Monday, June 5, 2017

Rev. Jason Ewart Introduced by Change or Die! Mark Jeske

Jason E-Wart is now kicked out of WELS.
He has the same arrogant attitude as Mark and Avoid Jeske.
Listen to his children's sermon.
 


Rev. Jason Ewart:



"Biography
Lead Pastor at Hope Lutheran Church in Oconomowoc, Wis.

Rev. Jason Ewart became the pastor of Hope in 2009. The congregation was started a few years earlier with a vision of reaching people who had given up on church. On Rev. Ewart's first Sunday at Hope, 90 people showed up at the congregation’s rented facility. After six months, he had successfully shrunk the church to 65 people a Sunday. That’s right, more than a quarter of the people had stopped coming within half a year. But that’s when the momentum shifted. It wasn’t a gradual shift. It shifted fast. Today, 450 people attend Hope on a given weekend. This growth has happened while the congregation has strategically chosen to remain portable. They currently rent a middle school gymnasium."


'via Blog this'

The Church Where Ski and Kelm Preached - WELS Gives It the Left Foot of Fellowship


SUSPENDED (REMOVED) FROM SYNOD Church Location Date removed Hope LC Oconomowoc WI 5/26/2017


Staff

Jason Ewart

Lead Pastor

Kathy Ewart

Children's Ministry Director

Judy Gotter

Office Administrator

Jeremy Treuden

Music and Communication Director

Steve Gotter

Video Producer

Jess Rupnow

Nursery Leader






Welcome to the media download section. Please select a file or choose a category below:

Year:      Category:

 

Click on one of the following files to view the available options:

SORT BY: Title Speaker Text Date 
Wildcard - pt 2 - Answering Skeptics...with Truth

Pastor Paul Kelm 
8/8/2010 
Wildcard - pt 2 - Connection Group Questions

8/8/2010 
Wildcard - pt 1 - Who Do We Say Jesus Is?

Pastor Clark Schultz 
8/1/2010 
Miracles - Part 4 - Opening Blind Eyes

Pastor Jason 
7/25/2010 
Miracles - Part 3 - Water to Wine

Pastor Jason 
7/18/2010 
Miracles - Pt 2 - Poolside Miracle

Pastor Ski 
7/11/2010 
Miracles - Calming the Storm

Pastor Ski 
7/4/2010 
Jonah - Part 4 - Holier Than Thou

Pastor Jason 
6/27/2010 
Jonah - Part 3 - White Flag

Pastor Jason 
6/20/2010 
Jonah - Part 2 - Distress Call

Pastor Jason 
6/13/2010 
Jonah - Part 1 - Resistance is Futile

Pastor Jason 
6/6/2010 
 |  


***

Hope in Jesus is the website name.

GJ - I get the impression this is a Church and Money Changer congregation, with Ski and Kelm preaching, the links to Willowcreek's Little College, etc.

I would listen to the sermons, if someone held a shotgun against my head. Feel free and report back in the comments.

Ski began one with pet peeves. As the Belushi character said in Animal House - "Seven years of college down the drain."

Arkansas college's lawyer calls bid to bar his firm in open-records suit harassment

Arkansas college's lawyer calls bid to bar his firm in open-records suit harassment:



"FAYETTEVILLE -- The attorney for Ecclesia College in Springdale says efforts to disqualify his law firm from a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit against the school amount to harassment and should be met with sanctions.

Arkansas legislators gave nearly $700,000 in taxpayer money from the state's General Improvement Fund to the private Christian college.

Jim Parsons' Freedom of Information lawsuit, filed Feb. 9 in Washington County Circuit Court, seeks documents from the school that are related to those state grants.

The suit contends that private organizations that receive public money, engage in activities of public interest, carry on work intertwined with a government body or receive grants to promote economic development are subject to the requirements of the state's open-records law.

Parsons, a former teacher and board member at the college, lives in Bella Vista. He also contends that Ecclesia's recent claim to be a church rather than a college puts it in violation of the state constitution regarding receipt of state money."



'via Blog this'

Rain on Rain - Another Team Jackson Event

Rachel Platten sang "Fight Song" for everyone at the Walmart
Stockholders Meeting. Next day we sat at the AMP for the
Saturday Morning Meeting.

Team Jackson routinely meets to barbecue at our house, after two or three of us attend the Saturday Morning Meeting. This often provokes grandson Alex to mention the time I turned bacon into ashes on the grill.

This time he said, "Remember the time Grampy burned up all the food?"

I said, "Alex, I just turned the bacon to ashes. Not all the food."

Alex said, "That was like burning all the food, because bacon is life." We all had a good life. The monthly denunciation about bacon will probably continue. His sisters laughed for years because, after being poked by chewing gum in the wrapper, I said, "That is chewing gum, not poking gum."

I was more careful, so the bacon and subsidiary meat survived.

Granddaughter Danielle, said earlier this spring, "The front looks like a graveyard." Nothing was green, so she saw a grim earth-tone landscape of stumps and mulch. This time they took home some roses; even more were ready for the altar on Sunday. Bell Flowers and Cat Mint are blooming, and each rose bush seems to have buds.

Joel Salatin writes about letting the landscape define itself, which is the opposite of most gardening and farming efforts.

I let good weeds grow, such as Hog Peanuts, a legume that does no harm and builds nitrogen in the soil. Many small weeds pop up to flower and seed, with shallow roots that hurt no one.

Crabgrass no longer appalls me. After a rain, the plant is easily uprooted before it creates a bushel of seed.

During a short dry spell, I shoveled the soil that ended up on the sidewalk, feeding some opportunistic weeds. This is the best soil, very fine, so I carefully gathered two shovels-full and put them around the base of new roses.

Someone who reads this blog to object will say, "But I thought you had no erosion." Mulch and cover crops decrease loss of soil from run-off, but when it rains a foot in a few days, some will end up on the sidewalk. My goal is to keep as much of the rain in the yard, and to use soil, even weeds, from the sidewalk.

Many problems with growing plants come from reading gardening books while gardening, paying no attention to the strengths of the yard. So-called weeds will claim areas left fallow. I found the violets surging into the Wild Garden, just as I might have wished. I want plants filling the area, improving the soil, feeding the beneficial creatures.

Instead of asking, "What would I like there?" a gardener should consider, "What would the land like there?" That is how gardeners learn about failures and dig up plants they put in the wrong place.

Of course, being wrong is illuminating in some ways, too. I was not supposed to put roses under the maple tree. Mrs. Ichabod ordered the bargain roses there - twice. My pleas for mercy went unheeded, and now we have wonderful roses growing around the maple. Several things helped:

  1. The area was covered with mushroom compost and earthwormed earlier.
  2. We trimmed the maple twice, to allow more sunlight on them.
  3. I watered the area especially, to help the roses compete with maple roots.

Sometimes we can add sunlight or shade to create conditions. At other times, the dominant feature will define what grows. I am more inclined to study the area first and find out what that part of the yard wants. The part that I want screening plants to grow is ideal for Elderberries, so the giant plants will expand to that area.

Fritillaries are in favor of Violets.


Individual kinds of butterflies demand monoculture for their young, so a diversity of plants will invite more kinds of butterflies. Monarchs want the Milkweed family, but Fritillaries need Violets.

The blessings accumulate. As Kudu Don Patterson would say, after extensive brain-washing at Exponential and other gatherings of Enthusiasts - "It's exponential!"

A large bush - grown for berries, flowers, or screening the yard - becomes a center of influence. Many pollinating insects come to feed, so the birds also come to feast - on the insects. A non-toxic yard without pesticides, herbicides, and insecticides will enjoy God's creatures doing this work for free.

I pruned the lower half to encourage the second bloom,
but I left the upper part alone to go to seed and leave the Cardinals in peace in the Crepe Myrtle.

I doted on the Crepe Myrtle for the blooms, but large bush was perfect for a Cardinal nest. We are happy to provide a spectacular home for the Cardinals (sorry Cubs fans).