Friday, September 11, 2020

Confirmation of Bishop Martin Stephan's Syphilis

 


Those who have researched this in St. Louis know that the young women suffered a syphilis outbreak due to Bishop Stephan. The pastors overlooked his abandonment of his family, his consorting with young women for years. I agree with the theory that he doomed several young women to misery and death, and that made extreme punitive measures seem to be justified. It also removed the continuing scandal of the bishop’s harem. Objective Justification covers a multitude of sin, because everyone is born forgiven, in that Halle-based scheme.

The Syphilis Story Is Known, But Kept Underwraps

The person who has done a lot of research on Lutheran and Biblical topics sent this comment from LCMS Synod President Matthew Harrison:
Even by 1817, the University of Wittenberg, by that reformation, or nearly so, was the seat of Lutheran orthodoxy, still enduring in Germany. What did the Prussian king do? He closed it. Combined it with Halle University. The university built by the Prussian kings; the university where, by 1800, one of the guys who was bringing about a revival, by the name of [Johann Ephraim] Scheibel, was the teacher of one Martin Stephan, who was the teacher of one C.F.W. Walther. Scheibel said, “In 1750, Halle was known for its deep piety. In 1800, it’s known for syphilis.” So there’s a bit of the story.[1]



In 1996, Pastor X named August Suelflow as the source – that Stephan had syphilis. My researcher wrote this,
It [Stephan’s syphilis] was common knowledge among pastors around St. Louis and those involved in the Concordia Historical Institute, and of course down in the settlement south of St. Louis made famous by the book Zion on the Mississippi. However, there's nothing in print, all word of mouth, so he and a small group confronted Sueflow about it. Sueflow confirmed it, saying there were historical documents in CHI that never sees the light of day and is in a secure location of CHI.[2]



[1] “Challenges to Lutheranism: Unionism.” Issues, Etc. Radio Conversation with Matthew Harrison, October 28, 2015.
[2] Written communication, September 10, 2020.