Gary and Nancy Hudson were students at Southeastern. The service starts with a prayer from 0:00-1:06. A confessional prayer is offered from 1:13-1:46. A scripture reading takes place from 1:54-2:32. Hudson speaks from 2:55-13:19. He preaches on life and how it is a gift from God.
Carol Neese was an associate minister and served as an associate minister at the United Methodist Church. The service begins with a responsive reading from 0:00-0:25. A prayer is offered from 0:32-1:20. An affirmation of faith takes place from 1:29-3:04. John 15:7-12 is read from 3:13-3:56. A silent prayer is offered from 4:02-4:30. Neese speaks from 4:34-18:07. Her message is focused on Christian corporate worship.
John McCullock was an architect from Charlotte, NC. The service starts with a scripture reading and prayer from 0:00-1:25. An introduction is given to the speaker from 1:27-5:24. McCullock speaks from 5:28-21:02. He shares his testimony and God’s plan that has unfolded in his life.
After the reading of John 6:47 and a prayer (start-3:05), Robert Cook Briggs, Professor of New Testament Interpretation, preaches from 2 Timothy 4:2, exhorting students to “Preach the Word.”
After a prayer and an introduction (start-2:56), Robert Cook Briggs, Professor of New Testament Interpretation, talks about Bishop Otto Dibelius and reads his work entitled, “The Last Will and Testament to the German Churches.”
Robert Cook Briggs was Professor of New Testament Interpretation. and After a prayer (start-1:50), Dr. Robert Cook Briggs, Professor of New Testament Interpretation, discusses the differences between having a personal faith and being religious.
After reading Psalm 103:19-22 and a prayer (start-2:45), Richard Knox Young, Associate Professor of Pastoral Care, preaches about not judging one another from Matthew 7:1-5.
After an introduction (start-4:15), Reuben E. Alley, the Editor of the Religious Herald in Virginia, speaks on what he sees as three essentials that make a good institution. Those three essentials are the faculty, a library, and a good spiritual environment.
R. Paul Kercher, a graduate student at SEBTS, re-shares one of his professor’s lectures entitled, “The Greatest Need in the Christian Church is Ecstasy.”
After the reading of Selection 117, a prayer, and an introduction (start-1:10), Pope Alexander Duncan, Professor of Church History, shares a message about the Church and how it relates to the student covenant.