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The Uncultured Saints

The Uncultured Saints

Auteur(s): Higher Things Inc.
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We’re told the same thing over and over. Christianity doesn’t fit with today’s culture. The thing is, it isn’t the culture saying it. It’s the church. We’ve done a great job figuring out what we’re not. Sometimes we forget what we are. We’re the saints, washed in the blood of the lamb. We’re sinners Jesus made holy. This defines us. There are places Christianity doesn’t fit with today’s culture because Christianity isn’t bound by culture. We’re free in Christ to be uncultured. Not against it. Not apart from it. Undefined by it, because we’re defined by something greater. Join Pr. Goodman and Pr. Lietzau, the uncultured saints, as we tackle today’s issues through the lens of the Lutheran Confessions and find answers to today’s questions rooted in a timeless truth in Christ.© Higher Things, Inc. Christianisme Pastorale et évangélisme Spiritualité
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  • The Lord’s Supper: Nostalgia or Sacrament?
    Jun 26 2025

    📖Mark 14:22-31

    ➡️ Jesus Institutes the Lord’s Supper

    Jesus gives His disciples bread and wine and declares, “This is my body” and “This is my blood of the covenant, poured out for many.”

    This moment isn’t just symbolic — it’s sacramental. Jesus isn’t speaking metaphorically; He’s delivering His very body and blood for the forgiveness of sins.

    As Lutherans confess, Christ is truly present in the Supper, and His gifts are given to sinners in real time. It’s not nostalgia or reenactment. It’s God working here and now.

    This meal fulfills the Passover. In the OT, the Passover wasn’t just a remembrance — it was participatory. Israelites didn’t simply recall the Exodus; through the meal, they were joined to it.

    Jesus brings that same reality to the Lord’s Supper. No longer are believers just remembering past salvation. In the Supper, they receive it.

    Recreating Seder meals today misses the point. Clinging to the shadow when the reality is given every Sunday in the Lord’s Supper turns salvation into nostalgia instead of participation.

    ➡️ Jesus Predicts That Peter Will Deny Him

    Immediately after this, Jesus predicts Peter’s denial.

    Though Peter insists that he won’t, Jesus tells him the rooster will crow twice before he denies Him three times.

    The disciples all join Peter in pledging loyalty.

    This exchange shows the danger of turning Jesus’ words into challenges instead of warnings. Jesus wasn’t testing Peter — He was preparing him.

    But Peter, in pride, saw it as a chance to prove himself. Like us, he wanted to be the hero. Salvation doesn’t rest on our performance — it rests on Christ.

    The Lord’s Supper isn’t a ritual for the strong. It’s a gift for the weak, the scattered, and the sinful — for Peter, for you, for me.

    Contributor Rev. Harrison Goodman is the Higher Things Executive Director of Missions and Theology.

    Contributor Eli Lietzau is the pastor at Wheat Ridge Evangelical Lutheran Church in Wheat Ridge, CO.

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    31 min
  • The Plot, the Annointing & the Betrayal
    Jun 26 2025

    A Bible Study of Mark 14:1-11

    ➡️ The Pharisees Plot to Kill Jesus

    It was now two days before Passover. The chief priests and scribes sought to arrest Jesus by stealth and kill him, yet feared causing an uproar during the feast.

    Their need for secrecy spoke volumes — if they were truly doing God's work, why hide in darkness?

    Since the beginning of Mark's gospel, they had been at odds with Jesus, looking for ways to destroy him.

    Even back in chapter three, they allegedly planted a man with a withered hand in the synagogue to test if Jesus would heal on the Sabbath.

    Their secretive plotting revealed their fear — not of wrongdoing, but of the people's reaction.

    They were fully committed to silencing Jesus, willing to employ dangerous and evil methods.

    ➡️ Jesus Anointed at Bethany

    While at Simon the leper's house in Bethany, a woman approached Jesus with an alabaster flask of pure nard, costly ointment worth a year's wages.

    Breaking the flask, she poured it over his head.

    Some became indignant, asking why such waste when it could have been sold for over 300 denarii and given to the poor.

    Jesus defended her: "Leave her alone. Why trouble her?

    She has done a beautiful thing.

    The poor you always have with you—whenever you want, you can do good for them. But you will not always have me."

    He explained she had anointed his body for his coming burial.

    What she did would be remembered wherever the gospel was proclaimed. (And it is!)

    ➡️ Judas Decides to Betray Jesus

    Then Judas Iscariot, one of the twelve, went to the chief priests to betray Jesus.

    They were glad and promised him money.

    Judas sought opportunity to betray him.

    The contrast is striking — the woman spent extravagantly to honor Jesus while Judas sought payment to betray him.

    While some saw her act as wasteful, Jesus recognized it as faith.

    Contributor Rev. Harrison Goodman is the Higher Things Executive Director of Missions and Theology.

    Contributor Eli Lietzau is the pastor at Wheat Ridge Evangelical Lutheran Church in Wheat Ridge, CO.

    #higherthings #lcms #lutheran #jesus

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    35 min
  • The Widow’s Offering & the Destruction of the Temple
    Jun 15 2025

    ➡️Mark 12:38-44

    Jesus contrasts the ostentatious scribes with a poor widow's humble offering.

    While wealthy individuals contribute large sums to the temple treasury, the widow gives just two small copper coins — all she has to live on.

    This passage isn't merely about stewardship or tithing percentages.

    Jesus is both commending the widow's faith and expressing righteous anger at a religious system that failed to care for its widows.

    Her act becomes a Christ-like image — giving all she has just as Jesus would ultimately give everything for our redemption.

    ➡️Mark 13:1-2

    As Jesus leaves the temple for the final time, his disciples marvel at its magnificence.

    Jesus responds with the shocking prophecy that not one stone will remain.

    This isn't just about physical destruction but marks a theological transition.

    The temple had served its purpose as God's dwelling place, but now Jesus himself is the true temple.

    When the temple curtain later tears at Jesus' crucifixion, it signifies this transition: God's presence would no longer be contained in a building but found in Christ and his church.

    ➡️ Mark 13:3-13

    The disciples ask when these events will occur, and Jesus describes ongoing signs: false messiahs, wars, natural disasters, persecution.

    Rather than providing a precise timeline, Jesus emphasizes faithful endurance amid tribulation.

    These signs aren't just about a distant future but characterize the entire period between Christ's ascension and return.

    Jesus promises the Holy Spirit will provide words during persecution — not through spontaneous revelation, but through the apostolic teachings and Scriptures internalized by believers.

    The central message isn't fear of calamity but faithfulness in confessing Christ until the end.

    Contributor Rev. Harrison Goodman is the Higher Things Executive Director of Missions and Theology.

    Contributor Eli Lietzau is the pastor at Wheat Ridge Evangelical Lutheran Church in Wheat Ridge, CO.

    #higherthings #lcms #lutheran #jesus

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    34 min

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