Categories
HT Legacy-cast

Episode 228: April 5th, 2013

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In Episode 228 of HT-Radio, Pr. Mark Buetow continues working his way through the commandments with us. This week he goes through the 3rd Commandment, Remember the Sabbath day by keeping it holy. He explains that this doesn’t apply just to Saturdays but every time you receive God’s Word and Sacraments. In the final segment Jon Kohlmeier plays a sermon from Pr. Borghardt on “Doubting Thomas.”

If you have questions or topics that you’d like discussed on HT-Radio email them to radio@higherthings.org or send a text to 936-647-3235.

Categories
Catechesis

Easter 2013: Did the Resurrection Really Happen?

Blessed Easter! Easter is everything! The resurrection of Jesus is the center of the Christian faith. Check out Pastor Fisk’s article on ways we know the resurrection really happened and that the tomb was actually empty. It will help you as you confess the resurrection to those around you.

This article originally appeared in the Spring 2012 Free Apologetics Issue of Higher Things Magazine.

Rev. Jonathan Fisk

It’s kind of an important question. I mean, if the resurrection didn’t happen, what on earth are we Christians doing? It’s not like it’s gaining us any power or money or anything. But if the resurrection did happen, then why is it that so many people in the world don’t believe it?

The resurrection did happen, and I can tell you how you can be certain of it. More than that, I can do it without telling you that you have to believe it just because the Bible says so. That’s the key thing. A lot of non-Christians in our world think that Christians are just a bunch of willfully ignorant nincompoops who believe in some book that fell out of the sky. But nothing could be further from the truth. Christians are Christians because something happened in history unlike any other thing ever: A guy named Jesus was murdered, but refused to stay dead. It’s not a leap of faith. It’s an historic fact that is as easy to prove as any other bit of history, if you aren’t too close-minded to consider the evidence.

  1. Jesus was a real human. Even without the Bible, modern scholars have to admit that there was a Jewish man named Jesus who lived in the first century. Non-biblical writings like Flavius Josephus, Mara Bar-Serapion and the Jewish Talmud all mention Him as a real, historical figure.
  2. The real human Jesus died by crucifixion and was buried. In the same way, some of these extra-biblical texts mention that Jesus was killed. They don’t go into detail, but only an ignorant person who gets all their information from internet forums will try to tell you that the real Jesus didn’t die, and wasn’t even buried.
  3. This Jesus had real followers who took his death very hard. At this point, we have to start trusting the books of the Bible as eyewitness accounts. We don’t have to believe they are true. We just have to trust that they tell us what the people who wrote them actually thought. That’s what we do with every historical document about any piece of history, at least, until we find other history that tells us something different. So the guy who wrote John’s Gospel around 90 AD also claims he followed this real guy Jesus, and believed He was the Savior of the world before He was murdered, watched Him die, and then fell into despair.
  4. Jesus’ tomb was found empty three days later. Next, the followers of Jesus who despaired after His death also tell us that they stopped despairing because He appeared to them as risen. But not just to them. Extra-biblical sources from Roman historians tell us that after Jesus was killed, “a most mischievous superstition…again broke out.” Yet another document, traced to Jewish sources, tells of a gardener named Juda who stole Jesus’ body. When you put all of these pieces of history together, and combine it with the fact that Christian belief in Jesus’ resurrection all started within walking distance of His tomb, there is only one reasonable historical answer: Somehow, some way, that tomb was empty.
  5. The disciples stopped despairing and started preaching, even though it meant their own deaths. Both biblical and extra-biblical documents tell us that Christianity came from the meeting together of these followers, in order to worship their leader “Christ” and listen to his teachings. Rather than give this up, the same disciples who once fled, willingly faced gruesome and painful deaths.
  6. Antagonists convert. James, Jesus’ brother by blood, and Saul, a man who made a business of killing Christians, were among these converts. More so, Saul’s own writings claim his reason for conversion was a face-to-face meeting with the risen Jesus.
  7. This is the event upon which Christianity is founded. Christianity is not direct proof that Jesus rose, but it is proof that people who knew Jesus personally before His death believed that He rose.
  8. Christianity was founded in Jerusalem. No one in the town where all this was happening could present the dead body so as to put a stop to it. Instead, the “stolen body theory” is preached even 
by the first skeptics.
  9. They worshiped on Sunday. These new Christians, a bunch of Jews (whose religion insists they worship on Saturday) start worshiping on Sunday, because Sunday is the day when they 
believe the resurrection happened.
  10. Do the math. The challenge for the non-Christian or the skeptic (which they are usually unwilling to take up) is to find an alternative historical explanation for where this Christianity came from which also fits all of these simple, documented facts. What could make orthodox Jews change their most sacred rituals, and go to the ends of the earth to tell others about it even though it only gets them killed? They say it was because they themselves saw this man risen from the dead. On top of this, the tomb was clearly empty and the man was nowhere to be found. So, what other explanation for all the facts can you come up with?

Over the last several hundred years the skeptics have tried. There’s the hallucination theory, and the swoon theory and that good ol’ stolen body theory. But none of those theories explain all of the above facts. You can’t steal a swooned body that gets up and walks away. Separate groups of people don’t experience the same hallucination. A Jesus who needed to be taken to the hospital would hardly have convinced terrified disciples to go out and die for him.

The simple reality is that there is only one explanation of the evidence that fits all the facts. It might be unbelievable, but it is anything but unreasonable. So put it in your pocket for the next time a skeptic attacks you with his claims that you are ignorant. Ask him how he explains what Tacitus says. Ask him why the Talmud called Jesus a sorcerer. Ask him to explain all the historical facts. Then, when he won’t (since he can’t), feel free to go right on believing the truth: that the resurrection did happen. Not only is it the best explanation for all of the real historical evidence, it also happens to be what the Bible says was God’s plan for the precise purpose of saving you.

Pastor Jonathan Fisk serves as pastor at Bethany Lutheran Church in Naperville, Illinois. He is also on the board of Higher Things and host of the popular Worldview Everlasting videos. He can be reached at revfisk@gmail.com.

Categories
HT Legacy-cast

Episode 227: March 29th, 2013

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This week on HT-Radio Pr. Borghardt and Jon Kohlmeier talk about the Triduum. They begin with Maundy Thursday and talk about the mandate given to His disciples. Then Good Friday and the cross where Jesus Christ dies for you and for the sins of the World. During the second half they talk about the Resurrection the scenes at the tomb and His appearance on the road to Emmaus.

If you have questions or topics that you’d like discussed on HT-Radio email them to radio@higherthings.org or send a text to 936-647-3235.

Categories
Christ on Campus

Christ on Campus: Father May I?

Article PDF

By Heidi Bliese

Right now life feels a little like a childhood game I used to play called “Mother May I?” One person was “mother” and would stand at the end of a long sidewalk and grant requests for how far participants could move forward towards the finish line. My siblings and I enjoyed playing this game and did so all the time, but on occasion (probably more often than we’d like to admit) the frustration of the competition got the better of us and it ended in a not-so-pretty display of complaining that it “wasn’t fair” and “you were choosing a favorite.” As Christians, we can take a different approach and see it as “Father May I?” with the participants being God’s children spread out around Him on their journey to the finish line: Heaven. In hard times, my sinful nature causes me to view this earthly life as a competition, and return to the views of my 6-year-old self who believes because I am not “winning” God doesn’t love me as much as He must love everyone else. Thanks to social media, comparing ourselves is fairly easy, for instead of only experiencing the joys and sorrows of our own lives, sites like Facebook allow us to now be a witness to every-day events in the lives of others whom we would classify as acquaintances, friends of friends, or even strangers. It is at these times that Satan starts to whisper lies of discontent into my heart, seeking to draw my attention away from the Father. But even as I am browsing someone’s status or pictures and am feeling unsure about my own future, something always happens in my life that awakens me to my sin of coveting and sends me running back to the Father. Instead of seeing myself in competition with those around me, I need to keep my eyes focused on my Lord and Savior, for “The life I live in the body, I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave himself for me” (Galatians 2:20). My life is unique and most importantly, every step has been planned by my Father, for “The Lord knows those who are His” (2 Timothy 2:19). Instead of viewing the events of others’ lives as a reason to lose contentment with my own, I strive to remember that the dreams I hold so dear to my heart and pray about every day were put there by Him, and He will fulfill them in His time.

Some days will be harder than others, because we are human and will continue to sin (Romans 3:23). But after a long night of weeping, nothing is more comforting than returning to His word and reciting the words of Psalm 116:7, which states “Be at rest once more, O my soul, for the Lord has been good to you.” And He has. It doesn’t take long to look around at my room, friends, and family, and be reminded that I have been blessed beyond measure. It is also a reminder of what our prayer life should look like; to have a humble heart in prayer is to remember that our Heavenly Father hears all prayers, and answers them, as we are reminded in 1 Peter 5:7, which states, “Cast all your anxieties on Him because He cares for you.” True, these answers may not always be what we want, but in the hardest of times, continue to seek your heavenly Father in prayer, asking Him to give you peace and whisper the words of Psalm 46:10 into your heart, “Be still, and know that I am God.”

Although it can sometimes be so easy to play the comparison game, God sees each one of us as individuals, and holds our lives in His loving and more than capable hands. He may not be granting you that one giant step that you’ve been waiting and longing for—but our loving Father will never deny you any kind of movement that takes you closer to Him. Whether it is a baby step in the form of a whispered thank you to Him, or a giant leap into His arms during your most desperate moments of prayer, God, our Heavenly Father, will always be there waiting with the promise of love, grace, and compassion. And you can be certain of that love and forgiveness by the sure promises of your baptism, His absolution, and His Supper. This message is so clearly stated in verse two of the hymn “Lord, Take My Hand and Lead Me” which states, “Lord, when the tempest rages, I need not fear, for You, the Rock of Ages, are always near. Close by Your side abiding, I fear no foe, for when Your hand is guiding, in peace I go.”

Heidi Bliese is a graduate student at Illinois State University in Normal, Illinois and sometimes wishes she had never heard the word “thesis.” In her spare time, she enjoys reading and writing scholarly articles and promoting a Christian worldview while debating social issues. You can email her with questions at Heidi.bliese@gmail.com.

Categories
Catechesis

The Church Year: Pointing to Jesus for You

Jonathan Kohlmeier

This is it! This is what the whole Church year rushes toward and flows from! The Paschal Triduum, the three days beginning on the evening of Maundy Thursday and concluding with the Easter Vigil on Saturday.

It began all the way back at the beginning of December with the Gospel reading for the first Sunday in Advent. It probably sounds familiar since you heard it this past Sunday as well. Jesus rides into Jerusalem on a donkey. The Son of David coming to answer the cries of “Hosanna” and to save you now!

It didn’t stop with Advent either! Christmas celebrates these holy days. Jesus christ, born of the virgin Mary becomes man for you. He is placed under the Law and fulfills it for you. He is named Jesus–Yahweh saves–as His flesh is broken and blood is poured. 40 days after His birth Jesus is presented at the temple and Simeon proclaims that he can now depart in peace for he has seen the salvation prepared for all people.

Then come the Magi bringing gifts of gold, frankincense, and myrrh. These gifts point to the Triduum too. The gold confesses that Jesus has “purchased and won me from all sins, from death, and from the power of the devil; not with gold or silver but with His holy precious blood and with His innocent suffering and death.” The frankincense confesses Jesus as the ultimate sacrifice, soothing the nose of God, burning in wrath at our sinfulness and unbelief. Myrrh is the strange gift that young Jesus received from the magi: a burial spice. You don’t think about the death of a young child unless that is what the child came to do–to die for you, and to die for all of fallen creation.

Jesus is baptized by John in the waters of the Jordan river. People would come and be baptized by John leaving their sins in the waters of the Jordan. Jesus is baptized to pick those sins up and take them upon himself as he continues to move toward the cross. The season of Epiphany ends with Jesus transfigured on the mountain top. Moses and Elijah appear and talk with him about His death on Good Friday. From the mountain Christ sets His eyes toward Jerusalem and His death on the cross for you!

Now here we are in the season of Lent. It began with Jesus overcoming the devil’s temptation for you. The Canaanite woman’s faith receives the crumbs from her master’s table and Christ drives out the demon who is possessing her daughter. The Lord continues to drive out demons, give His gifts and forgive sins!

That leads us to this week. It began the same way the church year began, with palms, shouts of ‘Hosanna!’ and a lowly king riding into Jerusalem with His eyes set on the cross to save you. Maundy Thursday he absolves us and institutes His supper. He gives you His body broken for you on the cross for the forgiveness of sins. He bids you drink His blood which is shed for you for the remission of all your sins. Finally comes Good Friday. The cross that the whole church year has been leading up to–which the remainder of the church year points to. The cross of Christ is what our whole theology is centered on and flows from. His body is pierced with nails and a spear for you. Water and blood flow with forgiveness. Your forgiveness and salvation is won there. On that cross, Jesus dies in your place to rescue you from death and the devil.

But death could not hold Him! The victory remains with life! Christ rises again for you! You die and rise too in baptism.

The rest of the church year points back to Christ’s death and resurrection for you. We celebrate this Triduum each week as we keep time with the church year until the Lord returns. Your pastor absolves your sins. Preaches the word to you. Delivers to you the body and blood of Christ which was broken and shed for you on the cross.

That’s the church year. That’s our theology. Jesus Christ’s death and resurrection for you! Your death and resurrection in the waters of baptism! Christ’s gifts of forgiveness of sins, salvation, and eternal life given to you during Holy Week and every other week of the year.

Jonathan Kohlmeier is a member of Mount Zion Lutheran Church in Greenfield, WI. He loves the church year and how it points to the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ for him. Jon is also Webmaster for Higher Things and producer of HT-Radio.

Categories
News

Retreat: Sex is for Marriage. Jesus is for Sinners.

August 9-10, 2013

Dating? Relationships? Marriage? Boyfriends and girlfriends. Husbands and wives. What does the Bible have to say about all that stuff? We’ll see what God’s Word has to say about marriage and dating and that thing that only belongs in marriage. Most of all, we’ll see how Christ loves His church as His bride and how that picture helps us to understand all that dating and marriage stuff.

Spend a weekend learning about relationships, Jesus, and forgiveness from Rev. Mark Buetow. Pastor Buetow serves Bethel Lutheran Church in DuQuoin, Illinois and is the Media Executive for Higher Things, Inc.

When: August 9-10, 2013
Cost: $50 per person
Where: Zion Lutheran Church Mitchell, South Dakota
RSVP: By registering online at www.higherthings.org/retreats
Pastor Thomas Brown – (605) 999-2873 or tbrown80@gmail.com
or
Sandra Ostapowich at retreats@higherthings.org – Higher Things Retreat Coordinator

Download the information packet here!

Click here to register online!

Categories
News

Easter 2013 Reflections Now Available

Higher Things is pleased to offer Daily Reflections for the Easter Season, March 31 through May 18, 2013. These daily devotions deliver the Good News told by the angels: Christ is risen! He is risen indeed! You can download the Reflections in a variety of formats from the links below:

Printable Booklet (PDF)
“In Line” PDF
Nook and other readers (ePub format)
Amazon Kindle (may require file management software on your kindle device)

In Christ,
Pastor Mark Buetow
buetowmt@higherthings.org
HT Media Services Executive

Categories
Higher Homilies

The Holy Week Difference: Judas vs. Peter

Rev. Mark Buetow

Then Judas, His betrayer, seeing that He had been condemned, was remorseful and brought back the thirty pieces of silver to the chief priests and elders, saying, “I have sinned by betraying innocent blood.” And they said, “What is that to us? You see to it!” – Matthew 27:3-4

Consider Judas and Peter. What was so different about their sins? Judas plotted with the Jewish leaders to hand Jesus over for money. Peter denied that he knew Jesus not once but three times! Is there any difference between betraying Jesus and denying Him? Is there really any difference between betraying Him to get money and denying Him to save your own skin? The first thing we are to learn from Judas and Peter is that even though they were Apostles chosen by Jesus, they fell into great and terrible sins.

Such accounts were given to us to teach us that being a disciple of Jesus does not mean we won’t sin. Far from it! In fact, sometimes God’s people can do some real whoppers! Like turning in the Lord for money. Or out and out cussin’ and hollerin’ that you don’t know the Man! Betrayal. Denial. Looking out for Number One! That’s what Judas and Peter did. They just did it in two different ways. But not just Judas and Peter. You and I do it. By our sins. By our being ashamed of God’s Word and denying our Lord. By always putting ourself first when it’s us or the Lord. Or putting ourselves ahead of our neighbor; trampling on others to get what we want and what will make us comfortable. Judas’ sin, Peter’s sin, your sin—there’s not any difference. These are the mortal sins that damn us. Looking out only for ourselves, we bring ourselves under the wrath and judgment of God.

So Jesus does what He does. He is the Friend of sinners by letting Himself be betrayed into the hands of evil men by a friendly kiss. He stands firm against accusation and condemnation by the religious men of the world even while the disciple who said he would never leave Jesus’ side swears to God he doesn’t even know the guy! The Shepherd is struck and the sheep don’t stand firm; they run away faster than you can say “cock-a-doodle-do.” Jesus goes the way of suffering the weight of His Father’s will that He drink the cup of God’s wrath to save sinners. It is the way of betrayal, the way of arrest, the way of humiliation and abuse, the way of scourging and crucifixion, the way of mockery and being forsaken. It is, finally, the way of death on that cross.

No, it is not possible that the cup of God’s wrath be taken from Jesus; He must drink it to the dregs for your salvation. Now, rejoice, dear Christian, because all that Jesus suffered, He suffered for you. His blood shed on the cross was shed for Judas’ betrayal, for Peter’s denial and for every sin you have done or will do, yes, even for the sin that has corrupted your nature and been a part of you since your conception—all this iniquity our Lord has carried to Calvary and blotted out by His holy passion. Have no doubt, dear Christian, that there is no sin so great it is not covered by the atoning sacrifice Jesus on the cross; there is nothing too wicked, too terrible, no betrayal too great, no denial too awful that it was not answered for by the death of Jesus. Believe it, dear Christians, that ALL of your sins have been paid for by your Savior’s Passion.

So what then is the difference between Judas and Peter? There is no difference in their sins just as their sins are no different than ours. But there is a difference! The difference is in where they went to church! There is a difference in what preaching they heard when their sins overwhelmed them. Brothers and sisters in Christ, the preaching to which you give your ears will either save you or damn you. When Judas betrayed Jesus, was he sorry? Of course he was! When Peter betrayed Jesus, was he sorry? He wept bitterly. But where did Judas go with His burden of guilt and shame? To the church of the Pharisees and High Priest. There Judas cried out His bitter confession: “I can’t take this money! I’ve sinned! I’ve betrayed innocent blood!” There it is: sorrow over his sins and confession of his sins. But hear the preaching he receives against his sins. “What is that to us? You see to it! That’s not our problem. That’s your problem. We can’t help you. You’d better go and deal with it yourself.” In other words, when Judas despaired of himself, all they had to give him was more Judas. And since Judas couldn’t save himself, he did the only thing he could: he perished.

Yes, Judas sinned terribly. He repented and was sorry. He confessed his sin. But these things don’t save him. The “absolution” Judas receives is the preaching of all the world’s religions: “Save yourself.” You have to pick yourself back up. If you’ve sinned, it’s on you to work it out and make it right. Jesus said to His disciples at the Last Supper, “The Son of Man goes as it is written of Him, but woe to the one by whom the Son of Man is betrayed. It were better if he had not been born.” Jesus does NOT say this because Judas’ betrayal is an unforgivable sin. Jesus does NOT say this because His death was not for Judas; it was! He says it because He knows how it is going to end: Judas will not hear the preaching that will forgive and save him. The preaching Judas hears casts him upon himself and damns him. The great tragedy of Judas is that all that took place after his betrayal was done for him, yet he never heard that preached to him because he went for comfort to the First Church of Save Yourself. But there was no comfort to be had. No forgiveness, only death. That’s how it is in a church that is less worried that they killed an innocent man than that the blood money gets put into the right account at the bank!

Peter’s sin was no different than Judas’. Our sins are not any different either. But Peter was in the church. He was among the disciples of Jesus. He was there when the announcement was made that the Lord was alive. He was there when Jesus appeared alive on Easter. He was there to hear Christ call him to repentance and three times restore him and send him to feed His sheep. In other words, Peter was where the crucified and risen Jesus was to forgive his sins and comfort him with that Good News of life and salvation. So it is with you. The Lord has put you in a church where what Jesus did for you is delivered to you. When you look in the mirror of God’s Law and see that you are a Jesus-betrayer and a Jesus-denier and you sorrow over your sins and you confess them, you will not hear that you must work it our yourself and see to it yourself.

Rather, you will hear that all that Jesus did He did for you. You will be reminded in the preaching and teaching of the Gospel that you have NO sin too big that it cannot be taken away by Jesus blood. In Christ’s church you are put in mind of your Baptism in which you too have died and risen with Jesus and therefore have passed from death to eternal life. In His church, you are absolved and your sins are forgiven by the minister whose job it is to pronounce that forgiveness. Christ Himself is there, present, in His flesh and blood to join you to Himself and give you forgiveness of sins, life and salvation. In Christ’s church, you need never despair of your salvation. Oh yes! Despair of yourself! Despair of your ability to fix what you’ve done! Weep and wail over the sins you have that have killed the Son of God. But then hear what Judas refused to hear by going to the wrong church: hear that exactly what happened to Jesus was done FOR YOU and is given to you in His gifts. Make sure that when you sin big, you get there quickly so that the preaching of Jesus will rescue and save you from such sin!

The Psalmist writes, “Weeping endures through the night, but joy comes in the morning.” Weep and wail for your sins! Mourn over your iniquities which have killed the Son of God. But do not weep with worldly sorrow that has no hope. Dry your eyes and rejoice that all that the Lord suffered He has suffered to take away your sins. Rejoice that He has sent His Spirit to call you into the church where this Good News is delivered at font, altar and pulpit so that you will not despair as Judas did, but be restored as Peter was. It is for this life that your Lord came to die. And He rose again that you too will rise and live with Him who with the Father and Holy Spirit is blessed forevermore. Amen.

Categories
HT Legacy-cast

Episode 226: March 22nd, 2013

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Next week is Holy Week. In episode 226 of HT-Radio, Pr. Buetow and Jon (recording from Iowa) talk about the first couple days of Holy Week. But first, they talk about the papacy. Then Pr. Buetow goes through the 2nd Commandment as he continues to work his way through the Commandments each week. What gift does God give in the 2nd Commandment? How do we break it? And how did Jesus keep the commandment for us? Listen to find out!

If you have questions or topics that you’d like discussed on HT-Radio email them to radio@higherthings.org or send a text to 936-647-3235.

Categories
HT Legacy-cast

Episode 225: March 8th, 2013

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This week on HT-Radio, Pr. Buetow continues his series on the commandments by talking about the 1st Commandment: You shall have no other gods. What exactly does this mean? Then during Free Time Pr. Borghardt and Jon talk about a Happy Lent in preparation for Laetare. The Lord gives you His gifts of life and salvation. He also gives you His joy!

If you have questions or topics that you’d like discussed on HT-Radio email them to radio@higherthings.org or send a text to 936-647-3235.