Faith and History: Lessons from the Reformation

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### Quotes for Outreach

1. "So, every week that that church meets, they're reminded of the history of that church, and also their history, their place in history as Christians, as people who are continuing to meet. And so, we meet in the succession of history. Granville Chapel, we're celebrating our 75th anniversary this coming year. But imagine a church 1,200 years old, right? Imagine if this church were still here 1,200 years later, and they're excavating, and they're finding, I don't know, maybe things in the font or something like that. There's just this richness of history and heritage and awareness of the past." [02:26] (44 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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2. "The primary thing, I think, is the power of the Word of God. As I mentioned, part of what was going on at the time was this renaissance, this wanting to go back to the sources, wanting to go back to the classical world. And part of this was wanting to rediscover the beginnings of the Bible or the New Testament. And so understanding the Bible and its Greek texts and its Hebrew text. And so going back to the sources, this great impulse of wanting to go back to the source of our faith." [24:32] (38 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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3. "So I'll just leave you with those three applications. One is make space for the word of God in your life. Two is when you hear that message, be obedient. Be obedient. And three is when it's hard, take courage. Take courage. Keep on walking the walk of discipleship." [35:16] (26 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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4. "It takes tremendous courage, doesn't it? I mean, in his day and age, when the church was so powerful, one man standing up to an institution like that, this is a journey of years from 1517 to 1521, four or five years in which he'd been studying the Bible and pondering these things in his heart and thinking, what is truth here? Going back to scripture and saying, this is truth. This is what I interpret truth to be. And then the church saying, no, you're teaching heresy. But he's saying, here I stand. On the word of God, I can do no other. That takes courage, doesn't it?" [33:43] (40 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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5. "So think of that first part of the Middle Ages as a life preserver. Now, in the High Middle Ages, what we have, if we just go into the next slide, the picture I want to leave you with is entanglement. So there's a knot and threads, ropes kind of entangled with each other, and what happens is the papacy. The papacy, which had begun, the Pope and the institution of the Pope, which had begun in the early part of the Middle Ages, becomes really entangled with the political, secular powers of that day." [05:12] (40 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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### Quotes for Members

1. "So Martin Luther, Martin Luther was born to a humble family. He and his five siblings, three brothers, two sisters, the children of a father who was a working class copper miner, but Luther was sent to study law. So this is outside of his regular family industry. And he finishes his bachelor's in three semesters and he goes on to do his master's. He finishes that, he achieves second in his class. So it's this bright career of law in front of him." [16:49] (40 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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2. "So these are pictures again, again that we took while we were in Germany. This is at, in Worms, the town of Worms. And I mean, it's commemorated all about Luther, that town now. They remember him as larger than life. He was more than just a spiritual and religious reformer. He was really a cultural icon for all of Germany. And so there's that statue, of him. It's huge in the center of the city. And there's Luther on top and the other reformers around him sitting down." [32:11] (29 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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3. "So Luther says, really, the laws that are written about penance, at this point, he's not disagreeing with the penance canon law. He's just saying that they really apply only to those who are alive. Those who are dead, I mean, he doesn't want to speculate about what happens and how they're supposed to live. They're just speaking in their mind. But they're going to prove their sins are remitted, or forgiven. So there's focus on this life, and the Christian life, rather than speculating about the afterlife." [20:07] (25 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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4. "And I think especially the first two of those are really important. Sola scriptura, theology grounded in scripture alone. And solus Christus, the Bible points to Christ as a central theme. So what can we learn from this period in history? These 500, 700 years I've just kind of blown through. The primary thing, I think, is the power of the Word of God." [24:32] (28 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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5. "So obedience, I think, is something that will help us to receive God's Word. Once we hear, are we able to obey? Are we able to take it to the next step? And the third thing I learned from studying the Reformation is courage." [32:11] (15 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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