Categories
Life Issues

Lutherans on Facebook

by Jonathan Kohlmeier

There are more than 800 million active users on Facebook. People from all over the world, of many different religions and world views, log into the same website to communicate with others every single day. In many ways, that makes it even harder to dare to be Lutheran than it is in our daily physical lives.

Many people use Facebook and other social media as a way to keep in touch with friends, family, people with the same interests and favorite celebrities. Others use it for self-promotion or as a place to express their opinions. Still others use social media as a virtual scrapbook of things going on in their lives or things that they find interesting.

Amidst those more than 800 million Facebook users, how are we supposed to dare to be Lutheran on Facebook? We do it the same way as we dare to be Lutheran in real life—through the Small Catechism as a baptized child of God! We are baptized children of God at home, at school, at church, and wherever else we may be.

The internet and social media in particular add yet another forum where love of God and neighbor are often found in short supply. In addition, it is very easy for Facebook to become an idol. We can spend hours and hours on the website, all the while shirking our vocations as children, students, and baptized children of God. We completely disregard the 8th commandment. We gossip about what our Facebook friends are posting, we don’t defend our neighbor, we rarely speak well of them and we definitely don’t explain everything in the kindest way. We covet our neighbors’ lives. We wish we were as happy as they appear to be. “Just read their profiles, after all!” We covet their possessions and the people in their lives. We don’t receive everything as gift from God and we fall into anxiety and unbelief. Everyone else’s lives seem so much better than our own. Repent! Stop hating your neighbor. Stop living as if Christ did not die and rise for you.

Even though it might magnify our constant failure to keep God’s Law, Facebook is a First Article gift of God. It truly is a great communication tool. It has made the world so much smaller. Distance means very little when, with the click of a mouse, you can keep up with those who are geographically far away. It is a great resource for planning events, sharing pictures and videos and keeping up on what your favorite celebrities or organizations are up to. It provides another platform to discuss things that are important to you. Sports fans connect with sports fans and Lutherans connect with Lutherans from 
all over the world! There are great Facebook pages (http://facebook.com/higherthings) that post resources that confess the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ for you.

As we scroll through our News Feed, we are reminded to pray for those in our lives, in the midst of good times and bad. Even though we are more connected to those who are far away from us than we have ever been before, sometimes we feel alone sitting at our computers. The church’s prayers are often written in first person plural. When we pray those words, “Our Father..,” we are joined with the whole church-—in a much more real way than 1s and 0s across the internet. We are with the whole church in Christ. When we pray the Lord’s Prayer, we are praying it both for ourselves and for the whole church. When others pray they are praying for themselves and for you!

Although Facebook is virtual, we still live as those who are baptized. Our sinful Old Adam is daily drowned by repentance and a new man is risen to live in righteousness. We have been set free from sin—not so that we can run right back to that from which we have been set free. Rather, we are free to keep the Law of God and live forever. In Christ—in our baptism—we do keep the law, both on Facebook and in all other aspects of our lives.

While Facebook is a great virtual reality, it should not replace those things that are real. You can discuss a lot of theology on Facebook but that is still not where Christ has promised to be. It does not replace receiving His gifts in church each week. Christ comes to you, not virtually, but truly in His Body in the Lord’s Supper. His Word is delivered into your ears. His Body and Blood are placed into your mouth. You are freely given forgiveness of your sins and eternal life in a very real and physical way.

Facebook is a great gift, but with a couple keystrokes it could be gone. Your hope, truth, trust, and life are much more certain and sure than that. They are found in Christ, into whose death and resurrection you have been baptized!

Jon Kohlmeier is IT Assistant for Higher Things which includes managing our Facebook page. You can add him on Facebook at facebook.com/jonkohlmeier.

Categories
News

August Retreats

We have two retreats coming up in August!

Sin, Death, and the Devil
August 3-5, 2012

As Christians, we learn that our only real enemies are sin, death, and the Devil. But do those things have any teeth these days? What is sin? Is it just a word used to browbeat the fun out of everything, or can there be some real ramifications in your life if you engage in sinful behavior? And death—sure, we all die, but what happens when we die? What are the consequences of “assuming room temperature”? Then there’s the Devil—that quaint, outmoded idea of the Boogeyman used to frighten countless classes of Sunday School children. Or is there really something to this “devil” that we should be careful about? Learn how this “evil trinity” really does affect your everyday life and how, as a baptized child of God, you can rejoice in their defeat—in Christ.

Pastor Duane Bamsch serves Evangelists’ Lutheran Church in Kingsbury, TX and is the Catechesis Coordinator for the 2012 Higher Things “Twelve” conferences.

When: August 3-5, 2012
Where: Christmount Retreat Center Black Mountain, NC
For more information visit: www.carolinalutheransunago.com
or retreats.higherthings.org.

Download the information packet here!

Click here to register online!

Confessing Your Confirmation
August 17-18, 2012

Contrary to popular belief, confirmation is not your graduation from church. Way back when you were baptized, you were baptized into the faith of the Christian church. Over the years, and especially in confirmation class, you learn just what that faith consists of – in great detail! Confirmation teaches you who you are in Christ and how to confess your baptismal identity. Come and learn what a great blessing this tradition of our church is for you in Christ.

Pastor Borghardt is Senior Pastor at Zion Evangelical Lutheran Church in McHenry, Illinois and the Conference Executive for Higher Things.

When: August 17-18, 2012
Where: Our Redeemer Lutheran Church / 910 Wood Avenue / Rapid City, South Dakota
For more information visit: retreats.higherthings.org

Download the information packet here!

Click here to register online!

Categories
Current Events

The Colorado Shooting: God’s Promise in Jesus Christ

Rev. Brent Kuhlman

Romans 8:28 “In all things God works for the good of those who love him.

Job 1:13-22 “May the Name of the LORD be praised!


When horrific events like this happen, it is time to have a serious talk.  After all, these are serious times.  I suppose there are many times as you hear a preacher like me or listen to a sermon from preachers like me, that you really don’t pay attention. You have other things on your mind. But today I’ll bet you are prepared to hear God’s Word.  The murderous, shooting spree at the movie theater in Aurora, Colorado early Friday morning stops you in your tracks. You take a deep breath and feel the beat of your heart pounding away.

Perhaps now you’re paying attention. I pray that you hear God’s Word proclaimed here with a determination like you haven’t had since the events of 9-11, the killings at Columbine or some tragedy in your life.  You want God’s help.  You want Him to strengthen your faith in Him all the more.  And not just yours but all those who mourn the death of these folks in Colorado.


You’re still in shock.  I am in shock too. Your emotions are like a roller coaster.  So are mine. You watch the news reports. You hear the interviews. But the big question that we all ask is:  “Why?”  “Why would this happen to these people?”  “Why didn’t God stop this?”  “Isn’t God in charge of everything?”  “He’s sovereign isn’t He?  So why?  Why?”



The police will investigate. The psychiatrists will evaluate. The TV and radio pundits will spin. Besides the fact that the murderer is a sinner like all of us, I don’t know why. God hasn’t given us any specific answer.

The murderer just did it. Recklessly. Appallingly. Now we have to deal with the results.

So I will proclaim God’s promise to you from the apostle Paul. What is that? Here it is: “In all things God works for the good of those who love him.

Did you hear that?  I’d better say it again because it is so incredible:  “In all things God works for the good of those who love him.”  This “in all things” applies most especially to what happened in that Aurora, Colorado movie theater. You are called once again to believe this.  To trust God’s promise.  Even and most especially when all your reason and all your senses say that it just can’t be true!


“Easier said than done Pastor Kuhlman!”  Yes.  I know.  It’s not easy to believe that “in all things” God works good for you.  Trusting that promise when everything’s going our way is easy.  But when twelve people are brutally murdered in cold blood and fifty-eight have been harmed, well . . .


These are the times when the rubber of the Christian faith hits the road.  Hard! It’s like a crash course!

Just like for Job, “the greatest man among all the people of the East“(1:3). He had seven sons and three daughters. A very respected businessman and farmer.  Quite well to do.  Owned 7,000 sheep, 3,000 camels, 500 oxen, 500 donkeys.  Employed hundreds of people to take care of his livestock.

He trusted God.  Believed in the promise of the Savior who was to come.  He prayed for his children and offered the burnt offering every morning as he relied on God’s forgiveness for all sin, especially the sins his children might do while . . . well, you know, partying.  They were always doing that.  And you know what happens at parties.  Just ask any university community.  Ask the friends of Charlie Sheen or Lindsay Lohan.  Read Tom Wolfe’s book I Am Charlotte Simmons.


Job and his family lived in the country.  A “safe” secluded place.  Tucked away in the rural, lazy land of Uz.  Where you don’t need to lock your doors at night.  Where you trust your neighbors with anything and everything.  The donkeys graze peacefully in the pastures.  The oxen do their plowing.

Then in the midst of this pastoral scene:  tragedy strikes! Out of nowhere!  Arabians attack!  They steal Job’s donkeys and oxen.  Every last one!  While they’re at it, these ruthless thieves brutally decapitate all the employees except for one who escapes and tells Job the terrible news.


Job receives another awful report.  All of his sheep and the shepherds have all been burned to a crisp! How? By a wacky lightning storm!  Only one messenger escapes the fires to tell about that.


Then another horrific report arrives.  Gangs of Chaldeans have stolen all of Job’s camels. They too have viciously massacred more of his employees.


Can it get any worse?  Really? Yes.  Sadly, more tragedy!  Horrific heartbreak! This time it happens to his children!  A tornadic windstorm blows up! It utterly destroys the oldest son’s house while all his siblings are having a dinner party.  As a result all ten of Job’s children are crushed in the rubble! Killed! Dead! Just like that! In the blink of an eye!


Job is stunned!  Staggered!  Who wouldn’t be? In one day he’s been targeted and singled out by Arabians and Chaldeans, by a lightening storm and a tornado.  He’s lost everything, humanly speaking.  All his wealth has vanished! Worst of all every one of his beloved children have been killed!  He has to bury them all at the same time!

What did he do to deserve any of this?  Nothing.  Yet it happened. His safe haven of Uz has been violated.  Desecrated.



What will he do?  What will he say?  His wife gives him some advice: “Curse God and die you silly old man!” (Job 2:9).  However, there are the words of the apostle:  “And we know that in all things God works for the good of those who love him.” 



Job doesn’t ask why.  His wife and his neighbors do.  Instead, Job gets up.  Tears his robe.  Shaves his head.  Yes, he’s devastated.  He’s deeply hurt.  His body throbs with immense heartache and the deepest of sadness!

Then Job does the unthinkable.  The irrational! The absurd! What does he do?

HE WORSHIPS GOD!  “Then he fell to the ground in worship.”  He trusts in the Lord! In life! In tragedy! In horrific murderous events! He trusts the Lord no matter what.  Listen to his faith:”Naked I came from my mother’s womb and naked I will depart” The Lord gave and the Lord has taken away; may the name of the Lord be praised.”


May the name of the Lord be praised?  Are you kidding me?  No way! Yet, Job says this because he trusts the Lord’s Word of promise that in all things God works good.  Job really believed this.  So can you — even in these most heartrending and faith challenging events.

Our fellow citizens in Colorado have been brutally taken away from their beloved families and friends.  Many others have been injured. It hurts.  We ache.  We are horrified.  However, there remains the “in all things” promise.  In addition, there are the worship words of Job:  “The Lord gave and the Lord has taken away; may the name of the Lord be praised.


You too can praise the Lord’s Name today.  Because of another good:  Good, good, very Good Friday!  On that day God did something!  He acted!  For these folks in Colorado!  For you, me and the world!  There on the cross God in Christ dropped dead!  Stone cold dead.  Graveyard dead! For them, for you and for all!


In His Mount Calvary, very good, Good Friday death, God Jesus embraced all the gunk, rot, and filth of every sin and every sinner.  Everything that is wrong with the world He took in His body and He answered for it.  He took care of it!  He holds it all . . . RECONCILED . . . in His nail-scarred hands. His death includes this monstrous sin of murder committed against these Coloradoans!


“Father, forgive them.”  That was Christ’s Good Friday prayer.  All is forgiven because God Jesus acted.  Because He did something about this broken world!  That’s why He said:”“It is finished.” Then He died!


Jesus too asked the “why” question on the cross for Job, the murdered and harmed, and all of us.  “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?”  He gets no answer from His Father. However, He doesn’t get down from the cross.  He stays put!  He suffers in the silence.  He trusts that, in His grizzly crucifixion and gory death, even when His Father doesn’t answer His question, good will come from it.  Consequently, Jesus prays: “Father, into your hands I commend my spirit.


“Where are you God?” Here is the answer! He’s in His Son hanging on the Cross.


“Why won’t you do anything God?”  He did.  He reconciled the world to Himself in His Son’s once for all time and for all people death.  

That’s good!  Really good!  For in Christ crucified and risen all things have been made new.  The old has passed away.  Behold the new has come.  God brings life through death.  Victory through loss.  

This is what you are given to trust.  You are given to use God’s promise of working all things for your good against all your reason and every one of your senses, especially your sight!

As you trust the Lord’s promise you are free to pray. Just like Jesus! “Father, into your hands I commend myself, my body, and all things (including these tragic murders and harm).”  You are free to pray for the police and investigators!  That the Lord will use them as His hands, eyes, and ears to do their work faithfully! Free to pray for the judge and jury who will hear this case!  They too are the Lord’s instruments to carry out a fair trial and hand out appropriate punishment.
In addition, you are free to pray for the murderer.  For his full confession, perhaps some kind of explanation and for his repentance!


You are free to use your hands and mouth for the benefit of theses families who have been deeply affected forever by this murderer. Cards. Condolences. Sympathies. Good wishes. Facebook posts. Tweets and Twitters. God’s heartiest blessings. And the prayers! For you too are the Lord’s instruments to help them any way that you can.


In the midst of all your care for the grieving and the injured, Jesus is there.  As your Savior! As their Savior!  In all things doing what He’s promised.  Working all things out for good! That’s His cup of tea!

Naked I came from my mother’s womb and naked I will depart. The Lord gave and the Lord has taken away; may the name of the Lord be praised.”

Indeed!

The peace of the Lord be with you all.

In the Name of Jesus.

Categories
HT Legacy-cast

Episode 195: July 20th, 2012

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Our first international episode! This week Jon and Pr. Borghardt talk to a bunch of Canadian pastors at TWELVE in St. Catharines, ON. They walk us through different breakaways that they taught and even teach us how to speak Canadian!

Categories
News

Higher Things Makes the News in Canada.

From The Brock News

Nearly 200 Lutheran youth have gathered at Brock this week for the Higher Things Lutheran youth conference, running today through Friday at the Concordia Lutheran Seminary.

This marks the first time the annual conference, which has attracted young people Ontario, Manitoba, Saskatchewan and several U.S. states, has been held in Canada.

Conference attendees will be staying on campus in the DeCew Residence.

The conference’s theme, TWELVE, focuses on biblical themes for the number 12. Daily activities include multiple worship services and plenary and breakaway teaching sessions. Breakaway sessions will explore topics ranging from creation and stem cell research to social media and vocations.

Higher Things is a recognized service organization of the Lutheran Church – Missouri Synod that assists parents, congregations, and pastors in cultivating and promoting a Lutheran identity among youth.

Categories
Current Events

Coming Home at ‘Twelve’

When I found out last year that Higher Things was coming to Maryville, Missouri for their LCMS youth conference, I knew I had to go. My youth groups had never gone to a Higher Things conference before, and I knew they would receive indepth teaching of the Gospel, participate in genuine Lutheran worship (only with 800 other people) and enjoy the organized, chaotic fun that Higher Things does so well.

But there was another reason I wanted to go. You see, Maryville is my hometown. My family moved when I was in kindergarten, when my dad took the call to serve Hope Lutheran Church in Maryville as their pastor. I was confirmed in Maryville and graduated from Maryville. Although I did not go to Northwest Missouri State, I was familiar with the campus. My high school Christmas concerts were in the Ron Houston Center, which served as the Higher Things chapel. I had attended basketball camps and a concert in same the Bearcat Arena where plenary sessions were held. So going to NWMSU for this summer’s Higher Things conference was thrilling, because everything I had known was transformed for the service of the Gospel.

The theme for the conference was “Twelve.” More than just a number, “Twelve” is the symbolic, Scriptural number for God’s Holy Church. There are the 12 tribes of Israel, the 12 apostles, and symbolic numbers in Revelation. Pastors Tim Pauls of Boise, Idaho, and Jeff Grams of Scottsbluff, Nebraska did a fantastic job teaching the large group sessions. Both pastors showed, by focusing on the Lutheran understanding of the end times and the book of Revelation, how popular Protestant teachings can bring great fear and guilt, and how Lutheran teaching gives comfort based on Christ alone. Sectionals offered many different topics that people could go to, ranging from Facebook, tv shows, movies, parts of Scripture and issues like depression or Islam. Thank you to all who attended my sectional on the Passover Roots of the Lord’s Supper.

The worship, as you would expect, was excellent. In a smoking hot Ron Houston Center, pastors conducted Lutheran worship using services and hymns from Lutheran Service Book. I thought each sermon was fitting and Christ centered. I was especially impressed at Rev. Bruce Keseman’s statement that God “twelves” you, making you into a member of His Holy Church on account of Christ Jesus. Who knew that “twelve” could be a verb? And seeing approximately 800 Lutheran youth and chaperones singing their hearts out on Lutheran hymns and liturgy was also moving.

One service stood out for me. On July 4 by Mozingo Lake, after the fireworks had ended, pastors led an acapella compline service. This was meaningful for me for two reasons. First, there I had many memories there. I had a summer job at Mozingo Lake years ago, and once I ran a mower out of gas on the very hills we sat on. Second, but more important, halfway through the service, I noticed that several of the motorboats that had been loudly sailing on the lake had stopped their engines, yet their lights were still on. It dawned on me that they were hearing us! From then on, I determined to enunciate every syllable and sing as loudly as I could. I wondered if any of my former classmates were on the lake listening. I hoped that Holy Spirit might work through that Word and lead them to faith in Christ, too.

Last but not least, there was the fun! Higher Things knows how to have a good time: ultimate frisbee, pickup soccer games, an iron chef contest using bacon, an illusionist who passed sharp blades through people, but left them unharmed, bouncy-house-laser tag and jousting (that did not leave everyone unharmed, such as Rev. Jonathan Fisk’s nose), games, excellent performances at the talent show, and some original movies created by Lutheran youth groups. I loved the video parody of Rev. Todd Wilken of Issues, Etc. fame, and Rev. Jonathan Fisk, of Higher Things and Worldview Everlasting fame. Judging by how he looked when he saw it, he thought it was hilarious, too.

Servant events and projects were also a part of the conference. Volunteers could help pick up Mozingo Park on July 5. The youth also collected project books for Bethesda Lutheran Home. Nobody else might have realized this, but Maryville has a Bethesda home, and the residents of the Bethesda are faithful members of my home church, Hope Lutheran in Maryville. I was so thankful that Higher Things youth groups helped these special people, and was humbled that I personally knew many of the residents who would benefit from these project books.

Before we left Nebraska, I thought I’d try to catch up with some old friends while I was back in Maryville. I tried calling some, but other than one family who belonged to my home church, I didn’t run into anybody I knew. Not one person in my class! Not one person I recognized! When I tried to start up conversations with the people of Maryville, no one even remembered my family name. Maryville had moved on. When I had lived in Maryville, I never really felt like I fit in. Perhaps it was that I was the only Lutheran out of 137 in my graduating class. And it was hard to fit in partially because I didn’t have agreement with others in the most important matters: Christ, His Church, and what His Word teaches.

But how different it was at Higher Things! Here are my friends, old and new. Here is my family in Christ. How easy it was to talk to people I didn’t know, on the way to a sectional, or at a meal. How often it happened that I or members of my group could sit down with a total stranger, and after some time, you could joke around as if you were old friends. I think this happened because we all had the same faith, the same grounding, and participated in the same gifts and Word of our Lord Jesus. We were “twelved” together as members of the body of Christ. And that makes all the difference. The members of my youth group are already making plans for next year. I can hardly wait.

In Christ,
Rev. Robert Mayes
“The Trombone Guy”
Immanuel and Zion St. John
Beemer and Wisner, NE

Categories
Catechesis

TrueBlood

by Rev. Jeffery W. Grams

“Take, drink; this is the true blood of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ, shed for the forgiveness of your sins.”

Week after week, this phrase is heard in Lutheran churches all around the world. The words have remained essentially the same for hundreds of years. They serve as a reminder of what we are truly receiving from the Lord Jesus Christ every time we celebrate His Supper.

Popular culture has a way of messing with the meaning of words, and in 21st century America our obsession with vampires, in movies and on television, can certainly cause confusion. Nevertheless, fiction has a way of imitating life, and sometimes we can find reminders of the truth in the strangest of places.

Did you ever notice that the mythology of vampires bears a strange similarity to the truth of God’s Word? Let us use this popular myth to take a look at God’s Word and recall the good news of our salvation.

It all begins with the blood. All vampire myths have one thing in common—a vampire must drink blood to survive. Without blood, especially human blood, a vampire will starve and become weak. The drinking of human blood is understood to be the source of true “strength” for the “living dead.”

What does God’s Word say about blood? The life is in the blood…

When Cain murdered Abel, it was his blood that cried out! And the Lord said, “What have you done? The voice of your brother’s blood is crying to me from the ground.” (Genesis 4:10 ESV)

From the beginning, the biblical understanding was that the life of a creature was in its blood: “ Every moving thing that lives shall be food for you. And as I gave you the green plants, I give you everything.  But you shall not eat flesh with its life, that is, its blood.” (Genesis 9:3-4 ESV)

If you search for the word “blood” in the ESV version of the bible, you will find it over 400 times! Why is blood used so often? Just as our life is in our blood, it is by the shedding of blood that we receive the forgiveness of sins. In the New Testament we have come to understand that all of the blood shed in the Old Testament was pointing us forward to our Lord Jesus Christ, who as the Lamb of God would shed his blood for our salvation. (See Hebrews 9:11-28 to read more about our redemption through the blood of Christ!)

Which brings us to the next interesting myth about vampires: 
If you drink their blood you will become immortal and live forever.

What is fascinating to me is that these myths have some similarities 
to the truth of God’s Word. After all, what does our Lord Jesus Christ say in John’s Gospel?

Jesus said to them, “Truly, truly, I say to you, unless you eat the flesh of the Son of Man and drink his blood, you have no life in you. Whoever feeds on my flesh and drinks my blood has eternal life, and I will raise him up on the last day. For my flesh is true food, and my blood is true drink. Whoever feeds on my flesh and drinks my blood abides in me, and I in him.” (John 6:53-56 ESV)

Clearly this sermon of Jesus is not recommending some form of vampirism or cannibalism! He is pointing us toward His own work of salvation. He is the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world. He is the one who would shed His blood on the cross for the forgiveness of our sins. He is the one who would give us His flesh to eat and blood to drink in the Lord’s Supper so that we would receive everlasting life. Isn’t that far more comforting and amazing than any myth about blood-sucking undead?

Which raises the question: What do so many people find appealing in the myths about vampires? Some people imagine that becoming a vampire would mean living forever and being forever beautiful. They imagine that as a vampire they would be strong and powerful and fearless.

In reality, even the fantastic promises of this myth pale by comparison to the true joy offered by the Lord Jesus Christ in the True Blood of His Holy Supper. Eternal life will never be found in the blood of some undead monster—but is instead truly received in the Blood of our Savior. Eternal youth will not be received through a bite on the neck—but the new life we have received as we were born again in the waters of Holy Baptism will never end! Digging your way out of a shallow grave can hardly seem an appealing future—but we know that on the day of the Resurrection of all flesh we will all rise again in new and glorious bodies that are forever free from the touch of sin and death.

The glorious future that is given to us by the true body and blood of our Lord Jesus Christ is far more amazing than any vampire story found in movies or television. For in the end, by the grace of God, this is the vision of our glory:

“These are the ones coming out of the great tribulation. They have washed their robes and made them white in the blood of the Lamb. Therefore they are before the throne of God, and serve him day and night in his temple; and he who sits on the throne will shelter them with his presence. They shall hunger no more, neither thirst anymore; the sun shall not strike them, nor any scorching heat. For the Lamb in the midst of the throne will be their shepherd, and he will guide them to springs of living water, and God will wipe away every 
tear from their eyes.” – Revelation 7:14-17 ESV

Rev. Jeffery W. Grams is pastor of St. John’s Lutheran Church, Scottsbluff, Nebraska, and can be reached at RevJGrams@live.com

Categories
News

Keep up with conference happenings on Facebook!

Higher Things is halfway through this year’s conference season! Nearly 1300 Lutheran youth, chaperones, and pastors attended the North Carolina and Missouri conferences the past two weeks. Around 500 people are gathering at Concordia University Irvine this week before Higher Things heads to Canada next week! Keep up with conference news as it is happening on Facebook: facebook.com/higherthings.

Categories
Catechesis

Keep up with conference happenings on Facebook!

Higher Things is halfway through this year’s conference season! Nearly 1300 Lutheran youth, chaperones, and pastors attended the North Carolina and Missouri conferences the past two weeks. Around 500 people are gathering at Concordia University Irvine this week before Higher Things heads to Canada next week! Keep up with conference news as it is happening on Facebook: facebook.com/higherthings.

Categories
HT Legacy-cast

Episode 194: July 6th, 2012

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This week’s episode of HT-Radio was recorded live in Maryville at TWELVE – Missouri. Pr. Borghardt and Jon are joined at the table by Pr. Rich Heinz, Seminarian Aaron Fenker and Pr. Mark Buetow. Each of them take turns talking about the breakaway sessions that they are teaching at this year’s conferences.