Friday, September 11, 2020

Q Alert Borrowed My Favorite Paine Quote, 2019

Thomas Paine


THESE are the times that try men's souls. The summer soldier and the sunshine patriot will, in this crisis, shrink from the service of their country; but he that stands by it now, deserves the love and thanks of man and woman. 

Tyranny, like hell, is not easily conquered; yet we have this consolation with us, that the harder the conflict, the more glorious the triumph. What we obtain too cheap, we esteem too lightly: it is dearness only that gives every thing its value. 

Heaven knows how to put a proper price upon its goods; and it would be strange indeed if so celestial an article as FREEDOM should not be highly rated.

Thomas Paine, The American Crisis, 1776


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Sep 11, 2020 1:46:33 PM EDT
Q !!Hs1Jq13jV6 ID: fc0dc2 No. 10604573 


“Tyranny, like hell, is not easily conquered; yet we have this consolation with us, that the harder the conflict, the more glorious the triumph.” ― Thomas Paine, The American Crisis Q

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.


From Johann Arndt - And the Lutheran Library

Johann Arndt

Something good from John Arndt:
[18] Whoever yields too much to one sin, undoubtedly opens a door to many others. Sin never comes alone, but, like a noxious weed, spreads itself on every side, and gains more ground every day. And as the darkness becomes greater accordingly as the sun retires, so as the holy life of Christ departs from us, the darkness and sin increase, till at length the man is swallowed up in eternal darkness.
On the contrary, if a man devote himself to the practice of one virtue, he gains thereby an opportunity of practicing all the rest in time, and cannot but daily proceed from one to another.
This admirable connection is represented by St. Peter as a chain, in which all the rings are linked together, and none is suffered to separate from another. “Add,” he says, “to your faith, virtue; and to virtue, knowledge; and to knowledge, temperance; and to temperance, patience; and to patience, godliness; and to godliness, brotherly kindness; and to brotherly kindness, charity;” superadding one virtue continually to another, and crowning all at last with this promise: “If these things be in you and abound, they make you that ye shall neither be barren nor unfruitful in the knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ.” 2 Peter 1:5-8.
To sum up all in a few words: Whoever is not earnestly bent on the exercise of such heavenly virtues as these, certainly knows not Christ, and is void of all saving knowledge: whereas, if a man by faith grow in virtue, he also grows in Christ himself. On the contrary, the wrathful, the covetous, the proud, the impatient, do not grow in Christ, but in the devil.
From: John Arndt. True Christianity New American Edition by Charles F. Schaeffer. 1868. LutheranLibrary.org

Draft - More Details on Threatening, Robbing, and Kidnapping the Bishop



May 28, 300 Roared Off the Steamship

Walther organized the mob that arrived in Perryville and surrounded the bishop’s cabin. Only those against the bishop were allowed to take the trip. They threatened his life, held him at gunpoint, forced him out of his home, stole all his money, took all his books and personal possessions, and forced him across the river to Illinois. They even disrobed him to make sure he was not hiding any money.[1]

This action has been called “deposing the bishop,” but it was a series of crimes and completely unscriptural. This mob activity led by Walther set the precedent in the LCMS-WELS-ELS for ignoring due process and Matthew 18, assuming dictatorial powers, and abusing people with the theme of might makes right.

First of all, only the people already in agreement with Walther were allowed to travel from St. Louis to Perryville. Those with a different opinion were left behind, not a voters’ assembly but a kangaroo court. They were fired up for execution, not for pastoral admonition and discipline. To compound the deceit of the times, the LCMS guides in Peryville today tell the innocent that the bishop was given three options. But only one option is needed at the end of a gun barrel – obey! Bishop Stephan had no advance notice of this angry horde and refused to acknowledge their authority. The former clergy arranged to have the real estate agent (!) read the charges to Stephan.

The bishop was charged with misuse of the funds, fornication, and adultery, the same charges brought against him in a court of law in Dresden, ending his career there. Since the same lawyers, Vehse and Marbach, were there in the Dresden court, people should only marvel that these were suddenly charges never before proven. Mrs. Stephan and the primary mistress Louise Guenther both testified.

The mob outside Stephan’s cabin whipped the walls to terrify him, and he felt afraid for his life. He signed the document of accusation, though obtaining a guilty plea through death threats is hardly legal or Biblical.

The next anti-Scriptural step was searching him bodily for any money on him and the cabin for the rest of the money. At the Walther site, the guide showed me the chest where Stephan’s gold was kept. “That would be worth millions today.” The man showed no remorse over stealing a vast amount of money, which was perhaps a mix of the society’s money and the bishop’s. The implication of the tour was – he had it coming to him. Never mentioned – the society was financially strapped from foolish spending, not all of it the bishop’s fault. The former pastors also took money from the fund and that was not consistently recorded or paid back. (Zion)

Stephan was forced to sleep overnight on the ground, another strange concept not addressed in Walther’s Pastoral Theology. He was forced across the river at gunpoint, with only 100 dollars, a few clothes, and a shovel. The mob took all his personal possessions and library. Stealing a library was replayed when Seminex stole the books from Concordia Seminary, St. Louis, for their own school, claiming, as one did, “They were our books.” Antinomianism reigns with legalism where Objective Justification is taught.

The trip across the river was probably on a ferry, not in a rowboat. The bishop was dumped in Illinois, sick, with not enough to survive. Future pleas to provide some food were refused. He sued for the return of his property and received almost nothing. The beautiful chalice given to him was kept by Walther and used at every communion service. Thieves often keep trophies to admire.

The lawyer Marbach, on behalf of the Society, interrogated Louise Guenther - after the fact, so the verdict and punishment were first and the facts second. The issue had already been settled in Germany and verified by her cozy position on the ship near Stephan’s cabin, living above him in the same building in St. Louis. Could Marbach and Vehse have traveled for weeks on the same ship and not seen anything amiss, with the bishop’s wife and his children (except one) left behind?

Louise joined the bishop in Illinois about two weeks later. He became the first bishop in Illinois and served as the pastor of a congregation that still exists in the LCMS. He died in Illinois, seven years after Walther’s mob threatened, robbed, and kidnapped him. A rumor lived on that Stephan had gold coins in his cane when he was expelled. The author of Servant of His Word examined the cane and found nothing there. The irony of thinking the bishop escaped with some money – but without his land, cabin, books, and savings – is too rich to ignore.

Not satisfied with this, Walther talked Stephan’s son into giving away the 80 acres in Perryville belonging legally to his father.

The Ninth Commandment.

Thou shalt not covet thy neighbor's house.
What does this mean?--Answer.
We should fear and love God that we may not craftily seek to get our neighbor's inheritance or house, and obtain it by a show of [justice and] right, etc., but help and be of service to him in keeping it.


[1] Servant of the Word, cane story.

 Red Bud, Illinois