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- Beschreibung:
- Olin Trivette Binkley was the 2nd President of Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary and Professor of Christian Sociology and Ethics. The service begins with a prayer (0:00-1:12). After which, the speaker reads a responsive reading (1:13-2:50). The service continues with a period of singing (2:51-5:19). A prayer is then offered (5:20-5:39). Binkley’s message is on is on grace. Binkley begins with an introduction explaining that a story's final words are designed to achieve specific goals (5:40-7:43). He explains how final words are meant to ignite the reader’s imagination (7:44-10:00). In addition, he explains that final words are designed to deliver the mind from suffering (10:01-11:14). He continues by illustrating the importance of the final words in the Bible and demonstrates why Jesus’s grace matters (11:15- 27:32). He concludes by challenging his audience to go wherever Jesus commands them (27:33-28:00). He closes in prayer (28:01-28:19).
- Fach:
- Grace
- Schöpfer:
- Binkley, Olin Trivette, 1908-1999 and Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary
- Owner:
- archives@sebts.edu
- Location:
- Wake Forest (N.C.)
- Sprache:
- English
- Datum hochgeladen:
- 02/12/2026
- Datum geändert:
- 02/13/2026
- Datum erstellt:
- 1972-01-27
- Resource Type:
- Audio
- Identifikator:
- SEBTS_Chapel_Olin_Trivette_Binkley_1972-01-27
- Beschreibung:
- (audio quality is poor) Fred B. Craddock, Jr. was Bandy Distinguished Professor of Preaching at the Candler School of Theology at Emory University. A word of prayer begins the service (0:00-0:17). Visitors are welcomed and the announcement of this being the third annual of the Adams Lectures is made (0:18-1:47). Dr. Fred Craddock is introduced and his lectures will be on preaching and the practice of ministry (1:48-5:40). The anthem is sung (cut) (5:41-5:45). Dr. Craddock is honored to lecture (5:46-7:26). He informs the congregation that he will be discussing preaching in his lectures, with his first lecture focusing on the forms of biblical material in regards to the nature of preaching (7:27-9:47). He explains that just as architecture plays a role in creating a certain experience so does the shape of words, specifically the lively words of the Bible (9:48-12:00). Dr. Craddock refers to Matthew 10 to convey that preaching is “public whispering” (12:01-14:44). He mentions that gossip in church does not define public whispering (14:45-17:22). Preaching can affect someone’s life positively or negatively, which Dr. Craddock says is frightening (17:23-18:27). If a message is worth hearing, the preacher is worth listening to (18:28-19:31). Dr. Craddock clarifies that preaching is public whispering to the listener because one must “lean forward” to grab on to faith in order to hear the Gospel (19:32-23:24). It is called whispering because not everyone can hear it, not everyone has the “ear of faith” (23:25-26:55). Dr. Craddock speaks on the public opinion of Jesus as the Messiah from Matthew 16 (26:56-31:20; the audio ends abruptly without Dr. Craddock finishing the lecture).
- Fach:
- Biblical teaching, Preaching, Lectures and lecturing, and Bible. Matthew
- Schöpfer:
- Craddock, Fred B., Jr., 1928-2015 and Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary
- Owner:
- archives@sebts.edu
- Location:
- Wake Forest (N.C.)
- Sprache:
- English
- Datum hochgeladen:
- 02/12/2026
- Datum geändert:
- 02/13/2026
- Datum erstellt:
- 1979-02-13
- Resource Type:
- Audio
- Identifikator:
- SEBTS_Adams_Lecture_Fred_B_Craddock_Jr_1979-02-13