Lutheran Theological Seminary -Nyamira

Lutheran Theological Seminary -Nyamira LTS Nyamira is a Lutheran confessional seminary that trains Lutheran men to serve as Pastors.

This morning, our students began an important milestone as they sat for their end-of-semester examinations. The semester...
04/05/2026

This morning, our students began an important milestone as they sat for their end-of-semester examinations. The semester, which commenced in early January, now draws to a close this week, culminating in these comprehensive unit exams.

Throughout the term, our students have been richly blessed with instruction from highly qualified, deeply committed, and faithful Confessional Lutheran pastors. Their dedication has not only equipped the students academically but has also firmly grounded them in the treasures of our Lutheran heritage, with the hope and vision of nurturing future Confessional Lutheran pastors.

We humbly ask that you keep our students in your prayers during this significant time, that they may be granted clarity of mind, confidence, and success in their examinations.

Pr. David Thompson ministering to our students through a powerful presentation on Apologetics.With hearts full of gratit...
23/04/2026

Pr. David Thompson ministering to our students through a powerful presentation on Apologetics.

With hearts full of gratitude, we thank God for the invaluable opportunities our online presenters continue to provide. Pr. David stands out as a devoted and selfless servant, consistently imparting essential knowledge that equips our students with discernment and confidence to address false teachings that often mislead many in the Christian faith; including those arising within SDA circles, Pentecostal movements, and emerging religious sects.

His impact goes far beyond the depth of his teaching. Pr. David has also demonstrated remarkable generosity, extending material support to meet our basic needs during crucial times. Such kindness reflects not only his commitment to truth but also his compassion in action.

We deeply cherish and honor every contribution he has made. With great anticipation, we look forward to his future presentations and continued partnership in strengthening and empowering our students.

Pastor Steven Sparley continues to serve our students with remarkable dedication, guiding them through the depths of Gre...
22/04/2026

Pastor Steven Sparley continues to serve our students with remarkable dedication, guiding them through the depths of Greek Grammar with clarity and care. Despite the distance, and the inevitable challenges of differing time zones, he remains steadfast in his commitment to offer nothing less than his very best. Such consistency and sacrifice are not things we take lightly.

His love for the work and his generous spirit are evident in every session. Through his efforts, the vision of equipping these men for the Office of the Keys is not only upheld but strengthened. His contribution quietly shapes futures and deepens foundations in ways that will bear lasting fruit.

We remain deeply grateful for his intentional and faithful support of our Seminary. And to all who continue to stand with us in prayer financial support and encouragement, your presence in this journey has allowed us to grow beyond what once seemed like limitations. From humble beginnings, we have witnessed meaningful progress and we do not take that for granted.

Pastor Steven, please receive our sincere gratitude and appreciation. Your labor is seen, and it matters.

This evening, our students were privileged to sit under a rich and insightful homiletics presentation delivered by Dr. B...
17/04/2026

This evening, our students were privileged to sit under a rich and insightful homiletics presentation delivered by Dr. Brian Kleibig. His session focused on the art and discipline of sermon presentation, emphasizing the critical role of a well-crafted introduction. He highlighted how the opening of a sermon serves as the gateway to the message; capturing attention, setting the tone, and drawing hearers into deeper engagement with the Word.

Dr. Kleibig also underscored the importance of rightly dividing the Law and the Gospel. His teaching is not only instructive but also deeply formative for those preparing for ministry.

We give thanks to God for such meaningful and enriching presentations. Opportunities like these are not taken for granted, as we recognize the dedication, sacrifice, and selflessness of facilitators who faithfully serve from afar. Despite the barriers of distance, their commitment to equipping and nurturing students remains unwavering.

We extend our heartfelt appreciation to Dr. Kleibig for his time, wisdom, and passion. His contribution continues to shape and inspire a new generation of faithful communicators of the Gospel.

Today’s online presentation came with a few unexpected challenges, as our internet connection proved unstable and incons...
17/04/2026

Today’s online presentation came with a few unexpected challenges, as our internet connection proved unstable and inconsistent. Unfortunately, it couldn’t support a smooth real-time video stream; our screen would freeze, and the audio became distorted.

Rather than let this disrupt the session, we quickly adapted by turning off the video and continuing with a live voice-over. Thankfully, we had also enabled subtitles, which; displayed on the big screen, turned out to be a great advantage, making the lesson even clearer and more accessible for our students.

We are truly grateful for the gift of the internet, even with its occasional limitations, and especially thankful for Pr Christian Eisenbeis for his unwavering dedication and selfless commitment to teaching our students.

To each one of you, thank you for your continued support and prayers; we deeply appreciate it.

Our students yesterday experienced a truly dynamic and eye-opening session led by an exceptional guest teacher, Pastor H...
09/04/2026

Our students yesterday experienced a truly dynamic and eye-opening session led by an exceptional guest teacher, Pastor Hesham Shehab, invited by Pastor David Thompson. With remarkable clarity and depth, Pastor Hesham unpacked the foundations of the Islamic faith, offering profound insight into its beliefs, practices, and growing influence.

More importantly, he equipped our students with practical, compassionate, and biblically grounded approaches on how Christians can effectively witness to Muslims. His teaching on crafting a thoughtful Christian response was not only informative but deeply empowering.

This session proved to be incredibly enriching, not just for our students, but for the future of our church and its mission. As Islam continues to take root across African societies, often blending seamlessly with the complex layers of syncretism in local religious expressions, such teachings are both timely and essential.

We remain deeply grateful for the love, commitment, and generosity shown by friends and ministers from across the globe who invest in our growth and calling. Their support is shaping leaders and strengthening the Church for generations to come.

We eagerly look forward to hosting Pastor Hesham again; this time to pour into our pastors and leaders in what promises to be another impactful and transformative engagement.

22/03/2026

FIFTH SUNDAY IN LENT SERMON

PS 130:1-8
EZEK. 37: 1- 14
ROM 8: 1-11
JOHN 11: 1- 45

Grace, mercy, and peace be unto you from God our Father and from our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. Amen.

Out of the depths we cry to You, O Lord. The psalm does not give us polished religion; it gives us a cry torn out of the human chest. It is the voice of one who knows both suffering and sin, who stands not on dignity but in desperation: “If You, O Lord, should mark iniquities, O Lord, who could stand?” That question strips everything away. It silences excuses. It topples titles. It exposes every heart. Who could stand? Not the strong, not the clever, not the religious, not the leaders of the Church, not you, not me. If God were to count our sins as they deserve, we would not merely stumble, we would be undone.

But the psalm does not end in the depths. It turns on a single, blazing truth: “But with You there is forgiveness, that You may be feared.” Not earned forgiveness. Not negotiated forgiveness. Forgiveness that comes from God Himself. Forgiveness that creates true fear, true faith, true worship. And so the psalmist waits; not in uncertainty, but in hope: “My soul waits for the Lord more than watchmen for the morning.” This is not passive waiting; this is clinging to a promise when everything else collapses.

Now take that cry from the depths and walk with it into the valley shown to Ezekiel. There is no metaphor here to soften the blow. The valley is filled with bones; dry bones, scattered, lifeless, beyond recovery. And the Lord asks a question that seems almost cruel: “Son of man, can these bones live?” The honest answer is no. There is no life here. No pulse, no breath, no future. This is what sin does. It does not merely wound; it kills. It does not merely weaken the Church; it reduces it to bones when it abandons the Word for power, when leadership becomes a ladder for self-advancement, when nepotism replaces calling, when tribalism replaces baptism, when corruption is tolerated and even defended. Then the Church does not merely struggle, it becomes a valley of dry bones.

But God does not ask Ezekiel to fix the bones. He does not command him to organize them, improve them, or inspire them. He says, “Prophesy.” Speak My Word to what is dead. And as the Word is spoken, something impossible happens. There is a sound, a rattling, bones come together, sinews and flesh appear, but still there is no life until the breath of God enters. And when the breath comes, the dead stand on their feet, a great army. This is not reform; this is resurrection. This is what the Word of God does. It creates what it commands. It brings life where there is none.

And now the apostle Paul speaks into this same reality with clarity that cuts through every illusion: “There is therefore now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus.” Not less condemnation. Not delayed condemnation. None. Why? Because “the law of the Spirit of life has set you free in Christ Jesus from the law of sin and death.” The law could diagnose the disease, but it could not cure it. It could expose sin, but it could not justify the sinner. So God did what the law could not do: He sent His own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh and for sin, and He condemned sin in the flesh. At the cross, sin is judged, not excused; condemned, not ignored. And because Christ stands in the place of sinners, those who are in Him stand justified. This is the center of everything: you are declared righteous not because of what you have done, but because of what Christ has done for you.

But Paul presses further. This is not an abstract declaration floating above reality. “You, however, are not in the flesh but in the Spirit, if in fact the Spirit of God dwells in you.” The same Spirit who hovered over the chaos at creation, the same breath that entered the dry bones, now dwells in those who belong to Christ. “If the Spirit of Him who raised Jesus from the dead dwells in you, He…will also give life to your mortal bodies.” This is not only about a distant future; it is about a present reality shaped by a coming resurrection. Even as the body wastes away, even as death approaches, the promise stands: life will be given.

Carry all of this now into Bethany, into the house of grief where Lazarus has died. The sisters send word to Jesus, but He delays. And when He arrives, the words come; honest, aching, accusatory: “Lord, if You had been here, my brother would not have died.” It is the cry of Psalm 130 in another form. It is the cry of those who stand in hospital rooms, who sit beside graves, who watch the Church fracture and wonder where God is. “Lord, if You had been here…”

Jesus does not rebuke the grief. He enters it. He speaks first to Martha, drawing her confession beyond general resurrection hope into Himself: “I am the resurrection and the life. Whoever believes in Me, though he die, yet shall he live.” Not an idea. Not a system. A person. He does not point away from Himself to a future event; He locates resurrection in His own being. Faith is not clinging to a concept; it is trusting Him.

And then, at the tomb, He weeps. The Son of God stands before death and does not treat it lightly. He is deeply moved because death is the enemy, the wages of sin, the great destroyer. He sees what sin has done; to Lazarus, to the sisters, to all creation, and He is not indifferent. He weeps.

Then He commands the stone to be taken away. Objections arise; practical, reasonable, rooted in reality: “Lord, by this time there will be an odor.” Yes, there will. Death is real. Decay is real. Just as the corruption that seeps into the Church is real, just as the suffering of the poor is real, just as the despair of the dying is real. But Jesus is not deterred by what is real to us, because He is the One who defines reality.

He prays, not to gain power, but to reveal the Father, and then He cries out with a loud voice: “Lazarus, come out.” The Word goes forth, and the dead man comes out, bound in grave clothes. The command that creates life is followed by a command to the community: “Unbind him, and let him go.” Resurrection leads to release, to restoration, to life among others.

This is what justification looks like in flesh and blood. The sinner, dead in trespasses, is called by name through the Gospel and brought to life. Not improved, not advised, not managed, raised. Declared righteous for Christ’s sake. Freed from condemnation. And then, set within the community to live.

So the texts converge into one thunderous proclamation: from the depths of Psalm 130, through the dry bones of Ezekiel, through the Spirit-filled promise of Romans 8, to the open tomb in John 11, God justifies the ungodly and raises the dead by His Word.

And that Word judges us even as it saves us. It judges the Church wherever it has trusted in anything other than Christ. Where leadership has been shaped by favoritism instead of faithfulness, where tribal identity has overshadowed baptismal identity, where racism has denied the unity of the body, where corruption has been excused, there the Word exposes death. There the valley of dry bones is not a distant image but a present reality. Repent. No position, no lineage, no influence will allow anyone to stand if the Lord marks iniquities.

But the same Word that condemns sin also forgives sinners. “With You there is forgiveness.” That is the only reason anyone stands at all. Not above others, but before God, justified by grace alone. And that justification is not a theory; it is a living reality that must shape the life of the Church. A Church that confesses justification but neglects the suffering neighbor contradicts its own confession. A Church that guards doctrine but ignores the poor has forgotten the Lord who calls the dead to life. The one who has been raised by Christ cannot remain indifferent to those who lie in the depths.

So to those who have lost hope, hear this: your cry is not unheard. The Lord who heard the psalmist hears you. To those in hospice, to those facing terminal illness, to those whose bodies are failing, hear this clearly: “There is now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus.” Your life is not measured by your strength, your usefulness, or your remaining days. Your life is hidden with Christ, and the Spirit who raised Jesus will give life to your mortal body. The grave is not your end.

And to those who have means, influence, stability; hear the call: the justified life is a giving life. Go to the poor. Stand with the suffering. Bind up the broken. Not to earn anything, but because everything has already been given to you in Christ.

Out of the depths we cry, and into the depths Christ Himself has come. He has entered death, borne sin, been condemned in our place, and risen victorious. And now He speaks. And when He speaks, the dead live.

“My soul waits for the Lord more than watchmen for the morning.” The morning is coming. The voice that called Lazarus will call again. And all who are in Christ will stand; not because they could stand on their own, but because they have been justified, raised, and given life by Him.

In the name of Jesus. Amen.





Dr. Brian Kleibig listened attentively as students engaged in their preaching practice, offering thoughtful and insightf...
20/03/2026

Dr. Brian Kleibig listened attentively as students engaged in their preaching practice, offering thoughtful and insightful feedback. He skillfully highlighted key aspects such as voice projection, gestures, and body language; essential elements for effective public preaching.

His guidance and teaching continue to equip our students with the vital skills they need as they prepare to be called to the Office of the Keys. We are deeply grateful for Dr. Kleibig’s exceptional knowledge, wisdom, and dedication, which he so generously imparts to our students.

We were richly blessed this afternoon as Pr. Christian Eisenbeis taught our students virtually. Despite the public holid...
20/03/2026

We were richly blessed this afternoon as Pr. Christian Eisenbeis taught our students virtually. Despite the public holiday marking the Muslim celebration of Idd-ul-Fitr, our classes remained fully engaged; undeterred and deeply immersed in the study of the Scriptures.

It was truly inspiring to witness such hunger for the Word and dedication to learning. We give thanks to God for Pr. Christian Eisenbeis and his unwavering commitment, passion, and faithfulness in teaching and guiding our students.

May the Lord continue to strengthen and bless him abundantly!

This evening we were greatly blessed as Pr. Christian Eisenbeis led our students through a rich study on the Inspiration...
16/03/2026

This evening we were greatly blessed as Pr. Christian Eisenbeis led our students through a rich study on the Inspiration of God’s Word, engaging thoughtfully with the arguments presented by Daniel Deutschlander in his book Grace Abound. The presentation was both insightful and deeply enriching, strengthening these men as they continue to prepare for faithful servanthood in the Office of the Keys.

Pr. Eisenbeis shared that his country is currently experiencing an extraordinary snowfall; an intense snowstorm that has brought many activities to a halt and is expected to continue for more than 30 hours. Yet, even amid such severe weather, his dedication and love for our learners shone brightly. His willingness to teach despite these conditions was both humbling and inspiring.

Two of our students were unable to attend due to health concerns. In addition, one of our brothers is scheduled to undergo surgery tomorrow, the 17th. We kindly ask you to keep him and all our students in your prayers as they continue their journey of formation and preparation for ministry.

15/03/2026

FOURTH SUNDAY IN LENT SERMON.

PS 145: 1-7
ISA. 42: 14-21;
EPH. 5: 8-14;
JN. 9: 1-41

Grace to you and peace from God our Father and from our Lord Jesus Christ.

The Psalmist in Psalm 145 declares with confidence: “One generation shall commend your works to another, and shall declare your mighty acts.” The people of God are meant to be a witnessing people. We are meant to see what God has done and then speak of it. The Church exists so that the works of God may be proclaimed from one generation to the next. The mighty acts of God are not to be hidden, buried under fear, or strangled by religious politics. They are to be declared.

Yet the prophet Isaiah speaks a painful accusation in Isaiah 42. God says, “Who is blind but my servant, or deaf as my messenger whom I send?” That is a terrifying sentence. The servant who was supposed to see is blind. The messenger who was supposed to hear is deaf. The very people entrusted with the light of God have become unable to recognize it.

And then the apostle writes in Ephesians 5, “Once you were darkness, but now you are light in the Lord. Walk as children of light… Awake, O sleeper, and arise from the dead, and Christ will shine on you.”

Do you hear the thread running through all these readings? Sight and blindness. Light and darkness. Seeing and refusing to see.

And all of it comes to a blazing climax in the Gospel from John, chapter 9.

A man sits beside the road, blind from birth. He has never seen a sunrise. He has never seen the face of his mother. He has lived his entire life in darkness. To the disciples, he is not first a man but a problem. They ask Jesus, “Rabbi, who sinned, this man or his parents, that he was born blind?” They want a theory about suffering.

But Jesus refuses their speculation. He says something far more explosive: *“It was not that this man sinned, or his parents, but that the works of God might be displayed in him.”*

In that moment, the blind beggar becomes something extraordinary. His broken life becomes the stage upon which the mercy of God will be revealed.

Jesus spits on the ground. He makes mud with the dust. He places it upon the man’s eyes. The act is earthy, almost scandalous. But it echoes the beginning of creation itself. The One who formed Adam from the dust now kneels beside another wounded piece of humanity and works again with dust. The Creator has come among His creation.

“Go,” Jesus says, “wash in the pool of Siloam.”

The man goes. He washes. And, suddenly, light bursts into his world. For the first time in his life, he sees.

If the Church were truly living the words of Psalm 145, the streets of Jerusalem would erupt with praise. One generation would immediately begin telling the next: “Look at what the Lord has done!” But instead of praise, there is suspicion. Instead of wonder, there is investigation.

The neighbors argue. “Is this not the man who used to sit and beg?” Some say yes. Others say no. But the man himself ends the debate: “I am the man.” They ask how it happened. He answers simply: “The man called Jesus made mud, anointed my eyes, and told me to wash. I went, I washed, and now I see.”

That testimony should have filled the city with the proclamation of God’s mighty acts. But instead the man is dragged before the Pharisees. The religious authorities cannot ignore the miracle, yet they cannot accept the One who performed it. The problem is that Jesus did this on the Sabbath.

So the interrogation begins.

“How did you receive your sight?”

The man answers again: “He put mud on my eyes, I washed, and now I see.”

Immediately the leaders divide. Some say, “This man is not from God, because He does not keep the Sabbath.” Others ask uneasily, “How can a sinner perform such signs?” The miracle is undeniable, but their system cannot tolerate Christ.

Suddenly, the prophecy of Isaiah 42 begins to unfold before our eyes. The servant who was supposed to see has become blind. The leaders who claim to guide God’s people can not recognize the work of God standing right in front of them.

They question the man again. “What do you say about Him, since He opened your eyes?”

The man answers with simple clarity: “He is a prophet.”

But that is not enough for them. They refuse to believe the miracle happened at all. They summon the man’s parents. The parents arrive trembling because the authorities have already declared that anyone who confesses Jesus will be thrown out of the synagogue. Fear seals their mouths. “He is our son,” they say, “and he was born blind. But how he now sees we do not know. Ask him.”

So the man stands alone before the guardians of religion.

Again, they summon him. “Give glory to God. We know that this man is a sinner.”

And then comes one of the most powerful confessions in Scripture: “Whether He is a sinner I do not know. One thing I do know. I was blind. Now I see.”

That is the testimony of the Church. Not religious speculation. Not endless ecclesiastical debate. Simply this: Christ found us in darkness and brought us into light.

And here the words of Ephesians 5 echo: “Once you were darkness, but now you are light in the Lord.”* The healed man embodies that transformation. Moments ago, he lived in darkness. Now, he stands in the light, both physically and spiritually.

But the leaders can not accept it. They keep questioning him. Finally, he asks them with biting honesty, “Why do you want to hear it again? Do you also want to become His disciples?”

That question ignites their fury. They shout back, “You are His disciple, but we are disciples of Moses!”

And the former beggar answers with astonishing boldness: “This is an amazing thing. You do not know where He comes from, yet He opened my eyes. Never since the world began has it been heard that anyone opened the eyes of a man born blind. If this man were not from God, He could do nothing.”

The man who once sat begging by the roadside now teaches the theologians of Israel. The one they considered cursed now speaks truth with clarity. And they cannot tolerate it.

“You were born in utter sin,” they say, “and would you teach us?” And they cast him out.

There it is: the blindness Isaiah warned about. The shepherds of Israel driving away the very sheep whom Christ has healed.

And the danger did not disappear with the Pharisees. The same blindness can creep into the Church today. Leadership can become intoxicated with control. Systems can become more important than mercy. Ecclesiastical wrangles, tribal loyalties, and endless internal struggles can suffocate the living work of Christ.

Sometimes those who have been longest in the Church begin to assume they see more clearly than everyone else. They mistake familiarity with church structures for spiritual vision. They speak with authority, but their hearts have grown cold.

Meanwhile, new believers; like the healed man, sometimes find themselves pushed to the margins. Their testimony is treated with suspicion. Their enthusiasm is quietly restrained. Yet the Gospel reveals something astonishing: the clearest witness in the entire story is the newest believer in the room.

The man who has known Christ for only a few hours speaks with more clarity than the scholars who have studied Scripture for decades.

But notice what happens next. After the Pharisees cast him out, Jesus goes looking for him. The religious establishment may reject him, but the Good Shepherd does not abandon His sheep.

Jesus finds him and asks, “Do you believe in the Son of Man?”

The man answers, “Who is He, Lord, that I may believe in Him?”

Jesus says, “You have seen Him, and it is He who is speaking to you.”

Imagine that moment. The man whose eyes were opened now sees the face of the One who healed him. And he says, “Lord, I believe.” And he worships Him.

Then Jesus speaks the final verdict: “For judgment I came into this world, that those who do not see may see, and those who see may become blind.”

The Gospel always brings this great reversal. The poor see. The proud stumble. The outcasts worship. The powerful rage in darkness.

Yet the promise of Psalm 145 still stands. God’s works will be declared. His mighty acts cannot be buried forever under the rubble of human pride. One generation will still tell another about the God who opens blind eyes.

And the call of *Ephesians 5 still rings through the Church: “Awake, O sleeper, and arise from the dead, and Christ will shine on you.”*

That is the call of this Lenten season. Wake up. Repent. Let Christ open our eyes again. Let the Church return to the light of the Gospel.

For the greatest danger is not blindness itself. The greatest danger is thinking we see when we do not.

But blessed are those who confess like the healed man: “Lord, I believe.”

For the Light of the world has come. And though we once walked in darkness, in Christ we now see.

In the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.

Address

Kisii
40500

Opening Hours

Monday 09:00 - 17:00
Tuesday 09:00 - 17:00
Wednesday 09:00 - 17:00
Thursday 09:00 - 17:00
Friday 09:00 - 17:00

Telephone

+254720455507

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