Albert L. Meiburg was Professor of Pastoral Theology and Dean of the Faculty. The service begins with a word of prayer (00:00-01:24). Albert L. Meiburg is introduced as the Faculty Lecturer (01:25-03:45). Meiburg’s lecture is entitled Ageing is Becoming, and he begins by speaking on the wisdom of old age (03:46-09:23). His first point is that ageing is tied to being created in the image of God, and he believes that this image is founded in our ability to make decisions (09:24-24:38). Meiburg’s second point is that we have been redeemed by God’s grace through Christ, and this grace is liberating and implies union with Christ that is not dependant on age (24:39-43:38). The service ends with a word of prayer (43:39-44:28).
Interview with Nigel Goodwin discussing interactions with Francis A. Schaeffer (FAS) and how FAS enabled him and others to ask questions, how FAS was a deep listener, how FAS understood the person, and that understanding came from the Scriptures
Interview with Larry Snyder discussing interactions with Francis A. Schaeffer (FAS), Larry's antagonism towards Christianity before meeting FAS, FAS' kindness, compassion, passion for truth, and how FAS' would treat the culture and ideas of today
Interview with Tom (Thomas) Streeter discussing interactions with Francis A. Schaeffer (FAS). Topics of conversation include FAS' apologetics and pre-evangelism linked with his kindness and compassion, his view of people being made in the image of God, and his teachings on Intellectual History
Interview with Andrew Kirk discussing interactions with Francis A. Schaeffer (FAS), working together on The God Who Is There, how FAS would engage people, his humility towards the Bible, and the influence FAS had on the evangelical Christian world
Interview with Udo and Deborah (Schaeffer) Middelmann describing their interactions with Francis A. Schaeffer (FAS). Topics in this discussion include Neo-Orthodoxy and Existentialism, Francis and Edith Schaeffer's relationship with each other and how they raised their children, FAS's appreciation of the human being, and his later years