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HT Video Shorts

It’s OK to Not be a Pastor (What’s UP? Wednesday)

 

 

It’s ok to be a sheep. God saves sinners, not just religious people. It’s easy to start thinking that the more we do at church, with church, around church…the more saved we are. And then we start to despise the ones who only show up on Sundays. There’s nothing wrong with serving the church, it’s a good thing to do. But it doesn’t save you. Only Jesus saves you.

Got questions or topics that you’d like discussed on Higher Things® Video Shorts? Email them to support@higherthings.org or send a text to 936-647-3235.

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Sounds used:
Ship’s Bell – Mike Koenig at SoundBible.com

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HT Video Shorts

The Shepherd, the Door, and Salvation (Lectionary Monday)

 

 

Jesus it the door. He’s the entrance to eternal life. Is He REALLY the door? Yes! Is He a symbolic door? No. He’s the one that you enter through to get eternal life. The Good Shepherd stands in the gap of the sheep pen and gives up His life for the sheep. In Him being the door, you are saved. Entering through that Door, you have eternal life.

Got questions or topics that you’d like discussed on Higher Things® Video Shorts? Email them to support@higherthings.org or send a text to 936-647-3235.

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To support the work of Higher Things®, visit https://support.higherthings.org.

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Sounds used:
Ship’s Bell – Mike Koenig at SoundBible.com

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HT Video Shorts

Guilty About Missing Church because of the ‘Rona? (Fun Word Friday)

 

 

You’re trying to be a good citizen, lower the curve, love your neighbor. But you’re missing church, too. Feeling a little bit guilty about that? We don’t want to say, “Oh, it’s alright, I have extenuating circumstances…” We always have “extenuating circumstances” for the things we do. Don’t try to excuse yourself. Just confess your sins, and receive forgiveness.

Got questions or topics that you’d like discussed on Higher Things® Video Shorts? Email them to support@higherthings.org or send a text to 936-647-3235.

► Subscribe to our channel to get notifications when we go live — 
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To support the work of Higher Things®, visit https://support.higherthings.org.

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Sounds used:
Ship’s Bell – Mike Koenig at SoundBible.com

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HT Video Shorts

Confession & Absolution in 5 Minutes! (What’s UP Wednesday)

 

 

In today’s video, Pastor Borghardt attempts to zip through a very through explanation of Confession and Absolution in FIVE minutes flat! He uses numerous references from Scripture and the Small Catechisms. AND he even answers some common questions and objections about confession and absolution. Can he make it?? Brevity is NOT his style…

If you have questions or topics that you’d like discussed on Higher Things® Video Shorts, email them to support@higherthings.org or send a text to 936-647-3235.

► Subscribe to our channel to get notifications when we go live:
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To support the work of Higher Things®, visit https://support.higherthings.org

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Sounds used:
Ship’s Bell – Mike Koenig at SoundBible.com

Scripture cited:
John 20:22-23
Matthew 16:19
Matthew 18:18
Luke 10:16

Small Catechism, Confession & Absolution

Categories
The Uncultured Saints

Ep. 5: Jesus over Journey

Justification is a fancy $5 church-word that makes us sound smart when we use it. But what does it mean? It’s all about how we are saved and made right before God. As sinners, we look to ourselves — our choices and our actions — to gauge whether we really are Christians and measure how we’re doing to stay Christians. That’s probably not the best way to go about things. It actually gets dark and twisted. When we put the focus on us, even just the tiniest bit, it’s not on Jesus. If our faith is a process, it’s not finished. If it’s about our journey, it’s not about Jesus or what He did on the cross for us.

 

Return to The Uncultured Saints

Categories
Catechesis

The Divine Service: Amen

If you want to read about the good news of Jesus’ work for you, where do you turn? Your first thought may be to open to one of the Gospel accounts. Maybe you page to one of Paul’s epistles. In all these you will certainly find the wonderful proclamation of Christ who lived, died, and lives again for you. But, would your first choice be a book in the Old Testament? Would you turn to Leviticus?

The same Lord who comes to us in Word and sacrament today is the same Lord who came to His people in the Old Testament. The work of Christ for us is clearly shown in the Gospels and proclaimed in the epistles. In the Old Testament, the Gospel is proclaimed as a shadow of what would come in the incarnation.

The Apostle Paul writes,

“But now the righteousness of God has been manifested apart from the law, although the law and the Prophets bear witness to it — the righteousness of God through faith in Jesus Christ for all who believe”(Romans 3:32–22).

Leviticus bears witness to Christ our great High Priest, our atonement, our sanctification, our holiness. Leviticus is not a handbook of how to earn favor with God through mere sacrificial works and outward acts. Author Chad Bird describes it this way, “The tabernacle of the Old Testament was not a slaughterhouse to satisfy the bloodthirst of an angry diety. It was the Father’s house, where his children came to be redeemed by the death of a substitute.”

Levitical sacrifices had no strength apart from the Word of God and faith. No benefit existed apart from the Holy Spirit worked faith which listen and received the gifts of God. The Apology to the Augsburg Confession states, “Faith is the divine service that receives the benefits offered by God.”

We receive and confess this divine service, which God works in us, as we hear the promise of the forgivness of sins in the absolution and respond with one word, “Amen.” This single word is a gift. Faith receives the benefits of absolution and clings to the promise that Christ lived, died, and rose for me, for the forgiveness of my sins.

In the Small Catechism Martin Luther writes, “Confession has two parts. First, that we confess our sins, and second, that we receive absolution, that is forgiveness, from the pastor as from God Himself, not doubting, but firmly believing that by it our sins are forgiven before God in heaven.”

Faith is a gift from our gracious God which receives and holds onto His promised mercy. Faith listens to and firmly believes in God’s Word. Faith sets its eyes and ears on Christ. Jonathan Grothe describes faith in this way, “Faith itself has no strength at all, but it is the channel through which flows all the strength of God himself. Our faith, like Abraham’s ‘comes from what is heard’ and lives by holding to that heard and heeded Word of God.”

Leviticus is all about the work of Jesus for you.It is the liturgy, the divine service of the Old Testament. The same faith the Holy Spirit created in the saints of the Old Testament He creates in us. In God gifted faith, they looked forward to the ultimate Day of Atonement, the ultimate Lamb of God who would take away their sins. In the Divine Service we too look to Christ, the Lamb of God, who has atoned for our sins on Calvary. We can only say, “Amen” through the faith God gifts us. And, with ears of God-given faith, we hear the absolution in the divine service and exclaim, “Amen!”

Categories
Catechesis

The Divine Service: Absolution in the Wilderness

Leviticus. It’s a messy book. Open up to Leviticus and you’ll find pages bleeding with words of bloody sacrifices. Goats, bulls, and rams all give their lives for the sins of Israel.

Leviticus drips with the blood of beasts. But, why is this particular book in the Bible filled with so many sacrifices and so much blood? The writer to the Hebrews states, “without the shedding of blood there is no forgiveness of sins” (Hebrews 9:22). In other words, sin must be accounted for, a price must be paid to atone for sin. Forgiveness cannot be dispensed without a blood sacrifice. The wages of sin is death (Romans 6:23).

Sinners cannot commune with a holy God. So, in His gracious mercy, the Lord provided a way in which to cover and cleanse Israel of their sins. In Leviticus chapter sixteen we read about the Day of Atonement, the day the Lord appointed for the whole of Israel to be absolved of their sin every year.

“For on this day shall atonement be made for you to cleanse you. You shall be clean before the Lord from all your sins” (Leviticus 16:30).

There were two important elements specific to this Day of Atonement. On this day of sacrifice, two goats were to be selected. One of these goats was to be a blood sacrifice for the sins of the people. The other would be brought alive to Aaron, the High Priest. The High Priest then confessed all the transgressions of Israel, placing them on the head of this goat. Now, bearing the full weight of the iniquities of Israel, the goat would be cast into the wilderness where it would die along with sins of the people. Instead of Israel paying the pentalty for their own sin, a substitute was given to them.

Leviticus is not filled with laws, commands, and ordinances so much as it is filled with promises. Israel is passive on the Day of Atonement. Their sin is taken from them and placed on the shoulders of another. God, Himself, cleanses them of their iniquities and provides a way to graciously be with and bless His people.

Martin Luther once remarked, “Wherever you cut the Bible open, it bleeds Christ.” Here, in Leviticus chapter sixteen, the Scriptures point to the blood of a greater substitute.

The hymn, In the Shattered Bliss of Eden, points us to that greater substitute when we sing,

“What these sacrifices promised
From a God who sought to bless,
Came at last — a second Adam —
Priest and King of righteousness:
Son of God, incarnate Savior,
Son of Man, both Christ and Lord,
Who in naked shame would offer
On the cross His blood outpoured.” (LSB 572, 3)

Just like Israel, we do not answer for our own sin. We do not clean ourselves and atone for our own sin, we cannot. Jesus, as our Great High Priest, cleanses us of our sins through the sacrifice of Himself once and for all (Romans 6:10). He took up the full weight of all our transgressions and iniquities. Our confession fell on Him as He traveled into the wilderness of Calvary to be a sin offering in our place.

As we enter into the divine service, we confess our sins to our High Priest confident that His blood now covers and absolves us of our guilt. He has answered for our sins on the altar of the cross.

The Lord commanded that the gift of absolution through the Day of Atonement be delivered to His people. After His resurrection, Jesus sends His Apostles out to deliver the gifts He won for you and me on the cross. Jesus sends out His disciples to be priests absolving the sins of the penitent.

 “Peace be with you. As the Father has sent me, even so I am sending you.” And when he had said this, he breathed on them and said to them, “Receive the Holy Spirit. If you forgive the sins of any, they are forgiven them; if you withhold forgiveness from any, it is withheld” (John 20: 21–23).

Pastor Norman Nagel describes the working of our Great High Priest when he says, “He is the One who, by the marks of Calvary on Him, is the One who has answered for our sins and therefore is the One who can give the forgiving words to the apostles to speak. And His words are alive with the Spirit to bestow the gifts that they bring, here, the forgiveness of sins in Holy Absolution.” Leviticus, just like the divine service, is all about the Gospel gifts.

Categories
HT Video Shorts

Augustana XI – Confession and Absolution – HT Video Short


Pr. Borghardt continues our Advent tour of the Augsburg Confession. Today we study Article XI – Confession and Absolution.

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