Russell Foster Aldwinckle was Professor of Systematic Theology at McMaster Divinity College in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada. The service begins with a scripture reading and prayer (0:00-1:57). After which, Russell Aldwinckle is introduced (1:58-4:09). Aldwinckle’s message is on the theme “does it matter what a man believes?” Aldwinckle begins with an introduction on why he chose his topic (4:10-6:56). After which, he explains the role of faith in the believer (6:57-13:32). He discusses several factors that stop people from believing in God (13:33-17:13). He continues by explaining the Christian response to a world of opposition to the faith (17:14-45:38). He concludes by explaining the importance of recognizing who Jesus truly is (45:39-56:13). The service closes in prayer (56:14-56:39).
William Randall Lolley was the third President of Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary. The Dr. Lolley opens the service with a reading of Matthew 7:24-27 from 0:00-1:00. He prays from 1:05-3:24. Dr. Lolley preaches from 3:30-22:28. He preaches on the role of the Church in society and how the Church is given a mandate to forgive others.
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.
Julius Carroll Trotter was Professor of Preaching and Speech at Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary. The service begins with prayer and a scripture reading (0:00-2:11). After which, Trotter reads Matthew 4:1-11 (2:12-4:06). Trotter’s message is on the temptation of Jesus. Trotter begins with an introduction concerning the deity and humanity of Jesus (4:07-7:20). He continues by stating that Jesus's temptation is the same temptation that each believer faces (7:21-11:01). He discusses each response Jesus used to rebuke Satan (11:02-15:53). He concludes by demonstrating that every believer is a son or daughter of God, which should lead to obedience and resisting of temptation (15:54-21:32). He closes in prayer (21:33-21:43).