The new Secretary of ELCA, the Number Two, is a Seminex graduate who allied himself with Reconciling Works. |
ELCA is selling this myth with an oiliness usually reserved for the next fund-raising campaign. Eaton had no idea she would be the next Presiding Bishop of ELCA!
Quotas for women leaders and gays actually work?
ELCA can "study" homosexuality and saturate their media with the same agenda items for 25 years, and that will bring the results demanded by the minority, who now control all the boards and commissions?
That sounds so much like LCMS-WELS-ELS promoting Fuller's Church Growth, sending everyone to Fuller for training, teaching CGM in all the schools, funding CGM, and then having CG advocates "study" the cancer.
Fuller/Trinity/Willow Creek graduates find CGM/Emergent to be good, wholesome, beneficial, and praiseworthy.
The graphic above was posted with a web article, but I did not want to dignify the story by linking it. Needless to say, the Network is very pleased with itself this week. They got a grand slam with only one on base. They ousted the Presiding Bishop who was their slave, replacing him with a better icon for their movement. Next they elected a Seminex graduate and bishop in the role of Secretary, a man whose history leaves no doubt about where he will land on each issue.
Mrs. Ichabod and I were hoping for a lady Secretary, to confound the ELCA-huggers in WELS and LCMS.
But having a Seminex trained bishop as Secretary is even better, since that involves WELS and Missouri together. Richard Jungkuntz was chairman of the board of Seminex, the first of many gay Lutheran seminaries. Jungkuntz was a favorite teacher at Northwestern College (RIP) in Watertown. He was an ardent UOJ advocate and Biblical Leftist, but no one seemed to know his Biblical position until it was found out by accident.
The heart of Seminex was WELS, and Seminex controlled the formation of ELCA with its system of quotas, including gay, minority, and female quotas on all the boards and commissions.
Jungkuntz married a Kowalke. How could he be wrong about anything? |