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Archive for January, 2011

Are you Prepared to Minister to Victims of Sexual Assault?

Guest post by Justin and Lindsey Holcomb

There is an epidemic of sexual assault and the statistics are jarring. One in four women and one in six men are or will be victims of sexual assault in their lifetime. As sobering as the statistics are, they don’t begin to speak to the darkness and grief experienced by these victims. Because sexual assault causes physical, psychological, emotional, and spiritual pain, victims need the kind of hope and help that only the gospel of Jesus Christ can provide.

Tragically, many churches and Christians are woefully unprepared to help those have been assaulted. Worse still, many Christian leaders (including parents) are ignorant of this epidemic because ashamed victims are reticent to simply declare what has been done to them, and untrained leaders do not recognize the signs of sexual assault or know how to inquire lovingly of victims.

Victims want and need a clear explanation of how the gospel applies to their experience of sexual assault and its effects in their lives.  Many parents, spouses, ministers, and friends are looking for solid, gospel-based information that would be helpful in serving victims. Informed supporters are needed for the healing process.

We wrote Rid of My Disgrace to help equip pastors and ministry staff as well as family members and friends of victims. As you read what we are saying to victims, you will become better prepared to respond and care for victims in ways that are compassionate, practical, and informed. While avoiding platitudes and shallow theology, we combine biblical and theological depth with up-to-date research.

Much of the literature on sexual assault employs self-help approaches that do not offer the full-orbed good-news of the gospel—that it is God’s one-way love replacing self-love that is the true path to healing.

It is important to address the effects of sexual assault with the biblical message of grace and redemption. Jesus responds to victims’ pain and past. The message of the gospel redeems what has been destroyed and applies grace to disgrace. It is our hope that you will be equipped to provide accessible gospel-based help, hope, and healing to sexual assault victims who know too well the depths of destruction and the overwhelming sense of disgrace.

Justin Holcomb is the Director of The Resurgence and co-author with Lindsey Holcomb of Rid of My Disgrace. Read their other articles on this issue or download a sample chapter of Rid of My Disgrace.

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January 24, 2011 | Posted in: Abuse,Author,Books,Counseling,Loving Others,Ministries,Sexual Immorality,Suffering | Author: Angie Cheatham @ 9:46 am | (6) Comments »

A Legacy of Illuminating Religious Texts

When you think of illuminated religious texts, the lavish Book of Kells may come to mind, with its exotic inks, intricate decorations, and ornate treatment of the Gospel texts. Since the time of the early Church, believers have expressed their great respect for Scripture by developing such extravagant works of art.

The Four Holy Gospels, illuminated by Makoto Fujimura and published this month by Crossway, carries on this sacred tradition. Crossway President Lane Dennis explains in the book’s Forward:

This volume, titled The Four Holy Gospels, carries forward the legacy of the illuminated Gospel Book extending back nearly fifteen centuries. The oldest surviving Latin illuminated Gospel Book is the St. Augustine Gospels (also known as the Canterbury Gospels), which dates to the late sixth century. Exquisitely illuminated with portraits of each evangelist, miniature drawings, initial letters, and embellishments throughout, the St. Augustine Gospels was, according to reliable tradition, created in Italy and brought to England by St. Augustine in AD 597.

During the next one thousand years, the creation of illuminated Gospel Books was typically the highest form of art undertaken during this period. Richly illuminated Gospel Books, often embellished with gold leaf and brushed with gold specks, were created to glorify of God and were carried in procession, for the reading of the Gospel, during church worship services in both the East and the West.

In the later Middle Ages, however, the creation of Gospel Books gave way to richly illuminated devotional Books of Hours, exquisitely exemplified by the Très Riches Heures du Duc de Berry illuminated by the Limburg Brothers in the early fifteenth century. With the advent of printing and the publication of the Gutenberg Bible in 1455, the art of illumination declined rapidly. One of the last few Gospel Books created is the extravagantly decorated Peresopnystsia Gospels completed by a single scribe in a Ukrainian monastery in 1561.

Undertaking such a project is a humbling thing, something contemporary artist Makoto Fujimura explains:

I can do nothing to enhance the Word of God. I can only tremble at the expanse of vision that the Word of God led me to during my work on this project. This vision is a luminal space that, in recent times, imagination has rarely approached. We are invited by our Creator to enter that space, an invitation which is extended to anyone desiring to journey there. My hope then is that this project will be merely the beginning of creative imagination — of being drawn to God’s expansive generative Reality….

In taking on this project, it is my simple and ambitious prayer that this new century will see a revisitation of the illuminated legacy, with the Bible as a source of creative inspiration and artistic expression, in both the East and the West.

May this illumination of the four Gospels draw us nearer to the Word of God, and inspire us to engage the Creator . . . creatively.

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January 21, 2011 | Posted in: Arts & Literature,Books,ESV,The Gospel | Author: Crossway Staff @ 1:00 pm | 0 Comments »

“The Four Holy Gospels” Now Available

We’re pleased to announce that The Four Holy Gospels is now available to order. This unique volume features beautiful paintings and illuminations by Makoto Fujimura, a respected artist in the contemporary art community. If you’re interested in learning more about Fujimura’s method of illumination, you can watch this mini-documentary. You can also preview The Four Holy Gospels for a closer look.

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| Posted in: Arts & Literature,Author,ESV,The Gospel | Author: Andrew Tebbe @ 9:15 am | 0 Comments »

Teaching, Into All Technologies

Yesterday we shared three biblical principles that help inform Crossway’s digital product development:

  • God’s Word does not belong to us
  • Partnership in the Gospel
  • Teaching the Nations

We referenced the first principle earlier this month, and yesterday our resolve to partner with others for the sake of the gospel.

Regarding teaching the nations, Crossway President Lane Dennis explains:

This third principle, the principle of teaching the nations, has been a special emphasis and a specific calling for Crossway in recent years. In fact, the whole purpose behind the creation of the ESV Study Bible was “to help people understand the Bible in a deeper way.” Thus, our highest commitment is to the publication and distribution of the Bible, God’s Word.

But it is increasingly clear that there is a massive need to create and provide doctrinally sound Bible resource materials, so that people will be able to understand and apply the Bible — materials that can be provided free of cost, everywhere in the world, over the internet, via mobile devices, “into all technologies.”

We are humbled that the Lord has given Crossway’s publishing ministry a part to play in this great task.  We are grateful to partner with individuals, local churches, denominations, and ministries of various kinds to help spread God’s word, for the technologies that make it easier to do this, and for the means to provide free access to the Bible wherever possible.

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January 20, 2011 | Posted in: Books,Digital,Evangelism | Author: Crossway Staff @ 6:00 am | 0 Comments »

Partnering, Into All Technologies

A couple weeks ago we referenced Crossway’s commitment to the free use and development of the ESV Bible through all available technologies. That resolve stems from the first of three guiding principles identified by Crossway President Lane Dennis in an address he gave at the 2010 Faith Comes By Hearing “Digital Bible Summit”:

  • God’s Word does not belong to us
  • Partnership in the Gospel
  • Teaching the Nations

Regarding the second principle, Lane Dennis explained:

Partnerships are essential, first and foremost because this is the biblical principle. But partnerships are essential, equally so, because it makes no sense for Crossway to create organizations and infrastructures in the far-flung corners of the world, where brothers and sisters in Christ are already present, giving their lives for the sake of the Gospel and God’s Word.

We appreciate standing alongside a community of others; it’s a joy to collaborate for the sake of the gospel and the distribution of God’s Word.

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January 19, 2011 | Posted in: Books,Digital | Author: Crossway Staff @ 9:07 am | 1 Comment »