Very well done, and very helpful indeed. The Book of Concord is one of my favourite books at the moment, comes right after the Bible and the Evangelisches Gesangbuch.
Thanks so much for this! I wish i had this 3 weeks ago wen I was teaching the origin of the creeds including the Niceno-Constantinopolitan Creed (modified).
I would love to hear more about the republication of the Book of Concord translation when it comes closer. Would also love to hear a comparison to the different editions of the Book of Concord that are on the market in the English language.
Can’t wait for your edition of The Book of Concord to be available, depending on the price and size I might consider buying some in bulk to give out to visitors to the Lutheran church here. My only worry is since it’s the same style as your Sacred Hours meditation book the binding was really cheap for that one and the first couple of pages all fell out so I really hope especially since the Confessions are so long that you got a good binding on them, apart from that really am looking forward to being able to buy it
Dr. Cooper and other Lutherans, I completely hold to Lutheran theology and the confessions but due to life’s circumstances I cannot attend a Lutheran church. What shall I do about this? Can I call myself Lutheran or is that offensive? Should I just say I’m theologically Lutheran? If I get the opportunity to attend a lcms church and regularly at that, I would like to be confirmed.
As a Lutheran, I would say that if you hold to Lutheran theological distinctives, you are free in Christ to call yourself a Lutheran. I would take no offense. I don't really have any advice for your not having a Lutheran fellowship to be a part of, but I do know that even if your situation is not ideal, God will find a way to give you what you need to grow in your faith. Blessings.
You might have the wrong verse for Paul's reworking of Shema. 1. Cor. 6:8 reads: "Instead, you yourselves cheat and do wrong, and you do this to your brothers and sisters." (NIV)
@@lisajones7756 that’s correct. There’s also perhaps the earliest Christian creed which is the Gospel Creed cited by Paul in 1 Corinthians 15 as something that he had already delivered to the Corinthian Church which he himself had received.
12:20 Can you please do a video on binitarianism and if it is heretical to deny the deity of the Spirit? (or the more modern incarnation; that the Father became the Spirit)
Depending on which Anglican province you’re interested in, a copy of their authorized prayer book should have binding documents. In the Anglican Church in North America (ACNA), we have authorized the 2019 Book of Common Prayer and it includes the 39 Articles, the statements issued by the Global Anglican Future Conference (GAFCON), alongside the Apostles, Nicene, and Athanasian Creed. The only thing missing is the 1662 BCP since we treat whole prayer books as a binding document and we acknowledge the 1662 to be authoritative in addition to our current 2019. I hope that helps
I would add the Books of Homilies (endorsed by Article 35 as containing “godly and wholesome doctrine”) as at least a secondary formulary, seeing as it was written by the same guys who produced/defended the 39 Articles and fleshes out a lot of the teachings contained therein.
Eeehh..!a yea..🥸I would a abridge edition w/ note pages,free ring a the time,, a yr or the rest of life,,flip the coin , you didn't notice the two faces..looky here..God bless you..both the coin and the book..eahh
Dr Cooper, it's midnight. Go to sleep
Excellent work, as always. Thank you for your diligent efforts in making Lutheranism more known and understood.
He has a button he can press to equip a tie.
Viewing tip for those of us older lay people trying to learn on this channel: lower the playback speed. Tremendously helpful! ;)
The magic tie at the start was awesome…
Very well done, and very helpful indeed. The Book of Concord is one of my favourite books at the moment, comes right after the Bible and the Evangelisches Gesangbuch.
Important! Thank you Dr. Cooper!
Thank you. Very clear and helpful.
Mic check, one two, one two.
Here I go in the place to be.
Explaining the confessions like ABC.
Good timing! I just borrowed my pastor's book of Concord to study
Dr. Cooper, why thank you. A lovely midnight watch 😉
Thank you Dr. Cooper!
@DrJordanBCooper , I enjoyed this. (I'd forgotten about the "garlic juice" and magnets.) Looking forward to more.
We hear you Prof. Cooper.
Thanks so much for this! I wish i had this 3 weeks ago wen I was teaching the origin of the creeds including the Niceno-Constantinopolitan Creed (modified).
I would love to hear more about the republication of the Book of Concord translation when it comes closer. Would also love to hear a comparison to the different editions of the Book of Concord that are on the market in the English language.
Can’t wait for your edition of The Book of Concord to be available, depending on the price and size I might consider buying some in bulk to give out to visitors to the Lutheran church here. My only worry is since it’s the same style as your Sacred Hours meditation book the binding was really cheap for that one and the first couple of pages all fell out so I really hope especially since the Confessions are so long that you got a good binding on them, apart from that really am looking forward to being able to buy it
Testing.... Test passed ✅ 😊
🙂
Are these slides available for download???
When will the "Jacobs Edition" of the Book of Concord from JS Publishing be available?
Curious about this as well!
@@Steadfast-Lutheran Soon!
Dr. Cooper and other Lutherans, I completely hold to Lutheran theology and the confessions but due to life’s circumstances I cannot attend a Lutheran church. What shall I do about this? Can I call myself Lutheran or is that offensive? Should I just say I’m theologically Lutheran? If I get the opportunity to attend a lcms church and regularly at that, I would like to be confirmed.
As a Lutheran, I would say that if you hold to Lutheran theological distinctives, you are free in Christ to call yourself a Lutheran. I would take no offense. I don't really have any advice for your not having a Lutheran fellowship to be a part of, but I do know that even if your situation is not ideal, God will find a way to give you what you need to grow in your faith. Blessings.
@@mj6493 thank you so much! I appreciate your thoughts and encouragement
You might have the wrong verse for Paul's reworking of Shema. 1. Cor. 6:8 reads:
"Instead, you yourselves cheat and do wrong, and you do this to your brothers and sisters." (NIV)
I was wondering about this too, I think it should be 1cor8:6.
@@lisajones7756 that’s correct.
There’s also perhaps the earliest Christian creed which is the Gospel Creed cited by Paul in 1 Corinthians 15 as something that he had already delivered to the Corinthian Church which he himself had received.
Maybe there is something wrong with my phone, because the volume is quite low.
It's not your phone; the volume _is_ quite low on this video.
12:20 Can you please do a video on binitarianism and if it is heretical to deny the deity of the Spirit? (or the more modern incarnation; that the Father became the Spirit)
When will the book of concord publication be available?
Soon!
❤
Midnight showing
What’s a good source for all the documents Anglicans find binding?
Depending on which Anglican province you’re interested in, a copy of their authorized prayer book should have binding documents. In the Anglican Church in North America (ACNA), we have authorized the 2019 Book of Common Prayer and it includes the 39 Articles, the statements issued by the Global Anglican Future Conference (GAFCON), alongside the Apostles, Nicene, and Athanasian Creed. The only thing missing is the 1662 BCP since we treat whole prayer books as a binding document and we acknowledge the 1662 to be authoritative in addition to our current 2019. I hope that helps
@@Samitchmeister thank you
@@KadenGreen-eg1cz you’re welcome
I would add the Books of Homilies (endorsed by Article 35 as containing “godly and wholesome doctrine”) as at least a secondary formulary, seeing as it was written by the same guys who produced/defended the 39 Articles and fleshes out a lot of the teachings contained therein.
Anglicans are all over the map. There is no comparable document for Anglicans as for Lutherans. As several of the other comments attest to.
Eeehh..!a yea..🥸I would a abridge edition w/ note pages,free ring a the time,, a yr or the rest of life,,flip the coin , you didn't notice the two faces..looky here..God bless you..both the coin and the book..eahh