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HT Legacy-cast

Episode 16: December 19, 2008

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It’s begining to look a lot like Christmas in Conroe! Episode 16 opens up with The Rev. Brent Kuhlmann of Murdock, NE and the Vice President of Higher Things discussing with Pastor Borghardt the Incarnation of Christ. Pastor Kuhlman will talk about Christ coming down to us in the lowly form of human flesh in order that He might deliver us from our sin. He’ll point us back to the promises in the Old Testament which tell us of this coming as well as to the manger where we’ll find the body of Jesus Christ. In the last segment before Christmas will close with The Rev. Marcus Zill of Laramie, WY and the Christ on Campus Executive of Higher Things will discuss the Lukan Narrative from the Annunciation all the way through the Shepherds seeing Chris. And finally, a Blessed Christmas to you and your family from Higher Things!

Categories
Pop. Culture & the Arts

“The Day the Earth Stood Still” Review

by The Rev. Mark Buetow

Warning: This review contains movie plot spoilers!

movie posterThen God said, “Let Us make man in Our image, according to Our likeness; let them have dominion over the fish of the sea, over the birds of the air, and over the cattle, over all the earth and over every creeping thing that creeps on the earth.” (Genesis 1:26)

“If the earth dies, humans die. If humans die, the earth will live.” –Klaatu, from “The Day the Earth Stood Still.”

It’s pretty irritating to go to a movie that you think is going to be a good sci-fi flick with lots of action, only to be hounded with a message of morality, especially one about something as ridiculous as global warming and the environment. I’ll admit, I had a hint of that before I saw “The Day the Earth Stood Still (TDTESS)” but I went anyway because we live in a small town and movies are pretty inexpensive here.

If you ever saw the original “The Day the Earth Stood Still,” you know that the human race was going to be destroyed unless they stopped developing atomic weapons. Since the original was released in 1951, you can definitely see the “Cold War” concerns of people at the time. Well, it’s 2008 so now “TDTESS” does the same thing, except instead of nuclear weapons the big concern is the environment.

Now, here is one way to review this movie. Aliens come to earth to punish us for destroying the earth. In the end, however, mankind promises to change and do better and the alien, Klaatu, is persuaded to call off the destruction of the earth. Of course, the consequence is a big change to our technological way of life. The problem with this way of thinking is that the creation becomes our god and instead of answering to our Creator, we must answer to some outside alien for what we’ve done. In this way of looking at it, “TDTESS” is really a bad movie theologically, because it confuses the Creator with the creation and makes “global warming” something more dire than it is at all.

That’s one way to look at the movie. But there’s a better way. How about this? An alien takes a human form, comes to earth to warn us and then judge us and in the end sacrifices himself to save us! Sounds a little bit like the Gospel, doesn’t it? Of course, Jesus is God in the flesh, not an alien. And our real problem is not “the environment” but sin. Still, it just goes to show that even in a movie that is probably thought of as completely “secular” can’t get away from a storyline that mimics the Gospel story of the Son of God coming in the flesh to save us from the very judgment He Himself brings!

So I left “TDTESS” a little bit annoyed that a sci-fi movie had to be “ruined” by a moralistic message about how we hurt our planet. But as I thought about it, I had to smile that even a movie like that can’t get away from teaching or picturing the Greatest Story—our salvation—even if it’s just in some similar ideas. Humanity’s ability to change and do better seems to overcome our destruction in the movie. But in the end, even a silly plot line like that is overcome and overshadowed by the Gospel of our salvation in Jesus. And the giant robot in the movie does some cool stuff, too!

The Rev. Mark Buetow is pastor of Bethel Lutheran Church in Du Quoin, IL. He is also the Internet Services Executive, which means he gets to tell Stan what to do!

Categories
News

Dare to be Lutheran Shirts!

At long last! We finally have them. We’ve decided to go with a new company for our merchandising that should be more efficient than before. The new website is here:

www.higherthings.spreadshirt.com

The shirts are available in red and blue currently. This site also offers more payment options than the eBay site did. And if you order by Thursday, it should be to you by Christmas!

Please give me feedback on this new site and the shopping experience with it. Send me an email or reply to this post.

Merry Christmas!

FL1

Categories
HT Legacy-cast

Episode 15: December 12, 2008

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In a special wintery edition of Higher Things Radio, Episode 15 opens with Pastor Borghardt singing “It’s beginning to look a lot like Advent…” Can you imagine, snow in beautiful Conroe, Texas? Without delay, Pastor Borghardt opens interviewing The Rev. William Cwirla of Holy Trinity Lutheran Church in Hacienda Heights, CA and the President of Higher Things. Pastor Cwirla sticking with the season will go through the Advent Hymnody of the Lutheran Service Book and discuss the beautiful theology represented by these hymns as they point to our Lord’s deliverance into human flesh for the salvation of mankind. After covering ALL of Pastor Cwirla’s favorite Advent hymns, Pastor Borghardt will call up The Rev. Joel Fritsche to talk about everybody’s favorite guy, John the Baptist. Make way for the Lord, as Pastor Fritsche will direct us to put our eyes on Jesus and He comes to us this Advent. Lastly in a strange twist of events, Pastor Borghardt will torture… errr, serenade one of his youth group members with a rendition of “Hark, the Glad Sound”. You’ll end this episode thinking how awesome Chris Loemker’s organ playing is and also wondering… Who is chuckles?

Categories
HT Legacy-cast

Episode 14: December 5, 2008

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In an Advent 1 episode, Pastor Borghardt opens up this weeks program with a monologue on our Lord coming to us and our preparation for His arrival. Prepare for the King by receiving His gifts! Then Pastor Borghardt will interview The Rev. David Kind of University Lutheran Chapel in Minneapolis, Minnesota on Advent. Pastor Kind will direct us to prepare by repenting of our sin and preparing for our Lord to deliver Himself in flesh and blood. He’ll teach us how Advent is a penitential season which reminds us of the Old Testament Prophecies that our Lord fulfilled by taking on flesh and blood in a manger. Lastly, in a Moment with Madre, Sandra Ostapowich of Mount Olive Lutheran Church in Loveland, Colorado will deal with dating issues. Tune in and find out if Sandra can direct us to the Gospel and Christ Crucified.

Categories
Catechesis

“Comfort, Comfort My People” – A Homily for Advent

by The Rev. William Weedon

Isaiah 40:1-5 / Luke 1:5-25

zechariahandangelGod commands a word of comfort to His people: “Comfort, comfort my people, says your God. Speak tenderly to Jerusalem and cry to her that her warfare is ended, that her iniquity is pardoned, that she has received from the Lord’s hand double for all her sins.” A word of comfort, pardon, grace, and huge gift. And yet this word from God is often met with skepticism. Can He mean me? Surely not. Not after all I’ve done. Such a word of comfort and grace cannot be meant for the likes of one whose sin is like mine.

And there are none who so feel their sin as those who live closest to His holiness – those whom He regards as righteous by their faith and trust in Him. They see their sin and feel its weight in a way that the world never can understand. It takes the nearness of God to bring the weight of sin to bear on the conscience and the heart.

Zechariah and Elizabeth were such. The evangelist tells us that they were “both righteous before God, walking blamelessly in all the commandments and statues of the Lord.” If you asked them, they’d have told you a different description. They’d have said: No, we are poor sinners, who plead the mercy of God and wait for His redemption. But such people who live by faith and who are righteous because they see their own sin and utterly despair of themselves and put all their hope on the mercy of God – they are the ones who above all struggle to believe that God could be gracious and kind to the likes of them.

And so the old man stood there attending to his duty, offering the sacred incense and as the smoke began to swirl toward the heavens and the sweet smell filled the darkened room, he became aware of a presence. There at the right side of that altar where he had so lately thrown on the coals the offering of incense, the sign of prayer, stood an angel.

What is the response of a man who knows his sin when he sees such a thing? Does he rejoice and thank God that he is counted worthy of such a vision? No. Zechariah shows his righteousness by his humility. He is troubled and fear falls on him. But the angel was not sent to scare him, but to comfort him. “Comfort, comfort my people, says your God.” Gabriel was sent to announce the dawn of the redemption for which Zechariah had longed, and in which he would play a key role.

“Do not be afraid, Zechariah. Your prayer has been heard, and your wife Elizabeth will bear you a son.”

“My prayer?” thought Zechariah. “But that was years ago. I’ve long since stopped hoping or even dreaming of such a thing. Why, it’s just not possible.” So his thoughts must have run as the angel went on, heedless of the perplexity on Zechariah’s face. “You shall call his name John. And you will have joy and gladness and many will rejoice at his birth for he will be great before the Lord. And he must not drink wine or strong drink, and he will be filled with the Holy Spirit, even from his mother’s womb. He will turn the hearts of the children of Israel to the Lord and will go before Him in the spirit and power of Elijah, to make ready for the Lord a people prepared.”
Zechariah is blown away that God could be so good, so gracious, so kind to Him. He can’t get his mind around it. And his unbelief and fear conquer him. “How shall I know this?” he asks. “I am old; my wife beyond the years of bearing a child. How can this be?”

If it is terror to see an angel to those who know their sin, even more terrifying is seeing an angel riled. Gabriel speaks a word of judgment that turns out also to be a word of promise. Not a word can pass from Zechariah’s lips until they open in praise of what God has done, for the words He gave to the angel will come to pass, fulfilled in their time. God’s words cannot and do not fail.

And then the angel was gone. And Zechariah was struck dumb before the goodness and the mercy of the Lord – goodness and mercy unlooked for. That he and his wife would have a child. That that child would be the long awaited prophet to go before the Lord Himself, preparing his way. That their child would be the appointed ambassador of the King of kings to announce the ultimate comfort. That God has come into the flesh to triumph over the enemies of the human race – to make common cause with the flesh He now shares and to raise the fallen sons of Adam to their high destiny as children of God.

And like Zechariah, we stagger at the promise. Me? Can He possibly mean this comfort for me? That I who fail Him so often every day will be forgiven, made welcome in the home of the Eternal Son, made to sit with Him at His table and to reign with Him over all things? Me? How can it be?

Advent invites us to enter the silence of Zechariah and to wait and see the Words of God come to their fulfillment at the proper time. As he left the temple and couldn’t even given the final blessing because of his sealed lips, his heart was burning with the hope that words of God had given him. And he began to see their fruition not many days later. Elizabeth laughed and thought “Why, it’s Abraham and Sarah all over again.” The prayers that they long since had given up on were answered by God in His goodness in a way beyond their imagining.

People loved by God, your God commands comfort to be spoken to you too. His love for you will indeed astound and silence you, as you behold Him taking flesh from the pure Virgin and coming among you as your own brother to lift you to His glory. The comfort of this message is for you – you who think yourself hopelessly sinful and a failure. He says to you: For you I have come. For you I have sent my messenger to prepare my way. Do not fear. I am your Emmanuel. Watch in silence and see my salvation unfold! Amen.

The Rev. William Weedon is pastor of St. Paul’s Lutheran Church in Hamel, IL. Pastor Weedon is a plenary speaker at next summers Higher Things Sola Conferences. This homily originally appeard on his blog.

Categories
HT Legacy-cast

Episode 13: November 28, 2008

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Happy Thanksgiving! On a special turkey day episode Pastor Borghardt will open up with a monologue on giving thanks, particularly for our Lord Jesus Christ who delivers us from sin, death and the devil. Then Pastor Borghardt will interview The Rev. Rick Stuckwisch of South Bend, IN about the end of the Church Year. As we celebrate the Last Sunday of the Church Year and approach Advent how does Christ deliver Himself to us? Pastor Stuckwisch will show us the Gospel. In the final segment Pastor Borghardt will interview the host of “Sarah’s Daughters”, a new progrtam on Pirate Christian Radio, and also frequent guest on Higher Things Radio – Sandra Ostapowich about dating older men. Is it good, bad, what do you think? Listen to Sandra as she deals with this sensitive issue and points us back to Christ and Him crucified.

Categories
Catechesis

All That Daily Bread!

Our Lord works through His Word and means. By means of flesh, the Son of God was able to bleed and die for our sins. By means of water, God puts His name on us. By means of a pastor’s voice, Christ absolves us of our sins. By means of bread and wine, Jesus gives us His body and blood. Of all the means by which the Lord does things, those are the most important! Jesus, who is the Bread of Life, is truly our daily bread!

But have you ever stopped to consider how the Lord uses means to give us the rest of our daily bread? Let’s take an example. When I sit in my recliner and watch TV, there is a little boy and girl in the congregation I serve who can eat. How is my watching TV connected to their eating? Well, their mom works for the cable company. So when I pay for my cable TV each month, she earns money from her job at the cable company. So, by means of my watching TV, and her earning a paycheck, these children are fed and clothed.

But it goes way beyond that. Think about all the connections that are made when that transaction takes place. When the money comes out of my account, a computer programmer at the bank earns money to buy his children what they need. When that mom I mentioned goes and buys those groceries, let’s say a loaf of bread, all kinds of gifts from our heavenly Father are coming together. First of all there is His gift of sun and rain to water the fields where the grain grows. The Lord provides for the farmer who harvests and ships the grain. Men and women at a flour mill grind that grain into flour. Someone drives it on a truck, using fuel to drive that truck that was pumped out of the ground. People who make the boxes and bags in which the bread is shipped, the people who work at the warehouse and the grocery store, from the boy who puts it on the shelf to the nice young lady who rings it up at the register. At every step of the way, in every aspect of our lives, we see the gracious hand of our heavenly Father at work to provide for us.

Notice that a loaf of bread doesn’t fall out of the sky whenever you get hungry. You buy it from people who produce and deliver and sell it. Do you see then how the Lord works through means, not just for our salvation but for every aspect of our lives? And why? Because we deserve it? Nope. After all, even people who aren’t Christians have jobs and can buy bread. No, our Lord gives us these gifts, as the Catechism teaches, “only out of Fatherly divine goodness and mercy, without any merit or worthiness in me. For all which it is my duty to thank and praise, serve and obey Him.” So, take a moment at Thanksgiving to do that!

But how do you thank God properly? How do you say “thanks” or “give back” to the Guy who has everything? You do what the Psalmist says: You “take the cup of salvation and call on the name of the Lord.” (Psalm 116:13). In other words, the best way to thank the Lord for all His benefits? Live in them! Enjoy them! Receive them as His gifts! Don’t try to pay Him back—you never could! Rather live each day expecting that your Father in heaven will provide for you! Use what He gives you for your good and the good of your neighbor, those around you. Enjoy whatever the Lord gives you as a gift.

As you enjoy the good things the Lord gives you to support your body and life, enjoy most of all the gifts that never perish or run out. As you eat your daily bread, feast also on the Bread of Life, the flesh of Jesus given for the life of the world. As you chug down your favorite drink, drink also the cup of Christ, filled with His blood, the drink of salvation. As you put on your sweater and pants, rejoice in the clothing of Jesus’ righteousness given to you in Holy Baptism. As you receive and give thanks this week for the wonderful and varied gifts the Lord gives for your body and this life, give thanks by receiving and living in the truly eternal gifts that are all wrapped up and bestowed on you in Jesus. Happy Thanksgiving in Christ!

Categories
Higher Homilies

The Last Sunday in the Church Year

by The Rev. Mark Buetow

St. Matthew 25:1 -13

Ten Virgins went to meet the Bridegroom. Five were wise and five were foolish. The Greek word for “foolish” is “moron.” The Bible says, “The FOOL says in his heart there is no God.” The foolish virgins were foolish because to them the things of God were not worth worrying about. Perhaps they never thought the Bridegroom would come. Perhaps they live as if there might be a God or maybe not. Maybe they don’t care whether or when Jesus is coming back. The gifts of forgiveness, life and salvation are not things they care about our delight in. Perhaps they have some sin that they want to hold on to. Whatever the case, they are foolish because they leave behind the gifts of faith and when the Bridegroom comes they are not ready. On the other hand, the Bible says, “The fear of the Lord is the beginning of WISDOM and knowledge of the Holy One is understanding.” The wise virgins fear the Lord. They know they cannot survive on their own. They know they owe their existence to the Bridegroom. Their whole life is one lived waiting for Him. They live by His mercy and grace. They live in the forgiveness of sins. The oil of that forgiveness is what keeps their lamps lit and they know they will need it on the Last Day. They are ready to meet the Bridegroom because they live in that forgiveness.

Where does the oil come from? Lamps in Bible times were fueled by simple wicks in olive oil. Olive oil comes from olives. And the oil is gotten out of the olives by taking them from the olive tree and crushing and squeezing them. The oil in the lamp of a Christian, the oil in YOUR lamp is from the tree of the cross. On that tree, the Son of God in the flesh is squeezed and pressed and crushed for your sins. And as He is crushed and killed by the weight of your sins, blood and water flow out of Him. Olive oil is squeezed into a jar to be carried with your lamp. Christ’s blood and water flow into the vessels prepared for them: the water into the holy font and the blood into the holy cup. The oil that the virgins carry is not some oil they made themselves or came up with. The oil that fuels are lamp is not our good works or good intentions or even our own faithfulness and believing. The oil that fuels our lamps, that gives us light, is the oil of Christ Himself pressed out of Him on the cross as He gave Himself for the Bride to make her spotless and holy and perfect for Himself. The oil you have, brothers and sisters, is from Christ Himself. Only what is from Christ Himself burns purely and supplies you light at the nighttime of your death and at the midnight hour when our Lord comes again.

Take a minute to make sure you’ve got that oil! That oil is poured into your vessel at the font when it is poured on you with water and the word. The gifts of Holy Baptism—God’s name, the death and resurrection of Jesus, the peace of the Spirit and the adoption as a child of God—these gifts are poured into you in Holy Baptism. More gifts poured into you. The words of Jesus which are written to tell you what He has done. The words of Jesus spoken that declare your sins are forgiven. More oil poured into your vessel for the Last Day. And also the body and blood poured into you. Given to you to eat and drink, this food of Jesus Himself promises and delivers the forgiveness of sins, life and salvation. Why life and salvation? Because when the Bridegroom comes again you will be ready with a lamp that is burning brightly, filled from these heavenly gifts. Do you get it? When Jesus comes again on the Last Day and wakes us from the sleep of death, we trim our lamps and they burn brightly because of Him and what He has given us. It is Jesus we are waiting for and it is Jesus Himself who gives us the oil of Himself so that we might be prepared to enter into the wedding feast when He comes again.

But which of us is not foolish? Which of does not despise their Baptism and Christ’s gifts? Which of us does not think we can coast through life, slipping through church, pretending we’re Christians, while all the while paying no attention to how much oil we’ll have on the Last Day? You and I do this all the time: we figure we can show up in church, do the “church thing” and then go right on living the way WE want to back in our daily lives. You know, still hating the same people, still giving in to the same sins, still pretending we’re religious to a world that knows we aren’t really. Still finding other things to love and attract us more than the Lord Himself. Still finding other ways to please and worship ourselves instead of serving and caring for others. To live like that is to despise our Baptism. It is to hang on to our lamps but have no oil. It is to fall into the Devil’s trap of thinking, “Live how you want, you can always go and buy your oil, get your religion, have some Jesus at the last minute!” But there won’t be any oil to be found on the Last Day. And while the world wails at the coming of Jesus, those who pretended like they were Christians but had no oil will be shut out of Christ’s presence. How terrifying a thing that is!

That is why Jesus speaks these words. Brothers and sisters in Christ, our Lord tells us about the wise and the foolish virgins, and we hear about them every year to warn us! To call us to repentance. To wake us up from our laziness and remind us that we need oil! And that we have been given oil! And that the oil is plentiful for us on the Last Day. Your Lord doesn’t want you to be without oil on the Last Day. He also doesn’t want you to try and come up with the oil on your own or go buy it somewhere. He has provided the oil from His own body given into death for our sins. He has delivered that oil and filled up our vessels through His holy gifts of word, water and body and blood. There is not a one of us who has not lived foolishly, more happy in our sins than with the Lord. There is not a one of us who has not in some way despised the gifts Jesus gives. But that is why His Words save us. The parable of the wise and foolish virgins wakes us up from the sleep of sin so that when we fall asleep in death we will not wake unprepared but ready to go in with our Bridegroom to His feast. Wake up, sleepers! Throw off your sin! Cling to Christ. You are filled with His oil. His salvation. His forgiveness. He’s coming soon and you will be ready. That’s His promise to you in His church where His holy gifts are given.

Our oil and fuel prices were really high recently. Now they have dropped dramatically. They said gas and oil for heating our homes this winter would be very expensive but now they’re not so sure. I have no idea what those crazy prices will do. But I do know this: the oil that matters, the oil which fuels the lamp of your life as a Christian never goes up in cost—because it’s free! The oil that Christ Himself gives you from Himself is the oil that will burn brightly on the Last Day. As we prepare in this life to fall asleep in death, we do so knowing that when our Lord comes again, our vessels will be filled with oil. When the Lord wakes you up on the Last Day, get ready to trim your lamps and follow Jesus, being filled with Jesus Himself. You see, that is our life as Christians, to wait for the coming of the One who has already come and given Himself for us and to us. Our life is to eagerly await the coming of Jesus, who Himself has made us ready to receive Him. Wake up! He’s almost here. The feast is going to start. Light your lamps and live in Christ. Come quickly, Lord Jesus! Amen.

 

Rev. Mark Buetow is Pastor of Bethel Lutheran Church in Du Quoin, IL. Pr. Buetow is the editor of the Higher Things Reflections and Internet Services Executive. He has also been a guest on Higher Things Radio.

Categories
HT Legacy-cast

Episode 12: November 21, 2008

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In the 12th episode of Higher Things Radio Pastor Borghardt will open with a monologue and deliver the Gospel in these last Sundays of the Church year. While the world is getting ready for Christmas Shopping, Christians are busy getting ready for Christ’s coming. In preparation for our Lord’s coming Pastor Borghardt will interview regular guest, Rev. Brent Kuhlman on Holy Absolution. Ironicaly, after learning all about Holy Absolution, Pr. Borghardt calls Rev. Jonathan Fisk for “Is This a Sin?” Tune in to find out if Pr. Fisk can handle the hot seat.