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HT Video Shorts

Watch Your Boasting (Bible Study Thursday)

 

 

All the things you are tempted to boast in which are not the cross of Christ — whether it’s your life change, your decision, or how much much better you are than you used to be — are all great things to do (good job!). But none of them help you stand before God. Only Christ saves you. Everything else is varying degrees of of not-Jesus. Only Jesus saves you.

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Sounds Used in this Episode:
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Categories
HT Video Shorts

What to do with the Rest of Your Life (What’s UP? Wednesdays)

Figuring out what to do with the rest of your life can be very stressful! So use God’s Law to eliminate all the sinful options…but then remember the Gospel, that Christ has set you free to serve your neighbor. Whatever path makes the most sense for you to follow — after you’ve heard the Law of God — is followed in freedom because of Jesus.

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.

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

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HT Video Shorts

Answering Apparent Contradictions (Bad Theology Tuesday) – A Higher Things® Video Short

What do you do when you have a friend challenge you with a(n apparent) contradiction from the Bible? First thing — actually READ the passage in question. Read it in context, with the verses before and after it. This will solve the vast majority of “contradictions.” Still stumped? Call or text your pastor. He’s the one God put in your life to help you with questions like this.

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.

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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.

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Gospeled Boldly

The Bible Guide to Podcasting – Gospeled Boldly #68

The Bible Guide to Podcasting – Gospeled Boldly #68

Our opening horrific scene stars Jason… but not in the way you’d think. In this episode, Pastor Eric Brown and Thomas Lemke dive into the Bible and read about hospitable Christians getting extorted. Then the noble missionaries split the party, and Paul goes into the pagan hub of the ancient world to proclaim peace on Mars Hill.

In the Backwards Life, Pastor Brown addresses the question of whether it’s okay to read things besides the Bible.


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Higher History

Who Was Martin Luther? Part 13

Rev. Donavon Riley

Martin Luther received his license to enter doctoral studies in 1512. He swore on oath on the Bible to teach true doctrine and stand strong against false teaching. Then a wool cap was set on his head and a silver ring was slid onto his finger. Luther began lectures on Genesis three days later.

Outside his responsibilities as a teacher (which began at 7:00 a.m.), Luther was also busy writing letters to friends and colleagues, preaching at the monastery, reading Bible devotions at meals, preaching in parishes around Wittenberg, serving as a student advisor, supervising eleven monasteries, lecturing on St. Paul’s letters, and preparing a commentary on the Psalms. At that time, Luther said to a friend that he was so tired by the end of the day he would collapse on his bed and immediately go to sleep.

But, for all that, Martin was still focused on reviewing and revising everything he had been taught about the righteousness of God. He said, “I did not learn my theology all at once, but had to search deeper for it, where my temptations took me.” Everything Luther did was in service to eliminating anything and everyone who stood between him and Jesus crucified for sinners.

Luther’s turn away from the theology he had learned while a boy, that was instilled in him at university and as a young monk, did not happen all at once. Instead, he grew slowly and through much temptation and struggle. Then, finally, it was during Martin’s biblical lectures that things began to lock into place for him. It was in the classroom, as a lecturer, that Luther worked out his questions. Though nothing remains of his first Genesis lectures, one can read his evolution as a theologian from the first Psalms lectures, through Romans, Galatians, Hebrews, then through another go ’round in the Psalms.

Through his lectures on the Psalms, Luther came to a startling conclusion almost unheard of in former commentaries and lecture halls. From Psalm 72, he taught the students that God did not have one, but two kinds of righteousness. Martin had only been taught the second one. God’s righteousness on the one hand was a righteousness by which He found sinners guilty of disobeying the commandments. Then, and here is where Luther began to break free of Late Medieval theology, God’s other kind of righteousness—God’s primary righteousness—was a righteousness by which He declared believers righteousness for Christ’s sake, that made them acceptable in His presence. This was a new teaching, unheard of by anyone at that time. Luther was beginning to tear down—one theological brick at a time—the wall that separated sinners from God’s grace and mercy in Christ Jesus.

Next time, we will look again at Luther’s time as a lecturer and the personal and professional consequences of his teaching.

Rev. Donavon Riley is the pastor of St. John’s Evangelical Lutheran Church in Webster, Minnesota.