April 2008 - Posts

National Weather Service issues freeze warning for early Thursday morning

GlobalWarming More global warming woes for Idaho.

From the Idaho Statesman:

The National Weather Service has issued a freeze warning for Thursday morning for most of the Treasure Valley.

A warm weather system hanging over the Valley is expected to move out Wednesday night bringing light winds, clearing skies and temperatures in the mid-20s to lower 30s Thursday morning.

Freezing temperatures will remain in the area from 3 to 9 a.m. Thursday, according to forecasters.

According to the National Weather Service, a freeze warning means sub-freezing temperatures are imminent or highly likely. Conditions likely will kill crops and other sensitive vegetation.

On Wednesday, there is a chance of rain and snow showers before noon in parts of the Treasure Valley. Scattered showers could continue through the day.

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Lawmakers Consider Tax On Fast Food: 'Sin' Tax Could Help Fund Struggling Hospitals

It was just a matter of time.

Ask liberals what they don’t like, and just wait for it to be taxed.

Remember the words of Ronald Reagan:

If it moves, tax it. If it keeps moving, regulate it. And if it stops moving, subsidize it.

From WCBS TV:

The sputtering economy has caused an increase in prices of many staples including gasoline, rice, ice cream, even beer. Now some lawmakers in New Jersey are considering taking food taxes a step further and install a proverbial "sin" tax on fast food.

Yes, the idea of marking up your favorite fast food burger or pack of fries is actually being tossed around, and it's not settling well with many residents.

"They're taxing everything. Now you're gonna tax fast food? That's crazy," said Newark resident Miriam Robertson.

Added Livingston resident Tina Abrahamian: "No one wants to be taxed. I mean, it's a necessity to eat and people need to eat and with everything skyrocketing, that's the last thing we want to tax."

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The Economics of Panhandling

My Econ professor in graduate school once talked about all the money that panhandlers could make.

He said that when you consider not having to report any taxes (federal, state, etc), not paying Social Security or Medicare/Medicaid, a panhandler can make out like a bandit.

Now comes this great news report on panhandling.

At $50 an hour, it can be quite a lucrative business.

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Quote of the Day

"It never ceases to amaze me the hoops people will go through to try to avoid taxes."

Tennessee Revenue Commissioner Reagan Farr.

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Liberal Dilemma

Via the Club for Growth:

A 67-year-old anti-trust law in Pennsylvania is preventing Wal-Mart from selling $4 generic drugs. Instead, over four dozen different drugs have to be sold for at least $9.

So...if you're a liberal, what side of the argument do you support? Do you defend Wal-Mart (God forbid) and repeal the law so that people can get their much-needed drugs at "an everyday" low price? Or do you side with the mom-and-pop pharmacies that supposedly can't compete against the big, bad Wal-Mart?

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Stupid Quote of the Day

From MSNBC.com:

Last week, French Agriculture Minister Michel Barnier warned E.U. officials against “too much trust in the free market.”

“We must not leave the vital issue of feeding people,” he said, “to the mercy of market laws and international speculation.”

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Who Gets Farm Subsidies in Latah County?

EWG's 2007 database of farm subsidy recipients is out.

Here’s the list of top 25 Latah County recipients :

Rank Recipient ownership
information available
Location Total Direct Payments
2007
1 Thompson Farms Moscow, ID 83843 $84,699
2 Moser Partners Colton, WA 99113 $62,637
3 Norm Druffel & Sons Gp Pullman, WA 99163 $61,940
4 Jencrops General Ptr Genesee, ID 83832 $55,912
5 Kyle & Lisa Hawley Moscow, ID 83843 $52,641
6 Garry & Connie Esser Moscow, ID 83843 $47,388
7 Nelson Brothers Troy, ID 83871 $43,785
8 Joe And Pamela Anderson Potlatch, ID 83855 $41,394
9 Mark Thomas Dennler Juliaetta, ID 83535 $41,101
10 Driscoll Farms Inc Troy, ID 83871 $40,000
11 John Meyer Five Inc Uniontown, WA 99179 $39,956
12 Edwin Gilbert Salisbury Moscow, ID 83843 $39,382
13 K & L Farms Gp Farmington, WA 99128 $39,120
14 Ridgeview Farms Troy, ID 83871 $39,060
15 Herman Farms Genesee, ID 83832 $37,973
16 Alan L Lyon Moscow, ID 83843 $37,033
17 Doug Or Barb Scoville Dba D & B Potlatch, ID 83855 $36,282
18 Wolf Corporate Farms Inc Uniontown, WA 99179 $32,473
19 Renfrow Brothers Troy, ID 83871 $32,442
20 Pleasant Hill Farms Troy, ID 83871 $31,251

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Best entry-level salaries for new grads

According to CNN, the #1 spot goes to economists!

  • Economics - $52,926
  • Nursing - $52,129
  • Chemistry - $52,125
  • Political science/government - $43,594
  • Human resources - $40,250
  • History - $35, 956
  • Communications - $35,196
  • English language and literature - $34,757
  • Journalism - $32,250
  • Psychology - $30,877
  • Public relations/organizational communications - $30, 667
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Ranting Rev's Education Theories Strike At Heart of Obama

From Michael Medved. Just a short extract of an excellent article.

The Ranting Rev is back, trailing malodorous clouds of sulfurous new controversy, imperiling the Obama campaign at its very core. The Obama promise of “a more perfect union” directly contradicts the Jeremiah Wright insistence on unbridgeable racial difference and distinction.

Nothing makes this pastor-protégé conflict more obvious or more significant than Wright’s crackpot theories on education and his fiery insistence that the different “brains” of black kids and white kids require totally different educational approaches.

In his Detroit NAACP speech on Sunday night, Dr. Wright cited (and somewhat distorted) the controversial work of a professor at Wayne State University named Janice Hale, suggesting that “in comparing African-American children and European-American children in the field of education, we were comparing apples and rocks.”

And which group of kids, according to Reverend Wright, count as “rocks” – not shiny, juicy fruit capable of providing nourishment, but inorganic pieces of dead matter notable mostly for their threat of smashing school windows? If he thinks of black kids as “rocks” (on which teachers might break their teeth) he’s recycling hateful white supremacist ideology. If it’s white kids who are only rocks, he’s a black racist. Either way, he’s an idiot.

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Harvard: $100 million gift = 1/3 of one percent of endowment

From the 5 May edition of the Weekly Standard:  

Fight Fiercely, Harvard!
Good news from Cambridge. David Rockefeller, Class of 1936, has “pledged $100 million to increase dramatically learning opportunities for Harvard undergraduates through international experiences and participation in the arts. Mr. Rockefeller’s is the largest gift from an alumnus in Harvard’s history.” For those keeping score at home, this will increase the $34 billion Harvard endowment by roughly one-third of one percent.

As one of my readers notes:

Sheesh. At one-third of one percent, Harvard could pay all its undergraduates $100 million a year just out off the interest on their bloated endowment and still have 5-10 percent left over to permanently endow a dozen different colleges every year! But that would pale, of course, in comparison to the importance of giving Harvard's poor underprivileged 18 and 21 year olds some academic tourism experience and opportunity to do finger painting (alternatively, they could go over to see Yale's latest senior art projects and witness how self-insemination and miscarriage is reclaiming the arts in the Ivy League).

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Maine wants to tax soda to pay for health care.

The Nanny State at its best.

Via the Tax Foundation:

Maine Pushes through Nanny State Tax Increases; Says, Who Cares About Personal Freedom?

Back when cigarette tax increases were justified by politicians on the grounds of paternalism (even though they really just wanted more money), critics argued that the same argument could be applied to other unhealthy activities and products like candy bars or soft drinks. But such criticisms were dismissed as being scare tactics and unrealistic. But now the nannies at groups like the totalitarian Center for the Science in the Public Interest are having their voices heard in the push towards even more state control over our lives (largely through tax policy), much like the American Cancer Society has done over the past two decades on cigarette taxes. Of course, all of this is in the name of public health. (You as an adult aren't smart enough to make up your own mind about what to drink.)

Policymakers in Maine are the latest to succumb to this pressure of raising money by targeting specific products. This time it goes beyond the usual suspects of cigarettes and alcohol. If you drink soda, you're now going to pay as much as 22 cents more for a 2-liter bottle. Yes, 22 cents more on that 2-liter bottle of Coca-Cola, Pepsi, Dr. Pepper, or even generic Sam's Choice Cola (assuming Wal-Marts are allowed in Maine). This extra revenue is designed to help pay for health care for self-employed individuals and small business owners. Such a policy has basically no justification in sound public finance. Such a policy is likely even regressive given that the tax will disproportionately be borne by low-income Maine residents in order to finance a spending program that disproportionately benefits upper-income residents (those who own businesses and are self-employed).

Critics have complained about the impact it will have on the state's economy. I say that's a secondary concern to the fact that politicians in Maine seem to not give a darn about individual freedom. Either way though, let's raise a toast to more people crossing the border and going into tax-free New Hampshire to buy their alcohol and soda.

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Proposed 1500% Tax Hike on Beer -- College Republicans Confront Assemblyman

This cracks me up.

"A 1500% increase in any tax is intolerable. These sleazy politicians think they can get away with it by taxing something other than our paychecks. Well I've got news for Beall: for many working-class college students, a big chunk of our paycheck is spent on beer. For them, this is highway robbery. The truth is that this tax is completely regressive. What percentage of income do the wealthiest Californians spend on beer? I'm guessing not much. For us, it can be as high as 60% of our paycheck."

Via Flash Report.

And no surprise: Assemblyman Jim Beall is a Democrat.

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Atlas Shrugged: The Movie

Scott Holleran over at Box Office Mojo talked to Michael Burns, vice chairman of Lionsgate, the studio that is planning to make the movie Atlas Shrugged.

You can check out the Baldwin Entertainment Group’s website for more info.

Holleran confirmed that Angelina Jolie will star as Dagny Taggart. (Carl: will having Angelina star in it be enough for you to see it?)

In high school, I did a video class project on John Gault and Atlas Shrugged. The liberal teacher warned me of the dangers of libertarianism when I was 16. I didn’t listen to her.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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The Global Warming Hysteria that Isn’t

ClimateWire (subscription required) reports that a new study from the Pew Research Center for the People & the Press has terrible news for the church of global warming.

When given a list of issues and asked to state whether the issue should be a “top priority” for President Bush and the Congress, climate change is at the absolute bottom of the public’s list of priorities for the federal government.

Here’s the list:

  • Strengthening the nation’s economy: 75%
  • Defending the country against terrorism: 74%
  • Reducing health care costs: 69%
  • Improving the educational system: 66%
  • Securing social security: 64%
  • Improving the job situation: 61%
  • Securing Medicare: 60%
  • Dealing with energy problems: 59%
  • Reducing the budget deficit: 58%
  • Protecting the environment: 56%
  • Reducing crime: 54%
  • Providing insurance to the uninsured: 54%
  • Dealing with the problems of the poor: 51%
  • Dealing with illegal immigration: 51%
  • Reducing middle class taxes: 49%
  • Dealing with moral breakdown: 43%
  • Strengthening the military: 42%
  • Reducing the influence of lobbyists: 39%
  • Dealing with global trade: 37%
  • Making tax cuts permanent: 35%
  • Dealing with global warming: 35%

HT: Cato

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How "Free" are America's Private Schools?

The Milton and Rose D. Friedman Foundation has a useful new report out that assesses regulation of private schools in all fifty states, assigning letter grades according to market freedom.

Idaho received a grade of C+ (see page 23 of the report).

The reason for the low grade? Mandatory certification credentials.

Here’s what they say about the certification requirement:

Requiring state certification of teachers or administrators is a strict form of government control that allows the state to determine who can and cannot be a teacher or administrator.

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Rev Wright in front of the National Press Club

Rev Wright in front of the National Press Club.

The green/blue/red lines are the agreement ratings by Independents/Dems/Repubs.

Rev. Wright is a “gift that keeps on giving” to the Republicans.

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12 Questions for Obama

Over in Newsweek, George Will provides twelve questions that should be asked of Barack Obama.

Here are three doozies for him:

  • “Voting against the confirmation of Chief Justice John Roberts, you said: Deciding ‘truly difficult cases’ should involve ‘one’s deepest values, one’s core concerns, one’s broader perspectives on how the world works, and the depth and breadth of one’s empathy.’ Is that not essentially how Chief Justice Roger Taney decided the Dred Scott case? Should other factors-say, the language of the constitutional or statutory provision at issue-matter?”
  • “You say John McCain is content to ‘watch [Americans’] home prices decline.’ So, government should prop up housing prices generally? How? Why? Were prices ideal before the bubble popped? How does a senator know ideal prices? Have you explained to young couples straining to buy their first house that declining prices are a misfortune?”
  • “Telling young people ‘don’t go into corporate America,’ your wife, Michelle, urged them to become social workers or others in ‘the helping industry,’ not ‘the moneymaking industry.’ Given that the moneymakers pay for 100 percent of American jobs, in both public and private sectors, is it not helpful?”

George Will at his best.

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On Charter Schools

World Magazine has an article about the poor crying out for charter schools and school choice. And the liberals tell them “no”, keeping them down on the plantation.

Chicago school teacher Will Okun recently described his frustrations with traditional city schools in an blog post entitled “The Mire.” The Chicago Public Schools have 27 charter schools on 48 campuses. Hundreds are on the waiting lists, and the city plans for more by 2010.

Okun, while cautioning parents and policy-makers to remember the students left behind in the public schools, describes parents desperate to pull their children from traditional schools:

Charter-school parents speak of higher graduation rates, better facilities, more extracurricular opportunities, caring teachers, and stricter discipline. Most importantly, these parents speak of charter schools with a sense of hope and purpose that no longer exists in most public high schools on the West Side.

I do not blame parents for wanting to surround their children with other children and parents who give education top priority.”

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WSU: Floyd tells university leaders to hold off on new hires -- Move comes in response to national economic woes

This confirms what I posted previously (WSU, EWU tightening their belts: Wary of shortfall, leaders slow hiring).

As reported in today’s edition of the Moscow-Pullman Daily News.

Washington State University President Elson S. Floyd has notified campus officials that the university plans to significantly slow its hiring of administrative and professional staff.

In an internal e-mail circulated last week, Floyd wrote the move was in response to a slowing national economy.

"Given an increasingly uncertain financial future for the state and the nation, it is my desire to slow significantly the pace of Administrative/Professional hiring within Washington State University, and hold as many of these positions vacant as possible ... The bottom line is that the economy is clearly slowing and we must appropriately prepare WSU to respond to this circumstance," Floyd wrote.

Floyd also indicated that hiring should be avoided "except in emergency/essential positions or situations," or "instances in which firm and final commitments have already been made."

"This is a preferred approach when compared to lay-offs," he wrote.

 

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EPA gives early go-ahead to proposed Idaho field burning regulation plan

As reported in today’s edition of the Moscow-Pullman Daily News.

The Environmental Protection Agency has given an early nod to Idaho's proposed new rules and changes to its approach to regulating the long-standing farm practice of field burning in northern Idaho.

The agency announced that it's proposing a rule change that enables the state to modify its air quality protection plan in a way that allows field burning and still meet standards of the federal Clean Air Act. The proposed rule change was published in the Federal Register on Tuesday, launching a 30-day public comment period.

"What this means today is it's our way of saying we think that what Idaho has done meets the requirements of the federal law," Doug Cole, air program coordinator for the EPA in Boise, told The Associated Press.

"We know the state is hopeful that it can allow burning again this year. We understand the sense of urgency that exists ... but we also have an obligation to do this thoroughly," Cole said.

For decades, north Idaho bluegrass farmers have set their fields aflame after harvest, believing that fire is the most effective tool for clearing debris and recharging the soil for another growing season.

 

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New Palouse River Drive Ball Field Project Rendering

Below is the latest version of the ball field project for West Palouse River Drive.

Last Thursday, the Parks and Recreation Commission unanimously endorsed this plan.

The Fields Planning Committee will meet in late May to discuss it.

(click to enlarge)

Ball Field Rendering 4-24-08-A

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Famed Theologian J.I. Packer Quits Anglican Church of Canada

“J.I. Packer, one of the world's most renowned evangelical theologians, left the Anglican Church of Canada, citing 'poisonous liberalism' in the church body.”

From the Christian Post:

J.I. Packer, one of the world's most renowned evangelical theologians, left the Anglican Church of Canada, citing "poisonous liberalism" in the church body.

Packer, 81, who was named one of the 25 most influential evangelicals in the world by Time magazine in 2005, quit the Canadian arm of the global Anglican Communion with 10 other B.C. Anglican clergy last week, he said, according to The Vancouver Sun. They joined the more conservative and orthodox Province of the Southern Cone in South America.

The Oxford-trained theologian said he can no longer serve under Vancouver-area Bishop Michael Ingham, arguing that he "appears heretical." Ingham had sanctioned in 2002 same-sex blessings in the British Columbia diocese of New Westminster, sparking international uproar.

In recent years, 28 parishes have voted to split from the Anglican Church of Canada, citing the denomination's departure from Christian orthodox values and Anglican tradition. They have realigned with overseas Anglican provinces.

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Muslim cleric tells Christian women to wear veils

Swami Nick Gier -- Intellectual Leader of the IntoleristaDedicated to Nick Gier, who still cannot tell the difference.

Many do not seem to understand the difference between eradication of sexuality and modesty.

From the Australian:

Outspoken Muslim cleric Taj al-Din al-Hilali says the Bible “mandates” the wearing of the veil by Christian women.

Writing in a new book, Sheik Hilali, who lost his job as mufti of Australia after comparing scantily clad women to uncovered meat, argues that the Bible and the Koran make similar demands of a woman’s modesty.

Sheik Hilali, who remains the head of Australia’s largest mosque, in the southwestern Sydney suburb of Lakemba, says the purpose of the book is to show the commonalities of Islam with the Jewish and Christian faiths when it comes to women’s modesty and clothing.

In the soon to be published The Legitimacy of the Veil for Women of the Scripture - Evidence of the Veil in the Bible, the cleric points to references in the Old and New Testaments to women wearing a veil.

“Through this I hope to raise awareness and understanding and eliminate apprehensions and misunderstandings about the veil,” he writes.

 

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Are the Quakers Going Pagan? The liberal end of the Society of Friends has long had members who denied God's existence or Jesus' divinity. Now hundreds of pagans call Quakerism home.

Will anyone be surprised that the liberal FGC is here in Moscow?

Via Christianity Today: 

Across the board, the number of Quakers is dwindling, to roughly 100,000 in the U.S. But if Quakerism continues to catch on among the estimated half million pagans in the U.S., those who embrace both traditions predict that could reverse the Quakers' downward trend. Still, some Quakers worry about losing their own traditions through the process of accepting new ones.

In the last decade, this dual faith has sprung up around the country, including Quaker-pagan gatherings, seminars, an extensive presence on the Internet, and even explicitly Quaker-pagan congregations. There may be only several hundred Quaker pagans, but among American Quakers, their presence can be distinctly felt.

"It seems that now, in most liberal meetings at least, you can always find a few members that identify as pagan," says Stasa Morgan-Appel of Ann Arbor, Mich., who has facilitated a Quaker pagan interest group since 2002.

Quakers — officially the Religious Society of Friends — are divided into four main branches, three of which are explicitly Christian. Pagans have been generally joining the liberal fourth branch, the Friends General Conference, which counts 30,000 members in North America, including Morgan-Appel.

Liberal Quakers are less tied to the Christianity and instead hold established Quaker practices, such as unprogrammed pastor-less meetings, as the basis of their faith. Because of that flexibility, many liberal Quakers no longer see Jesus as divine, and some don't believe in God at all.

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Constitution Party Nominates Baldwin

The Constitution Party has settled on a presidential nominee.

According to an April 26 press release, the Constitution Party has nominated Chuck Baldwin of Florida, a Baptist pastor and radio talk show host.

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Brainwashed with liberal cliché

The following letter to the editor appeared in today’s Moscow-Pullman Daily News. You can always count on Johnson to speak his mind.

Someone is doing great harm to our youth, teaching them that disapproval of homosexuality is equivalent to hatred of persons. This is an example of a tired, outworn liberal cliché, the allegation that opposition to liberal prescriptions cannot possibly be rooted in principled reason, but can only be motivated by hatred of persons. Oddly, even highly "educated" people believe this canard.

I hope it is not our schools that are doing this harm, although it cannot be without consequence that our teachers' labor union/political action committee/agency of societal deconstruction (aka, the NEA) routinely urges through its annual convention resolutions that school curricula be oriented toward presenting homosexuality as a normative, acceptable approach to the gift of sexuality.

As a tactical matter, it makes sense for the homosexual political movement to attempt to insinuate itself into childhood education venues. Having perverted the fundamental, normal procreational purpose of sexual intercourse, homosexuals seek to increase their numbers by recruiting. And where better to recruit than among the young, the immature, the unsure youth striving to define and establish their personal identities? Where better to play the persecuted victim card, to seek sympathetic support and approval, to indoctrinate into acceptance of homosexuality as a personal lifestyle choice? Where better, indeed?

Leonard C. Johnson, Moscow

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Not speaking for all Lutherans

The following letter to the editor appeared in today’s Moscow-Pullman Daily News.

Krause accurately speaks for all the other conservative Lutherans: LCMS, WELS, etc. It’s just the mainline Lutheran Church (ELCA) that is in this predicament.

In his letter to the editor (Opinion, April 18), Pastor Dean Stewart of Emmanuel Lutheran Church in Moscow spoke in approval of the presentation given in Pullman by Pastor Bradley Schmeling, an ELCA pastor from Atlanta who "happens to be gay." Pastor Stewart gave answers to two questions that had been asked of him regarding Lutheran policy. I am sure that in doing so, he was assuming his readers would understand he was speaking of Lutheran policy in his own congregation or church body (the ELCA). However, he did not explicitly state that. As a result the impression I was left with (and perhaps other readers too?) is that what he spoke of as "current Lutheran policy" is policy held by all Lutherans.

Such is not the case. I am a Lutheran pastor serving two congregations in the Snake and Clearwater valleys. We are a part of a church body called the Church of the Lutheran Confession. The CLC (along with other Lutheran church bodies), in keeping with God's Word, does not condone the homosexual lifestyle, nor does it ordain gays into the ministry.

The Bible teaches that homosexuality is sin - and since the Bible teaches that, so do we. But that is not all the Bible says - it is not simply a message of sin-revealing law, but more importantly it is a message of good news that all sin is forgiven through Jesus' sacrifice on the cross. And it is that Gospel message in which lies the power of God to bring individuals to faith - also giving the strength to fight against temptation.

Law and Gospel - sin and forgiveness - this is what we invite all to hear at our congregations. "God our Savior ... desires all men to be saved, and to come to the knowledge of the truth." (1 Timothy 2:3-4)

Paul Krause, Clarkston

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