Monday, August 24, 2015

Another Lutheran Church Closing

August 21, 2015 6:06 pm  •  
CALEDONIA — It’s the end of an era for Redeemer Lutheran Church, 4649 Lora St.
Next Sunday, the church will be holding its last services.
They used to bring in extra chairs on holidays to fit everyone, said Doris Kidd, the church’s secretary.
It’s been years since they have had to do that, Kidd said of the church, which is one of about eight Lutheran churches in the area that are part of the Missouri Synod.
“Churches across the board are having this kind of problem. The church is not as important as it used to be,” said Kidd, who has been a church member almost 60 years. “It used to be a social center, too. There were picnics and potlucks … It’s hard to have them when you don’t have a lot of people.”
Over the years, membership has declined steadily, she said. Older members died and their children chose for job reasons to go elsewhere, she said.
“It’s a sad fact, but that is the way it is,” said Kidd, who is retired.
Shirley Martens, secretary for the church council, said the church was founded in 1933 and started in a Douglas Avenue storefront.
That same year, land was purchased on Lora Street, she said. Later they built a small building for worship and school and then in 1951 they began construction on the current church.
She said the church was put up for sale and they have an accepted offer, although she didn’t know exactly what the building would be used for.
“Any time a church is dissolved, it’s a very sad thing,” Martens said.
Kidd also said the closing is hard to take.
“It’s like a kick in the gut,” she said. “But you have to realize it’s just a building, God is wherever you are and worship.”
The last services will be held Sunday, Aug. 30. The last regular service will be at 10 a.m. and there will be a final closing service at 2 p.m.

Are Synods Necessary? - Not in This Form -
They Are Going Down Like the Concordia - With Inept Leadership

The Lutheran leaders are not apt to teach -
they will celebrate the 500th anniversary of the Reformation by emphasizing
Justification Without Faith.
Lutheran Seminaries - Debt and Apostate Dogma

On our tour of Michigan and Adjoining States, we had a discussion about the necessity of synods. Several concluded - the synods are not doing anything worthwhile now, only causing more damage.

The original idea of the synod was to gather the clergy together for doctrinal discussions, an ongoing clarification that involves studies and debates. This practice can be traced to the Jerusalem Council in the Apostolic Era.

What are the synods today? They are business enterprises that fail at every level except one - feathering the nests of the leadership. The leaders make sure they are paid extraordinary salaries with benefits the parish pastors never dream about, unless they have scarlet fever.

The top two salaries employees at Concordia Publishing House make almost $600,000 a year together, including benefits - as of 2012, IRS 990. Next is Paul McCain with a total of $190,000. Four more make more than $100,000 and another $20,000 or so in benefits. All that cash is overhead and paid by the unfortunates who buy CPH books.

ELCA is a good example of the bad, and the other synods following the same pattern. Organized in 1987, the ELCA leaders set an agenda in motion that was bound to end in the 2009 resolution, which reduced ELCA by about 25%, crippling all synodical functions. The next step is their female presiding bishop and two female seminary presidents so far. WELS cannot wait to ordain women, but will toy with women celebrating Holy Communion, women teaching men, and women usurping authority from men.



Remember SP Mark Schroeder and boy-porn expert Joel Hochmuth writing a joint letter against ELCA's stance? I saved a copy in case it might be erased from history.

As I pointed out in the LCA, Michigan Synod, "The organization is designed and funded to self-destruct." One startled pastor asked the bishop's assistant if this could possibly be true. He nodded his head and said, "Yes it is true."

From the withering, dying ELCA to the tiny twitching corpse of the CLC (sic), all the sects are passionately committed to Universalism, all in the name of grace, but without the Means of Grace.

ELCA is more fond on the Roman side of ecumenism, but the others like to pal around with the Babtists, who are fading more slowly than the Lutherans.

The unifying factor, among the Babtists and "conservative" Lutherans is Fuller Seminary, the business or entertainment model of the church - one not mentioned in Protestantism until lately. The Church of Rome has always put on a good show, which may be why the ELCA cast covetous eyes at Rome and join when the coast is clear.

Therefore, failing Lutheran sects are aping the best looking horse at the glue factory. The Fuller heroes, Robert Schuller and David Cho, have earned their reward already. Schuller was ousted from the leadership of his Hour of Power and Cho was found guilty of embezzling massive amounts of money. Needless to say, Schuller's family did just what the Lutherans leaders have mastered - they paid themselves enormous salaries and bled the congregation dry. The Crystal Cathedral is now consecrated to Rome.


The Fuller Church Death Model

LCMS-WELS-ELS leaders denied studying at Fuller Seminary and plagiarizing Church Growth, but their materials proved that was exactly what they were doing. Various leaks from the false teachers (Valleskey, Werning, Olson, Huebner, Hunter) showed they studied at Fuller and loved, loved, loved it.

Anyone in WELS, ELS, or Missouri who studies at Fuller is rewarded and promoted. Anyone who criticized Church Growth was punished and eventually hated out, often defenestrated with malice and great enthusiasm. This horrid combination of pop psychology, worn out business cliches, and rock music for balding Boomers has marched through all the "conservative" groups without any honest reckoning.

Remember - it is not rape if you give permission first.
WELS was warned in advance and reminded 15 years later.


Certain leaders have frowned when talking about Fullerism, but they go along with the Fuller agenda and curse anyone who opposes that agenda.

Jon Buchholz and Jay Webber are no different from the other clowns, in supporting horrid pastors like Jeff Gunn and Floyd Stolzenburg while pulling the rug out from under faithful pastors. Neither one of them knows Lutheran doctrine, not even the Small Catechism.

The process of making everyone conform to the current agenda is always going to dumb down the sects. Plenty of intelligent and faithful leaders are available, but the ticket demands conformity, stolid stupidity and obsequious behavior. Jay Webber makes fun of the ELS leaders until he gets within 100 miles of Mankato, which may be reason enough to make him a seminary professor. That would keep Jay in a permanent posture of bowing and scraping.

The synods do not have the membership on their side, and many of the clergy are going along sullenly, without much choice. ELCA will force far more upon its members, in the name of being a witness to diversity - selective diversity.

WELS forces its agenda the same way, totally clueless about the alienation of the members and pastors.

A few of the hooligans have changed,
but the agenda moves forward.
Watch the Wisconsin Sect follow the ELS into oblivion.

Virtue Online - Criminal School Traditions Parallel What Happens in WELS, LCMS, ELS, and CLC (sic)

Kiss Harvard goodbye.
The Senior Salute will probably continue.

NEW HAMPSHIRE: St. Paul's School in denial mode as rape trial begins
By Mary Ann Mueller
VOL Special Correspondent
www.virtueonline.org
Aug. 24, 2015
St. Paul's School was founded in 1856 as a private institution for refined gentlemanly learning for well-to-do Episcopalian boys in antebellum Concord, New Hampshire. As the Revolutionary War was fading into memory, the reorganizing Protestant Episcopal Church in the United States of America was just getting solid footing in New World America.
The school, with ties to The Episcopal Church, has had its ups and downs during its, sometimes turbulent, 159-year history. Throughout its history the school, nestled in 2,000 wooded acres, has had a strong attachment to gentlemanly sports -- in fact, one of the first assignments the newly established school gave was to "go fishing." This is something the school brags about on its website.
"In the spring of 1856 . . . a young schoolteacher arrived in a carriage at a large property of ponds and woods near Concord, New Hampshire, where a wealthy Boston physician had provided land to create a new school," the website's history page explains. "St. Paul's began that same day, as three boys received their first assignments, one of which was to go fishing. A love of the School's natural habitat has remained constant since those early days."
As the school developed, it became noted for building the first squash court in the United States, turning the lower school pond into nine ice hockey rinks, and preferring to play the English game of cricket, which was defined as a "more refined sport" than the American game of baseball.
By 1910 St. Paul's emphasis on gentlemanly sports was so well defined that the Rev. Samuel Smith Drury was appalled when he became the rector (headmaster) to find the school to be deficient "in almost all aspects -- student body, faculty, and curriculum -- severely lacking a serious commitment to academic pursuits and moral upstandingness." He also disbanded secret societies and ushered in an "Augustan era" where academics and courtly manners were emphasized over leisurely sporting events.
"Senior Salute"
Fast forward to 2014 -- sordid secret sex societies were back. One alleged aspect of the on-campus open sexually-charged culture was the "Senior Salute," where St. Paul's graduating seniors would allegedly "compete with each other to see who would have the most sexual encounters before they graduate." A running tally was supposedly kept on the wall behind the washers.
In the spring of 2014 one girl -- a 15-year-old freshman -- cried rape and pointed her finger at 18-year-old Owen Labrie, a graduating senior who hails from Tunbridge, Vermont.
Even the working press is protecting the identity of the alleged rape victim. She is now a 16-year-old teenager who no longer attends St. Paul's as her family has left the area. Miss X is not being identified by name; the print media is not taking her picture and the broadcast media is disguising her voice. Even her family is being represented by spokespersons when dealing with the press.
Labrie was arrested in mid July 2014 by the Concord Police Department. The charges include felony sex assault, misdemeanor sexual assault, endangering the welfare of a child, and using a computer to solicit or lure a child under the age of 16. The alleged sexual encounter occurred on Friday evening, May 30, 2014, two days before St. Paul's commencement. The 2014 graduate's trial started last week in Concord's Merrimack County Superior Court. During court Labrie sits at the defense table with his defense team. He is a handsome young man with dark wavy hair. The glasses give him a studious look while the tailored blazer and deportment show him to be a New England preppy. He fails to smile.
Owen Labrie, a scholarship student, was graduated on June 1, 2014. At the center of his defense is the alleged "Senior Salute" an apparent decades-long tradition where graduating seniors allegedly compete with each other to seek end-of-year sexual conquests of younger students and to see how many girls could be "slain." The Associated Press reports that during Labrie's interview with Concord police detectives, the suspect explained the "Senior Salute" tradition and claimed he was trying "to be number one" with the most "slays."
High-profile defense
The defense team, headed by criminal defense lawyer J.W. Carey, is painting St. Paul's School as "a place of secret rites and sexual conquest."
Carey is a noted high-profile criminal defense attorney in Boston. He started out as a public defender then switched sides and became the Middlesex County, Massachusetts prosecutor. In that position, he handled a rape case against Army Sgt. Dennis Maher who was charged with raping two women and sexually assaulting a third. Following the successful rape conviction, Carey again switched sides from county prosecutor to defense lawyer. He became an effective private criminal defense attorney and started handling high-profile cases.
In 2003 DNA proved that former Army Sgt. Maher was not the rapist he was convicted of being and was released from prison. As a result Carey became a changed man -- a man on a mission. At the twilight of his law career and bolstered by a solid reputation in criminal defense, Carey can afford to be choosy about the cases he accepts. Now he has Labrie's life and St. Paul's tarnished halo in his hands.
St. Paul's ducks for cover
More than a year ago -- early summer of 2014 -- and as soon as the allegation of rape started to surface, St. Paul's went on the defensive.
"I write today to tell you about a disturbing incident involving St. Paul's School students. One of our recent graduates, Owen Labrie '14, has been charged by the Concord Police Department with sexual assault. The accusation against this young man is based on an incident allegedly occurring at the School before graduation," Michael Hirschfield St. Paul's rector wrote on July 16, 2014. "When this matter was first brought to our attention by the young woman involved, we reported it to the authorities, as is our obligation, and we are cooperating fully with law enforcement."
The victim's family doesn't agree with the school's level of support.
"There has definitely been an issue from the very start when she (Miss X) first reported what happened. There wasn't a lot of support at the school and the community. The family has left that area and she is no longer at that school. They faced a lot of retaliation," Laura Dunn, a spokesperson who is close to the victim's family, told MSNBC. "They (the family) have found support. There is a lot of advocacy organizations in the New Hampshire coalition and a lot of other (rape) survivors have rallied around them."
On Aug. 17, 2015, more than a year later, as the sexual assault trail was about to begin, Hirschfield wrote, "As the Labrie trial begins, you will undoubtedly read or hear allegations surrounding those involved in the situation, as well as about the School. These are, indeed, allegations and not proven facts, and the judicial system will weigh them and determine how this case is ultimately resolved."
Bishop's brother
St. Paul's rector (headmaster) Michael Hirschfield is the younger brother of Bishop Robert Hirschfield (X New Hampshire). The younger Hirschfield is an educator, not a clergyman. He is a 1985 graduate of St. Paul's School; his college years were spent at Princeton, Dartmouth, and the University of Pennsylvania. The Hirschfield tradition continues at St. Paul's. His daughter has joined the ranks of St. Paul's alumni and his son currently attends the prestigious school.
The Episcopal Diocese of New Hampshire is staying mum about the on-going trial. Laura Simoes, the diocesan Missioner for Communications, told Virtueonline, "A statement following the outcome of a legal trial will be offered." The Diocese also promised to include VOL in its media distribution list.
Rector Hirschfield first joined St. Paul's faculty in 1994 where he taught history and humanities. He also coached the boys' rowing crew before serving as the associate director of college advising, director of admissions, and vice rector for enrollment and communications. Before joining the St. Paul's teaching staff, Hirschfield was on the faculty at Kent School, another elite Episcopal prep school in Connecticut.
In 2007 Hirschfield was named St. Paul's vice rector of external affairs and was responsible for overseeing the school's development, alumni relations, admissions, college advising, and communications offices. From that position he was elevated to the rectorship in 2010 after being chosen from a field of "gifted candidates from all over the world."
"It's likely that St. Paul's is a different kind of school from any other you might be exploring. Yes, we are committed to providing the most nurturing environment for intellectual growth through a remarkable array of academic opportunities, but something else distinguishes us: the fact that all of us -- students and teachers -- live on campus, in a community devoted to healthy and caring relationships," Hirschfield explains in his Welcoming Letter on the St. Paul's website. "We are also distinctive in our role as an Episcopal school, a foundation for our central mission of developing graduates who are prepared and willing to pursue lives that contribute to the greater good -- in their communities and in the world."
Media interest
As soon as the rape story broke, the media started sniffing around St. Paul's for clues to the on-campus culture, which would allow such an alleged sexual assault to occur. The story was picked up by American media and has been exported around the world, especially in countries with a strong Anglican presence -- Canada, England, Australia and New Zealand.
"I write to let you know that a reporter from the Boston Globe is contacting members of the SPS community, both here at the School and beyond, seeking reactions to the alleged sexual assault. Because this matter is now before the court, the School has been asked to limit its comments to the press," Hirschfield wrote to his students on Aug. 1, 2014.
Hirschfield posted that if St. Paul's School students want to speak with reporters, it is their decision. He cautioned them to first speak with their parents or the school's communication office before dealing with the press.
On Aug. 17, 2015 Hirschfield again wrote his students and their parents about media attention.
"We are aware that some of our students have been contacted by the media," he wrote. "It's unfortunate, but not surprising, to hear that some reporters are trying to secure comments from SPS students. Our director of communications ...can be reached if you have questions or concerns about how to handle media inquiries."
The next day St. Paul's rector wrote to the school's alumni: "Yesterday, I wrote to SPS students and parents about the Owen Labrie trial and the resulting extensive media coverage.... Please do not hesitate to contact the School with your questions and concerns. I am also extending the School's resources to you, in the event you are contacted by the media. Any media inquiries may be directed to our director of communications..."
In an earlier Aug. 7, 2014 letter to St. Paul's students and their parents Hirschfield wrote, "It is first important to acknowledge that the allegation of a sexual assault at the School and the subsequent media coverage have been unsettling for many within the community. I am aware of this hurt and the compounding effect brought by a lack of knowledge about the circumstances. While the allegation and the people it involves will not be a topic of conversation at the School, the broader issues it raises -- the use of social media to perpetuate unhealthy relationships, the "hook-up" culture and unsanctioned student 'traditions' -- will be."
Hirschfield is also taking a heavy hand: "Participation in any game, 'tradition,' or practice of sexual solicitation or sexual conquest under any name will be grounds for expulsion from the School," he wrote.
As the rape trial gets underway, MSNBC reports that a St. Paul's spokesperson commented, "The allegations of the (hook-up) culture are not emblematic of the culture of the school".
Harvard plans dashed
Labrie was popular on campus. He was captain of the varsity soccer team and was a candidate for the Presidential Scholars Program. He was also a prefect -- a high student leadership position -- for his dorm; as such, he received training about the difference between statutory rape and consensual sex. Before he graduated, Labrie won the Rector's Award for "selfless devotion to the school's activities."
Since the rape allegations, Labrie's plans to attend Harvard have tanked. The aspiring divinity student was previously accepted to the prestigious Ivy League school. On Sept. 3, 2014, the Harvard Crimson newspaper reported that the Harvard student body was minus Owen Labrie. His name was scrubbed from the Harvard College and the Harvard Class of 2018 Facebook pages.
Harvard officials explained that "admission to Harvard College can be revoked on several grounds including engaging in behavior that brings into question honesty, maturity, or moral character."
Harvard College, the oldest school of higher learning in the United States, is one of two undergraduate schools within what is now Harvard University. Labrie had hoped to eventually attend Harvard Divinity School, the university-based, nondenominational theological school, which focuses on the academic study of religion and offers masters degrees in theological studies (MTS); divinity (MDiv); and theology (ThM); as well as a doctorate in theology (ThD).
Mary Ann Mueller is a journalist living in Texas. She is a regular contributor to VirtueOnline

***

GJ - Mary Ann Mueller is an excellent writer for Virtue Online. 

I see many parallels with the so-called conservative synods. I get responses like, "How dare you post a news article and highlight certain sections!" The reason is that some people speed-read and want to know why I am publishing so much bilge. Then they have the freedom to read it all in context.

Bethany Seminary President Gaylin Schmeling made a point of criticizing me in his adult class for "hurting the face of the synod." He knew all the facts, because I gave them to him. He even said he would file the lawsuit about Floyd Luther Stolzenburg, because it would be useful. But the Little Sect on the Prairie adopted adopted him as their new Church Growth hero - and Jay Webber had no trouble with it. Schmeling had no problems either. Tis funny how Webber specializes in getting rid of pastors, but he had no issue with Floyd, who was kicked out of the LCMS and embraced by WELS and the Little Sect. Why didn't he repudiate Floyd and his lapdog Kovo?

The Schwan Foundation even gave matching funds so the John Shep (now ELCA) and Jay Webber operation in the Ukraine could build a church honoring the name of Floyd's. Brings a tear to my eye.

But Jay and the ELS thought it was terrible that I gave the Forbes article about St. Marvin to Christian News to print. Forbes is not exactly an unknown magazine. Little did I know that the truth caused St. Marvin to lose an ex-wife when she read it in Christian News.

Adultery is no sin in WELS or the ELS. Cheating a spouse out of her due in a divorce is no problem, when she is the innocent party. Telling the truth about the sordid behavior of WELS-ELS leaders - that is a great and terrible sin, one that cannot be forgiven (not that I am repentant).

So - just like the Episcopalians above - truth is the sin. The mainlines like WELS, ELS, and LCMS can abuse women and children all they want. But telling the truth is good for excommunication and having the slander machine revved up to full speed.

The restrictions of his divorce were
never followed by WELS or the Little Sect -
they are above the law.

What I Learned Most This Year - Creation Gardening.
Chronological Order



I began the year with red wiggler earthworm populations all over the yard, and Jackson Mulch in place in future gardening areas.


I. The Microbes Were Working for Team Jackson All Along

My foundational lesson came from a serendipity discovery of Teaming with Microbes. Most gardening books are tiresome picture books that repeat the errors of the past - or they eagerly describe the cultivation of marijuana.

Teaming with Microbes opened my eyes to the recent research about the interface of plant roots, fungi, protozoa, nematodes, and bacteria. I always worked with organic/Creation principles, but here was a book that described the reasons why we should trust in God's design.



By necessity, this book is divided into two sections. The first is an explanation of soil and the soil food web. There is no getting around it. You have to know the science before you can apply it. At least in this instance, the science is fascinating, even astonishing, and we try not to make a textbook out of it. The second section is the explanation of how to work the soil food web to your soils’ advantage and to yours as a gardener. What makes this book different from other texts on soil is our strong emphasis on the biology and microbiology of soils— relationships between soil and organisms in the soil and their impact on plants. We are not abandoning soil chemistry, pH, cation exchange, porosity, texture, and other ways to describe soil. Classic soil science is covered, but from the premise that it is the stage where the biology acts out its many dramas.

Lewis, Wayne; Lowenfels, Jeff (2010-09-10). Teaming with Microbes: The Organic Gardener's Guide to the Soil Food Web, Revised Edition (Kindle Locations 129-135). Timber Press. Kindle Edition. 

This book showed me the process of complicated microbes trapping useful nutrition in the top layer of soil, with complicated swaps taking place between fungi and plant roots.



II. Sharon Lovejoy and Her Mini-Lessons with a Macro View

Sharon Lovejoy on Facebook

The princes of Serendip made accidental discoveries while looking for something else, and they applied their luck to their endeavors. We were at the Cracker Barrel looking at all the temptations for hungry diners in their gift shop. I spotted A Blessing of Toads by Sharon Lovejoy.

The genius of this author is her combination of little lessons (toads, chickadees, the absences of chemical poisons) in her larger view of gardening and bird-watching.

Sharon is on Facebook often and a lot of fun, enjoying the fruits of gardening and writing. Because of her books, I read one section at a time and plan new projects or enhance what I am doing for for the creatures in our yard.

Her books motivated me to make our yard as toad-friendly and bird-friendly as possible. Wherever water might fall, including under the soaker hoses, little ceramic pans hold water for toad hydration.



III. Jessica Walliser's Beneficial Bugs

Jessica Walliser on Facebook

Another serendipity find was Jessica Walliser's Attracting Beneficial Bugs to Your Garden.

It might surprise you to know that a mere 1 percent of the insects we come across in our lives are actually harmful. These are the creatures that consume our plants, introduce disease, bite our flesh, feed on our pets, and cause economic, aesthetic, or medical damage. These are the bugs that tend to attract our attention, and as a result they get all the press—most of it negative. 

The remaining 99 percent of insects are either benign or beneficial. Benign insects are very good at going about their business without harming our crops or us. And beneficial insects are, in fact, doing some type of good in the landscape. Insects can be beneficial for several reasons. First, they can be pollinators. We all know how important quality pollination is to a farm or garden. The world, after all, cannot function without it. Most of us can readily recognize common pollinators like honeybees and butterflies, but there are hundreds of thousands of other pollinator species in this world: beetles, moths, wasps, ants, flies, bats, and birds. Not to mention the more than thirty-five hundred species of native bees in the United States whose pollination work sadly and undeservedly plays second string to that of the imported European honeybee. Fifteen billion dollars worth of food needs to be pollinated by some little creature each and every year in the United States alone. The worth of pollinators is undeniable.

Walliser, Jessica (2014-02-26). Attracting Beneficial Bugs to Your Garden: A Natural Approach to Pest Control (Kindle Locations 184-193). Timber Press. Kindle Edition. 

Jessica Walliser's book was at the bookstore. I kept looking for a book on vines, and never found that, but I did discover Teaming and Attracting Beneficial Bugs in the process.

I always knew about the ratio between bad bugs (1%) and the good ones (99%). My mother had no fear of bugs and always liked to grab one and demonstrate its intricacies. She collected and grew butterflies and moths for photos that she published.

Jessica's work shows a vast knowledge of plants, far beyond anything I read about before, so I study her book for the relationship between plants and beneficial creatures. Suddenly the modest plants, weeds, and herbs took on new meaning.

I followed her advice and left the roses alone for the first invasion of aphids this year. My best hopes - Peace and John Paul II - were destroyed by aphids on the first round. The blooms were ugly, distorted, wilted, and loaded with aphids and other bugs. I even visited them at night, but did nothing. On the next boom cycle, the same roses were almost flawless and have remained so all summer.

If the pests are killed or picked off by hand (scratch that idea), then the pest eaters will have no food and go away. When the pests attack, the flowers send up a chemical signal that draws the beneficial bugs. The good bugs devour the pests or they lay eggs near/on the bad bugs. That explains the delay in solving the problem. The eggs need to be laid, hatched, and letting loose the hungry babies.


Wrapping Up a Strange Gardening Season

Bride's Dream is a delicate pink,
but the flower will be quite large when the plant matures.


Last summer I had vines growing all along the fence between us and Mrs. Wright's, but only two clumps of vines this summer. Rabbits flourished in the whole area and spent inordinate amounts of time eating my new plants.

I made a point of planting pumpkins at various times - not to mention gourds - to get a good crop. That looks unlikely as the weather turns cooler and no fruit is apparent, once again quite different from last year, when late planting at least got some finished gourds and some starting pumpkins.

The squirrels enjoyed the sweet corn harvest. We had some volunteers where they hid their corn in the garden. That was left alone in favor of Silver Queen. My wife and I had a little and got back to stalks stripped clean of their ears. Team Jackson was going to have a BBQ with corn on the cob, and settled for Fritos instead.

The tomatoes I planted "too early" are still bearing fruit, but the late planted tomatoes have only taken up garden space. To rush the green tomatoes, I pick them before the critters harvest them, put them in a box, and include bananas or apples inside to generate the ripening gas ethylene.

Perfect white fragrant roses - John Paul II -
constantly blooming.

Asparagus grew well and ferned out, so I may harvest some next spring.

I discovered a new organic nursery, Almost Eden, 1/2 block away, so I began expanding my gardening knowledge with trips over there, buying some high quality plants at bargain prices - blackberries, blueberries, elderberries, chaste tree, beautyberries, and coreopsis.

Walmart surprised me with an ever-changing display of low cost plants, so I boosted my supply of bee balm (horse mint), coreopsis, and the unknown plant, which turned out to be lantana, a great butterfly plant.

My goal of attracting hummingbirds without feeding a feeder was achieved when a hummer stopped by the bee balm.

The honeysuckle vine grew rapidly and flowered, looking good for next year. Its prop, the dead treet, fell over without harm and became the base for our rustic fence.

The passion flower vine was attacked without mercy by slugs, and I learned so much about those varmints. This year's staggering rains favored slugs and weeds. I gave up on the maypop for this year.

In contrast, the trumpet vine took root and grew in three locations, two up their appointed trees, and one on the Wright fence. Now that is a hummingbird plant.

Mr. Lincoln is the most productive rose,
growing and blooming constantly.

Roses Galore
The most fun for the neighborhood has been the rose gardens. We began with 8 bargain roses and 8 KnockOut roses from last year, enjoying a deep bed of Jackson Mulch and red wiggler earthworms.

I added 20 more bargain roses for only $5 each, and dozens of hybrid tea roses.

The most productive and beautiful roses have been:

  • Mr. Lincoln
  • Veterans Honor
  • John Paul II
  • Double Delight
  • Peace
  • Pink Peace


Finding five Peace roses in bloom at once -
shockingly fun and yet not uncommon.

Circuit Rider Completes Circuit - All Members Communed

1994 Lincoln Town Car - the Ichaboat.

We completed an 1800 mile drive to commune the Eastern district of our congregation. Late last year we visited the Washington State branch. Mrs. Ichabod and I were able to visit her cousins, who have severe heart/circulatory problems, our member in Jackson, and our members in the Midland area, including an adult baptism.

Mrs. I gets the trouper award for all that travel in five days. In theater, a trouper goes on with the show in spite of any troubles, illnesses, pain, or distractions. The dates fell together at the last minute, so that made driving the only choice.

The Ichaboat now has 190,000 miles on it. Once I was pitied for having an old car. The college kids recently summed up the car as "Suh-weet" and our driver at the airport in December said, "Now that's a car." We had a beautiful ride and no troubles. Repairs have been minor, except for one grand sweep after hail damaged the outside. No one can see the damage, but insurance paid $1500 and that went into some maintenance issues in the engine and tranny, making the car run like new again - thanks to Tim's Auto.

At the start of the trip, one Facebook friend wrote, "You know Norma Boeckler!?" Yes, we do, and we enjoyed our stay at her home, which is filled with art and collectibles on the inside and decorated with elegant floral displays on the outside, with a view of the river down below.

Norma Boeckler and Chris posed by the flowers in the front yard.

Which Lutheran Seminary? - Has 50 Views Already Today.
Do Not Buy a Worthless Degree for Yale Costs

WELS-ELS-LCMS-CLC (sic) - This applies.
ELCA too? How can that be?
They all meet and study at Fuller Seminary and its clones.


Someone has been asking me about which Lutheran seminary to attend. The synods project a mirage glimmering on the horizon. Surely with their approval, the candidate who does all his work will have a call and serve in the Kingdom!

Just the opposite is true. The synod school will grab all the money and  force someone out, leaving him with a mountain of student debt and a useless degree. "But," some object, "What if I graduate and get a call?" That is no better. The DPs are eager to wipe out new pastors to make room for the next herd to be slaughtered.

WELS and the Little Sect are known for this, but so is the LCMS. Just remember - an MDiv from a synod school is a worthless degree, although one at the same price from a divinity school could be valuable. Yale Divinity School graduates are known for not serving congregations after graduation, but doing many other things instead - graduate school in Asian literature, social work, business school, doctoral degrees in theology.

Any Lutheran MDiv is equal to the rest, so a cheaper degree from a Pietistic school or Canadian one is a better deal than St. Louis, Ft. Wayne, the Sausage Factory, or the Little Schoolhouse on the Prairie. Whether someone serves a parish is a gamble, no matter what. The origin of the degree seems immaterial, since the synodicals have no qualms about brutalizing their own graduates, pastors, and teachers.

Let the buyer beware, or as Jesus said, "Count the cost first."



St. Ignatius
Someone has asked me about the ELDONA seminary start-up, St. Ignatius. The total cost is very low, and the pastors in that group are the most intellectual of the Lutheran entities I know.

ELDONA is the only organized Lutheran group to teach justification by faith and reject Universal Objective Justification (aka Universalism).

Book about St. Ignatius.

A Blessed St. Ignatius Day from St. Ignatius Lutheran Theological Seminary!

The world continues to ask the devil’s question, “Has God indeed said…?” By the power of God’s Holy Spirit the Church continues to answer the world with boldness and clarity as it faithfully believes, teaches, and confesses all that Christ Jesus has taught in the Holy Scriptures. St. Ignatius Lutheran Theological Seminary is established for the very purpose of this holy work. The Church must continue to train men in the Word so they may faithfully give the divine gifts of the Gospel and the Sacraments to all nations, for all generations to come until Christ comes again in glory.

The Evangelical Lutheran Diocese of North America (ELDoNA) is currently accepting applications for enrollment for St. Ignatius Seminary Here candidates for the pastorate will be trained to hold fast to all that Christ has taught the Church. They will be taught to rely on the Word of God, to apply the faithful teachings of the Lutheran Confessions, and to observe the historical practices of the one holy, Christian and apostolic Church that proclaim God’s truth. They will be equipped so that they may be worthy candidates for Christ’s Holy Office of the Ministry, rather than being timid hirelings or those who are conformed to the world.

St. Ignatius Seminary is named for Saint Ignatius of Antioch, who is remembered for his faithful contributions to teaching doctrine and practice in the Church. The example of this bishop and martyr is a valuable asset to the Church as he exemplified both wisdom and humility in Jesus Christ. (Please note, St. Ignatius is not to be confused with Ignatius of Loyola, who was canonized by the Roman church for waging war against the teachings of the Reformation.)

As the Augsburg Confession states, it is taught among us that we receive forgiveness and “become righteous before God by grace, for Christ's sake, through faith,” (AC IV) and that God has instituted His Holy Office through which He provides the preaching of the Gospel and the administering of the Sacraments, the gifts by which His Holy Spirit produces such faith. (AC V) St. Ignatius Seminary is founded on these teachings as it trains men for this office. 

For more information on St. Ignatius Lutheran Theological Seminary, please visit http://saintignatiusseminary.com Enrollment applications for the 2014/2015 school year are now being accepted. Contribution information is also available for those who would like to financially support this work, which endeavors to ensure the faithful preaching of life in Christ crucified to all who will hear.

***

GJ - If the idea is studying theology with believers who appreciate the scope of Christian theology, then St. Ignatius is a good idea and far less expensive than the Thrivent salesman farms. One also has to calculate lost income, which I why I went through college and seminary in six years, earning a new degree when my peers at seminary were still finishing (partying).

In this age of technology, there is nothing keeping a faithful man from serving a group and building a congregation. The mighty Episcopal Church has 50% of its priests in part-time calls, and they have a (failing) seminary with a $66 million endowment. Clearly, money and tradition are not the answers. I can only guess what their other failing seminaries have in the bank.

A Lutheran pastor can gather a congregation with blogging, Ustream broadcasting, visiting, etc. God will provide. The destruction of traditional Lutheran worship will certainly make a segment of the population eager to participate in Means of Grace liturgical services, which are now rarer than an honest DP.

I suggest:
1. Meeting with those who have direct experience with a given educational choice.
2. Looking at and preparing for alternative sources of income, not unlike Paul, who made tents to avoid burdening tiny congregations.
3. Comparing costs.

God will provide for faithful servants, and Satan will provide for the rest, so this is a win/win situation. 


If you are WELS, don't throw away your cross-dressing outfits
from Michigan Lutheran Seminary or Martin Luther College.
You can use them as a parish pastor.
Pastor Adam Mueller, Church and Changer.