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Gospeled Boldly Podcasts

Come At Me, Bro! – Gospeled Boldly #44

In this “lost episode” (so called because Thomas’ audio is horribly botched, so the episode never came out – until now) Pastor Eric Brown and Thomas Lemke continue through the story of Gideon.

In the Backwards Life, Thomas asks Pastor to talk about a weird article (from an ostensibly orthodox site) insisting that Christians should go vegetarian. You know, because of the Gospel.

This episode covers Judges 6:28-7:25. 


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Categories
The Black Cloister

Episode 11 – Sola Scriptura 4

Listen in as Pastors Hull and Fenker start to wind down talking about Sola Scriptura (Scripture Alone). If Scripture Alone is sufficient, and it is, why then do you have a pastor who preaches to you?

Categories
As Lutheran As It Gets

15: Luther the False Brethren with Mark U. Edwards

By way of introduction we consider why As Lutheran As It Gets exists and why podcasting is an appropriate platform for theological discussion. Or jump in at ~45m and join in on the conversation between Pr. Riley and Pr. Gillespie as they consider Luther and the radical reformers via Mark Edwards’ classic historic work. As always, we allow the text to lead us to interact with pop culture and other conversation and then find our way back into the text.

Our Text: Luther and the False Brethren (1975)

From 1522 to his death in 1546 Luther clashed with a succession of major evangelical opponents. First there was Karlstadt, then Müntzer, then Zwingli, Oecolampadius, Bucer, and the other sacramentarians, then John Agricola, and finally Kaspar Schwenckfeld and once again the Swiss sacramentarians. For the most part, these opponents accepted the central reformation principles and assumptions that differentiated evangelicals from Catholics.* At the same time, they came to conclusions different from Luther’s on issues such as acceptable ceremonial practice, the real presence in the Lord’s Supper, the separation of secular and spiritual authority, and the relation between law and gospel. As it happened, they were able to convince a large number of evangelicals to accept their positions, and, consequently, they posed a major challenge to Luther’s version of the gospel message and to his authority within the reformation movement.

There are several ways in which controversies between evangelicals and Catholics differed strikingly from controversies among evangelicals. In controversies between evangelicals and Catholics, Luther usually made an effort not to attach his name to the beliefs he espoused when challenged by other evangelicals, he occasionally supplemented his theological arguments with claims about himself and his special role in the reformation movement. In controversies between evangelicals and Catholics, each side accused the other of satanic motivation and exchanged the vilest personal abuse; in controversies among evangelicals, the accusations of demonic possession and the ad hominem abuse tended to come more from Luther than from his opponents. Again and again Luther accused Zwingli, Oecolampadius, Bucer, Agricola, Bullinger, and Schwenckfeld of being false brethren and lying hypocrites, but these men generally acknowledged that Luther was a fellow Christian even though he erred. And although Catholic and evangelical opponents alike attacked Luther’s authority, whereas the Catholics attempted to discredit it entirely, the evangelical opponents rarely asserted that Luther had no legitimate authority, insisting only that Luther, like any other man, could be in error.

Bio on Mark U. Edwards

Other References of Interest: 


Questions? Comments? Show Ideas? Send them to us at http://higherthings.org/contact.

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And as always, don’t forget Pr. Gillespie’s coffee for your caffeination needs.

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Gospeled Boldly Podcasts

Final Appeal – Gospeled Boldly #74

And you thought the American legal system moved slowly! In this episode, Pastor Eric Brown and Thomas Lemke read about Paul’s appearances in the courts of governors Felix and Festus. Both of whom are more interested in placating the Jews than carrying out true justice. What’s a Roman citizen to do? Take their case to the highest court in the land, of course!

In the Backwards Life, Thomas asks Pastor to comment on the philosophy behind having large families as a tool to shape the culture.

This episode covers Acts 24:1-25:12. 


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Gospeled Boldly Podcasts

Citizen Paul – Gospeled Boldly #73

Dear, have something to eat before you kill that heretic! In this episode, Pastor Eric Brown and Thomas Lemke read about Paul’s captivity in Jerusalem, under the protection of an abashed tribune. He gets spared from the scourge, only to instigate a Pharisee vs. Sadducee feeding frenzy. Then, when some Jews plot to kill him, a well-timed tip by his nephew gets Paul on a horse bound for the Governor.

In the Backwards Life, Pastor Brown talks about guardian angels. Does he ruin Christmas? You be the judge!

This episode covers Acts 22:22-23:35.


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As Lutheran As It Gets

14: The Hidden God with Dr. Robert Kolb

In another attempt to try your patience, Pr. Riley and Gillespie discuss the article before actually discussing the article. In our Upside Down, this makes complete sense. Some might call it inductive, others probably chaotic. If you’re so inclined, we’d suggest reading the excerpt first as a sort of secret decoder ring.

Our Text: Bound Choice, Election, And Wittenberg Theological Method: From Martin Luther To The Formula Of Concord (Lutheran Quarterly Books), Grand Rapids: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 2005.

“Luther took the hidden God seriously for a number of reasons. Without the admission that there is more to God than meets either eye or ear, God could be tamed, measured, managed within the realm of the human ability and possibility to judge. From the human perspective God remains God because human creatures are creatures as well as sinners, and it is not possible for the product of God’s creative words to master knowledge of the Creator.

“…In the Heidelberg Disputation Luther had focused first on the blank wall created by the impossibility of the human creature’s, to say nothing of sinner’s, conceptualizing of God, just to prove that with fallen eyes no one can see God. With fallen human ears no one can return to the Edenic hearing of his Word. Then Luther focused very sharply on God in his revelation of himself (John 1:18): no one has seen God, but Jesus of Nazareth, God in the flesh, has made him known: a God with holes in his hands, feet, and side; the God who has come near to humankind, into the midst of its twisted and ruined existence” – Robert Kolb, Bound Choice, pg 36.

Rev. Dr. Robert A. Kolb Biography

Extraneous References: 


Questions? Comments? Show Ideas? Send them to us at http://higherthings.org/contact.

Please rate and review the show in Apple Podcasts, via https://itunes.apple.com/podcast/simulcast/id1037828387?mt=2.

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And as always, don’t forget Pr. Gillespie’s coffee, Coffee by Gillespie, for your caffeination needs.

Categories
The Black Cloister

Episode 10 – Sola Scriptura 3

Listen in as Pastors Hull and Fenker continue to talk about Sola Scriptura (Scripture Alone). They talk about the clarity of Scripture and discuss if Scripture is clear, why we have Bible Studies and Bible Commentaries.

Categories
As Lutheran As It Gets

13: Veith – Vocation, Vocation, Vocation

Our Text: Glory Versus the Cross by Gene Edward Veith

Show Notes: 

Dr. Gene Keith is not Dr. John Kleinig. Pr. Riley flubbed it. By way of apology, we introduce you, faithful listener, to Dr. Veith himself.


Questions? Comments? Show Ideas? Send them to us at http://higherthings.org/contact.

Please rate and review the show in Apple Podcasts, via https://itunes.apple.com/podcast/simulcast/id1037828387?mt=2.

To subscribe Apple Podcasts, please go to: pcast://feeds.feedburner.com/AsLutheranAsItGets
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And as always, don’t forget Pr. Gillespie’s coffee, Coffee by Gillespie, for your caffeination needs.

Categories
Gospeled Boldly Podcasts

Bound and Determined – Gospeled Boldly #72

Paul doesn’t know the meaning of the phrase, “come quietly.” In this episode, Pastor Eric Brown and Thomas Lemke read on as the Jews get Paul arrested for the… wait, what’s the count again? Paul makes one more plea to his countrymen on behalf of the Gospel, but instead of a pulpit he preaches from between Roman guards.

In the Backwards Life, Thomas asks Pastor to explore the recent flood of accusations leveled against politicians and celebrities from an 8th Commandment perspective.

This episode covers Acts 21:17-22:21.


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Gospeled Boldly Podcasts

Spirited Away (to Jerusalem) – Gospeled Boldly #71

Belts are fickle: they hold up your pants, then they tie you up. In this episode, Pastor Eric Brown and Thomas Lemke read about Eutychus falling asleep during Paul’s sermon. And by falling, we mean FALLING. Then, Paul sets his face toward Jerusalem for his Pentecost date with destiny.

In the Backwards Life, Pastor Brown addresses the place of violence in TV, movies, and other media, and does a dramatic reading of some Tolkien for good measure.


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