in writing my Christmas letters, but I hope to begin struggling with them soon. I say very little about myself. Christmas is about Christ NOT ourselves! 

Pray for President Trump and our Constitutional Republic with faith.

In Christ,

Tom Fisher

The MOST important statement made by President Trump during his inauguration speech:

"We will not forget our country!"

"We will not forget our constitution!"

"AND WE WILL NOT FORGET OUR GOD!!!!"

"Can't do that!"

President Trump emphasized this ONE statement with the STRONGEST heartfelt conviction and firm resolve:

"AND WE WILL NOT FORGET OUR GOD!!!!!"

He emphasized this statement more than any other, making it clear that the success of everything he said depended upon this broad foundational statement. 

This foundational statement echoed his continuous urgent plea for American's to buy and read the KING JAMES BIBLE. He urged American's to PRAY more. He urged American's to greet one another with, "MERRY CHRISTMAS" , believing the TRUE meaning of this greeting: that God sent His ONLY BEGOTTEN SON to be our Savior. In his own words President Trump preached Christ to America and the world in his Christmas Greetings.

As Lutheran Christians we need to follow President Trump's example and clearly express our Christian faith with our family and friends. Share KJV Bible verses with your sons and daughters, mom and dad, grandfather and grandmother, brothers and sisters, aunts and uncles, friends, and distant relatives. TELL THEM WHAT GREAT THINGS GOD HAS DONE FOR YOU IN YOUR BAPTISM. 

I have found that writing Christmas letters focused on quoting KJV Bible verses and clearly expressing the great things God has done for you is the best way to share your Lutheran Christian faith with your family and friends. 

I am way behind in writing my Christmas letters, but I hope to begin struggling with them soon. I say very little about myself. Christmas is about Christ NOT ourselves! 

Pray for President Trump and our Constitutional Republic with faith.

In Christ,

Tom Fisher



Daily Luther Sermon Quote - Epiphany 4 - "That the people marveled and praised the Lord that the wind and sea were subject to him, signifies that the Gospel, God’s Word, spreads farther through persecution, it thus becomes stronger and faith increases; and this is also a paradoxical characteristic of the Gospel compared with all worldly things which decrease through every misfortune and opposition, and increase through prosperity and peace. Christ’s kingdom grows through tribulations and declines in times of peace, ease and luxury, as St. Paul says in 2 Corinthians 12:9: “My power is made perfect in weakness, etc.”

 

Luther knew that Management by Objective was a farce, but today's Big Five Apostates - ELCA-LCMS-WELS-ELS-CLC (sic) - immerse themselves in jolly follies, wondering where everything went.


Complete Sermon ->Fourth Sunday after Epiphany. Matthew 8:23-27. Christ stilling the Tempest, or Faith and Unbelief, and Love

12. But what does this Gospel say? There was a violent tempest on the lake when Christ and his disciples were in the ship. The sea and the wind allowed the other ships to sail in calm weather; but this ship had to suffer distress because of Christ being in it. The world can indeed tolerate all kinds of preaching except the preaching of Christ. Hence whenever he comes and wherever he is, there he preaches that he only is right and reproves all others; as he says in Matthew 12:30: “He that is not with me is against me”, and again, John 16:8: “The spirit will convict the world in respect of sin, and of righteousness and of judgment;” he says that he will not only preach, but that he will convict the whole world and what is in the world. But it is this convicting that causes such tempests and dangers to this ship. Should he preach that he would allow the world to go unpunished and to continue in its old ways, he would have kept quiet before and never have entered the world; for if the world is good and is not to be convicted then there would never have been any need of him coming into the world.

13. Now it is the consolation of Christians, and especially of preachers, to be sure and ponder well that when they present and preach Christ, that they must suffer persecution, and nothing can prevent it; and that it is a very good sign of the preaching being truly Christian, when they are thus persecuted, especially by the great, the saintly, the learned and the wise.

And on the other hand that their preaching is not right, when it is praised and honored, as Christ says in Luke 6:22-26: “Woe unto you, when all men shall speak well of you; for in the same manner did their fathers to the false prophets. Blessed are ye, when men shall hate you, and when they shall separate you from their company, and reproach you, and cast out your name as evil, for the Son of man’s sake; in the same manner did their fathers to the prophets.” Behold our preachers, how their teachings are esteemed; the wealth, honor and power of the world have them fully under their control, and still they wish to be Christian teachers, and whosoever praises and preaches their ideas, lives in honor and luxury.

14. Hence, people have here an example where they are to seek their comfort and help, not in the world; they are not to guard the wisdom and power of men, but Christ himself and him alone; they are to cleave to him and depend on him in every need with all faithfulness and confidence as the disciples, do in our text. For had they not believed that he would help them, they would not have awakened him and called upon him. True their faith was weak and was mingled with much unbelief, so that they did not perfectly and freely surrender themselves to Christ and risk their life with him, nor did they believe he could rescue them in the midst of the sea and save them from death. Thus it is ordained that the Word of God has no master nor judge, no protector or patron can be given it besides God himself. It is his Word. Therefore, as he left it go forth without any merit or counsel of men, so will he himself without any human help and strength administer and defend it. And whoever seeks protection and comfort in these things among men, will both fall and fail, and be forsaken by both God and man.

15. That Jesus slept indicates the condition of their hearts, namely, that they had a weak, sleepy faith, but especially that at the time of persecution Christ withdraws and acts as though he were asleep, and gives neither strength nor power, neither peace nor rest, but lets us worry and labor in our weakness, and permits us to experience that we are nothing at all and that all depends upon his grace and power, as Paul confesses in Corinthians 1:9, that he had to suffer great affliction, so as to learn to trust not in himself but in God, who raised the dead. Such a sleeping on the part of God David often experienced and refers to it in many places, as when he says in Psalm 44:23: “Awake, why sleepest thou, O Lord? Arise, cast us not off forever.”

16. The summary of this Gospel is this, it gives us two comforting, defying proverbs, that when persecution for the sake of God’s Word arises, we may say: I indeed thought Christ was in the ship, therefore the sea and wind rage, and the waves dash over us and threaten to sink us; but let them rage, it is ordained that the wind and sea obey his will. The persecutions will not continue longer than is his pleasure; and although they overwhelm us, yet they must be subject to him; he is Lord over all, therefore nothing will harm us. May he only give us his help that we may not despair in unbelief. Amen.

17. That the people marveled and praised the Lord that the wind and sea were subject to him, signifies that the Gospel, God’s Word, spreads farther through persecution, it thus becomes stronger and faith increases; and this is also a paradoxical characteristic of the Gospel compared with all worldly things which decrease through every misfortune and opposition, and increase through prosperity and peace. Christ’s kingdom grows through tribulations and declines in times of peace, ease and luxury, as St. Paul says in 2 Corinthians 12:9: “My power is made perfect in weakness, etc.” To this end help us God! Amen.