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Catechesis

In The Midst of Death We Live

“Your mother was in an accident, and is at the hospital in critical condition.”  Those were words I never expected to hear. Yet, at noon on Tuesday, October 17th, 2017, that’s exactly what my father told me.  My sister and I rushed to the hospital as fast as we could.  We learned that our mother had sustained unsurvivable injuries.  As the afternoon progressed, we gathered around her bed to pray, read from Holy Scripture, and sing hymns.  We recited the Apostles’ Creed and Lord’s Prayer at 4:30 p.m., then she was delivered into the resurrection.

I never expected to bury my mother at just twenty three years old.  The hospital staff, friends, classmates, and professors had little clue how we dealt with this tremendous loss or were able to continue with our lives amidst our grief.  But, I understand how, for many young people, the same situation would he hopeless, debilitating, and maybe something they would try to run from. I can even understand why they might flee their church or God.  After all, how could God, who we confess, loves us so much, allow something as terrible as this to happen? Our mother was a loving and faithful Christian woman who steadfastly devoted herself to God’s Word and Sacraments and served others in any way she could.  She surely didn’t deserve to be taken now!

However, Holy Scripture speaks a much different message:  We all deserve death. As the Apostle Paul writes, “For all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God (Rom. 3:23).”  Ever since Adam and Eve fell into sin in the garden of Eden, death has been a reality of life here on earth. God told Adam, “for you are dust, and to dust you shall return” (Gen. 3:19b). God has not guaranteed us any minimum number of years in this life. Also, He has not promised that our lives will be easy or pain-free.  We will face trials and tribulations, pain and suffering, and even death as difficult as that may be for us to swallow. The weight of the Law, and how sin uses the Law to kill us, rests heavy upon us. However, thanks be to Christ that’s not the end of the story!

As soon as Adam and Eve rebelled against God, and dragged all creation down with them, He prepared a plan of Salvation. He promised in Genesis 3:15 that Eve’s offspring would bruise Satan’s head.  This promise was fulfilled in God’s Son, Jesus. Jesus took on human flesh, was born of the Virgin Mary, lived the sinless life that we could not, and then was crucified and died, taking upon Himself all of the sin of you and me and everyone in the world which separated us from the perfection of God.  Even better, Jesus didn’t stay dead! He rose from the grave three days later, defeating sin, death, and the devil, so that we can say with the Apostle Paul, “O death, where is your victory? O death, where is your sting?” (1 Cor. 15:55). This is the wonderful, sweet message of the Gospel: That Christ died to take away your sins, my sins, and the sins of the whole world!  How exactly do we receive this forgiveness? The resurrected Christ promises us in Mark 16:16 that, “Whoever believes [the Gospel] and is baptized will be saved.”

I know for sure that my dear mother Lisa was baptized, enjoyed faith in Christ through the Gospel and His gifts, and was received into the resurrection at 4:30 p.m. on October 17th, 2017.  Does this mean that the pain is gone?  Of course not – burying my mother will always be painful.  However, the knowledge that she sees Christ face-to-face in the resurrection and that we will be reunited with her at the wedding feast of the Lamb is a great comfort.  And, more than that at present, we are comforted when we receive Christ’s Body and Blood at the altar in Holy Communion. We commune with my mom and “all the company of heaven” who have passed from this life into life eternal.  That’s what your pastor alludes to when he speaks or chants the Proper Preface and it says, “therefore with angels and archangels and with all the company of heaven…” All the company of heaven – that’s my mom, your mom, grandma or grandpa, and all Christians who die in Christ Jesus.  Remember that the next time you receive Communion. It brings comfort to those who grieve.

For me and my family, at a time of such profound pain, what else could we do but take comfort in the Gospel?  Since we had this comfort, instead of being overcome by grief like those with no hope, we were freed by God’s Spirit and Word to bear witness to Jesus who is our forgiveness, life, and salvation.  In the end, Christ Jesus is all that matters in this life and the life to come. He is my mom’s life and resurrection. He is our life and resurrection. 

by Matthew Kelpe

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Gospeled Boldly Podcasts

Do Your Duty – Gospeled Boldly #94

And don’t be a Nabal about it. In this Episode, Pastor Eric Brown and Thomas Lemke read about the King of Israel’s continued pursuit of David. Saul goes to take care of business in a cave, unaware that it is already full of squatters. Then, David and his men shepherd some shepherds, but instead of paying the piper, the owner uses his own pipes to get into trouble.

In the Backwards Life, Pastor Brown gives pastoral (and fatherly) career advice.

This episode covers 1 Samuel 24:1-25:17


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Gospeled Boldly Podcasts

He’s No Outlaw – Gospeled Boldly #93

Not all that glitters is gold, and not all those on the lam are guilty. In this episode, Pastor Eric Brown and Thomas Lemke read about Saul’s kill order against the town of Nob, and the priests therein. Then, David saves a city—what will be his reward?

In the Backwards Life, Pastor Brown talks about heroes and heroics.

This episode covers 1 Samuel 22:6-23:29.


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Categories
Catechesis

“Jesus” Isn’t Enough

You’re bound to hear it from your non-Lutheran friends. Perhaps a family member will say it or you’ll hear it spoken by campus “Christian” groups. Pastors (hopefully never yours) will even tell people. “Sure, we all have differences but what matters is that we all believe in Jesus.” It sounds good. It sounds nice. It sounds like one of those things you’d hear said to prevent people arguing over something like religion. Isn’t there enough to worry about in the world with all the non-Christians who make fun of or persecute Christians? Why should Christians argue? “It’s enough that we all believe in Jesus and know He’s Lord.”

Except that it’s not enough. Because there’s more than one Jesus out there. That was true even way back in St. Paul’s day. Even before that, back in the Old Testament too. When Aaron made the golden calf and Israel worshiped it, Aaron said it was a feast day to “Yahweh,” the true God. They said a false god was the true God. In Paul’s day, lots of Jesuses were being preached. He even got on the case of the Corinthian Christians about it: “But I fear, lest somehow, as the serpent deceived Eve by his craftiness, so your minds may be corrupted from the simplicity that is in Christ. For if he who comes preaches another Jesus whom we have not preached, or if you receive a different spirit which you have not received, or a different gospel which you have not accepted — you may well put up with it!” (1 Corinthians 11:4). The fact is, there is only one true Jesus and He doesn’t want you confused. After all, it’s Jesus Himself who says, “You will know the Truth and the truth will make you free.” (John 8:32) Not some of the Truth or a quarter or half. All of the Truth.

Here’s the irony: the less detailed we get about Jesus, the less He’s our Savior. Someone might argue that it’s not a big deal whether we agree that babies should be baptized or that the Lord’s Supper is the true body and blood of Jesus or just a symbol. But if you start chiseling away at the words and gifts of Jesus, you are whittling away His forgiveness and salvation. At that point, Jesus becomes just something you know, or just something you do or choose instead of the One who is true God and true man who did all the work of our salvation and who delivers that forgiveness and salvation to us with no strings attached.

The Catechism works this out as it simply and clearly teaches us that Jesus is true God and true man and that He redeemed you with His holy, precious blood and His innocent suffering and death. The Holy Spirit calls, gathers, enlightens and sanctifies you so that in Christ’s church you daily and richly have all your sins forgiven. In the church is where Jesus delivers to you the forgiveness He accomplished for you on the cross. When you are baptized, no matter what age, Jesus is forgiving your sins, rescuing you from death and the devil and giving you eternal salvation. When your pastor absolves you, it is just as valid and certain that your sins are forgiven as if Jesus Himself told you. When eat and drink Jesus’ true body and blood in the Lord’s Supper, Jesus Himself is giving you the forgiveness of sins, life and salvation.

If you take away baptism, or the Lord’s Supper or make Jesus into just an example of how you’re supposed to live, then what good is He? If Jesus didn’t die for you, with no conditions for you to fulfill, what kind of Savior does that make Him? Truth is: A Jesus who isn’t dead on the cross and risen from the dead, who doesn’t baptize you with real forgiveness, speak for real through your pastor, or come Himself to you in His body and blood, is no Jesus worth having. He may be a “great teacher” or even a “Savior” or “Lord,” but those words can mean anything and nothing all at the same time. They mean what people think they mean, which is usually something like, “Jesus died for me BUT, now I have to do this or that to make Him MY Savior.”

“Jesus” isn’t enough if by “Jesus” someone means, “Jesus far away who sounds nice but really leaves everything up to me and is whatever I think He is.” But Jesus is everything when it is the real and true Jesus who gives us His Word so we may never doubt but always be certain that He’s a real and true Savior: True God. True Man. Crucified. Risen. Word. Water. Body. Blood. THAT Jesus is not just enough, but more than enough. He’s everything for you and all that you need. When someone wants to talk about “Jesus,” tell them THAT Jesus is the only one that’s any good for either of you and for the whole world. Those fake Jesuses are out there. Yet the real Jesus is not the Waldo to be found among them but the true and shining light that scatters the darkness and illumines His church.

 

Rev. Mark Buetow serves as pastor at Zion Evangelical Lutheran Church in McHenry, IL

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Gospeled Boldly Podcasts

It’s Dangerous To Go Alone – Gospeled Boldly #92

Take Goliath’s sword! In this episode, Pastor Eric Brown and Thomas Lemke read about David’s pact with Jonathan and subsequent departure. He has a few false starts, but eventually accrues some companions to himself as he stays one step ahead of Saul.

In the Backwards Life, Pastor Brown answers a listener question about Jesus bringing not peace on earth, but a sword.

This episode covers 1 Samuel 20:18-22:5


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Catechesis

My Unbelieving Friends

“The man without the Spirit does not accept the things that come from the Spirit of God, for they are foolishness to him, and he cannot understand them, because they are spiritually discerned” (1 Corinthians 2:14).

Talking to your unbelieving friends can be difficult. The passage above seems to present a problem that makes it harder. How can I get my unbelieving friends to believe when they can’t understand what I am saying? How do they get the Holy Spirit in order to understand the truth, so that I can speak the truth to them?

My framing of the problem is really the problem. There is no sequence of the Holy Spirit coming and then the truth. It does not happen that the Holy Spirit is received and then the truth of God’s Word is received. Rather, Christ gives us his Holy Spirit with his Word. Our Lord’s words are Spirit-filled. Jesus said that his words are “Spirit and life” (John 6:63). Therefore, the Holy Spirit is received with the truth, with God’s Word. In fact, we cannot expect to receive the Holy Spirit apart from God’s Word and the Sacraments, which are God’s “visible” Word. Luther wrote, “We should and must insist that God does not want to deal with us human beings, except by means of his external Word and sacrament” (SA III VIII:10).

When it comes to an unbeliever, God prepares that person for conversion through His law—His commandments. All people have an innate knowledge of God’s law through having a conscience. This is called the natural knowledge of God. However, people deny this knowledge and pervert it. But when God’s law as revealed in Holy Scripture is proclaimed, the Holy Spirit convicts and allows no denial of what is good, right, and holy. It says in our Lutheran Confessions, “The Spirit of Christ must not only comfort but through the function of the law must also ‘convict the world of sin’ [John 16:8]. Thus, in the New Testament the Holy Spirit must perform (as the prophet says in Isaiah 28:2) “alien” work—which is to convict—until he comes to his “proper” work—which is to comfort and to proclaim grace. For this reason, Christ obtained the Spirit for us and sent him to us” (FC SD V:11).

First the law is proclaimed, and then the Gospel. It is through the Gospel that God works conversion, or brings people to faith and life in Christ. Conversion also occurs through Holy Baptism, which is Gospel, as is the case with infants. But for the unbelieving adult, the spoken Word will be the means by which the Holy Spirit penetrates the stony heart. Through the Gospel, sinners who are blind, dead, and enemies of God are given sight, made alive, and turned to love God. This happens by the Holy Spirit acting upon people, for unbelievers cannot understand and cannot help themselves. It says in the Small Catechism’s explanation to the Third Article of the Creed: “I believe that I cannot by my own reason or strength believe in Jesus Christ, my Lord, or come to him; but the Holy Spirit has called me by the Gospel, enlightened me with his gifts, sanctified and kept me in the true faith . . .”

This reminds us that you can’t reason someone into the kingdom of grace. It didn’t happen for us that way. Why would we then try to argue our unbelieving friends into a confession of true faith?

So the answer to reaching your unbelieving, undiscerning friends is God’s Word. Speak God’s law and Gospel to them. The Holy Spirit works through the Spirit-filled Word. Bring God’s Word to bear on their lives, and the Holy Spirit will act upon them. The Apostle Paul wrote, “Faith comes from hearing the message, and the message is heard through the word of Christ” (Romans 10:17). Faith does not come from reason, from the best argument, or from the most knowledge. You don’t have to win anyone with your skills. In fact, you can’t.

Let me offer two other important points. First, the Holy Spirit can be resisted (Acts 7:51). Therefore, we are never to judge our confession of the truth by “results.” Second, the Word of God does not return empty (Isaiah 55:11). Therefore, as God gives you the opportunity, continue to speak the Word to your unbelieving friends and bring them to the public proclamation in the Church. There may come a time later in their lives when God brings to mind that Word you spoke.

Finally, rejoice in the Gospel of your own forgiveness as you receive absolution and are reminded of your baptism, hear the Word of Christ preached and partake of His body and blood in the divine service. Then by the Holy Spirit you continue to receive for certain the complete forgiveness from the Father for the sake of Christ, which you then declare to others.

Rev. Philip Young is pastor of Redeemer Lutheran Church in Nashville, Tennessee, and he serves as the pastoral advisor to the Lutheran Student Fellowship group at Vanderbilt University.

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Gospeled Boldly Podcasts

Mawwiage – Gospeled Boldly #91

David’s gettin’ hitched! As long as Saul doesn’t alter the deal any further… In this episode, Pastor Eric Brown and Thomas Lemke read about the courtship of Michal. Then, as Saul doesn’t cotton too well to his new son-in-law, Michal’s siding with her husband over the raging king.

In the Backwards Life, Pastor Brown contrasts modern marriage ideas with those of an older time.

This episode covers 1 Samuel 18:24-20:17.


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Gospeled Boldly Podcasts

Closer Than A Brother – Gospeled Boldly #90

Or a brother-in-law, for that matter. In this episode, Pastor Eric Brown and Thomas Lemke read about the storied friendship of David and Jonathan. But all is not well with Saul, and when he starts to alter the deal… David best beware.

In the Backwards Life, Pastor Brown talks about the danger of interpreting Scripture through politics.

This episode covers 1 Samuel 18:1-23.


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News

Higher Things Magazine for Spring 2018 – Now Available!

Vocation, vocation, vocation! We can’t emphasize it enough! Our callings and relationships are gifts from God, which you’ll discover in our topical spring issue of Higher Things Magazine. Vocation is precisely what Paul is talking about in Ephesians 2:10: “We are his workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared beforehand, that we should walk in them.” As always, we start by foundationally understanding who we are as baptized children of God. From there we grapple with the Law and Gospel and where they come into play as we fulfill the various roles we walk in. And finally, we tackle a question that you have probably asked yourself at one time or another: “What do I do with my life?” From cover to cover, you’ll notice a recurring theme: Through faith in Christ, we have the freedom to live out our vocations for the good of our neighbor!

 Included in this issue:

  • #whoami – By Rev. George F. Borghardt
  • Free in Christ-Slave in Christ – By Rev. Donavon Riley
  • Called to Receive: The First Table – By Rev. Eric Brown
  • Called to Serve: The Second Table – By Rev. Aaron T. Fenker
  • Jesus for You, Jesus Through You – By Rev. Harrison Goodman
  • Vocational Variety: God’s Wisdom for Women – By Deaconess Ellie Corrow
  • Called to Deliver: The Pastoral Ministry – By Rev. Rich Heinz
  • So What Do I Do with My Life? – By Rev. Mark Buetow
  • Catechism: Three Orders: Table of Duties – By Rev. William M. Cwirla

Check out this issue and the others on higherthings.org. With your HT-Online Account, you also gain access to every issue of Higher Things® Magazine ever printed along with Bible Studies and Leaders’ Guides for many of the articles. Print copies of the magazine will be arriving in your mailbox soon. You can subscribe to the print edition of the magazine at http://higherthings.org/magazine/subscriptions.

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Gospeled Boldly Podcasts

David and Goliath – Gospeled Boldly #89

It’s doesn’t exactly look like the matchup of the century, but it sure goes down in history. In this episode, Pastor Eric Brown and Thomas Lemke read about the fated fight between the giant and the shepherd. And Pastor schools Thomas in both physics and pop culture Jeopardy categories.

In the Backwards Life, Pastor Brown talks about the ethical implications of warfare.

This episode covers 1 Samuel 17:24-58.


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