We’d like to have as many people attend our conferences each summer, even if it’s just for a little while! Come and learn what Higher Things is all about, and join us for a day!
Worship is at the heart of our conferences. The services are familiar to most LCMS Lutherans, since the liturgies and hymns are all taken straight from the Lutheran Service Book. Some of the services like Vespers and Compline might be new, but they are part of the great historic tradition of Lutheran worship. Youth really enjoy participating in these traditions of the church and the multiple services set a rhythm for each day that keeps the focus of the week on faithfully receiving gifts from Christ and Him crucified.
Catechesis (religious instruction) is the other major component of Higher Things conferences. We gather together each day to learn about God’s Word and our faith, and what it means to Dare to be Lutheran and live out our baptismal faith in all that we do. Plenary sessions are led by some of the best teachers we know, who teach us about some aspect of the conference theme. Then there are many opportunities to learn about your own interests and have questions answered on any number of issues during the breakout sessions.
Fun. Oh, we have fun. Not that Worship and Catechesis aren’t fun (in their own interesting way), but it’s good to kick back, let your hair down, and be silly too. Barn dances, magicians, karaoke, hymneoke (HT’s version of what older people would know as a hymn-sing), soccer, volleyball, Ultimate frisbee, talent shows, scavenger hunts, beach parties, fireworks, inflatables, etc. There’s more than enough fun to go around!
And when you join us for a day, you get to participate in all those activities too! So if you have an urge to take an impromptu road trip, want to come and see for yourself what happens, or just couldn’t get away for the entire week to go to a conference, please join us. Email Crysten Sanchez, the conference Registrar at registrar@higherthings.org to let us know you plan to come. Registration for the day is just $50/person. We’d love to see you at one of the conferences this summer!
Your $50 registration fee includes conference materials, a T-shirt, meals for the day and admission to all conference events going on that day – including evening entertainment options. Download a registration form HERE. For the safety of our youth participants all HTFAD participants must pre-register with the registrar.
- June 25-28 at University of Scranton in Scarnton, PA
- July 9-12 at Purdue University in West Lafayette, IN
- July 16-19 at Pacific Lutheran University in Tacoma, WA
In Christ,
Sandra Ostapowich
Conference Coordinator
ostapowich@higherthings.org
May I hear your confession? That may seem like an odd question. Most people who hear it would associate it with confessing sin to a pastor. However, Christ also calls believers to confess their faith to one another and the world (Matthew 10:32). St. Paul wrote that those who believe in Christ’s Word will also confess Him (Romans 10:8-11). Additionally, Lutherans learn the Apostles’ Creed as a confession of faith in their confirmation classes.
My first call right out of seminary was to be a Youth Pastor. I was in shock. I went to see Dr. Ronald Feuerhahn, my faculty advisor, and pleaded with him because I didn’t know anything about youth ministry. Not a thing! How could I be a youth pastor? He told me I needed to get involved with a group out of Laramie, Wyoming, called “Higher Things.”
Books and movies on angels, demons, exorcisms, and the occult have been popular for years. Are supernatural things just a clever moneymaker, or are they really in the Bible—and thus to be taken seriously?
We know we live in this world surrounded by the horrors and tragedies of sin. Often, we’re so accustomed to these things that they don’t even strike our conscience. We are not aware of them. Maybe we’ve become desensitized. Maybe we just don’t have the emotional energy to care. Maybe we just don’t want to know what goes on. Every so often the curtain is pulled back and events like the trial of abortion doctor Kermit Gosnell brings these horrors vividly to light. This man ran a clinic that not only provided women with the service of killing their unborn children but in many cases, he murdered babies born alive by cutting their spinal cords. For just a little while, the graphic horrors of sin are made known for all to see.
It wasn’t your normal day at the mall. At this mall—the National Mall in Washington, DC—more than half a half million people gathered on Friday, January 25, not to shop, but to march. I joined hundreds of Lutherans, including LCMS President Matthew Harrison, at the National March for Life. We united on behalf of the weak, the defenseless, and the unborn on the 40th anniversary of the 1973 Supreme Court decision Roe v. Wade that legalized abortion in the United States.