Categories
News

Higher Things’ Technology Manager

To apply for this position, please email your current resume with a cover letter and salary expectations to media@higherthings.org no later than Friday, August 31, 2018.

Link: Download the Tech Manager Job Description.

Summary of Position

The Tech Manager is responsible for managing, maintaining, and supporting the various technologies used by Higher Things, as determined by the Media Executive. This is a part-time (estimated 5–10 hours per week) position.

Primary Responsibilities

Web

  • Manage and maintain Higher Things’ website technology.
  • Upload Higher Things’ Reflections to the Higher Things’ website.
  • Post Magazine content to the Higher Things’ website.
  • Maintain and register Higher Things’ domains.

Email

  • Manage general support emails to webmaster@ and support@higherthings.org through HelpScout.
  • Assist in creating and sending MailChimp campaigns.
  • Maintain and manage organizational email system through Google Apps Domain and support as needed.

Social Media

  • Administrate access to the various Higher Things’ social media accounts (Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, etc.).

3rd Party Applications

(List of applications/services is on page 2 of the job description.)

  • Offer general support for the various applications/services Higher Things uses to accomplish its mission.
  • Manage access to these applications/services.
  • Provide on-site technical support at Higher Things Conferences.
  • Assist in developing the board-approved Technology Budget.
  • Attend Higher Things’ summit meetings as able/needed.

Qualifications

  • Member in good standing of a congregation belonging to The Lutheran Church—Missouri Synod.
  • Expert with the content management system WordPress.
  • Knowledge of HTML, CSS, and JavaScript is a plus.
  • Broad-based knowledge of software solutions.
  • Ability to learn knew hardware/software quickly.
  • Excellent problem-solving skills.
  • Excellent communication skills, verbal and written.
  • Team-player and self-starter.
  • Strong work ethic with ownership and pride in results.
  • Result-driven and result-oriented.
  • U.S. Citizen, this is not an H-1B eligible position.
  • Clean criminal record.
Categories
HT Legacy-cast

Episode 325: The Gospel, its Freeness, and Fallen Pastors – Rev. George Borghardt, Sandra Ostapowich, Rev. Mark Buetow

Today on HT-Radio, Pr. Borghardt and Sandra are joined by Rev. Mark Buetow. They talk about the Freedom in the Gospel, fallen pastors and how fallen pastors don’t effect the Gospel.

 

Categories
Gospeled Boldly

Epistle Roulette

Paul takes off the kid gloves. In this episode, Pastor Eric Brown and Thomas Lemke begin their read-through of Paul’s letter to the Galatians. Pastor gives some background to the book, and we begin to get a picture of just what is going on that is so concerning to Paul.

In the Backwards Life, Pastor Brown talks about what’s up with the ELCA and women’s ordination.

This episode covers Galatians 1:1-17.


If you have questions you’d like answered send them via our Contact Page or post them on The Gospeled Boldly Facebook page.

Please rate and review our show on iTunes.

Click here to subscribe via iTunes.

Categories
Catechesis

Books Every College Student Should Read

INTRODUCTION TO THE CHRISTIAN FAITH

  • Mere Christianity, C. S. Lewis (Touchstone/Simon & Schuster, rev. ed., first published in 1952, 1996). Amazon
  • On Being a Christian: A Personal Confession, Henry Hamann (Northwestern Pub. House, 1996). NPH | Amazon
  • What Do You Think of Jesus?, David Scaer (Concordia Theological Seminary Press, reprint, 1999). CTSFW | Amazon
  • Why I Am a Lutheran: Jesus at the Center, Daniel Preus (CPH, 2004). CPH | Amazon

CHRISTIAN INSTRUCTION

  • Concordia: The Lutheran Confessions – A Reader’s Edition of the Book of Concord (CPH, 2005). CPH
  • Didache, John T. Pless CTSFW
  • Holy Bible ESV | Biblegateway.com
  • Luther’s Small Catechism with Explanation (CPH, 2005). CPH
  • The Book of Concord (Online) BOC

SPIRITUALITY

  • Christian Spirituality: Five Views of Sanctification, Donald L. Alexander (InterVarsity Press, 1988). Amazon
  • Dying to Live: The Power of Forgiveness, Harold L. Senkbeil (CPH, 1994). CPH | Amazon
  • The Spirituality of the Cross: The Way of the First Evangelicals, Gene E. Veith (CPH, 1999). CPH | Amazon
  • Sanctification, Christ in Action, Harold L. Senkbeil (Northwestern Publishing House, 1990). Amazon
    (Look for the new CPH series on Lutheran Spirituality beginning in 2006!)

THE DEFENSE OF THE CHRISTIAN FAITH

  • God on the Dock: Essays on Theology and Ethics, C. S. Lewis (Wm. B. Eerdmans Pub. Co.; Reprint edition, 1994). Amazon
  • History, Law and Christianity, John W. Montgomery (CILTPP, 2002). CILTPP | Amazon
  • Miracles, C. S. Lewis (HarperSanFrancisco, 2001). Amazon
  • The Defense Never Rests: A Lawyer’s Quest for the Gospel, Craig A. Parton (CPH, 2003). CPH | Amazon
  • The New Testament Documents: Are They Reliable?, F. F. Bruce (Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, 2003). Amazon
  • The Testimony of the Evangelists, Simon Greenleaf (Kregel Publications, 1995). Amazon
  • The Whimsical Christian: 18 Essays, Dorothy L. Sayers (Collier Books; Reissue edition, 1987). Amazon
    (See also Mere Christianity above)

BIBLICAL WORLDVIEW TODAY

  • Above All Earthly Pow’rs: Christ In A Postmodern World, David F. Wells (Wm. B. Eerdmans Pub. Co., 2005). Amazon
  • Becoming Conversant with the Emerging Church, D. A. Carson (Zondervan, 2005). Amazon
  • Christianity in an Age of Terrorism. Gene E. Veith, (CPH, 2002). CPH | Amazon
  • Christians in a .Com World: Getting Connected Without Being Consumed, Gene E. Veith, Christopher L. Stamper (Crossway Books, 2000). Amazon
  • Discovering the Plain Truth: How the Worldwide Church of God Encountered the Gospel of Grace, Larry Nichols & George Mather (Intevarsity Press, 1998). Amazon
  • Loving God With All Your Mind: Thinking as a Christian in the Postmodern World, Gene E. Veith (Crossway Books, 2003). Amazon
  • Postmodern Times: A Christian Guide to Contemporary Thought and Culture, Gene E. Veith (Crossway Books, 1994). Amazon
  • Reading Between the Lines, Gene E. Veith (Crossway Books, 1990). Amazon
  • Testing the Claims of Church Growth, Rodney E. Zwonitzer (CPH, 2002). Amazon
  • The Anonymous God, David L. Adams, Ken Schurb, eds. (Arch Books, 2005). Amazon

PRAYER & DEVOTION

  • A Devotional Companion: Blessings & Prayers for College Students, (CPH, 2005). CPH | Amazon
  • Day by Day We Magnify Thee: Daily Readings for the Entire Year, Martin Luther (Fortress Press, 1982). Amazon
  • Psalms: The Prayer Book of the Bible, Dietrich Bonhoeffer (Augsburg Publishing House, 1970). Augsburg | Amazon

ETHICS

  • Holy People Holy Lives: Law and Gospel in Bioethics, by Richard C. Eyer (CPH, 2000). CPH | Amazon
  • Letter to the Christian Nobility, Martin Luther
  • Losing Our Virtue: Why the Church Must Recover Its Moral Vision, David F. Wells (Wm. B. Eerdmans Pub. Co., 1999). Amazon
  • On Christian Liberty, Martin Luther (Augsburg Fortress, 2003). Augsburg Fortress | Amazon

CHRISTIAN FICTION

  • The Chronicles of Narnia, C.S. Lewis, Pauline Baynes, Illustrator (HarperTrophy, Boxed edition, 1994). Amazon
  • The Hammer of God, Bo Giertz (Augsburg Books, Revised edition, 2005). Amazon
  • The Hammer of God (DVD), Bo Giertz Lutheran Visiuals
  • The Lord of the Rings, J.R.R. Tolkien (Del Rey Books, Boxed Rei edition, 2001). Amazon
  • The Screwtape Letters, C. S. Lewis (Various editions, 1961). Amazon

THEOLOGY FOR COLLEGE STUDENTS

  • Handling the Word of Truth, John T. Pless (CPH, 2004). CPH | Amazon
  • On Being a Theologian of the Cross: Reflections on Luther’s Heidelberg Disputation, 1518, Gerhard O. Forde (Eerdmans, 1997). Amazon
  • Orthodoxy, G. K. Chesterton (Various editions, 1908). Amazon
  • Here We Stand: Nature and Character of the Lutheran Faith. Hermann, Sasse (CPH, reprint, 2003). CPH | Amazon
  • Life Together: The Classic Exploration of Faith in Community, Dietrich Bonhoeffer (Harper and Row, 1954). Amazon
  • Luther’s Commentary on Galatians, Martin Luther
  • Luther’s Letters of Spiritual Counsel, Theodore Tappert (Regent, 1995). Amazon
  • Praying for Reform, William Russel (Augsburg Fortress Publishers, 2005). Amazon
  • The Bondage of the Will, Martin Luther (Revell, reprint, 1990) Amazon
  • The Fire And The Staff: Lutheran Theology In Practice, Klemet I. Preus (Arch Books, 2005). Amazon
  • The Proper Distinction between Law and Gospel, C. F. W. Walther (CPH, 1986). CPH | Amazon

ABOUT LUTHER

  • Luther: Biography of a Reformer, Frederick Nohl (CPH, reprint, 2003). CPH | Amazon
  • Luther the Reformer, James Kittleson (Augsburg Fortress Publishers, reprint, 1986). Amazon
  • Martin Luther: A Life, James Arne Nestingen (Augsburg Fortress Publishers, 2003). Amazon

VOCATION: THE LOST DOCTRINE RECOVERED

  • Faith Active in Love, George W. Forell (Augsburg Fortress Publishers, 1954). Amazon
  • God at Work: Your Christian Vocation in All of Life, Gene E. Veith (Crossway Books, 2002). Amazon
  • Love Taking Shape: Sermons on the Christian Life, Gilbert Meilaender (Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, 2002). Amazon
  • Luther on Vocation, Gustaf Wingren (Wipf & Stock Publishers, 2004). Amazon

SCIENCE AND RELIGION

  • Darwin’s Black Box: The Biochemical Challenge to Evolution, Michael Behe (Free Press, 1998). Amazon
  • Darwin on Trial, Phillip E. Johnson (InterVarsity Press, 1993). Amazon
  • Icons of Evolution: Science or Myth? Why Much of What We Teach About Evolution is Wrong, Jonathan Wells (Regnery Publishing, 2002). Amazon
  • Intelligent Design: The Bridge Between Science & Theology, William A. Dembski (InterVarsity Press, 2002). Amazon
  • The Wedge of Truth: Splitting the Foundations of Naturalism, Phillip E. Johnson (InterVarsity Press, 2000). Amazon

EDITORS’ PICKS

Dive into these twelve short, powerful, recent (or classic) books that make a good study in college. Come up for air long enough to dive into the longer list (see Books Every College Student Should Read). These resources may be available at your church or see the links on the right of each entry for online ordering, reviews, or additional book details.

  • Christians in a .Com World: Getting Connected Without Being Consumed, Gene E. Veith, Christopher L. Stamper (Crossway Books, 2000). Amazon
  • God at Work: Your Christian Vocation in All of Life. Gene E. Veith (Crossway Books, 2002). Amazon
  • Handling the Word of Truth, John T. Pless (CPH, 2004). CPH | Amazon
  • Loving God With All Your Mind: Thinking as a Christian in the Postmodern World, Gene E. Veith (Crossway Books, 2003). Amazon
  • Martin Luther: A Life, James Arne Nestingen (Augsburg Fortress Publishers, 2003). Amazon
  • Mere Christianity, C. S. Lewis (Touchstone/Simon & Schuster, rev. ed., first published in 1952, 1996). Amazon
  • On Being a Christian: A Personal Confession, Henry Hamann (Northwestern Pub. House, 1996). NPH | Amazon
  • On Being a Theologian of the Cross: Reflections on Luther’s Heidelberg Disputation, 1518, Gerhard O. Forde (Eerdmans, 1997). Amazon
  • The Defense Never Rests: A Lawyer’s Quest for the Gospel, Craig A. Parton (CPH, 2003). CPH | Amazon
  • The Hammer of God, Bo Giertz (Augsburg Books, Revised edition, 2005). Amazon
  • The Screwtape Letters, C. S. Lewis (Various editions, 1961). Amazon
  • The Spirituality of the Cross: The Way of the First Evangelicals, Gene E. Veith (CPH, 1999). CPH | Amazon

Note: A good study life is one balanced by a healthy devotional life (not to mention the life continually in communion with Christ and the saints). Devotional books were intentionly left out above, but not for de-emphasis. Your pastor can point you to appropriate devotional and worship literature.

Categories
Gospeled Boldly

The Mighty Have Fallen – Gospeled Boldly #98

David takes pursuit! In this episode, Pastor Eric Brown and Thomas Lemke read about David’s vengeance on the Amalekites, and how in the aftermath he radically changed ancient warfare. Then, Saul drinks the full measure of God’s promised punishment.

In the Backwards Life, Pastor Brown talks about mission trips.

This episode covers 1 Samuel 30:8-31:13


If you have questions you’d like answered send them via our Contact Page or post them on The Gospeled Boldly Facebook page.

Please rate and review our show on iTunes.

Click here to subscribe via iTunes.

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Categories
Catechesis

On Being “Simul” New Software on Old Hardware

Have you ever tried running new software on an old computer? I have. I have a seven year-old laptop—my trusty old road warrior. I’ve replaced the keyboard, the hard disk, and the logic board, three batteries and a few other spare parts from E-Bay. It’s not my primary computer, which is a desktop, but I try to make the old laptop as compatible as possible. However, I find that the new versions of software just don’t run well on old hardware. That’s a picture of the Christian life. Luther called it being “simul iustus et peccator,” which is Latin for “simultaneously a righteous saint and a damned sinner.” We sometimes speak of our “old Adam” or “sinful nature” and our “new man” in Christ. Old You and New You. Old You is the sinner born of Adam, hopelessly infected with the virus called Sin. New You is the saint born of God, pure and holy. The Scriptures call Old You the “outer man” or the “flesh” and New You the “inner man” or the “spirit.”

The key to understanding the Christian life as it is lived by faith is that New You is hidden “in, with and under” Old You—a Christ-mind operating an Adam-body.

In Baptism, the Spirit has given you a new operating system, new software, New You. You have the mind and the will of Christ. You delight in the Law of God and you desire to do what is pleasing to God. The trouble is that New You is running on Old You’s hardware. As a result, there are the inevitable crashes and glitches.

This is how the apostle Paul describes it: “So I find it to be a law that when I want to do right, evil lies close at hand. For I delight in the law of God, in my inmost self, but I see in my members another law at war with the law of my mind and making me captive to the law of sin which dwells in my members” (Romans 7:21-23). In other words, New Paul, his “inmost self,” really wants to do God’s will and delights in God’s law. But the hardware for Old Paul, his “members,” refuses to cooperate.

Old Paul has a terrible virus called Sin that causes him to crash every time he tries to do the will of God. Whenever he wants to do good, evil always lies close at hand. He can’t seem to get anything right. Everything he does is infected with sin, even his good works. And what is Paul’s analysis of the situation? “Wretched man that I am! Who will deliver me from this body of death?” (Romans 7:24)

Martin Luther communicated an amazingly profound insight in a series of statements he drafted for a debate at Heidelberg, Germany in 1518. This was very early in the Reformation—only a year after Luther had nailed his 95 Theses to the church door at Wittenberg. In his Heidelberg Theses, Luther said that everything man does, even when God is working through man, is sin. That’s because the inner man, the new person in Christ, must always work through the outer man, the old person in Adam. In other words, New You must always use Old You’s hardware.

That explains a lot of things. It explains why our works can’t save us. They are always sinful, even when they are good! It explains why faith alone justifies us before God. Only Christ’s works are without sin. It explains why we always seem to mess up, especially in spiritual things, why we can’t seem to stick with prayer or God’s Word, why we’re not glad when they say, “Let’s go to the house of the Lord.” It’s because New You always has to work through Old You. The righteous saint must always work through the sinner. No wonder the apostle Paul cries out, “Who will rescue me from this body of death?” (Romans 7:24)

It also explains why we can’t seem to fix ourselves. The Christian life is not about retraining old hardware to run new software. Old You is not fixable; it’s destined to die. Instead, Old You must be forced to go along with the program, at least for the moment. That’s where the Law comes in. The Law curbs, mirrors and instructs Old You to death. It curbs Old You’s behaviors, mirrors sin, and instructs with punishments and rewards, much the way you train an old dog new tricks. And you know how well that works.

Old You’s hardware is simply not suited for holiness. “Flesh and blood cannot inherit the kingdom of heaven.” Until you come into new hardware in the resurrection, New You’s software is going to have to make the best of trying to control Old You’s hardware.

Does that mean we simply sin to our heart’s content and ask for forgiveness? No! It means that we say “no” to Old Adam, and we bring him under discipline. Even though our new man in Christ needs no Law, our New You uses the Law to threaten, bribe, coerce our old hardware to get with the holiness program. That’s why we set alarms on Sunday for church. The New Adam is glad when they say, “Let’s go to the house of the Lord,” but the Old Adam says, “I’d rather roll over and go to sleep.”

For now you live “simul” by grace through faith for Jesus’ sake as a New You in Christ stuck in an Adam’s Old You hardware. That may not be a pretty sight to those keeping score, but in Christ you are already justified, sanctified, and glorified (1 Corinthians 6:11). You’re just waiting to be rescued from this “body of death” to rise with new hardware to run that Christ-like software.

Rev. William M. Cwirla is the pastor of Holy Trinity Lutheran Church in Hacienda Heights, California.

Categories
Gospeled Boldly Podcasts

How Low Can You Go – Gospeled Boldly #97

Depends… how low is Sheol? In this episode, Pastor Eric Brown and Thomas Lemke read about David’s new occupation as a Philistine mercenary—albeit one with his own motives. A necromancer helps Saul destroy the shield generator on the afterlife so they can talk to a very miffed Samuel. Then, David gets kicked out of the army, only to find that the families of all his men, as well as his own wives, have been kidnapped.

In the Backwards Life, Pastor Brown gives a backwards take on the words, “Well done, my good and faithful servant.”

This episode covers 1 Samuel 27:5-30:7.


If you have questions you’d like answered send them via our Contact Page or post them on The Gospeled Boldly Facebook page.

Please rate and review our show on iTunes.

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Categories
Gospeled Boldly Podcasts

The Lifespan of the Ancients – Gospeled Boldly Bonus

Tom’s out sick from the 2018 Higher Things conference in Lawrence, KS. Does that mean his breakout session on the Lifespan of the Ancients is kaput? Thanks to the modern technology of podcasting—by no means!

Listen in as Tom asks the question: does Adam’s lifespan defy credulity? Or is it another example of the truth being stranger than fiction?

In this BONUS episode, Thomas Lemke proposes scientific mechanisms responsible for the dramatic decline in human longevity since the flood. Turns out it’s not just possible for the ancients to have lived for centuries—based on modern discoveries it’s downright likely!

___________________________

Tom’s notes:

  • Could it be that ancient man lived three, four, five… or even nine hundred years old?
  • This is a sticking point for skeptics
    • 126 years old
  • We have a dilemma
  1. The Genesis account speaks of men routinely living into their 900s
  2. In our day we see folks topping out not long after 100
  • Outside of faith it sounds fantastic to us because it’s outside of our experience
    • Does that mean it’s not so?
      • Don’t discount ancient stories just because they seem too fantastic
      • Dragons sounded fantastic too – and then we found dinosaur bones
    • Discernment is one thing – encouraged
    • But don’t rule it out based on nothing but skepticism for things we don’t have first-hand experience with
    • Avoid chronological snobbery (anachronism)
    • Just because modern people don’t, does that mean our ancestors couldn’t?
    • Don’t assume we have exhaustive knowledge of the ancients
      • Neanderthals, for instance
  • Look at what scripture says – does it jive?
    • Let’s take a look and find out
  1. Scripture tells us that man was created to be essentially immortal
  2. The threat of the consequences for defying God’s command was that of death
  3. The command was broken, and the sentence carried out, the first man stopped breathing at 930
  4. Men for nine more generations lived most commonly more than 900 years old
  5. A man called Noah was called to build an enormous boat and set to the task even though he was over 500 years old at the time – so by all accounts in top shape
  6. A cataclysmic flood swept over the entire globe, wiping out every living creature save those native to the sea and those on the ark
  7. The following generations born successively after the flood saw shorter and shorter lifespans until, by Moses’ time 800 years later, 70 or 80 was the norm
  8. And that trend continues until today
  • There it is – that’s what the Bible says
It’s one thing to say “don’t worry about it, just trust your Bible”
I want to take it a step further
Ask the question:
  • Is it plausible that this happened based on our limited scientific knowledge?
  • Absolutely. Let’s talk mechanisms
    • Firstly, what really is aging? What causes it?
    • Compromised cellular function – as the result of:
      • Slowed cell turnover
      • Loss of ability to restore damaged tissues
      • Reduced ability to remove exogenous and endogenous toxins
        • Resulting in the buildup of damaging substances
      • Cell death
  • But why do those things happen? In the words of aging researcher Bernard Strehler, “genetic damage (particularly gene loss) is almost certainly (or probably the) central cause of aging.”
    • Why?
  • Healthy cellular function is dependent upon a healthy genetic code producing normal molecules
    • If the blueprint contained in the DNA is altered and unhealthy, the product will often be as well
  • The more genetic mutations, the more problems like this you will have
    • With structural proteins
    • With enzymes
  • Sickle cell anemia example (structural)
    • Altered DNA
    • Altered hemoglobin
  • Progeria example (structural)
    • Altered DNA
    • Altered prelamin A
  • Structural is relatively straightforward, enzymes are a whole new bag of fun
  • Healthy cellular function is dependent upon a legion of molecular substrates and products
    • For instance, you eat a potato and the glucose (substrate) is turned into energy (the product) through a series of reactions
    • Or, you drink alcohol (substrate), and your body turns it into water and carbon dioxide (products)
      • That’s right, you turn wine into water
    • These reactions require several catalysts, without which the reaction would halt
    • These catalysts are almost always enzymes
  • How does your body make enzymes?
    • By relying on the blueprints in your genetic code
  • What happens if the blueprint isn’t there?
    • This happens with genetic damage (called mutations)
    • No blueprint, no enzyme (or a misshapen one that doesn’t work, just like hemoglobin in sickle cell)
  • Phenylketonuria example
    • Genetic mutation to DNA coding for phenylalanine hydroxylase
    • Phenylalanine to tyrosine blocked
    • Phenylalanine to phenylketone instead
  • Cockayne syndrome example (very meta)
    • Genetic mutation to gene regions coding for DNA repair proteins
    • Causes rapid aging (think Indiana Jones and the last crusade with a longer time-lapse)
  • Think you’re not a mutant?: Vitamin C example
    • l-gulono-g-lactone into ascorbic acid
    • L-gulonolactone oxidase
  • Everyone on this planet is affected by scores of these mutations, many of which are still undiscovered
  • All of which shorten our lifespan due to their effect on optimizing cells function, benefits which we do not enjoy
    • 100s to 1000s of mutations per generation
    • Most benign, but certain bad ones have accumulated
    • But the ancients would not have had these in their time, by definition
  • So what I put forth is this:
    • If aging is the result of compromised cellular function
    • And if genetic mutations resulting in defective structural proteins and enzymes take away cellular function and our ability to preserve cellular function
    • It stands to reason that, if we were to walk back these genetic defects, we could end up with an organism with a vastly greater capacity for longevity
    • In other words, knowing what we know, it is more than plausible for the ancients to have outlived us by a factor of 10x
  • So what happened?
    • Great question
  • Ages of the antediluvian patriarchs:
1 Adam 930
2 Seth 912
3 Enosh 905
4 Cainan 910
5 Mahalalel 895
6 Jared 962
7 Enoch 365 (translated)
8 Methuselah 969
9 Lamech 777
10 Noah 950
  • 10 Generations of consistency
    • Serious mutations had yet to accumulate
    • Also, it’s possible the antediluvian environment was more hospitable in general
  • Then something catastrophic happened: The Flood
  • Changed the face of the world, and I would argue the environment, forever
  • Ages of post diluvian patriarchs:
11 Shem 600
12 Arphaxad 438
13 Shelah 433
14 Eber 464
15 Peleg 239
16 Reu 239
17 Serug 230
18 Nahor 148
19 Terah 205
20 Abraham 175
  • Then several generations later, Moses wrote the 90th psalm saying “The years of our life are seventy, or even by reason of strength eighty.”
  • Natural (or, “exponential”) decay rate
  • Over time a dynamic equilibrium was achieved
  • Something happened about the time of the flood that dramatically altered mankind’s longevity.
  • Probably several things:
  1. The flood altered the environment in incalculable ways
    • Possibly giving rise to new or increased levels of mutagens
    • Possibly reducing levels of beneficial compounds
      • O2, maybe
    • Altering mankind’s food supply
  2. The genetic bottleneck effect
    • Only Noah’s, his wife’s, and the three son’s wives’ DNA left
    • Any mutations they had accumulated were locked in
    • No descendant would have hope of overcoming them by virtue of other genetic material
    • Vit C
  • Humanity found a new baseline for longevity over the generations
    • But you would not call an Alzheimer’s sufferer’s baseline of confusion and memory loss “normal”
    • You would call it the result of decay (the wages of sin)
    • In the same way, our current, reduced baseline for lifespan is not normal
    • It is also the result of decay playing out on our physiology
  • Yet somehow skeptics feel that this current baseline provides ample reason to scoff
    • Can you imagine a civilization of Cockayne syndrome sufferers in four thousand years scoffing at the idea that once people lived to 90?
    • That’s the skeptic
  • We’ve come to accept aging as a normal process
    • As I’ve shown, it is a cellular process
    • And cellular processes can be altered
  • Christians contend that these cellular processes have been altered, from the time of the patriarchs until now
  • I believe research in the next ten years will discover even more enzymatic pathways that have been altered
    • Recognition of how much the decay of our genome has ravaged our lifespans will increase
    • Christian trust in the Scriptures will be vindicated again
Categories
Gospeled Boldly Podcasts

Throwing Shade – Gospeled Boldly #96

Okay, so Abner was the king’s general even as far back as the Goliath account, which makes David’s taunt against his old co-worker even funnier. In this episode, Pastor Eric Brown and Thomas Lemke read about Saul’s latest pursuit of David, and how David saves Saul’s life—again.

In the Backwards Life, Pastor Brown talks about historical fiction from the Bible and the place of piety.

This episode covers 1 Samuel 26:1-27:4.


If you have questions you’d like answered send them via our Contact Page or post them on The Gospeled Boldly Facebook page.

Please rate and review our show on iTunes.

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Categories
Gospeled Boldly Podcasts

I’m A Nabal For You – Gospeled Boldly #95

David gets saved from himself – by a girl! In this episode, Pastor Eric Brown and Thomas Lemke read about God’s divine intervention in the form of the woman Abigail. Then, Nabal loses his life, though his wall continues to be eroded.

In the Backwards Life, Pastor Brown talks about misplaced machismo.

This episode covers 1 Samuel 25:18-44.


If you have questions you’d like answered send them via our Contact Page or post them on The Gospeled Boldly Facebook page.

Please rate and review our show on iTunes.

Click here to subscribe via iTunes.

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