Tuesday, December 12, 2017

Two Comments for a Late Night Posting - Icha-peekers Alert




Almost 6,000 views after reaching the 6 million mark, so one reader asked, "When you started the blog, in your wildest dreams, did you foresee 6 million views? That is the power of the internet."

No, I never imagined that and did not really expect it for any reason. But I kept posting new material all the time, outlasting many others. Writing on a blog exhausts most people, but I love every aspect of it - research, graphics, SEO, polemics, humor.

"When you finally die, everyone will be so happy." That early comment motivated me to keep going. At one WELS convention, every computer was logged onto Ichabod.

Another person wrote specifically about WELS, "Thank you again for exposing the truth about this alcoholic good-ole-boys' club and the dying synod's apostasy." 


One Book's Progress



Spener seems to have gathered Luther's sermons, and there is a history behind the collection Lenker organized and edited, with the help of translators from various synods. His background was decidedly non-SynCon.

Various people have republished the Lenker edition, including an Internet version in PDF form, in various languages.

I found the whole set at a site called God Rules. I downloaded that to the blog, which was a big venture, but lots of fun.

I took those sermons from the blog and put them in Word, which we began to edit. That included members of our church, a Missouri pastor, and a Missouri member. Norma A. Boeckler agreed to illustrate it.

I took the initial edits and went through each volume. Some were scanning errors and rather funny. Others were subtle errors in citations, which can happen for many reasons. The Lenker print edition had its own errors, and one edition (mine) conflicted with another one (Virginia Roberts').

After fixing as much as I can, I go over all the format issues, which means reading the volume forwards and backwards. Sometimes looking for mistakes is reason to bypass reading comprehension. But some passages are so arresting that I slow down and read paragraphs.

Norma A. Boeckler inserts her art in the finished volume or the nearly finished one. I go through it again because the volumes are blurring together in my mind now. There are peculiar repetitive errors I try to catch with control-f. And broken paragraphs.

Janie Sullivan gets the completed file. She polishes the format and submits to the rules of Amazon and Kindle. She finds errors and irons out mistakes I left behind. I "fixed" some things and introduced some new glitches.

Are we done yet? No. Amazon has to check it with its software. Sometimes an issue will come up. Then I get the proof to check and OK.

Once the book is OKed, the title can be added to the author's page and social media picks it up.

Method in the Madness
Why bother, since many things are already in the public domain? The current list, which includes a number of books in full color, costs a grand total of $90 to send to one address in the USA. It costs another $100 to send to Africa.

It is a lot of work but also very satisfying. Everytime someone enjoys Luther for the first time, an angel gets his wings. Really.

 
 Thx. LOL.

Additional Progress - Volume V of Luther's Sermons - And African News Too



Janie Sullivan now has Volume V, the last of the Gospel sermons, and is getting it ready for Amazon print books and Kindle e-books.

Virginia Roberts has already prepared edits for Volume VI, so I am getting that done during Christmas lay-offs. As I told the English class, "They call it vacation, but there is no pay, so I call it being laid off." I enjoy the break, once grading is done.

In fact, Virginia has already started Volume VII edits. The last three volumes are the Epistle sermons - and they soar too.

God willing, we can be done with the set and the Gems volume in early 2018, far ahead of my best expectations - thanks to the help of so many. Norma Boeckler has the art ready before the editing is done. How so? She looked up a complete set of sermons in PDF, so she can figure out the layout of each one.

 The total cost for all of the above - including shipping to the missionary - is $90.
We already have the $100 for the mailbox to Africa.


Africa News
As I wrote before, there is a great need for Luther books in the African seminaries.

We already received a donation for the shipping cost of the first books - $100 for a mailbox, 20 pounds. By chance we have free shipping via the missionary's daughter.

So I have ordered a new set of books sent so those books can go to a second seminary fairly soon. The shipping is already paid for, thanks to that previous gift.

If you want to give toward the African seminary book fund, make out the check to Bethany Lutheran Church, 1104 Letha Drive, Springdale, 72762. We have an IRS tax number as a church and are incorporated, thanks to attorney Glen Kotten.

Some people use PayPal, so I transfer stipulated gifts to the church fund. PayPal allows a memo on funds sent, so that is an easy way to route the gift. Dr. Lito Cruz had us get that started, and it is handy for a lot of uses, such as paying for the mailbox, which is sent from St. Louis.

One reader is sending six copies of each Luther volume as Christmas gifts. My thinking goes like this - the readers are the best distributors, since the big money church publishers boycott me. The important part is getting people to read Luther again, so giving Luther books is one way to do that, and the cost is very low.

In the near future, the Gems from Luther's Sermons, in full color, will be available as a great introduction to the best of Luther.


Gardening and the Gospel - One by One - Not Giant Movements

 The collars around the new Crepe Myrtles
will protect them against a dry cold winter
and discourage rabbits from chewing on their new sprouts.


My neighbors are cleaning up their leaves while I am gathering them to improve the soil. Some days I only scoop some fragmented leaves under the Mother of all Crepe Myrtles.

Gardening is perfected through a series a small activities, each one seemingly insignificant. When I made the decision to use rose collars, I bought some and gradually fitted them around the new Crepe Myrtles and the roses. Leaves fell and the ground crew stuffed each collar with leaves, since i have most of the leaves from three yards.

Pardon me while I indulge in some sales talk. The manager always said, "Back end activity leads to front end sales." They even had a chart. I averaged so much income each time I dialed a number and earned so much an hour each time I met with someone. Scientific. In gardening that means building the soil, no matter what else is done. Fertile soil, teeming with microbes and soil creatures, will support plants, keep them healthy, and feed them during drought.

The old farm slogan is, "The only time I know what I'm doing is when I spread manure." In other words, adding organic matter will always be worthwhile for the plants. Our other plans and methods are open for debate. Fortunately, for our neighbors, we have no access to manure.

The Gospel has been reduced to a product marketed by devilishly clever people. Whether we give credit to Robert Schuller, Fuller Seminary professors, or other charlatans, the message is the same - "We can figure out how to grow a very large church, a yuuuuuge church, and this is the recipe."

That fits into the mainline apostate formula followed by the UniSynod: ELCA, WELS, ELS, LCMS, CLC (sic). They say - "God is all grace, so the entire world is already forgiven and saved. The Gospel is simply telling them this good news. Amen. Halleluia."


The Gospel
The mass movement hokum, spread by Donald McGavran, places a lot of trust in large numbers, not surprising for a man trained in sociology rather than Biblical doctrine. Some might call it ironic, since talk of numbers led to vast shrinkage everywhere.

But the goal was not the Gospel, but apostasy. The leaders got everyone involved and very busy, spending enormous sums at Fuller, Willow Creek, Trinity Divinity, and other snake oil emporiums.

The portrait of Jesus in the Gospels is just the opposite. Vast crowds came to Him, but He did not boast about them. Instead, the focus of each miracle is an individual whose faith was a significant part in the healing. People brought their friend in faith. Some asked for miracles on behalf of others - in faith. The woman with the flow approached Jesus - in faith.

The WELS apostates were clever in warning, "Do not make faith a cause of salvation." They are skilled in the art of poisoning the well. If anyone dares to ask about a felony, "Who told you?" Then they rail against that person, so that merely asking is by itself a felony, not to mention knowing that awful person who told. Faith as a cause is a philosophical diversion, away from the Scriptural truth that God's Word plants faith in our hearts. As the Gospels teach, the story of Jesus spread and people had faith in His divine power to heal.

How many times did Jesus say, "Your faith had made you whole"? I wonder if the WELS leader would scold Jesus for saying that. But they do not trouble themselves with their inconsistencies and contradictions. The power and the glory is theirs.

The Gospels do not reveal any special message except spreading the Word. The Parable of the Sower makes that clear, but the Fulleroids get that wrong too (an indication of their reading comprehension approaching zero). The Sower teaches us to sow the Word with abandon - not to "test the soil first." Whadda hooot. When synodical jackasses test the soil, they always find rich suburbs the most delightful. Growing suburbs - even better.

Jesus' message is founded upon faith in Him. Yes, that is true, no matter what the seminary professors claim. The foundational sin is not believing in Him. John 16:8ff. Therefore, the work of the Holy Spirit, according to Jesus Himself, is to teach faith in Him.

Claiming that unbelievers are forgiven or saved - or both - is a horrible blasphemy against Jesus and the Holy Spirit.

So how did Jesus organize His church? I find nothing beyond charging His disciples with teaching the Gospel of faith in Him. He did not appoint bishops, although ELDONA thinks bishops - or A Bishop - is the Chief Article of the Christian Church. The New Testament speaks very little about church structure, which is why they UniSynod studies and talks about structure all the time. They have no faith, so they have to discuss something.

Not that God works without purpose or result. When people come to faith, the Spirit distributes gifts so that each person has something to contribute. The combination is miraculous because that is how God works.

To borrow a phrase from Luther, God delights in doing the best work through the most unlikely people. They discover what they can do together in faith.

Schmauk has a statement on this, which someone will probably resend to me. (That can create a strange pun - I resent that quotation.) The point is that we should not rush around trying to be successful but only try to be faithful. Individual congregations come and go. The Gospel remains forever.