Sharper Iron From Kfuo Radio
- Autor: Vários
- Narrador: Vários
- Editora: Podcast
- Duração: 1383:30:33
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Sinopse
Join Rev. Jonathan Fisk and a guest pastor to test your mettle on "What does this mean?" and learn to spar with the best of them. Each episode covers the Daily Lectionary New Testament text.
Episódios
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Evil Men Cannot Stop God’s Reign
24/07/2020 Duração: 54minRev. Matt Wietfeldt, director of admissions and director of the Christ Academy program at Concordia Theological Seminary in Fort Wayne, IN, joins host Rev. Timothy Appel to study Judges 9:42-10:5. Abimelech has tried to do things his own way instead of the LORD’s; now, the LORD lets Abimelech experience that the way of evil only ends with evil. Abimelech turns on the very people who helped him assume power in the first place, with growing vengeance and violence. Idols prove their worthlessness as a refuge both for the Shechemites and Abimelech. His evil and pride are brought to an end through the LORD’s judgment by a humiliating death. Abimelech’s account stands as a warning to all who walk in the way of evil and as a comfort to Christians that the LORD does reign even during evil and one day does bring it to an end. In contrast to Abimelech stands the two minor judges, Tola and Jair. Though not much is said of their time as judge, their brief accounts remind us that the LORD continues to rule His people eve
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The Kingdom of God Is Not Ruled by a Mob Boss
23/07/2020 Duração: 54minRev. David Appold, pastor at St. Paul’s Lutheran Church in Paducah, KY, joins host Rev. Timothy Appel to study Judges 9:22-41. The short reign of Abimelech is a photo negative of the kingdom of God. Though Abimelech perhaps fancied himself king over all Israel, his rule was far more localized, primarily in the city of Shechem. God gave Abimelech and his Canaanite friends over to the evil they desired from the start of their ascent to power. Their shaky alliance quickly devolved into treachery, as the Shechemites worked against any peace or prosperity that should have characterized the rule of a king. When a drunken boast from Gaal called upon the Shechemites to remember and renew past hostilities, Zebul took advantage of the situation and led Abimelech to bring the insurrectionist to a violent end. This is only the beginning of Abimelech’s downward trajectory. God’s Word presents this, and other, ugly accounts of the sinfulness of mankind in order to bring into sharper relief the Gospel of the reign of Jesus
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Trust Not in Princes
22/07/2020 Duração: 56minRev. Dr. Adam Filipek, pastor at Holy Cross Lutheran Church and Immanuel Lutheran Church, both in Lidgerwood, ND, joins host Rev. Timothy Appel to study Judges 9:1-21. Israel has once again entered into the downward cycle. The rise of Abimelech does not represent the LORD’s deliverance, but a deeper fall into idolatry. Abimelech’s offer to the men of Shechem is shrewd from a worldly perspective, but his subsequent murder of his brothers through the use of money from a pagan treasury shows how bad the idolatry in Israel really is. This is true for sinners in every age. Idolatry lies at the heart of all our sin; though it seems to offer much, it always delivers nothing but death. Jotham, the lone son of Gideon to escape Abimelech’s fratricide, tells a parable that speaks the truth of the deadly trajectory Abimelech’s account must go. Though this section of Scripture seems hopeless, when we see it in light of the entire account of God’s merciful dealings with sinful man, we see the great need to put not our tru
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Real Grace for Real Sinners
21/07/2020 Duração: 54minRev. Chris Hull, pastor at Zion Lutheran Church in Tomball, TX, joins host Rev. Timothy Appel to study Judges 8:22-35. The threat from Midian has ended, but the threat of idolatry remains as Gideon’s leadership of Israel comes to an end. Though Gideon’s refusal of his own dynasty over Israel sounds pious, his deeds take him beyond the leadership the LORD’s Word had given him. As he receives the spoils of war, he goes beyond their proper use and crafts an ephod that becomes an idolatrous snare for him, his family, and Israel. Any such attempt to make something holy by our own ways must fail; only the Word of God can sanctify. Gideon’s family life foreshadows the coming faithlessness of Abimelech and those under his leadership, when idolatry in Israel only grows. Still, the LORD is gracious in giving rest from Midian. The end of Gideon’s life is a vivid reminder that the LORD’s forgiveness is real grace for real sinners. “Rebellion and Rescue” is a mini-series on Sharper Iron that goes through the book of Jud
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Pursuit, Anger, and Vengeance
20/07/2020 Duração: 56minRev. Jeff Hemmer, pastor at Bethany Lutheran Church in Fairview Heights, IL, joins host Rev. Timothy Appel to study Judges 7:24-8:21. The LORD has delivered the initial victory to Gideon; now, the runaway princes and kings of Midian must be fully defeated. As Gideon calls upon the men of Ephraim for their help, sinful man’s desire for his own glory wells up in jealousy and pride. Gideon skillfully pacifies the situation, although the LORD’s role in the victory seems to be neglected. Even as Gideon seeks to fulfill the LORD’s mandate to defeat the Midianite army, he begins to go past what he had been given, exacting vengeance upon even his fellow Israelites. As Gideon deals with the Midianite kings, he is faithful in acknowledging the foolishness of idolatry, even as his personal anger seems to lead him toward sin. As we see Gideon in both faithfulness and foolishness, we rejoice all the more in the completely faithful Savior, Jesus Christ. “Rebellion and Rescue” is a mini-series on Sharper Iron that goes th
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The LORD Conquers without Large Armies
17/07/2020 Duração: 53minRev. Sean Kilgo, pastor at the Northeast Kansas Lutheran Partnership, joins host Rev. Timothy Appel to study Judges 7:1-23. Gideon has amassed an army, but the LORD says that there are too many. In order that His people will not boast in His presence and to teach them that the victory is His alone, the LORD whittles Gideon’s army down to a mere 300 men. As Gideon continues to have difficulty seeing the LORD’s Word with the eyes of faith, the LORD graciously strengthens him once more as he overhears a Midianite dream; today, the LORD graciously strengthens our faith through His Word and Sacrament. The LORD delivers the victory into Gideon’s hand without Gideon or his men ever drawing their swords. The entire account is a picture of God’s gift of salvation by His grace through His strength and wisdom shown ultimately in Christ crucified for sinners. “Rebellion and Rescue” is a mini-series on Sharper Iron that goes through the book of Judges. This book is characterized by a familiar. As the generations after J
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Doubting Gideon and the Sign of the Fleece
16/07/2020 Duração: 54minRev. Rick Jones, chaplain and director of spiritual life at the Dakota Boys and Girls Ranch in Minot, ND, joins host Rev. Timothy Appel to study Judges 6:25-40. Gideon’s work as judge starts at home. In commanding Gideon to tear down his own father’s shrines to false gods, the LORD mocks the foolishness of idolatry. Though Gideon’s fear keeps him from accomplishing this during the day, he does keep the LORD’s word. As Gideon expected, his fellow townspeople are furious; this is the natural sinful reaction to the toppling of our idols. Gideon’s father speaks up on his son’s behalf; he points out that any god that needs someone to defend him is no god at all. The incident earns Gideon a new name, and the LORD clothes His chosen judge with His Holy Spirit to enable him for the task to come. Gideon’s fear still clings to him, however. In doubt similar to St. Thomas, Gideon demands two signs from God. God shows Himself patient and merciful as He confirms His promise to Gideon through the sign of the fleece, point
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The Gospel Brings Peace to Fearful Gideon
15/07/2020 Duração: 55minRev. James Preus, pastor at Trinity Lutheran Church in Ottumwa, IA, joins host Rev. Timothy Appel to study Judges 6:1-24. Here we go again. After a time of rest, the people of Israel again forsake the true worship of the LORD and godly government. They foolishly turn to idolatry, and the LORD chastens them through the oppression of the Midianites, as numerous as locusts. Just as the LORD had promised in Leviticus, the plagues He had sent against Egypt now came against His own people. In repentance, they cried out to the LORD, who sent His word to them through an unnamed prophet and spoke to Gideon to send him as deliverer. The Son of God declared Gideon a mighty man of valor even in the midst of Gideon’s fearful wheat threshing. This is a picture of objective justification. Gideon shows his cowardice and lack of knowledge, yet the LORD is gracious. He gives Gideon true worship through the offering Gideon brings, and through this Gospel, Gideon now has peace with God as he prepares to do the task the LORD giv
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The Song of Deborah and Barak
14/07/2020 Duração: 53minRev. Peter Ill, pastor at Trinity Lutheran Church in Millstadt, IL, joins host Rev. Timothy Appel to study Judges 5:1-31. When the LORD delivers His people, they respond by praising Him in song. The poetic praise of God’s deliverance gives theological reflection on the prose account of the battle. The song builds upon itself through its progression to drive home the main point that the battle has been fought and won by the LORD. The people’s idolatry had left them helpless before their enemies; only the LORD could deliver them. He rescued them through Deborah, Barak, and other willing leaders, but the glory remained His. Even though some tribes did not respond to the call for help, the LORD remained faithful to deliver His people. The unbelief of His enemies even in the face of their defeat is tragic, but the LORD’s salvation for His people is glorious. “Rebellion and Rescue” is a mini-series on Sharper Iron that goes through the book of Judges. This book is characterized by a familiar. As the generations a
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The LORD Is a Mighty Warrior
13/07/2020 Duração: 54minRev. Joel Haak, pastor at Trinity Lutheran Church in Rochester, MN, joins host Rev. Timothy Appel to study Judges 4:1-24. The cycle of rebellion and rescue starts again after Ehud’s death. The people of Israel turn away from the LORD into idolatry, and He sells them into the hands of an old enemy, the Canaanites. From an earthly perspective, the 900 chariots of the Canaanite general, Sisera, are far more powerful than any Israelite weapon. The key difference is that the LORD fights for His people; He commands both the army of the Israelites and the army of His enemies. The LORD sends His word of deliverance to Barak through the prophetess Deborah. Though Barak believes in weakness, the LORD shows His strength nonetheless. He leads the battle charge to defeat the Canaanites as Barak and the Israelite army follow behind. Though Sisera escapes for a time, he meets his gruesome end at the hands of a woman, Jael, just as the LORD had spoken beforehand. Even during these terrible times during Israel’s history, the
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An Unexpected, Left-Handed Judge
10/07/2020 Duração: 54minRev. Dan Speckhard, pastor at Faith Lutheran Church in Godfrey, IL, joins host Rev. Timothy Appel to study Judges 3:12-31. Israel again thinks that idolatry will lead to prosperity and happiness, but the LORD shows them otherwise quite graphically. He delivers His people into the hand of the Moabite king Eglon, who has made himself fat on the tribute of Israel. After the people cry out in repentance, the LORD sends His chosen deliverer, Ehud. Unexpectedly, he is left-handed, perhaps even crippled in his right hand. Yet Ehud uses this to his advantage, hiding his sword from easy detection and gaining a private audience with Eglon by his non-threatening appearance. Exacting the LORD’s judgement, Ehud brings Eglon to a grotesque and humiliating death. This filthy scene provides a picture of where our sin always leads. The LORD gives His people victory over all of Moab and provides rest for His people for eighty years, as Shamgar also defeats the Philistines. The rest given by the LORD throughout the book of Jud
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The First Judge, Othniel
09/07/2020 Duração: 53minRev. Tyrel Bramwell, pastor at St. Mark Lutheran Church in Ferndale, CA, joins host Rev. Timothy Appel to study Judges 3:1-11. When the LORD declared that He would leave pagan nations in the Promised Land, He did so as a test for His people in order that they would learn to rely on Him instead of any idols. This was His purpose in teaching them war. He did not desire to teach them proper military tactics; He desired to teach His people that He was the One fighting for them. Such physical warfare is a picture of the spiritual warfare that is constantly happening for the people of God. The people of Israel in the book of Judges failed the test miserably. Living among the pagan nations, they intermarried with them and began to serve their idols. The LORD gave them over to the evil they desired through a double evil, the Mesopotamian king, Cushan-rishathaim. This is the background for the first judge, Othniel. When Israel cried out to the LORD for help, He sent Othniel, clothed in the Holy Spirit, to deliver His
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Rebellion and Rescue: The Cycle of Judges
08/07/2020 Duração: 52minRev. Sam Wirgau, pastor at Bethlehem Lutheran Church in Ossian, IN, joins host Rev. Timothy Appel to study Judges 2:6-23. Joshua’s generation was generally characterized by faithfulness, but subsequent generations of Israel fell into faithlessness. Joshua’s generation saw with their own eyes the mighty acts of the LORD, but salvation was theirs by faith, not by sight. Something interrupted the hearing of the following generation. Whether it was a failure on the part of the parents to speak the LORD’s Word or on the part of the children to hear and believe the LORD’s Word is left unsaid; the generation after Joshua’s fell did not know the LORD or His work for Israel. That led to a terrible cycle that dominates the book of Judges. First, the people of Israel does evil in the LORD’s sight by bowing down to idols. Second, the LORD sends a foreign nation to subdue Israel as punishment for their sins. Third, the people cry out in repentance to the LORD. Finally, the LORD sends a judge to lead the people in His way
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Rebellion and Rescue: The LORD Does Not Forsake His Faithless People
07/07/2020 Duração: 54minRev. John Bussman, pastor at St. Paul's Lutheran Church in Cullman, AL, joins host Rev. Timothy Appel to study Judges 1:27-2:5. Israel’s faithlessness only grows worse. One tribe after another fails to fulfill the LORD’s Word to drive out the inhabitants of the land that He was giving them. Not only was this foolishness from a strategic political and military standpoint, it was direct disobedience to the LORD’s command. The attempt made by several tribes to enslave the Canaanites was a tragic irony, given Israel’s own history. By the end of the first chapter of Judges, any victories of the conquest under Joshua had been undone through the faithless idolatry of the subsequent generation. The LORD was not content to leave His people to eternal death, however. He came to them and spoke to them. As He called Adam and Eve to repentance for their sin in the Garden of Eden, so He called His people Israel to repentance for their sin in the Promised Land. Their weeping in response points to their repentance, and thei
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The Gradual Descent into Apostasy
06/07/2020 Duração: 54minRev. Matt Ulmer, pastor at St. Paul Lutheran Church in Bishop, TX, joins host Rev. Timothy Appel to study Judges 1:1-26. The book of Judges does not represent a high point in Israel’s history. Throughout the book, their faithlessness stands in contrast to the LORD’s faithfulness. Likely written during the early years of Israel’s United Kingdom, perhaps by the prophet Samuel, the book of Judges begins with some overlap from the book of Joshua. Tribe by tribe, Israel sets out to finish the conquest of the Promised Land, according to the LORD’s direction. He sends Judah first, the tribe from which the Promised Offspring will come. As Judah and its neighboring tribes keep their trust in the LORD, the book of Judges starts in a promising way as Israel begins to push out the inhabitants of Canaan. However, their turn to unfaithfulness begins quickly, as even Judah fails to drive out all of the idolaters in the land. Benjamin fails to drive out the Jebusites from Jerusalem. The house of Joseph copies the actions of
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NEW SERIES: Rebellion and Rescue
06/07/2020 Duração: 02min“Rebellion and Rescue” is a mini-series on Sharper Iron that goes through the book of Judges. This book is characterized by a familiar. As the generations after Joshua forget the LORD and what He has done for Israel, they fall into idolatry. The LORD gives them over into the hands of their enemies in order to bring them to their senses. When they cry out to Him in repentance, He sends a judge to rescue them and give them rest for a time, until they relapse into idolatry once more. In this cycle, we see a picture of our own Christian life. Daily, the old Adam in us is drowned in contrition and repentance, and the new man emerges in Baptismal forgiveness to live in righteousness and purity before God forever. Sharper Iron, hosted by Rev. Timothy Appel, looks at the text of Holy Scripture both in its broad context and its narrow detail, all for the sake of proclaiming Christ crucified and risen for sinners. Two pastors engage with God's Word to sharpen not only their own faith and knowledge, but the faith and k
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Pray, Praise, and Give Thanks
03/07/2020 Duração: 54minRev. Dr. Adam Filipek, pastor at Holy Cross Lutheran Church and Immanuel Lutheran Church, both in Lidgerwood, ND, joins host Rev. Timothy Appel to study James 5:13-20. Patient endurance for the Lord’s coming turns Christians to prayer. In times of suffering, a Christian prays, “Lord, have mercy.” In times of joy, a Christian prays, “God be praised!” Such prayers are offered by Christians both individually and corporately. When a Christian is sick, the whole Church, including the pastor, shares the burden by offering prayer for the one particularly marked with illness. Such prayers are offered in faith that focuses on God alone as the One who justifies and gives to the sinner. Elijah stands as an example of one who offered prayer in faith in what God had promised. Together as Christians, we show care and concern for each other in our sin, calling each other to repentance and faith in Christ who forgives our sins. “Wisdom from Above” is a mini-series on Sharper Iron that goes through the Epistle of St. James.
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Long-Suffering Endurance for the Lord’s Coming
02/07/2020 Duração: 52minRev. Zelwyn Heide, pastor at St. Peter Lutheran Church in Hannover, ND and Zion Lutheran Church in New Salem, ND, joins host Rev. Timothy Appel to study James 5:7-12. After warning of the danger of earthly wealth, James turns to comfort those who suffer under those who trust in something other than the Lord. Such suffering calls for patience, knowing that Jesus’ second coming is at hand. He will bring vindication to His people in His own time. This enables Christians to endure suffering in this life with patience, not only toward the Lord, but also toward each other. Experiencing suffering might make us grumpy; James calls us away from judgment and instead to expect the Judge’s coming together as Christians. The prophets who endured suffering patiently as they spoke the Lord’s Word stand as an example to us, as does the patriarch Job. As His people suffer with patience without judgment or swearing, the Lord shows His purpose of compassion and mercy for His people. “Wisdom from Above” is a mini-series on Sh
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Rich in Christ, not Mammon
01/07/2020 Duração: 53minRev. Harrison Goodman, pastor at Mt. Calvary Lutheran Church in San Antonio, TX joins host Rev. Timothy Appel to study James 5:1-6. Though mammon is not the only idol that can give false security, it poses a dangerous temptation to every person. James strips away any thought that security for the future is found in earthly wealth. Wealth brings misery, not only eternally if it leads away from Christ, but temporally in a variety of ways. The truth is that earthly wealth has already rotten. It causes us to look only at ourselves, rather than in love toward the one true God and our neighbor. In this way, worship of mammon molds us in its image, not into the image of Christ. Those who worship mammon stop seeing their neighbor as one who is worthy of mercy. Their ultimate problem, therefore, is idolatry of self, seeking after their sinful desires instead of the kingdom of God. Such idolatry did lead to Jesus’ crucifixion, yet He went to the cross willingly, precisely to save sinners, rich and poor alike. True wea
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Jesus Is Not Your Co-Pilot
30/06/2020 Duração: 52minRev. Hans Fiene, pastor at Prince of Peace Lutheran Church in Crestwood, MO joins host Rev. Timothy Appel to study James 4:11-17. God is God; we are not. This is the foundation of this text from James 4. To speak evil against a brother in Christ by judging him in an evil way is not simply to sin against your brother. It is a sin against God and His Law. One who judges his brother in this way usurps the place of God as lawgiver and judge. Instead, James calls us to trust God as God to be the One who will both save and destroy according to His will. In a similar way, no Christian dare usurp God’s vocation as the One who directs all of history. Our plans can never boast against that which God gives and desires, for our lives are here today and gone tomorrow. Such truth would lead us to despair except for the grace of God. Our value is found in the way God has loved us in His Son Jesus Christ. Because of Jesus, we belong to the God who created the heavens and the earth. “Wisdom from Above” is a mini-series on S