Thursday, January 25, 2018

Oh, The Arrogance of False Teachers

 Wartburg Seminary - alma mater -
look up the Latin.

I should look up the link to the book - The Air I Breathe is Wartburg Air. We can forgive the rah-rah approach for an alumni book. But if someone is truly interested, enough of the book is on Google to read and gag, without the normal medical aids (ipecac).

Here is a partially readable text.

 Do you want to impress me?
Cite Tillich the adulterer who made Barth look faithful in comparison. Weiblen appropriated Tillich, no one dare appropriate Reu (those bad conservatives).

The book is largely a transcription of their talks, so I was curious about their impression of the giant of that school (Reu), a seminary founded by Loehe, becoming Iowa Synod, then ALC, then The ALC, then ELCA and now dying.

Tis funny how ELCA marketed itself as new in 1987, but the heads of this school are still ALC. Not a merger no - but a New Lutheran Church with the radicals forced in with quotas.

Reu was a bit of a Social Gospeler (social activism) and also a bit loose on Biblical inerrancy. However, he became more conservative about both issues, for which the liberals never forgave him. As a keen student of Lutheran materials, Reu wrote Luther and the Scriptures, which is still floating around, stating the obvious - that Luther taught inerrancy.

 Does this sound like WELS, ELS, LCMS, CLC (sic)?
Yes, these sects honor this statement by daily breaching the spirit of Reu's essay. The previous Wartburg seminary president, before Louise Johnson, MDiv, helped instigate joint communion with the Reformed...and other communions, too.


From time to time I quote Reu on unionism, because his essay on that topic was so good.


Bodensieck taught at Wartburg too, and Bodensieck helped midwife The ALC 1960 double-talk on inerrancy, with inerrancy in the Constitution, which they undermined in the amendments or appendix. That was a crucial pivotal point as the ELCA was formed, with The ALC taking credit for being conservative while doing the opposite, such as starting Lutherans Concerned which - if I have the parentage correct - ended up as Reconciling Works. I will omit the obvious droll remarks, but the same radicalism can take on various names with the same few people involved.


Ex-lawmaker to testify in case of former Arkansas senator accused of getting kickbacks

 Rep. Micah Neal pleaded guilty.


 "Lay not up for yourselves treasures on earth,
where moth and rust corrupt, thieves break in and steal."
Evangelicals do not like their tax money used for bribes.


Ex-lawmaker to testify in case of former Arkansas senator accused of getting kickbacks:

 Shelton and his lawyer, to be featured on
What Not To Wear To Court.


"The U.S. Department of Justice alleges that Neal and former state Sen. Jon Woods, both of Springdale, took kickbacks in return for steering $550,000 in state grants to Ecclesia College in Springdale.

The kickbacks, according to the government's indictment, were passed through a consulting firm owned by Randell Shelton Jr., a mutual friend of Woods and Ecclesia President Oren Paris III. Woods, Shelton and Paris face trial April 9."



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Pew: Unitarians, Atheists, Agnostics Most Favorable to Abortion



Pew: Unitarians, Atheists, Agnostics Most Favorable to Abortion:



"Those who identify as Unitarian Universalists, Atheists or Agnostics are the strongest supporters of legalized abortion in America, according to a report published by the Pew Research Center this week.
Ninety percent of members of the Unitarian Universalist Church, a liberal religion professing no creed or specific belief in God, said that abortion should be legal “in all or most cases,” Pew found, while atheists and agnostics followed behind with 87 percent of each group asserting the same thing.

Notably, 75 percent of all Americans are against abortion-on-demand and believe that abortion should not be legal in all cases, as it is currently in the United States. This means there is significant support among voters for restrictions on legal abortions.

The majorities of nearly all mainline Christian churches agreed to the same statement, though in smaller percentages, while less than 50 percent of Catholics and evangelicals believe that abortion should be legal in all or most cases. Seventy-nine percent of Episcopalians, 65 percent of Presbyterians, 58 percent of Methodists, and 56 percent of Anglicans support legal abortion “in all or most cases.”"



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