1. Luther recognized that in the penitential psalms, God gives us the words to cry out to Him in our distress, lament our sins, and confess trust in the promise of His righteousness in which alone is our sure and certain hope.
  2. Jesus' cross is for dull shepherds and bright magi. It is for the whole world. It is for you.
  3. Lutheran theology begins not with God in His terrifying majesty but with God in the flesh, God crucified for sinners. Advent is about this trajectory.
  4. The Spirit who inspired the prophets and apostles to put God’s Word into human language has guided and guarded their transmission in the course of human history preserving them for the sake of the Gospel.
  5. Pastor Craft: Essays and Sermons is now available through 1517 Publishing
  6. Forgiveness of sins does not come in bits and pieces. There are no levels of forgiveness.
  7. The time is always near. The world rages on and in it you have tribulation, it is true. But the One who is standing at the gate has conquered.
  8. John T. Pless has prepared a midweek Lenten sermon series that will fix our eyes on the saving work of the triune God. Based on Martin Luther’s hymn “Dear Christians One and All Rejoice,” this series will provide preachers an opportunity to proclaim the saving work of God to their hearers throughout the season of Lent.
  9. Bonhoeffer’s Advent preaching was carried out under the dark shadow of war yet within that night the word of promise sounds forth with radiant clarity. There is much in his preaching to inspire, deepen, and sharpen our proclamation in Advent 2020.
  10. John is not the Light; he is the servant sent to bear witness to the light.
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