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Archive for November, 2009

ESV Study Bible on Trackback Thursday

Over at the Crossway Blog, the ESV Study Bible is currently featured in a special extended Trackback Thursday in celebration of the ESV Study Bible’s 1 Year Anniversary.

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November 5, 2009 | Posted in: ESV,General,Study Bibles | Author: James Kinnard @ 12:00 pm | Comments Off »

ESV Study Bible on Trackback Thursday

9781433502415We’re excited to feature the ESV Study Bible on Trackback Thursday! Please read on as we’re doing things a bit differently this week. On October 15, 2008, Crossway launched the ESV Study Bible to help people understand the timeless truth of God’s Word in a deeper way. Now, one year later we invite you to join us in reflecting on the past and looking into the future.

We will be giving away a new ESV Study Bible every day through Wednesday 11/11/09. You can enter the contest on the blog, at the Crossway Facebook Page, or on Twitter @Crosswaybooks (using hashtag #ESVSB) by doing any of the following:

1. We would like to see facebook, twitter, and the blog turn into a place to worship and thank God together. We encourage commenters to share how God has been faithful, good, loving, worthy of praise, gracious, just…(or share verses about his attributes).
2. RT or comment on any of Crossway’s tweets related to the ESV Study Bible this coming week (with hashtag #ESVSB).
2. Tell us what you appreciate most about your ESV Study Bible or how you’ve benefited from it.
3. Tell us why you’d like to win one.
4. Share some of your favorite verses.
5. Share a short quote from an article in the ESV Study Bible.
6. Share a picture of your ESV Study Bible or perhaps where you like to read it.
7. Is there anything you would change or add to the Study Bible.
*NOTE: You can enter as many times as you’d like!

Winners can choose from any of the following editions:
Hardcover
TruTone Natural Brown
TruTone Classic Black
TruTone Brown Cordovan Portfolio
TruTone Mahogany Trellis
TruTone Forest/Tan
Bonded Leather Black
Bonded Leather Burgundy

We praise God for his faithfulness and look forward to sharing some of the stories we’ve heard from people who have been impacted by the ESV Study Bible—people from many parts of the world, including, Hungary, South Africa, the Philippines, Sierra Leone, Liberia, the Ivory Coast as well as North America. Stay tuned!

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| Posted in: ESV,Study Bibles | Author: Crossway Staff @ 9:33 am | (93) Comments »

Christian Publishing

by Allan Fisher

Original article from Tabletalk Magazine

Looking for things for which to thank the Lord this Thanksgiving? Start by asking this question: Where would my church be without Christian publishing companies?

Imagine your pastor preparing his sermons week in and week out with only a Bible, perhaps in a language that is not his native tongue, with no Bible reference works, whether in print or digital format, and with no periodicals and journals.

Imagine your worship services without pew Bibles, hymnals, or choir music. Take away as well the text projected on a screen in front of the sanctuary.

Imagine your Sunday school teachers with no printed curriculum, no teaching aids, no teaching DVDs, no reference books.

Imagine your members having no Bibles of their own, either to read and study at home or to carry to church, no Bible study materials, no Bible study software, no reference works, no devotional literature, no Christian magazines, no Christian books for their children, no printed catechisms for them to learn

Imagine your pastor having trained for the ministry without textbooks and without libraries where he could learn to master research techniques in biblical and theological studies.

Can the church function without such publications? Of course. It does so in many parts of the world today, including much of Asia and Africa. Is their teaching ministry impoverished by this lack? Who would deny it?

Does Christian publishing always serve the church well in North America? No. Several factors can push companies in unproductive and even harmful directions.

Christian publishing companies seek to survive and expand. This effort takes a different form for a small non-profit than for a large, commercial corporation owned by a secular publishing conglomerate. But it pushes companies toward publishing things that will appeal to the market rather than things that meet real spiritual needs.

Because few Christian publishing companies are owned by ecclesiastical entities, their books tend to minimize denominational distinctives. In this way, Christian publishing companies have inadvertently promoted the lack of denominational loyalty with which church leaders are only too familiar. And because Christian books are purchased largely by individuals, too many books focus so exclusively on the individual’s direct relationship with God that they imply, if they do not say, that the church is optional. This view is already entertained by too many professing Christians.

Scripture makes clear that an appeal to the market can easily lead to the publication of half-truths, if not outright heresy. The apostle Paul warns Timothy that “the time is coming when people will not endure sound teaching, but having itching ears they will accumulate for themselves teachers to suit their own passions, and will turn away from listening to the truth and wander off into myths” (2 Tim. 4:3–4). Books by such teachers are eminently marketable today.

Granted that Christian publishers do not always serve the church well, one must admit that in many ways they have served it well during the last fifty years in particular. During this period, for example, Reformed theology and Reformed churches have experienced a resurgence. Can anyone doubt that Christian publishing has played a role in this important and encouraging development?

While the books of certain Reformed authors have appeared on the lists of a number of publishing companies, including some that have exhibited no special interest in Reformed teaching, a few companies have labored faithfully for decades to promote Reformed teaching specifically. Today we see a younger generation of pastors and other church leaders who, influenced by these books, have become solidly Reformed, and this in turn is having a positive effect on evangelical Christianity generally.

Could the Lord have accomplished all of this without printed materials? Yes. But remember that from the time of the Reformation, Protestantism has spread through the printed word. More than any other division of Christendom, Protestantism has thrived on books rather than other material aids to worship and devotion. During the second half of the twentieth century, evangelical Christianity has majored in publishing more than any other part of Christendom and any other religion.

During the mid-twentieth century Christian publishers entered the field of Bible publishing, a field they now dominate. While the number of translations vying for adoption by churches has created some chaos, and while not all of these translations are of equal quality, the focus of so much time, energy, and largesse on translating the Bible and then on creating reference works designed to put Bible study within the reach of all can only be lauded.

Where would the church be without Christian publishers? It would be sadly impoverished. So express your gratitude to God for these companies and the faithful authors who write for them. Then resolve that you’ll read more books next year than you’ve read this year.

———————

Allan Fisher is senior vice president for book publishing at Crossway Books and Bibles. He is also chair of the education committee at Bethel Presbyterian Church in Wheaton, Illinois.
Each month, the editors of Tabletalk select an influential pastor or scholar to address issues pertinent to the life and ministry of the church in Pro Ecclesia.


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November 4, 2009 | Posted in: Publishing | Author: James Kinnard @ 9:02 am | 1 Comment »

ESV.org/Mobile

By way of reminder, if you’re looking for quick access to the ESV Bible on your mobile device, check out esv.org/mobile. Formatted for your phone, you have free access to the entire ESV text along with several Bible reading plan options.

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November 3, 2009 | Posted in: Digital,ESV,General | Author: James Kinnard @ 2:01 pm | Comments Off »

The Task of the Apologist

9781433503153From R.C. Sproul’s Defending Your Faith

The defense of the faith is not a luxury or an intellectual vanity. It is a task appointed by God that you should be able to give a reason for the hope that is in you as you bear witness before the world.

In Defending Your Faith, Dr. R. C. Sproul argues that at its core Christianity is rational. He focuses on the basic truth claims for two of the most crucial issues of apologetics: God’s existence and the Bible’s authority.

Why a book on apologetics is a worthwhile read:
Before I can call upon Christ as my Savior, I have to understand that I need a savior. I have to understand that I am a sinner. I have to have some understanding of what sin is. I have to understand that God exists. I have to understand that I am estranged from that God, and that I am exposed to that God’s judgment. I don’t reach out for a savior unless I am first convinced that I need a savior. All of that is pre-evangelism. It is involved in the data or the information that a person has to process with his mind before he can either respond to it in faith or reject it in unbelief (pp.23).

The task of apologetics is to show that the evidence that the New Testament calls people to commit their lives to is compelling evidence and worthy of our full commitment. That often involves a lot of work for the apologist. Sometimes we would rather duck the responsibility of doing our homework, of wrestling with the problems and answering the objections, and simply say to people, “Oh, you just have to take it all in faith.” That’s the ultimate cop-out. That doesn’t honor Christ. We honor Christ by setting forth for people the cogency of the truth claims of Scripture, even as God himself does. We must take the trouble to do our work before the Spirit does his work, because the Spirit does not ask people to put their trust and faith and affection in nonsense or absurdity (pp.25).

Defending Your Faith is now available in trade paperback.

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| Posted in: Apologetics,Books | Author: Crossway Staff @ 9:08 am | 0 Comments »