There’s only one

Bono by itrimble

 

This message would make a great many liberal mainline Protestant pastors spit like crazed camels.

 

 But I think Bono would be quite pleased.

 

Click here > There’s only one

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Thanks, Pastor Mark.

 

And thanks to flicker and itrimble for the photo.

 

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The Roman Catholic view of ‘faith’ vs. the Lutheran view of ‘faith’

The full class is now posted (below) in mp3. 

St Peter's Basillica , Rome by James Mans                  

 The actual class starts about 5 min. into #1 (thanks to my Christian brother Brent’s lengthy questions)  😀

Views on ‘faith’ #1          Views on ‘faith’ #6

Views on ‘faith’ #2          Views on ‘faith’ #7

Views on ‘faith’ #3          Views on ‘faith’ #8

Views on ‘faith’ #4          Views on ‘faith’ #9

Views on ‘faith’ #5

Views of ‘faith’ – the entire class

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I should have titled them Views of ‘faith’, but it’s late and I’m not going to fix it now.

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Thanks to Pastor Mark Anderson.

And to flickr and James Mans,  for the photo.

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Trying to make Christians… out of Christians.

Galatians by Amsterdam Asp

That’s what St. Paul was doing in the Galatian letter.

Trying to take the religiosity out of Christians. Trying to show them that they have been freed from the Law of Moses, by the cross of Christ.

That job still needs to be done, as the ‘Christ +’ (whatever)  crowd is always on the lookout for those not living up to the “Christian life”, and is more than willing to hand you the list of all the areas where you should be doing a better job.

Here’s a terrific sermon that is the capstone for Lutheran Church of the Master’s Lenten theme this year of “Breaking Free from Religion’.

 

click here> Making Christians out of Christians

                         (Pastor Mark’s Good Friday sermon for 2011)

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Thanks to flicker and Amsterdam Asp for the photo.

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The 23rd Chapter of the Book of Acts

 IMG_0132 by blandocal

Here’s a class that is one of my favorites.  It is definitely not the picture of the Christian faith that you hear about in a lot of churches. It is a brutally honest accounting of the way things were, the way things are, and the way God acts for His purposes, using all things to accomplish His will…including us.

I put it up in piece meal, so you can listen to it in sections, if you wish. If you’d like the whole thing together in one shot, send me an e-mail letting me know and I’ll put it up that way for you as well.

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Acts #1                    Acts #9

Acts #2                   Acts #10

Acts #3                   Acts #11 

Acts #4                   Acts #12

Acts #5                   Acts #13

Acts #6                   Acts #14

Acts #7                   Acts #15

Acts #8                   Acts #16

 

       Acts 23 entire class

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 Thanks to flickr and blandocal, for the photo.

Palm Sunday, 2011

Palm Sunday 10 by Waiting For The Word

Here’s the Palm Sunday, 2011 sermon by Pastor Mark:

 click here> Palm Sunday, 2011

 

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Thanks to flickr and  Waiting For The Word  for the photo.

 

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Becoming a better Christian and other such nonsense

Katkeh --- HBW! by Lacejoy

Did you hear a good sermon today?

Did the preacher tell you how to make your life work a bit better today?

Did you get some good biblical principles on how to be a better husband, or wife, or how to be a more spiritual and committed  Christian?

Did they tell you what you can do in your community to be a better citizen, a more caring human being?

If you received some preaching along those lines today, then you were fed a portion of  horse dung.  

Those things might be a problem in your life and maybe you do need to work on some of those things that you might have a better life, but what do those things have to do with faith in Christ?  Absolutely nothing.  You can get good advice on how to better yourself just about everywhere these days.

Those things (things that we ‘do’) are law things. The law will save no one. The law always accuses us. It’s demand is a perfect demand, to be fulfilled perfectly by the doer in every instance… and it doesn’t mean tomorrow…but right NOW.

If you heard those things at church today, you are in a place where there is NO GOSPEL. Just law. The law trumps the gospel in a place like that. They might know exactly what the gospel is, and they might even give you the gospel, but if they preached those things to you so that you might become better…then, while you weren’t looking, they ripped the gospel away from you and replaced it with horse dung wrapped in colored foil paper with a curly ribbon.

Those things are law things. There is no life in law things. Things that demand. No life. Yes, maybe in the short term you will see improvement. But in the long run, only death will result from a diet of law.  St. Paul himself referred to the 10 Commandments as “the ministry of death”.  And law things are NOT ONLY the 10 Commandments, but every single demand that your existence places upon you. All of it is law. God’s law.

So, if you want to be a big fan of Moses and the Law, in order that you might progress higher and higher up the Christian ladder of obedience and spirituality…I wish you a lot of luck. You will need it. In the end, you’ll only become despairing of your Christian life, or you will become prideful in it. And then, you are in BIG Trouble, with a capital ‘T’.

You need to have the law DONE TO YOU. Not to make you better…but asserted in it’s full force of perfection (the way Jesus did in the Sermon on the Mount) in order to kill you off to any idea that you can handle it, or tame the law to make it work for you. You cannot. No one can. “No one will be justified in the sight of the law.” And when you have been sufficiently cut off at the knees by that Word of law, then the gospel should be handed over to you freely. Completely. Devoid of any little thing that you must do in order for it to be effective in your life. “Come forth Lazarus!”  He will raise you. He will breathe new life into your lifeless corpse. He will open up the future for you, yet again, where you were once hopeless. When you go to church, you need to know how to listen for the law, and then the gospel. That is your job in all of this. Don’t be hoodwinked by the new Moses who comes dressesd up as Jesus, while fomenting death. There is only one Jesus and He came, He comes, to free you from the bonds of death, and to give you what only He can…new life, forgiveness, and salvation in Him.

 

Here’s today’s sermon from where I got the inspiration for this post:

   click here >  Christian Transcendence nonsense

(If you are used to having the carrot dangled in front of you each week at church, then you probably won’t care for this sermon which puts all of that baloney to death…and gives you what you really need… which is all the more reason why you should hear it)

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Thanks to flickr and Lacejoy for the photo.

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Martin Luther’s Treatise on Christian Liberty

    Luther's 95 theses by honecr5        

click  below  

 >  Martin Luther on Christian Liberty

This class is just 49 minutes long and packed with great, freedom giving gospel and awesome  “ALL or NOTHING” Lutheran theology.

If you re only going to listen to one great class on Christian freedom this weekend, make it this one.

 

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Thanks to flickr and honecr5 for the photo.

 

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Don’t you dare listen to this, Roger!

I HEAR YOU KNOCKING BUT YOU CAN'T COME IN 309/365 by weasteman

 

This is for REAL SINNERS…ONLY!   We have estranged ourselves from God and this is the…

(find out for yourself …except you, Roger) > For Real Sinners, ONLY

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This evening’s Lenten sermon for April 6, 2011

 

Theme:        Estrangement from each other

                      Estrangement from God

                      Romans 6

                      Baptism

                      Holy Communion

                      

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Thanks flickr and weastman for the photo.

 

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‘The Easter Paradigm’

Professor James Nestingen, in commenting on the Lord’s Prayer, once wrote, “In teaching them to pray, Jesus did not teach His disciples to transcend themselves but to ask.” And asking, of course, is something we humans are not very good at. Why? Because asking is a form of dying, a recognition of our limitations, an admission of need and a direct threat to our most dearly beloved, self-reliance.

 

When Jesus spoke of the life of faith He said things like this; “If anyone would find their life in this world, they must lose it.” He spoke of denying self and taking up the cross. Dying must come before life can begin. When St. Paul wrote to the Romans he brought them back to baptism in order to make clear the dynamic of the Christian life; “Do you not know”, he wrote, “that all of you who were baptized into Christ Jesus were baptized into His death?” The sinner, sickened by sin, is beyond remedy. The patient must die.

 

The Easter paradigm of the Christian life is not an invitation to transcend upward to ever higher heights of spirituality and success. This may be good humanism but it is lousy Christianity, what Martin Luther called the Theology of Glory. Jesus was not raised from the dead in order to prop up our projects, however we define them. He was raised, as the New Testament proclaims, “for our justification” (to establish sinners in a right relationship with God). It is for this reason that we can say with Paul, “It is no loner I who live but Christ who lives in me.”

 

Easter is not the occasion for a lot of empty religious barking about new life. Our lives and the world are not progressing they are coming to an end. The life we do live is a life of faith – not faith in what we have done or believed, but faith in Christ Jesus on whose cross my sinful self has met it’s end, and out of whose empty tomb reverberates the promise of eternity.

                       Grace to you,

                                       Pastor Mark

“All I know is that I was blind, and now I see.”

                                                                   Raison D'etre 2006 037 by noondayphotos

Sermon for the 4th Sunday in Lent.     

 click here> Jesus heals the Blind Man

 

 

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Thanks to flickr and noondayphotos, for the photo.

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