Friday, December 1, 2017

Mirthless Mark Schroeder Comforts WELS - "WELS Is Bad. LCMS Is Worse."

WELS SP Mark Schroeder is working hard on his smile.
Sure WELS is losing members, but Missouri is losing them
twice as fast. What a relief!

From the WELS Statistics Department at Gloom, Doom, and Despair

Over half of WELS congregations are under 100 average attendance.  763 of the 1272 are 100 or less.

There are only a couple large ones.

Why Is WELS Closing Big, Old Congregations with Property Worth $1 Million?

 I don't know.



 Nor do I.
And - nothing happened.


Nor do I know.
And - nothing happened.

There are 3 states without a WELS congregation!
Maine
Rhode Island
West Virginia

There are 5 states with only 1 congregation?


Church
City
State
Average Weekly Attendance
St John  
Newark
DE
72
Community
Honolulu
HI
60
Good Shepherd
South Attleboro
MA
52
Faith
Columbus
MS
11
Christ the Redeemer
Barre
VT
38



Degenerate Swedes Have Same Standards as WELS-LCMS NIV Bible Paraphrases.
WELS Prints NIV Catechisms with the Same Philosophy

 Archbishop Antje Jackelen

See
more: http://evangelicalfocus.com/europe/3056/Swedish_Lutherans_will_no_longer_refer_to_God_as_Father




Swedish Lutherans will use gender-neutral language when referring to God:



"Instead of “In the name of the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit”, priests of the Church of Sweden will now be able to use the phrase “In the name of God and the Holy Trinity”.


A spokesperson said “a wide majority of people decided on the book” during the Church Assembly meeting. Furthermore, “when liturgy is revised we also seek to use inclusive language where appropriate when referring to people”.


Archbishop Antje Jackelen is leading the Church of Sweden since 2013. “Theologically, for instance, we know that God is beyond our gender determinations, God is not human”, she told news agency TT.


The new use of language takes effect on May 20, 2018, during Pentecost celebrations.





A NATIONAL CHURCH THAT HAS LOST ITS INFLUENCE


The Lutheran Church has 6.1 Million baptised members (in a country of 10 million).


Nevertheless, official figures show that only 5% of the population goes to church regularly."



'via Blog this'

Did I tell you years ago?


 "We are just getting started, Brett, and WELS
is right behind us."


From a reader:
In regard to Swedish Lutherans using gender neutral language when referring to God, the new ELCA hymnal, Evangelical Lutheran Worship, does that in providing an alternative for the greeting for settings one and two, "Blessed be the holy Trinity, + one God who forgives all our sins, whose mercy endures forever."


Jesus wasn't kidding when He said that "wide is the gate, and broad is the way, that leadeth to destruction, and many there be which go in thereat" (Mt 7,13).

More Autumn Leaves for the Creation Garden

Autumn Leaves, by Norma A. Boeckler

Readers enjoyed the first episode about

  1. Autumn leaves and the Creation Garden, and I had one in 2016 - 
  2. Finally, Autumn Leaves.
We have had unusually warm days, but fortunately a few frosty nights got the trees to start giving up their leaves.

I realized, about 30 years ago, that we should never take organic matter away from the garden. God mulches with leaves and plant debris, so we should too.

One neighbor delighted me by getting on his riding mower and driving over the leaf piles in the street. That really did nothing except blow the top leaves back into his neighbor's yard. But I waved, smiled, and coveted the new treasure.

Leaves on top of soil will be pulled down and reduced to food by earthworms, mites, and slugs. But leaves shredded by the lawnmower are already half-done, easier to compost, and unlikely to blow away.  My Creation-wise neighbors simply mow the leaves into their lawn, a great combination of high nitrogen grass for decomposition and leaves to build the soil.

And it rained thoroughly to soak this flaky mass, all the better for shoveling and mulching the rose garden. Today I will get more into the front yard.

Observation shows that all leaves left in the yard will disappear by late spring. Sycamores like to hang around and blow around, because they have a rugged construction, almost like they are plastic coated. But they cannot withstand the effects of rain, cold, snow, freezing, mold, and soil life. 

So I want as many leaves in the yard as possible. What does not rot into the soil by spring makes a good-looking mulch. The hunger of the soil is not for chemical fertilizer but for organic matter. One neighbor was sprinkling plants with chemical fertilizer while I was scooping his leaves and topsoil into my rose garden. Soil thief? Not at all. Top soil washes onto the sidewalk and into the street, so I recapture it.

When I cleaned the gutters, the debris coming out of the downspout looked just like black, rich potting soil - sold at gardening centers. Mine was free, discounting my labor costs. I put the rich mixture on top of the Blackberry patch, where I will rake additional leaves. I have harvested several berries from there, since Mrs. Robin thinks I am stealing her fruit. She emerges from the canes and looks at me the way a librarian does when I talk too loudly in that sacred space. She gets leaves for her nest there, too. She may pace around me in a fit, but she will not give up her building material.

 Robin by Norma A. Boeckler


If you wonder about the persistence of packing tape, you should look at a nest in the Mother of All Crepe Myrtles. Some old tape found its way into the nest as binding material. That makes me more determined to get dryer lint outdoors as soon as the winter thaws and add pieces of twine to the collection. Birds love the "trash" taken away by chemical gardeners. These clever engineers construct nests from ribbons, twigs, string, yarn, dryer lint, pieces of cardboard, colorful strips of plastic, and leaves.

Throw lengths of twine over a bush or lower tree limb and see how long they last in the early spring.

In the meantime, I spoil the insect eaters with suet in wire baskets. The woodpecker family, grackles, and starlings use suet as a substitute for bugs, but they continue to hunt for bug larvae all winter, where God conveniently stores them in bark and in bushes.

 Let's kill all the clover. It spreads on its own, hurts no one,
and collects usable nitrogen for the soil.
And the flowers smell like bubble gum!

First Shipment of Lutheran Books to African Lutheran Seminaries

 Graphic by Norma A. Boeckler
This is her author's page on Amazon.
We have known a Missouri Synod missionary for 25 years. He worked in Africa and has gone back there, but has health problems now. We have often talked about using Lutheran books.

I keep books in the our fleet of cars (a 1994 Lincoln Town Car and a 2002 Voyager). When the opportunity arises, I give them to interested people. Our biggest day included giving 10 books away at the doctor's office - Creation Gardening. I mentioned to our friend how inexpensive Luther's Sermons are, so we discussed the need for Luther's books in African seminaries.


One copy of every book title (black and white, some are color only) costs $90 at the author's price. We can ship that collection of books to Africa for $95 in a flat rate box. Note that glitches in publication caused some titles to be listed as incomplete or not available. So far, Luther's Sermons are available volumes 1-4.

Compare this to the current price of a textbook in college -
English Grammar - $160 for one book.
Mathematics - $200 for one book.

Gregory L. Jackson Author's Page

Money donated for this will go into a designated account for Bethany Lutheran Church. Thanks to our attorney, Glen Kotten, we have incorporated with a new IRS tax number.

We are starting slowly to see how this works. I am giving permission to the world missions to translate the books without any fees or permissions. The whole plan has consisted in getting Luther's Biblical doctrine recognized and taught again. The synods are not up to the task.