Saturday, August 5, 2017

Someone Asked about Reactions to Compare and Contrast - A Catechism for Universal Forgiveness without Faith - UOJ

 "Who's the dude? Cool hat!"
Concordia St. Louis Seminary students
at the Waldo Werning Evangelism Center.

A reader asked about reactions to Compare and Contrast - A Catechism for Universal Forgiveness without Faith - UOJ.

As stated earlier, and borrowed from a forgotten, wise person - There are three stages of reaction:

  1. Loud cheering means the effort was a waste of time, because everyone already agrees.
  2. Anger means the ideas have awakened animosity, not because they are wrong, but because they are correct.
  3. Silence signifies the most disturbed reaction. That means the ideas are so threatening that a debate is not going to be started, lest others catch on.
Exposing Robert Preus' horrible theology and worse exegesis, 1987, prompted no reactions at all. Likewise, no one deals with his vastly improved position in Justification and Rome. Apparently, the Preus Family Enterprises imagines they own all rights to Robert Preus. But published scholarship - whether sound or toxic - is not like the sacred relics of Elvis Presley. Anyone can and should debate ideas.

Update - I did get some positive responses, from two lay readers who really understand the doctrinal issues. Clergy seldom respond. 

Tis funny how often I have been banned, blacklisted, and silenced. One would think they would welcome the chance to debate someone so misguided, so horrible that cockroaches recoil in horror. Paul McCain made some of his feeble attempts, helped by his alcoholic friends in Fox Valley. Who says WELS and Missouri cannot get along? 

Of course, the Booze Brothers picking up friends like Kudu Don Patterson and Paul McCain is nothing to brag about. Why are UOJ Stormtroopers always so angry and bitter? I have yet to see any spiritual fruits from the lot of them. Rancid Pietism only produces rationalism, Talmudic rules for shunning, and empty seminaries. Those UOJ friendships break up when one can no longer use the other - Otten and McCain, McCain and just about everyone, not to mention the snarling and hissing denizens of LutherQuest (sic) and the CLC (sic). Meanwhile, a few Lutherans annually gather at the Emmaus to have their eyes blinded rather than opened.

We should remember what Luther said about the Holy Spirit. He is so powerful that He can turn the greatest evil into the greatest good, as He did at the crucifixion of Christ. 



The present apostate leaders of the Little Sect, Missouri, and WELS are not the greatest evil. They are simply riding out the landslide as Lutherdom collapses in America. The extremes are so comical that they seem dreamlike. The executives pay themselves like princes and Cardinals, but they starve those who do the work - and I do not mean the seminary professors. The professors do as little work as possible, as few hours as possible, and produce no worthwhile scholarship. The boards, commissions, and ladies aid societies simply march on in obedience, everyone listening for the latest shun orders, the newest fad, the ray of hope in the midst of so much carefully managed mediocrity. ELCA beckons because ELCA has won while losing.



The baton passes from Bohlmann to Barry to Harrison,
and everything only gets worse.
All winning candidates have been certified and approved by Herman Otten.


Buckwheat Wins - But I Will Trim It Back in the Rose Garden

 Buckwheat can be like bagpipe music:
enough is enough.


The main invasion of Japanese beetles is over, and the Buckwheat is at full growth, some of it chest high. On Bethany's birthday I cut a perfect Mr. Lincoln rose and brought it inside.

I was returning from errands with Mrs. Ichabod when we spotted several birds on the ground near the large Crepe Myrtle, which is re-blooming. I was not surprised to see a Mourning Dove on the ground. They work the ground all the time for seeds, and plenty of Buckwheat was going to seed.

But we saw a male Cardinal reach for the Buckwheat and tear the seeds off. He was very aggressive and tore away at the plant. We loved seeing the actual harvesting of the seeds. Because of Buckwheat flour and pancakes, people think of the plant as a grain.

Wiki says:
Despite the name, buckwheat is not related to wheat, as it is not a grass. Instead, buckwheat is related to sorrelknotweed, and rhubarb. Because its seeds are eaten and rich in complex carbohydrates, it is referred to as a pseudocereal.

I have repented of planting so much Buckwheat in the rose garden, because the soil helped it grow taller than the roses. However, the mistake will be erased when cold weather comes. Several gardening friends are also growing it as a cover crop. Buckwheat has a number of excellent qualities:

  • Short season crop, rapidly flowering and going to seed.
  • Dying off from cold weather, so not a pest.
  • Growth and tight root system push out long-term weeds.
  • Roots contribute 75% of soil organic matter.
We went from super-dry to 1.5 inches of rain during the Greek lesson on Ustream. When the sun comes up I will use the electric hedge clipper to mow down the Buckwheat in sections, day by day. 

The next task is to place a powder in the soil to promote a disease that will kill the Japanese beetle grubs and other white grubs. This milky spore disease is found naturally in soil and increases there when grubs die from the disease. Since Japanese beetles do not travel far, killing the adults next year and making the soil inhospitable to the grubs should greatly reduce the damage. Our very warm winter probably did as much for the Japanese beetle population as it did for the fleas and ticks. 

I may use a lot more Borage as a cover crop.
The rapidly blooming and seeding flowers attract bees,
and the flowers are good to eat.
My gardens are in a jungle state now, because necessary weeding did not take place before the Inferno weather - 100+ heat factor. I did not want to yank weeds in that weather and the teen helpers were no more willing than I. Next came bursts of rain to leverage the weed growth and Buckwheat, Buckwheat, Buckwheat.

Joe Pye Weed:
read this before sneering at me.


However, in my defense, we have butterflies all over the gardens. I keep adding butterfly plants - dill, parsley, Joe Pye Weed, salvia, etc. 

Creation Gardening means adopting habits that few others have:
  • Using as many leaves, newspapers, and wood products as possible.
  • Gathering as many organic products as possible, from coffee grounds to manure to neighbor's garden cuttings. Mr. Gardener gave me all of his garden trash, placed right in my compost bin. Later he took my extra chicken wire, which was a in the way for me and free for him.
  • Avoiding all toxins, including chemical fertilizers.
  • Diversifying the plants so that pollinators always have plenty of food.
  • Allowing for trashiness, since many creatures need leaf litter, certain weeds, and rotting matter for food and shelter.
  • Providing clean water for several bird baths, shallow pans of water for toads and other beneficial creatures. 
  • Placing logs on the ground, which are great perches for birds and squirrels, and they feed the soil.
  • Never tilling. If someone appreciates the enormous power of soil fungi, he will sell his tiller to someone and disturb the soil as little as possible.


The Creating Word had this all worked out at the very beginning. Modern farming in America has depleted the soil through plowing and chemical fertilizers. 

Another alarming feature of modern farming is dealing with standing water by draining or tiling fields. This practice has led to excessive flooding downstream, more drainage tile, and bigger levees to push even more water downstream. Cover crops loosen the soil and root systems carrying rain and snowmelt deep into the soil.