Thy Strong Word from KFUO Radio

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May 6, 2022 • 58min

I John 2:7-17. You may know that you have eternal life: A New/Old Commandment.

Rev. Jeremy Klaustermeier, pastor of St. John Lutheran Church in Warrenton, MO joins Rev. Brady Finnern to study I John 2:7-17.Love your neighbor. It is a command going back to Leviticus 19:18 that is now written with a forgiveness pen with bloody ink (I John 1:8-9). Darkness surrounds the world, but darkness can not share time with Light. Darkness has a timetable but Light is eternal. Love your neighbor, little children as You are forgiven in Christ. Love your neighbor fathers and young men because You know the Father’s love. Love your neighbor children as you know Your Father in heaven. We love because He first loved us. “Lord God, help us to love our neighbor as You first loved us. As you incorporated all people to Yourself, unite us together in the name of Christ that Your love is not only in our hearts, but extended to others. In Christ, Amen”
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May 5, 2022 • 57min

I John 2:1-6. You may know that you have eternal life: I need an Advocate.

Rev. Curtis Deterding pastor of Zion Lutheran Church in Fort Myers, FL joins Rev. Brady Finnern to study I John 2:1-6.We all need an advocate who will stand up for us when we are unable to stand up for ourselves. It is the righteous Christ who took on our sins, made the payment for our salvation, and has done all of this for the whole world. In this payment, we joyfully follow His commandments, repenting as we fall, but comforted that the Savior of the world is there as our Helper. Help to confess Jesus as LORD, help to follow His commands, and help to serve others. “O Holy Spirit, as You are our Advocate, help us to believe and follow the Lord’s commands. O Jesus Christ, as You are our Advocate, thank You for making our payment and fill us with Your promises to help us in everything. In Your name, Amen”
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May 4, 2022 • 58min

I John 1:5-10. You may know that you have eternal life: Walking in the Light.

Rev. David Boisclair of Faith and Bethesda Lutheran Church in Pine Lawn, MO joins Rev. Brady Finnern to study I John 1:5-10.John heard, saw, & touched the good news of Christ and now he proclaims it to others: God is light, His cleansing, and His forgiveness by His blood. He warns us to re-think how we speak about sin as our Old Adam can say, “I’m not that bad of a sinner” but if that was true, why did Jesus die on the cross? If we aren’t that bad, then we deny what God tells us about sin. As we confess our sins, our loving Father has given the final sacrifice of His Son that we have full forgiveness. Don’t make God a liar about sin, but walk in the Light and know that He is a forgiver! “In Him there is no darkness at all. The night and the day are both alike. The Lamb is the light of the city of God. Shine in my heart, Lord Jesus" (Lutheran Service Book 411, "I Want to Walk as a Child of the Light").
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May 3, 2022 • 57min

I John 1:1-4. You may know that you have eternal life: In Christ, our joy is complete.

Rev. Kevin Parviz, pastor of Congregation Chai v’Shalom in St. Louis, MO joins Rev. Brady Finnern to study I John 1:1-4.John preaches to the saints who were struggling in faith. This epistle is for us as we struggle in faith. From the beginning, Christ was the word of life that would be the one to unite us with the Triune God. We can knit-pick many details, but it comes down to the Truth of Christ’s life giving blood for you. This fellowship with the LORD extends to the joy we have with one another as the body of Christ. He has brought us together in joy for our joy is complete in Christ. “Lord Jesus Christ, as You are the vine and we are the branches, keep us connected to You and fill us with the joy that only comes through Your joy of saving us. Send Your Holy Spirit that others may believe in Your forgiveness and that our joy may be complete. In Your name, Amen”
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May 2, 2022 • 55min

Introduction to 1st, 2nd, and 3rd John: You may know that you have eternal life.

Rev. Warren Woerth, pastor of Good Shepherd Lutheran Church in Arnold, MO joins Rev. Brady Finnern to start off our study of John’s three epistles.John writes these epistles that you “believe in the name of the Son of God that you may know that you have eternal life (I John 5:13).” He writes these epistles toward the end of his life and is ardent with the desire for people not to believe the false messages going around the church. The Word written by John are vital as people continuously ask questions of Jesus, we are able to boldly confess He is Love, Light, & Forgiveness by His cross. “Lord Jesus Christ, in You there is no darkness at all. As You are the light of the city of God, shine in my heart to walk as a child of the Light. Amen”Thy Strong Word reveals the light of our salvation in Christ through study of God’s Word, breaking our darkness with His redeeming light. Each weekday, two pastors fix our eyes on Jesus by considering Holy Scripture, verse by verse, in order to be strengthened in the Word and be equipped to faithfully serve in our daily vocations.Thy Strong Word is hosted by Rev. Brady Finnern, pastor of Messiah Lutheran Church in Sartell, MN, and graciously underwritten by the Lutheran Heritage Foundation.
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Apr 29, 2022 • 57min

Psalm 26. Keep praying saints: Lord, be my judge!

Rev. Andrew Lehenbauer, pastor of St. Paul’s Lutheran Church in Concordia, MO joins Rev. Brady Finnern to study and pray Psalm 26.It appears that David was being falsely accused from others that led him to ask the LORD to do something we would fear ever to do: “LORD, judge me!” He knows that he was indeed a sinner (Psalm 51) AND knew that the Lord’s promises of steadfast love and faithfulness are real. Our conversations with God may not always sound perfect, but indeed our LORD wants to hear from us. David understands the love of God, how he wanted to be in God’s presence, and that the LORD would keep him from evil. “Forever, O Lord, Your Word is firmly set in the heavens. Lord, I love the habitation of Your house and the place where Your glory. Judge me by Your mercy and steadfast love. Amen.
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Apr 28, 2022 • 57min

Psalm 25. Keep praying saints: For your name’s sake, O LORD, pardon my guilt.

Rev. John Hopkins, pastor of Trinity Lutheran Church in Hicksville, NY joins Rev. Brady Finnern to study and pray Psalm 25.“Remember when…” we will say while with old friends. David realizes his sin and asks the LORD not to remember his sins—which we all hope, but also to remember that He is mercy. This Psalm is a prayer of a faithful person who not only seeks forgiveness, but for the LORD to lead, teach, guard, and give them refuge. Our pleas for forgiveness are not only for us as individuals, but also for others. “Christ be my Leader by night as by day; Safe through the darkness, for He is the way. Gladly I follow, my future His care, Darkness is daylight when Jesus is there" (Lutheran Service Book 861, "Christ Be My Leader").
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Apr 27, 2022 • 58min

Psalm 126. Keep praying saints: He restores our fortunes.

Rev. Dan Torkelson, pastor of St. John’s Lutheran Church in North Prairie, WI joins Rev. Brady Finnern to study and pray Psalm 126.The LORD restores fortunes. This Psalm might have been written after the Israelites were restored back to their homeland. Although everything was not perfect, it was another opportunity for a time to give thanks, to dream of what might be, and to see once again how the LORD takes care of us. He restores us daily by forgiveness in Christ by taking all sins from us. He restored the fortune of God’s people from slavery and captivity which reminds us of the future restoration to the perfect fortune of the new heaven and new earth. “Lord God, restore our fortunes in body and soul, You have done great things for us, even when I sow in tears, bring joy now and when Your Son returns. In His name, Amen”
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Apr 26, 2022 • 57min

Psalm 23. Keep praying saints: My cup overflows.

Rev. John Lukomski, co-host of Wrestling with the Basics on KFUO Radio, joins Rev. Brady Finnern to study and pray Psalm 23. Find Wrestling with the Basics at kfuo.org/WrestlingWithTheBasics.We are like lost sheep who need a Shepherd. David’s words remind us all that the LORD gives: daily needs, righteousness, peace, comfort, goodness, mercy, restoration, and all that we need to support this body and life. This psalm is a great comfort in all stages of life. He not only has compassion on us as sheep, BUT He treats us as royalty by preparing a place at the King’s table. Our LORD, the fullness of goodness and mercy, will be with us through everything with a steadfast, compassionate love that we fully see by His cross. Alleluia! "The King of Love my shepherd is, Whose goodness faileth never; I nothing lack if I am His, and HE is mine forever" (Lutheran Service Book 709, "The King of Love My Shepherd Is").
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Apr 25, 2022 • 57min

Psalm 22. Keep praying saints: But I am a worm and not a man.

Rev. Bryan Stecker, pastor of Trinity Lutheran Church & School in Waconia MN, joins Rev. Brady Finnern to study and pray Psalm 22.We hear the prayer of David and we see Christ on the cross. The connections to Christ are everywhere: mocking from others (v.7), bones are out of joint (v.16), piercing of my hands and feet (v.17), my tongue sticks to my jaws (v.15), and dividing the garments (v.18). The LORD worked through David to prove that this suffering Jesus was the King of Jews whose love goes beyond any love in this broken world. “Tell me, ye who hear Him groaning ; was there ever grief like His? Friends through fear His cause disowning, foes insulting His distress; Many hands were raised to wound Him, None would intervene to save; But the deepest stroke that pierced Him was the stroke that justice gave" (Lutheran Service Book 451, "Stricken, Smitten, and Afflicted").

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