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News

Crucified 2014 – Important Reminder

All unpaid balances for the Higher Things “Crucified” conferences in FL, WI, and UT need to be paid by midnight on April 30 or they will be charged a $25/person late fee (making the rate $400/person total). No refunds will be issued for cancellations on or after May 1 (including no-shows at the conference), and there will be a $20 change fee assessed for substitutions from that date forward.

Questions? Email general questions to conferences@higherthings.org, registration questions to registrar@higherthings.org or call us toll-free at 888-482-6630!

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Catechesis

Jesus Christ, and Him Crucified

Rev. Mark Buetow

Does your church have a crucifix? By crucifix I mean a cross with Jesus’ body on it. Some people have said that Jesus shouldn’t be shown on a cross because He’s risen from the dead. “He’s not on the cross anymore,” they say. (I bet the same folks might nevertheless have Jesus in a manger around Christmas time, though!) The crucifix is a reminder of what stands at the center of our Christian faith: Jesus Christ, and Him crucified. That’s all St. Paul was resolved to know in His preaching. (1 Corinthians 2:2).

St. Paul calls the cross “foolishness.” (1 Corinthians 1:18) What he means is that a guy nailed to a cross, crucified in the vicious Roman way, doesn’t seem like God. It doesn’t seem like a Savior. There’s nothing obviously heroic or notable about this Man, nailed to a tree. But, he says, this preaching of the cross of Christ, of Jesus nailed to the tree to take the curse, is the “power of God unto salvation.” (Romans 1:16). That is, Jesus’ death on Calvary is the way in which the world is redeemed from sin, reconciled to God the Father, and the judgment of God paid and satisfied.

This Friday is Good Friday. It’s called good because what happened on that day, the death of Jesus on Calvary, is good for the whole world. Here we learn God’s heart: that He saves sinners. We learn our own hearts, too, hearts that would so hate God as to nail Him to a cross to shut Him up, to get rid of Him, to silence Him. Yet for these very haters, for us even, Jesus chose to die. While we were yet sinners, Christ dared to die for us. (Romans 5:6). On Calvary, Jesus became the curse (Galatians 3:13). He was the righteous One, dying for the unrighteous (1 Peter 3:18). He is the Suffering Servant upon whom were laid all our sins, transgressions and iniquities. By His stripes, His wounds, we are healed from our sins. (Isaiah 53).

Good Friday stands in history as the reminder that our big problem isn’t that we need to learn how to behave. It’s not that we need to get our act together. Our greatest need is not to somehow become nicer people or to stay out of trouble. Our big problem is we are sinners who are cut off from God. Good Friday is the display of God’s promise that He Himself has come to rescue us, pay whatever the cost, and have us as His own again. Good Friday and the crucifixion of Jesus are the reason the Christian church exists. It’s the reason Christians share the Gospel, the Good News. We want all the world to know that what was wrong has been put right; what was condemned has been declared “not guilty;” what was dead has been made alive.

Just before He died, Jesus spoke the words, “It is finished.” These words put an end to our attempts to make up our own religion. These words silence our sinful hearts trying to bargain with God. These words shut down all arguments that we are good enough or can be good enough to please God. These words, “It is finished,” are the declaration of the Son of God that the work of your salvation is done. Finished. Complete. Fulfilled. Taken care of. Accomplished. This is the heart and center of the life of Christ’s church, that we hear and believe that Jesus was crucified for us and that by His death all things are finished.

The church lives by this crucified Jesus. As a pelican would pierce its own breast to provide food for its young, so the church lives because Jesus was pierced after He died. That spear opened a floodgate of forgiveness. Water. Font. Baptism. Blood. Cup. Communion. The very water and blood that flow out of Jesus’ side flow forth in His church in the holy gifts of Baptism and the Eucharist (Communion, the Lord’s Supper). It is from His side that His bride, the church is made, and it is by His water and blood that she is alive.

Jesus Christ, and Him crucified. It has all come to this, in Holy Week. The death of Jesus. The death of a man. The death of God. He who knew no sin but was made sin for us so that in Him we would become the righteousness of God. (2 Corinthians 5:21).

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News

Easter Reflections Now Available

Higher Things announces the 2014 Easter Reflections. These daily devotions are for the Easter Season, April 20 through June 7, 2014. Each day celebrates Christ’s resurrection from the dead and the good gifts by which He delivers His life and salvation to His church. Download them now in one of many available formats.

You might want to:

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HT Legacy-cast

Episode 273: April 11th, 2014

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In Episode 273 of HT-Radio, Pr. Borghardt and Jon are joined by Rev. Donavon Riley, Pastor of St. John’s Lutheran Church in Webster MN. Pr. Riley talks about Good Friday – the crucifixion of our Lord. Pr. Riley talks about Christ taking on your sin and the sin of the world and conquering sin, death and the devil.

If you have questions or topics that you’d like discussed on HT-Radio email them to radio@higherthings.org or send a text to 936-647-3235.

Categories
Life Issues

Rev. Mark Jasa: Getting to the Heart of the Matter

With Rev. Mark Jasa’s recent article in The Lutheran Witness, we wanted to highlight his work again with this article from our Apologetics Issue of Higher Things Magazine.

Katie Hill

For 47 years the University Lutheran Chapel has faithfully ministered to students at UCLA—from those who need their faith nourished to those who have no faith at all. And since August 2005, Rev. Mark Jasa has served as pastor there, bringing his unique life experience and apologetics skills to the table, sometimes literally.

In the beginning
Pastor Jasa was born into a Lutheran household and has fond memories of going through Little Visits With God with his parents. However, he was a skeptic at a young age. He recalls believing that everything was finite, that there was no infinite God and he feared, therefore, that perhaps he himself didn’t even truly exist.

In junior high Jasa came to the conclusion that all religions were basically the same, or as he put it, “You need to be good to get the good stuff.” He reasoned, why choose one? So, he chose nothing. By the time high school rolled around, he had developed a keen interest in biology. He felt his teachers clearly cared for him and invested time in him, so he had no reason to doubt what they said. Jasa operated under the assumption that evolution was true and God really wasn’t necessary.

In the back of his mind he recalled hearing a sermon wherein the pastor said, “God loves you in spite of yourself.” And he remembered the words in the liturgy, “If we say we have no sin, we deceive ourselves…” (1 John 1:8). But he shoved those things aside and left the church for a time. No one seemed to have any good answers. It wasn’t personal. Not yet.

The turning point
In college at UCLA, this thinking was reinforced. Evolution=fact. Bible=lie. But a fear of death had begun to creep in and take hold. One day he was asked a question by a man named Cliff Knechtle, a Christian apologist who travels from college campus to college campus conversing with skeptics. “Is Hitler bad?” The question haunted Jasa. It dawned on him that of course he would have to say yes, but then that meant, logically, that there had to be a standard—a law. It was a watershed moment for Jasa, who vividly recalls that day when he said aloud, “I believe in God.”

However, it would be some time before the full impact of that truth settled in. He continued to grapple with these matters. There are things that are true. Right and wrong do exist. But how could he prove it? He was on a quest for truth, but not salvation yet.

During his investigations he began to see that Jesus as a Savior was unique. Reading through Isaiah 53, he saw that claim of the Bible began to take shape. Another benchmark: Jesus is God, but not necessarily my savior. In fact, for Jasa it all boiled down to: “Jesus is the one sending me to hell.” Clearly it was not good news yet.

Now it’s personal
Two Lutheran friends of Jasa would often take the time to engage him in many discussions and while he loved the interaction he was not personally convinced. His fear of death had continued to grow over the years. So one fateful day, these two friends took him to Holy Trinity Lutheran Church in Hacienda Heights, California, where Jasa heard the words that he says changed the course of his life: “The good news is outrageous forgiveness for undeserving sinners.” Jesus’ promises were coming from the mouth of Rev. William Cwirla. “He has an amazing way of telling you that the Gospel is for you,” Jasa explains. Now it was personal. Now it was for Mark Jasa.

At this point Jasa knew that he wanted to be a pastor but he still lacked direction. At the urging of Rev. Cwirla and another pastor, he spent time as a missionary in Japan. He started putting more apologetics pieces together, reading Francis Pieper’s Christian Dogmatics and Josh McDowell’s Evidence that Demands a Verdict. He wanted to know how to be an effective apologist. He wanted to get to the heart of the matter.

What he began to notice was that in all of the world’s religions, there aren’t promises—only demands. Joseph Smith doesn’t make promises. Mary Eddy Baker doesn’t make promises. Mohammed definitely doesn’t make promises. But Jesus does…over and over and over again.

After Japan, Jasa went to Concordia seminary in St. Louis and served his vicarage at Humboldt State University in California. He recalls an incident after working with a student there, who claimed, “Mark Jasa has convinced me that God exists.” Jasa could only think, “I have failed!” Of course it was gratifying to lead someone to that point but he wanted to be able to clearly communicate the truth of the Good News—the promises. Lutheran attorney Craig Parton explained to him that the Lutheran doctrine of Law and Gospel, as well as Christ’s resurrection, are the keys to effective apologetics. Jasa took this and ran with it.

The harvest is ripe
In August of 2005, Jasa was installed as the pastor at the University Lutheran Chapel at UCLA. It was here where all of those pieces he had been gathering together formed a wonderful portfolio that would be utilized and tested in the most satisfying ways. His ministry there involves two worship services a week, Bible studies, fellowship and three days of evangelism on campus. He also gives lectures on various apologetic-oriented topics. Jasa has gained a reputation for posting unique and sometimes provocative signs, e.g. “Religion is for the weak,” in plain view on his ministry table that prompt people to stop and ask questions…all part of the plan, of course.

Jasa says that his preferred apologetics methods are ones anyone can use. He explains that, for the most part, we can approach apologetics with intellectual arguments or existential arguments (someone’s experiences). He likes to employ either or both, on a case by case basis. For example, talking to someone who feels guilty (existential) may drive that person to know the truth (intellectual). Jasa says we often try to include information/facts that aren’t necessary. He makes it a point to ask himself, “What does he or she need?” Then he leads them to the truth. This is an application of God’s Law and Gospel. He encourages anyone defending the faith not to focus on the existence of God, although it is okay to talk about that with someone if they bring it up. Also, he advises you not to spend hours trying to prove evolution is false. This will take you away from the heart of the matter. Instead, make sure you have your facts straight on the resurrection. He notes that the Josh McDowell book mentioned earlier, as well as John Warwick Montgomery’s book History, Law and Christianity are must reads in this regard.

Jasa says to keep in mind that there are certain things nearly everyone can accept. One of them is, “I have chosen to hurt others and have contributed to the way the world is.” Also, most people are afraid of death, so it is important to bring them back to that point. Finally, it’s okay to concede a point with someone, particularly if it is taking you away from the truth you are leading them toward. For example, if someone tells you the Trinity is a crazy idea, tell them they’re right, but on judgment day what do they think will happen?

“It’s a delight to be able to do what I do—whether I’m in the pulpit proclaiming Christ to our members or talking to atheists and telling them that Jesus is really free. Being a Lutheran is the easiest thing in the whole world because all you have to do is tell people what is true.”

Rev. Mark Jasa can be reached at markjasa@gmail.com You can read more about the LCMS ministry at UCLA at www.ulcbruins.org.

Katie Hill is the editor of Higher Things Magazine and the mother of two active teens in Gilbert, Arizona. In her spare time she is an elementary teacher. She can be reached at katie.hill@higherthings.org

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HT Legacy-cast

Episode 272: April 4th, 2014

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This week on HT-Radio, Pr. Borghardt brings back Rev. Donavon Riley and Rev. Jordan Cooper. They answer questions submitted by listeners about their interviews on Sanctification in the last two episodes.

If you have questions or topics that you’d like discussed on HT-Radio email them to radio@higherthings.org or send a text to 936-647-3235.

Categories
Pop. Culture & the Arts

No Thanks, I Read the Book

Rev. Mark Buetow

When Mel Gibson’s “The Passion of the Christ” movie came out, a group of us from our congregation decided to go see it. I asked one lady why she wasn’t going. Her reply: “No thanks, I read the book.” In the past month, we have seen two big movies (“The Son of God” and “Noah”) released supposedly based on the Bible. There are other movies, too, such as “God is Not Dead” that are exploring Christian themes and attempting to make a defense of the Christian faith.

The interwebs are full of people saying these movies are great! They’re awesome witnesses to the truth of God’s Word. They are important for giving voice to religious themes. And so on. Others have thrashed them as completely unscriptural, a horrible representation of God’s Word and not worth the time or money to watch. So what should you do? See these movies or not see them? I probably won’t see them only because if I am spending money to watch a movie, I want to see action stuff like car chases, explosions, spaceships, or Lego people. After all, I’m a pastor. I spend my week writing and speaking about Jesus and the Bible. Movie time is downtime for escaping from the world for a bit.

My advice to you is not to get worked up about these movies if you go see them and realize that they are not showing what’s in the Bible. Aside from the fact that no movie perfectly duplicates the story in any book, movies based on the Bible are always full of the writer’s own interpretation of things. The movie will always reflect the writer’s and director’s particular imagining of what they have read. Even “The Passion of the Christ,” which is, in my opinion, one of the most accurate retellings of the Gospel story, takes certain artistic liberties which betray Mel Gibson’s Roman Catholic theology and vision about what the movie should portray. If anything, these movies ought to make you ask your pastor questions and hear the answers from God’s Word.

Christians really don’t need to get upset that movies don’t accurately reflect the Word of God as written in the Bible. Art is like that. It interprets. But it is the Word of God that actually says what it says. An example: A lady told me once she was upset because she had seen on TV that Leonardo DaVinci’s painting “The Last Supper” probably showed Mary Magdalene in it. “That’s not in the Bible,” she said. “So what’s the problem?” I replied. “We don’t learn about the Lord’s Supper from Leonardo DaVinci but from the Scriptures.”

And that, ultimately, is the point. What we believe as Christians isn’t based on what we watch in a movie or see in a painting or read in some commentary. It’s based on what the Holy Spirit has delivered in the Bible through the writings of the apostles and prophets. In the movies, details are there to help us visualize and make real what’s in our imaginations. In the Bible, however, details are written to point us to Christ. Another example: In Mel Gibson’s movie, one of the hardest scenes to watch is Jesus being whipped by the Roman soldier. There was hardly a dry eye in the theater when audiences watched that for several minutes. But, remarkably, all the Gospels say is that Pontius Pilate had Jesus “scourged.” The point is that the Gospels record this detail so that we might know the suffering our Lord endured (a Roman scourging was awful) for our sakes but it’s not presented in a way that the purpose is to make us cry or elicit some reaction of sorrow or guilt.

And that leads me to this final consideration about the Bible versus Hollywood’s versions. Almost always the movie version of Biblical events is done to bring about some emotional reaction. That’s what a good movie does. It draws you in and you feel the struggles and triumphs of the characters. The Bible, on the other hand, was written so that “you may believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God, and that believing, you have life in His name.” (John 20:31). The Bible is more than just about telling WHAT happened. What is missing from so many of the movies about these things is the WHY it happened. The Word of God reminds us that everything that happened, all that Jesus did—His life, cross, death, resurrection, and ascension— He did to save sinners. To save you and me. To reconcile us to God. The faith that receives and believes that Good News doesn’t come from a movie that leaves us in doubt as to why we are watching. Faith is given by the Holy Spirit through the preaching of the Good News in Christ’s own church.

So go watch the Bible movies if you feel like it. Don’t expect them to be a faithful rendition of what’s in the Bible. Sure, it’s good that these sorts of movies get us talking. But if anyone asks me, I’ll probably say, “No thanks. I read the book.” And the Book is about Jesus. And now we have something real to talk about.

Categories
News

Higher Things Announces “Cruiseified”

Higher Things had some fun for April Fools’ Day 2014. Here’s what was posted.

Higher Things is excited to announce “Cruiseified” our first ever Higher Things Confererence aboard a luxury cruise liner in the Caribbean Sea! Register now for cabins aboard the Luxury Cruise Ship Eastern Star. Your registration fee of just $595 will include a cabin with porthole along with all your meals and gratuities.

Highlights of the this Conference-at-Sea include:

  • Daily Worship services in the giant auditorium followed by the comedic stylings of James and John, the funny brothers.
  • Breakout Sessions in cozy locations like the Piano Bar, American Graffiti Hamburger Joint, and French Market Cafe.
  • And of course, what would a Higher Things Conference be without loads of fun? Three pools, a driving range, roller blading rink, and of course, a “Lutheran Shuffleboard Tournament” plus much more  including the ultimate Seaborne Scavenger Hunt led by your Cruise Director, Mrs. Tracey Dann!

We’ll visit the ports of several poor Caribbean nations to give conference attendees not only the chance to buy duty free merchandise but participate in Evangelism Servant Events among the local populations.

And, in what is sure to be the highlight of the Higher Things Cruise, we’ll make a stop at the cruise line’s own private island where we’ll snorkel, sunbathe, and then pray Evening Prayer by the light of a thousand tiki torches.

So sign up today! Space is limited! (Travel to and from the Port of New Orleans not included in the registration fee). So head over to Crucified2014.org and click on “Cruiseified” for your permission to come aboard for Higher Things at sea!

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HT Legacy-cast

Episode 271: March 28th, 2014

http://higherthings.org/radio/shows/2014-03-28

Categories
HT Legacy-cast

Episode 271: March 28th, 2014

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This week, HT-Radio takes another look at sanctification. Rev. Jordan Cooper, pastor of Hope Lutheran Church in Brighton, IA (AALC), sits down with Pr. Borghardt, Jon, and Sandra to explain the differences between sanctification in the wide sense and sanctification in the narrow sense. He explains that in Christ we do good works.

If you have questions or topics that you’d like discussed on HT-Radio email them to radio@higherthings.org or send a text to 936-647-3235.