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News

Higher Movies: Serenity

Serenity: Good ole’Sci-Fi with a New Twist

I just saw Serenity last night.  This movie is kind of the culmination of a minor sci-fi cult following in a series called Firefly.  There are fan clubs, forums, more geekiness than you can imagine, unless you have ever been to a Dr. Who convention (been there; done that).  So what makes a movie like this tick?  Do you have to be a part of the in-group in order to watch the movie?

No.  that was one of the things I really enjoyed about the movie.  I hadn’t seen any of the TV series before seeing the movie last night, but it didn’t matter.  It was well written,  with a good balance of dialogue and action.  AND there wasn’t a lot of insider stuff that sci-fi flicks are often known for.  It is a good action adventure that most anyone should be able to pick up on, strap in and enjoy.

So let’s apply the Clint Eastwood rule to Serenity and see how we do:

The Good

The action was good.  It moved well.  As a techno-nerd, I enjoyed the ships and guns, and just enough fight scenes to really keep my interest and keep things movie.  In the same way, there is a level of depth to the characters that goes beyond your typical Steven Segal or Alien vs. Predator type movie.

The Bad

There wasn’t any really offensive language that I remembered, which is unusual and very good.  Probably the most offensive part to the movie was the positive portrayel of the “companion” character named Inara Serra.  A companion is a prostitute.  My problem with the character is that prostitution is really held up as a noble and honorable profession, because it “services” the natural urges of humanity.  Ugh.

The Ugly (that is, the parts that really make the movie tick for the Christian)

Probably the two parts to the movie that I enjoyed the most were first of all the positive portrayal of a (presumably) Christian pastor known as Shepherd.  He is a fairly minor character, but he is depicted as having a firm sense of right and wrong, of self-sacrifice, and as providing a kind of moral compass in the midst of dark times.  Obviously Shepherd is no Lutheran, but that is a twist in a sci-fi flick to me.  He is also martyred, which is a nice touch.

The second really enjoyable part is watching Captain Mal Reynolds.  Reynolds struggles with whether his vocation as the captain of his ship is to take care of his crew and pasengers, to himself, or to larger needs of humanity (I don’t want to say more without giving up the plot). 

The bottom line is that it is a good flick, it moves well, and that it would give some good opportunities to talk about vocation and sacrifice.

I give it an 8 of 10.

Enjoy!

Pr. Todd Peperkorn
Pastor
Sci-Feek Geek
New Firefly Fan

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News

“Higher” Movies: Batman Begins

We’ve been trying new things on the HT webpage.  In fact, we want you to have something new every time you visit!

So, we’re going to take our own stab at reviewing movies.  Always ready to poke fun at ourselves, we’ll call this column “Higher Movies.” (smile)If you’d like to submit a review for our weekly movie review, you can submit it to me

This review is provided to you by our our resident Batman expert,  Pastor Petersen. 

“Fan Boy Bliss”

Batman Begins began last night. I couldn’t wait for the weekend. Jacqui and I went. I read Batman comic books ever month and have for years. Being more than a casual fan I expected to be disappointed despite the good reviews. But I loved it, loved it, loved it. It may be the best comic book turned to movie ever. Jacqui even liked it.

What was good? For the fanboys: great casting, great origin story, great use of the Ra’s Al Ghul and Scarecrow, great use of Lucius Fox and explanation of how Batman gets his gadgets, very low level love interest/story (thanks for that! I hate it when these get sappy.) and lots of great effects. The ultimate fanboy kick? The best, absolute best, batmobile ever and the best entrance to the batcave.

Only two minor disappointments: no pearls on the street in a pool of light after the Wayne’s are killed. That is a classic comic panel and they could have paid homage there. At that point in the movie I thought they would and was bummed when they didn’t. That would have been a very nice touch visually just to let us fanboys know they were paying attention. They also failed to show Batman as much of a detective/scientist. I know there are a lot of different Batmans in the books, but I’ve always been prone to the thinking batman.

For the non-fanboys? It is a good action flick. There is plenty of dialog, plot and character development, to supplement the “ooh-ahh” effects. It is just a good story. There is nothing deep here: just fun. I highly recommend it. 

Rev. David Petersen is pastor at Redeemer Lutheran Church in Fort Wayne, IN, and a member of the Higher Things Editorial Board. This review was taken with permission from his blog, CyberStones.

What do you think?  Tell us on the Higher Things Forums.

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News

HT Media!

One of the cool things that we’ll be adding to the Higher Things website is media!  We’ll be achieving your favorite HT authors on Issues, Etc., in sermons, and podcasting our Daily Reflections.  

We are going to give you a little preview of our Media Section with a little taste of the Fall 2005 Edition of Higher Things and some lagniappe from Pastor Cwirla. 

Check out HT Media now!

Categories
News

The Feast is Online!

Dear everyone,

October 15th has arrived and, as promised, The Feast is now online!

Check out the 2006 conference web page at: www.thefeastonline.org

  • Download Registration Forms and Pre-Conference Information.
  • Get a foretaste of our worship life at The Feast.
  • Meet our Plenary Speakers and get a preview of some of the many great In-Depth Sectionals that are being planned.
  • Explore the fun activities your group can enjoy in/around Colorado Springs.
  • Get a sneak peak at the tentative schedule for the conference.
  • Join in on the discussion at our Feast Forums.

Remember that registration will open on November 15, 2005.

On behalf of the rest of “Team Feast” we’re looking forward to seeing you in Colorado Springs in the land of high altitude, low humidity, and for one week next summer, the next greatest Higher Things Lutheran Youth Conference!

So check now and check back often at www.thefeastonline.org. This will be your online home over the next 9 months as we prepare together for The Feast!

Enjoy the appetizer.

 

In Christ,

Mrs. Sandra Ostapowich, Plymouth, MN
Conference Publications Coordinator

Rev. Marcus Zill, Laramie, WY,
2006 Conference Director

“And in this mountain The Lord of hosts will make for all people A feast of choice pieces, A feast of wines on the lees, Of fat things full of marrow, Of well-refined wines on the lees.”  (Isaiah 25:6)

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News

Pastor Peperkorn’s Busy Week!

Our Executive Editor, Pastor Todd Peperkorn, has been a very busy man lately!  He presented at the Lutherans in God’s Word (LiGW) workshop at Memorial Lutheran Church in Houston, Texas on Tuesday.  His topic was “One Body at the Table.”

He will be on Issues Etc this Sunday night discussing “Youth Ministry.”  Check him out on October 16th from 10 pm to midnight CT online!  Listen Here!

Categories
News

Fall 05 Issue on the Press…with a Teaser!

The cover of the Fall 2005 HIgher Things The Fall 2005 issues of Higher Things is now on the press and will soon be out the door!  This issue has articles on everything from hell to video games, Narnia to plastic surgery, and the ever present Kathy Luder installment.  But for our online friends, we have three special additions:

  • In addition, there is an article (also online in PDF) on how to listen to sermons by our own Pastor William Cwirla.  This article helps young (and old) with what they are to listen for, how to listen, when to cut the preacher some slack, and how to find Jesus.

In honor of Pastor Cwirla’s article on preaching, we have also posted two articles that were originally sermons from the Dare to Be Lutheran youth conference.  Here they are:

  • Equal to the Apostles, by Dr. Norman Nagel.  This was the sermon Dr. Nagel (one of Pr. Cwirla’s teachers) preached at our Divine Service at Concordia Seminary, St. Louis, this past summer.  We commemorated the Eve of St. Mary Magdelene, and the text was from Luke 7.  Dr. Nagel invites the hearers to recognize that Jesus is the one who draws us into HIs Holy Kingdom by HIs blood, and that “our sin is not the measurement of HIs love.”  This sermon (along with a bunch of great pictures from DTBL), is also available in PDF format.

Look for your copy of Higher Things in the mail in the next few weeks, and in the meantime, enjoy the teasers!

Pastor Todd Peperkorn, STM
Executive Editor
Higher Things: Dare to Be Lutheran
editor@higherthings.org

Categories
Current Events

When Disaster Strikes

by Rev. David Kind

For several weeks now the images have been ashing across our television sets, have been seen on the front pages of our newspapers, and are now emblazoned on our minds. Devastation. Flood. Fires. Dire need. Looting. Violence. Death. All this in the wake of just one storm, a storm named Katrina.

And what was God’s role in this? That’s something a lot of people wrestle with. Did He send this disaster? If so, then why? Is He punishing the people of New Orleans? Or did He merely allow Katrina to happen? Does He care at all?

Obviously, God does care deeply about all people. He gave His only Son over to death out of love for sinful humanity. There can be no doubt about His commitment to us. But how does that square with tragedy and disaster? God must be doing something through this – something that is for our good. Many people think that God “allows” things to happen, but that He doesn’t send them. Try telling that to Job, or to David. They recognized rightly that God is not that impotent. He doesn’t allow things to happen. He does things. Sure others are involved too sometimes, like the devil, or an army of invaders, or a wicked person. But behind these enemies with their evil motives, is God at work with a righteous purpose. He is not a passive God, but an active One.

OK, then he must have been punishing people. New Orleans is known for its paganism and licentiousness, after all; so God must have sent this hurricane to wipe it clean, so to speak. Try telling that to the hundreds of orthodox and solidly confessional Lutherans who lost their homes, jobs, and even their churches to this hurricane. Was God punishing them too?

The Bible teaches us that natural disasters are harbingers of the destruction that will come upon the world at the last day. God sends hurricanes, oods, disease and even death to teach us that this world is coming to an end and that we all ought to repent of our sinful ways. It is not matter of one group of people being more evil than another group and the more evil ones suffering disaster. Every one is sinful. And everyone needs to repent.

One day Jesus encountered some people who were discussing Herod’s having killed some Galileans. Jesus said to them “Do you suppose that these Galileans were worse sinners than all other Galileans, because they suffered such things? I tell you, no; but unless you repent you will all likewise perish. Or those eighteen on whom the tower in Siloam fell and killed them, do you think that they were worse sinners than all other men who dwelt in Jerusalem? I tell you, no; but unless you repent you will all likewise perish” (Luke 13:1-5).

And this is the message for us in the face of tragedy. All of these things that cause such suffering are just a sampling of what sin has actually wrought. They are glimpses of the deeper, darker reality of a broken and dying world, a world eagerly awaiting its own destruction so that it may be reborn as a new creation (Romans 8:19-22). They are also little, tiny, tastes of the wrath of God and its power, meant to turn us away from our sins while there is time for repentance, so that we will not have to swallow the fullness of it.

So, while observing the disaster of Hurricane Katrina and its aftermath, while praying for and helping the victims, be sure also to heed the Lord’s warnings. Turn from the way of sin and nd your life, forgiveness, and salvation in Christ, who has suffered the fullness of God’s wrath for you, so that you won’t have to. Then you will be able to say with David: “You have dealt well with Your servant, O Lord, according to Your Word… Before I was aficted I went astray, but now I keep Your word. You are good, and do good; Teach me Your statutes” (Psalm 119:65, 67-68).

Categories
News

Hurricane Rita Prayers

The Staff of Higher Things extends our prayers to those who are in the path of or effected by Hurricane Rita.  May the Lord keep you and your family safe and protect you from all harm and danger.

As you prepare for the Hurricane or watch the news, take a moment and ignore the weather and reflect upon the promise of the Gospel: 

“They cry out to the Lord in their trouble, and He brings them out of their distresses. He calms the storm, so that its waves are still.” (Psalm 107:28-29)

Click here for our Hurricane Resources.

The Lord be with you!

Rev. George F. Borghardt III
Higher Things Web Committee
revborghardt@higherthings.org

Categories
News

Higher Things Website Upgrades!

It’s time for something new, isn’t it? The web committee has wonderful plans to change the look, feel, and content of the Higher Things website! In fact, we are so excited, we couldn’t even wait until Advent. We’ve already begun. We’ve added:

  • A new and more stable host.  Faster, quicker, better!   Do you like it? This change is already here!
  • Think it’s time for a whole new slew of moderators for the Higher Things Forums?  Done!  Check out the announcement here!

There’s so much coming on the website, that I can’t get into all of it!  But, I can tell you the following:

  • A completely new look to the whole Higher Things website, complete with easy to navigate drop-down menus, information registration materials for The FEAST, and more!
  • Daily Reflections for the full year!  Available through email, posted daily on our website, or download a seasonal booklet!  We’ve even got a slew of new writers!  Here are our 2005-2006 Reflectors:
  • Advent (Booklet available for download Nov. 1!) – Rev. George F. Borghardt III, Assistant Pastor, St. Mark Lutheran Church, Conroe, TX
  • Christmas (Booklet available for download Nov 1!) – Rev. George F. Borghardt III, Assistant Pastor, St. Mark Lutheran Church, Conroe, TX
  • Epiphany – Rev. George F. Borghardt III, Assistant Pastor, St. Mark Lutheran Church, Conroe, TX
  • PreLent – Rev. Grant Knepper, Mount Olive Lutheran Church, Seattle, WA
  • Lent – Rev. Daniel Feusse, Concordia Lutheran Church, Clearwater, NE
  • Easter – Rev. William M. Cwirla, Holy Trinity Lutheran Church, Hacienda Heights, CA
  • Trinity (Pentecost Tide) – Rev. Duane Bamsch, Evangelists Lutheran Church, Kingsbury, TX
  • Trinity (Apostles’ Tide) – Rev. J. Richard Sawyer Jr., Good Shepherd Lutheran Church & School, Brandon, MS.
  • Trinity (St. Lawrence/Martyrs’ Tide) – Rev. Richard Heinz, Senior Pastor, Saint John Lutheran Church, Lanesville, IN
  • Trinity (St. Michael/Angels’ Tide) – Rev. Dr. D. Richard Stuckwisch, Emmaus Lutheran Church, South Bend, IN
  • Trinity (All Saints’ Tide)

 Are you excited?  I know we are!  It’s coming soon!

In Christ,

Rev. George F. Borghardt III
Higher Things Web Committee
revborghardt@higherthings.org

Categories
News

Coming Soon… FEAST NEWS!

Join us at:

The Feast

July 18-21

Colorado College
Colorado Springs, CO

More information by October 15th!

Don’t forget! The FEAST news is coming October 15!