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Christ on Campus

Christ on Campus: Have you Apologized Lately? The Law and Gospel of Christian Apologetics

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by Rev. Ian Pacey

Going to college this year? How is your Christian apology? In daily conversation, the word apology almost always means an expression of regret for some misdeed. However, the term as used in Holy Scripture means to provide an answer, a reasoned response, or a defense. The intent here is to provide the briefest of overviews. The Higher Things Magazine spring 2012 issue will be featuring an entire array of articles on the subject of apologetics and it will be there that we delve into more specifics.

The best known use of apology comes to us in 1 Peter 3:15 which reads, “but in your hearts honor Christ the Lord as holy, always being prepared to make a defense [an “apology”] to anyone who asks you for a reason for the hope that is in you…”

In these words, God calls Christians to be prepared to make an apology or defense whenever the appropriate circumstances arise. So how is this done? It is one thing to know what we have been called to do. It is another to know how to do it.

The Best Response: the Gospel
The best response to the question concerning the hope we Christians have is nothing less than the Biblically revealed truth concerning human sin (the Law) and the forgiveness of sin for Jesus’ sake (the Gospel). It really is that simple. Why do Christians have hope? Christians have hope because Jesus, through his death and resurrection, has atoned for the sins of the world!

As we all know, not everybody who hears the Law and the Gospel believes immediately or ever, for that matter. Fundamentally, all unbelief is the result of human sin. In practice, the reason for unbelief is as different as the people who do not believe. Some may not believe because they have been taught some falsehood. Others may not believe because they have personally created falsehoods to distance themselves from God. In both cases, the only way to help the unbeliever dig out the error is to dialogue with them; to be willing to answer and ask questions of those who reject Christian truth claims.

Questions for Christians
Most questions for Christians from unbelievers fall into three major categories:

  1. The Existence of God. The Christian claims that God exists. God’s Word teaches this fundamental truth. Of course, the unbeliever rejects the Word. Purely for the sake of discussion, is there any way the Christian can talk about the existence of God without citing the Scriptures? The answer is yes. The Christian may talk about natural law, the idea of a first cause, or use other philosophical arguments, depending on the person with whom they are speaking. Most importantly, we can speak of Jesus (whom we know as true God) and how His tomb was empty, a fact that can be demonstrated without relying solely on the Bible’s testimony!
  2. The Reliability of the Old and New Testaments. When speaking of the Holy Scriptures, Christians use the words inerrancy, inspiration, and others. These terms reflect the origin and the truthfulness of God’s Word. By definition, the unbeliever rejects these concepts. However, when it comes the main criticism against the Bible, very often an unbeliever will set forth the idea that the words of the Bible are not the words of the original authors and/or the original authors are not those normally associated with the individual books. For example, Mark did not write Mark. Is there any way of undoing these views that poison the unbeliever’s view of the Bible? Again, the answer is yes. In fact, there is a science, called textual criticism, that is devoted to the question of text authorship and transmission. When put to the test, the Holy Scriptures pass with flying colors! Not only that, the Scriptures are validated because Jesus rose from the dead!
  3. The Problem of Evil. This argument has thousands of variations. Many atheists/agnostics consider the problem of evil to be the best argument against the truthfulness of Christianity. The idea goes like this: Christians believe God is both all powerful and the greatest good. If these two things are true, then evil should not exist. Nevertheless, evil does exist. Thus, God is not all powerful or not good. In either case, He is not a God worth trusting. In a purely formal sense, this challenge is easily undone. God can do things or allow for things which we may not understand while maintaining His omnipotence and His maximum goodness. We can see this demonstrated in the experience of Job in the Scriptures. More importantly, though, we see the problem of evil answered in Jesus, who suffered evil to rescue us from evil forever!

Questions for Unbelievers
At this point, in addition to responding to questions, Christians need to be able to ask serious, probing questions of the unbeliever. For example, in response to the question of God’s existence, Christians might bring up the question of why anything exists. In some cases, people believe the universe sprang up from nothing (practically a miracle). In other cases, people suggest an eternally existing universe (so the issue is not eternal existence, but what or who exists eternally). There are many important questions to be asked in the area of ethics. Most people believe in the existence of good. How do we know what is good (or evil) without God? The number of questions can make your head spin.

Putting it all together
A full apologetic for the truthfulness of the Christian Faith, in support of the Gospel, needs to have both questions and answers at work. In both the answering and asking of questions (as Law), the power of false belief is undermined. We know that the Law does not bring anyone to the Faith. Nevertheless, the work of the Law is the divinely created forerunner to hearing and believing the Good News of forgiveness in Jesus Christ which, in the end, is the goal of all of our apologies.

Rev. Ian Stewart Pacey was born and raised in Orange County, California. He holds degrees from U.C.L.A. (B.A.), Concordia Theological Seminary (M. Div.), and Drew University (M. Phil.). Rev. Pacey serves as campus pastor at the University of Arizona, Tucson Arizona.

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HT Legacy-cast

Episode 155: October 7th, 2011

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This week on HT-Radio Rev. Paul Mumme of Divine Shepherd Lutheran Church in Bollingbrook, IL talks about H20: Ordinary or Extraordinary? We rejoice in our baptism as he talks about water and the word. Then Pr. Kuhlman continues his series on the Last Days. This week we take a look at Christ’s Crucifixion as the Last day. Finally Pr. Borghardt and Jon Kohlmeier take a look a head to the gospel reading this Sunday. The raising of the widows son. Just as Christ ruined the funeral of the widow’s son by raising him, He also ruins all funerals by defeating Death itself.

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News

Trinity 17 – End of Church Year Reflections

Higher Things is pleased to announce that the Reflections for the weeks of Trinity 17 through the end of the Church Year are now available! These daily devotions cover the time of October 16th, 2011 through November 26th, 2011. To download the Reflections in a printable booklet format, click here.

In Christ,
Rev. Mark Buetow
Media Executive, Higher Things, Inc.
reflections@higherthings.org

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Current Events

On the Death of Steve Jobs

Rev. William Cwirla

You don’t have to know me well to know that I’m a huge fan of Apple. I have an Apple decal on my study door to make the point. My first computer was a 512K “Fat Mac” purchased in 1984. I’ve owned Apple computers my entire working life. I operate three today. I’m also the proud owner of two iPods and a first generation iPad. I don’t have an iPhone, though. I prefer my phones to be phones and my cell phone to be off. Don’t call me; I’ll call you.

Steve Jobs, the founder of Apple, died Wednesday. His accomplishments are legendary. A fiercely competitive businessman, a culture-defining designer, an innovator, a showman to the end, Steve Jobs epitomized a generation. My generation. For my parents’ generation, the defining company was General Electric, the giant industrial conglomerate that made everything from washing machines to MRI machines to jet engines. For my generation, the iconic company is Apple, joining form and function, engineering and art, making technology an integral part of our lives. Others invented computers, cell phones, music players, and tablets. Steve Jobs put his unique signature on them and changed the way we use them. He made technology fun.

What many people don’t know is that Steve Jobs was baptized in a Lutheran church. He was catechized in the same Lutheran congregation my brother now attends by a pastor I knew before he died. He is named in the famous “Lutheran Song” that lists many prominent people as Lutherans, though most are not actually Lutheran any more.

I’m sad that Steve Jobs died at a fairly young age. He was just two years older than I am. I don’t know if Apple will continue to be an innovative force without him. We’ll see. But what makes me really sad is that he didn’t stick with being Lutheran. That would have been so cool. Imagine, Steve Jobs as a Lutheran going to the same church as my brother. I might have met him. Truthfully I don’t know what he believed at the end of his life. I know he dabbled in Buddhism and was a vegetarian. Neither philosophical contemplations or vegetables will do you any good at the end of your life.

I don’t understand falling from faith. I understand that we do not come to faith by our own reason or strength or decision. I know that the Holy Spirit calls us to faith by the Gospel and that faith is a gift from God. I understand that and believe it. What I don’t understand is how someone falls from faith. This is a great mystery to me. How is it that someone can be baptized and catechized and then turn away from Christ and His Church? In 19 years of ministry, this is what puzzles me the most. There are many sons and daughters of our congregation who have gone that way. I grieve over them much more than I do the death of Steve Jobs. I baptized and taught them. And I will have to give an account for their souls. And what about me? What makes me immune from falling in the same way?

I think falling from faith happens slowly and imperceptibly. It begins with that Sunday soccer game or basketball tournament, the boy scout event, the part-time job that forces you to work on Sunday morning and then the next time, you volunteer. The late night party on Saturday that leaves you too tired to get up for church. The hectic calendar. Family concerns, the business, the house, the investments.

You discover that you can skip church for weeks, maybe even months, and nothing bad happens. Your hair doesn’t fall out. Your teeth don’t turn green. Your children are no worse and maybe even a little better now that you don’t have to fight them in the pews. And you get a little more “me time.” You might even get promoted, or start your own company, or invent the iPod. Pretty soon, you cease to worry about how it is with you and the Lord, like a relative you’ve long forgotten. Maybe you read a few books challenging religion in general and Christianity in particular and they cause you to wonder if it’s all a big waste of time. You find some unpleasant stuff about Lutherans on the internet. You have a squabble with a congregation member. No one from church seems to care or call.

One day the dimly flickering light of faith simply goes out, like a little candle in a puff of wind, and you don’t even notice. Faith doesn’t die with a shout of protest or a clenched fist of defiance. It takes faith to be angry with God. When faith dies, it simply withers away like a dry untended plant.

The rich man and Lazarus both died and were buried. Death is the great leveler of humanity. The rich may have better health plans and access to the marvels of medicine, but sooner or later that runs out too. Two days after his resignation from Apple, Steve Jobs looked like any other 56 year-old man near the end of his life. I know the look well. His many achievements and contributions to technology and culture were behind him. His days were numbered. “Teach us to number our days, that we may gain a heart of wisdom.”

God is merciful and gracious. He justifies the ungodly in His Son. He forgives sinners for Jesus’ sake. Jesus is the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world. In Him, God the Father reconciled all the world to Himself and does not count men’s sins against them. I don’t know how it is between the dying and the Lord of life in their last moments. I’ve attended many deaths, but I haven’t been privy to the private conversation. Like the beginning of life, the end remains a great mystery, hidden entirely in the hands of Jesus, whose hands were wounded to save the world, including men like Steve Jobs, and all those other Lutherans who no longer are.

I sincerely hope that everyone at their last hour gets to hear, “Come to me, all who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest” from the Savior who died for them. That’s what all of us sinners, great and small, clever and dull, extraordinary and ordinary, need to hear.

Rev. William Cwirla is pastor of Holy Trinity Lutheran Church in Hacienda Heights, CA. He is also the President of the Board of Directors of Higher Things, Inc. This article originally appeared at his blog.

Categories
HT Legacy-cast

Episode 154: September 30th, 2011

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In episode 154 of HT-Radio, we begin by rejoicing in the lilies of the field. The Lord takes care of them, how much more does he take care of you! Then Pr. Kuhlman is back for the second part of his series on the End Times. This week he talks about the anti-christ. During the second half of the episode, Pr. Sam Schuldheisz of Huntington Beach, CA talks about St. Michael and All Angels. What are Angels? Who is Michael? Listen in to find out as we walk our way through the Revelation text.

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HT Legacy-cast

Episode 153: September 23rd, 2011

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Facebook changed! Lutherans don’t like change. So Episode 153 of HT-Radio begins with Pr. Borghardt and Jon Kohlmeier talking a little bit about the changes made to Facebook and more so about changes in the church. Then, Pr. Kuhlman joins them to talk about the end times. In this first segment of a series on the End Times, he walks us through the New Testament to show when the End Times began. During the second half of the episode, Sandra Ostapowich answers a question from a freshman college girl on what she can do in the church.

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HT Legacy-cast

Episode 152: September 16th, 2011

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Episode 152 of HT-Radio is focused on the cross! First Pr. Borghardt and Jon talk to Rev. Rich Heinz of Chicago, IL about Holy Cross. Then they are joined for 30 minutes by Rev. Duane Bamsch who tells us about “Crazy Uncle Zeke” as we walk through the book of Ezekiel. Finally Jon and Pr. Borghardt talk a little bit about 9/11 and God working all things out for good.

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News

A Great Sadness

College can be a challenge of faith for many Christian students. For some it can be a crisis. It’s the first time away from home and congregation, a time when they must decide for themselves whether to get up for church or sleep in, a time when they are called to stand up and confess Christ on their own two feet in their own voice, often in an environment hostile to the Gospel. Their faith is challenged in the classroom, the laboratory, the library and the dorm. The social and spiritual pressures are considerable. The tangible presence of a faithful congregation on or near campus can make all the difference between confessing Jesus Christ as Lord or a long slow slide into spiritual apathy, despair and even atheism.

The campus congregation is a spiritual outpost in a wilderness of secularism, skepticism, relativism and atheism. While a building doesn’t necessarily make a congregation, it serves as a constant reminder of our Lord’s commitment to place and people. Lutheran campus ministry has always been more than just another congregation-less campus crusade. It is the sacramental presence of Christ on campus.

With much sadness we learned this week from our dear friend and Higher Things board member Rev. David Kind that the building in which his congregation gathered was being sold out from under them by their landlord district. University Lutheran Chapel has had a long and storied history of faithful service at the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis. Rev. John Pless had served there before Rev. Kind. Many alumni of the University of Minnesota can point to their days at ULC as a significant point in their lives. A number have gone from there to careers of service in the church. In many ways, ULC was and is a flagship of LCMS campus ministry.

These are economically challenging times. Unemployment is high, wages are flat or declining, offerings are in decline as are contributions to districts and the synod. Our synod, its districts and institutions, and all our congregations are being forced to make difficult decisions as we endeavor to be wise and faithful stewards of the resources our Lord places into our hands. We all hope and pray for better times when our districts will not be forced to sell churches to make ends meet, but instead would be able to build even more churches on or near college campuses.

We at Higher Things are deeply concerned for the spiritual lives of our church’s young people. We pray that this decision does not signal a synodical trend in campus ministry. We need to be audibly and visibly present on our campuses, unashamedly worshipping and confessing Christ on campus. Our students need a spiritual home away from home, a place where they can hear the saving Word of forgiveness and receive the Body and Blood of their Savior in fellowship with their fellow baptized believers and know that in spite of great changes in their own lives, Jesus Christ their Savior remains the same yesterday, today, and forever.

Let us pray:

Gracious Father in heaven, look down with kindness upon Pr. Kind and his congregation including the students who gather at University Lutheran Chapel. Grant them a place to gather for worship, study and fellowship and keep them from discouragement and despair. Turn their sorrow to joy and their loss to gain for Your kingdom. We dare not claim to know your will, and you have left these matters in the hands of men to decide. May this decision not be economically penny-wise and spiritually pound-foolish. Work all these things together for the good of salvation. Bless our campus ministries and congregations. Draw many to Christ on our campuses. Build up University Lutheran Chapel even as its building is sold and torn down. Remind us all that when we are weak then You are strong, when we are homeless then You are our shelter, when we become nothing You are everything, and that You alone are our refuge and strength, an ever-present help in time of trouble. Hear us for Jesus’ sake. Amen.

Rev. William M. Cwirla, President
Higher Things

Categories
News

A Great Sadness

College can be a challenge of faith for many Christian students. For some it can be a crisis. It’s the first time away from home and congregation, a time when they must decide for themselves whether to get up for church or sleep in, a time when they are called to stand up and confess Christ on their own two feet in their own voice, often in an environment hostile to the Gospel. Their faith is challenged in the classroom, the laboratory, the library and the dorm. The social and spiritual pressures are considerable. The tangible presence of a faithful congregation on or near campus can make all the difference between confessing Jesus Christ as Lord or a long slow slide into spiritual apathy, despair and even atheism.

The campus congregation is a spiritual outpost in a wilderness of secularism, skepticism, relativism and atheism. While a building doesn’t necessarily make a congregation, it serves as a constant reminder of our Lord’s commitment to place and people. Lutheran campus ministry has always been more than just another congregation-less campus crusade. It is the sacramental presence of Christ on campus.

With much sadness we learned this week from our dear friend and Higher Things board member Rev. David Kind that the building in which his congregation gathered was being sold out from under them by their landlord district. University Lutheran Chapel has had a long and storied history of faithful service at the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis. Rev. John Pless had served there before Rev. Kind. Many alumni of the University of Minnesota can point to their days at ULC as a significant point in their lives. A number have gone from there to careers of service in the church. In many ways, ULC was and is a flagship of LCMS campus ministry.

These are economically challenging times. Unemployment is high, wages are flat or declining, offerings are in decline as are contributions to districts and the synod. Our synod, its districts and institutions, and all our congregations are being forced to make difficult decisions as we endeavor to be wise and faithful stewards of the resources our Lord places into our hands. We all hope and pray for better times when our districts will not be forced to sell churches to make ends meet, but instead would be able to build even more churches on or near college campuses.

We at Higher Things are deeply concerned for the spiritual lives of our church’s young people. We pray that this decision does not signal a synodical trend in campus ministry. We need to be audibly and visibly present on our campuses, unashamedly worshipping and confessing Christ on campus. Our students need a spiritual home away from home, a place where they can hear the saving Word of forgiveness and receive the Body and Blood of their Savior in fellowship with their fellow baptized believers and know that in spite of great changes in their own lives, Jesus Christ their Savior remains the same yesterday, today, and forever.

Let us pray:

Gracious Father in heaven, look down with kindness upon Pr. Kind and his congregation including the students who gather at University Lutheran Chapel. Grant them a place to gather for worship, study and fellowship and keep them from discouragement and despair. Turn their sorrow to joy and their loss to gain for Your kingdom. We dare not claim to know your will, and you have left these matters in the hands of men to decide. May this decision not be economically penny-wise and spiritually pound-foolish. Work all these things together for the good of salvation. Bless our campus ministries and congregations. Draw many to Christ on our campuses. Build up University Lutheran Chapel even as its building is sold and torn down. Remind us all that when we are weak then You are strong, when we are homeless then You are our shelter, when we become nothing You are everything, and that You alone are our refuge and strength, an ever-present help in time of trouble. Hear us for Jesus’ sake. Amen.

Rev. William M. Cwirla, President
Higher Things

Categories
News

Jesus: The Real Deal – November 4-5, 2011

It used to be that everyone liked Jesus; they just didn’t believe he was God. Now some people don’t believe he existed at all! Was there a real Jesus who walked the earth 2000 years ago? Can a serious person believe he rose from the dead? Can we trust the New Testament? Pastor St- Onge will tackle some of our toughest questions and “contends for the faith that was once for all delivered to the saints,” (Jude 3).

Rev. Charles St-Onge grew up in Canada and completed two degrees in engineering before moving to the United States. He now serves as Associate Pastor at Memorial Lutheran Church and School in Houston, Texas.

When: November 4-5, 2011
Cost: $30 per person ($20 – Saturday only)
Where: Zion Lutheran Church / 1725 – 555th Street / Storm Lake, Iowa
For more information contact: Rev. David Anthony: kiliarche@msn.com– (712)732-5223
Sandra Ostapowich at retreats@higherthings.org – Higher Things Retreat Coordinator

Download the information packet here!