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Archive for November, 2011

Video: Justin Taylor Interviews Tom Nelson on “Work Matters”

Watch the recent interview below with Justin Taylor and Tom Nelson as they discuss Nelson’s new book Work Matters: Connecting Sunday Worship to Monday Work.

  • 0:20        Nelson’s heart behind the book
  • 1:48      Reasoning behind including short work testimonies in the book
  • 2:39      The importance of a correct theology of work
  • 4:24      Creating an environment that encourages a transformative theology of work
  • 7:12      Comments on James Davison Hunter’s “Faithful Presence”
  • 9:15      Defining work in light of unemployment
  • 12:03    Thanks and wrap up

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November 11, 2011 | Posted in: Theology,Vocation | Author: Angie Cheatham @ 8:00 am | 0 Comments »

What We Can Learn from Reading Jonathan Edwards

Guest Post by Sean Lucas, author of God’s Grand Design

I was a graduate student at Westminster Theological Seminary. I had spent three years in PhD seminars, writing papers that would form chapters of the future dissertation on Jonathan Edwards. As I was nearing the end of my class work and preparing for my comprehensive exams, my PhD advisor, the historian D. G. Hart, uttered immortal words that changed the course of my life, “Edwards is overdone; if you want me to be your advisor, do something else.” And even though Hart would leave Westminster in Philadelphia before I had a chance to write my dissertation proposal, I did in fact write on something else, the 19th century southern Presbyterian theological Robert Lewis Dabney.

There is a sense that many people would look at recent work on Jonathan Edwards and say, “Edwards is overdone; do something else.” I’ve even documented that fact in a bibliographic essay for a book I co-edited on Edwards. So, the question could be rightly asked, “If Edwards is overdone, then why in the world did you write this book on Edwards? And why in the world should I read it?”

These two questions actually have a single answer: while there has been a great deal written, there are actually surprising gaps in what people have said about him. In particular, there has been little recent writing that attempts to synthesize Edwards’ thought into a single “theology of Edwards.” And most of what has been written is inaccessible to most general readers with no to some knowledge of Edwards.

And so, God’s Grand Design: The Theological Vision of Jonathan Edwards is an attempt to write an accessible, synthetic theology of Edwards. As such, it encompasses a great deal of what I have learned and personally benefited from reading him. Let me highlight four things that are unique to the book and important to me.

  1. Trinity and covenant: While theologian Amy Pauw has written a marvelous book on Edwards’ Trinitarianism and while Conrad Cherry’s classic work on Edwards’ theology highlighted the covenant idea, I try to show how foundational these theological ideas were for Edwards’ larger goal of showing how the end for which God created the world and purposed redemption was to bring himself glory.
  2. Self-deception: Many, many people have written about Edwards and religious affections. But only one—historian Ava Chamberlain—noted how the theme of self-deception actually represented a darker side of Edwards’ work on the affections. To me, this theme is pastorally important because it helps to explain life in the church, where some appear to follow Christ for a time but turn out to be self-deceived.
  3. Means of grace: For all of his “modern” sensibilities, Edwards was a fairly traditional Reformed theologian. As a result, he believed that the “ordinary means of grace”—the ministry of the Word, the sacraments of baptism and the Lord’s Supper, and prayer—were used by God to enable people to persevere. I am not aware of another book that talks about the means of grace for the Christian life like this one does.
  4. Christian life as a journey: Again, Edwards was a eighteenth-century inheritor of the Puritan tradition. As such, he favored the theme of the Christian life as a journey and focused his ministry on preparing his people in each stage of life to die well. The final chapter, which links the first part on redemptive history with the second part on redemption applied, shows how believers who die well participate in God’s grand design: being drawn up into heaven in order to enjoy the fullness of God’s glorious love forever.

These four things, I say, are fairly unique and hopefully make the book worth reading. I know that, for myself, reading Jonathan Edwards has proved to be an enriching spiritual experiencing, one that has furthered my own Christian walk. I hope that those who read God’s Grand Design will find the same thing.

Sample the Introduction and Chapter 1.

Sean Lucas (PhD, Westminster Theological Seminary) is senior minister at First Presbyterian Church in Hattiesburg, Mississippi, and the author of three books. He previously taught at Covenant Theological Seminary for five years, serving as chief academic officer and associate professor of church history.

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November 10, 2011 | Posted in: History and Biography | Author: Angie Cheatham @ 8:48 am | 0 Comments »

Video: Theology as More Than Just an Academic Discipline

Why is it necessary to be the best theologians we can be? Joe Thorn explains the importance of theology and how it is inseparable from loving Jesus. “We must know God and his word so we can make him known.”

Joe Thorn blogs at www.joethorn.net and is author of Note to Self: The Discipline of Preaching to Yourself.

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November 9, 2011 | Posted in: The Christian Mind,Theology | Author: Angie Cheatham @ 8:50 am | 0 Comments »

5 Questions with Andreas Köstenberger on Excellence

We just published Andreas Köstenberger’s new book on the pursuit of excellence in Christian scholarship and in all aspects of the Christian life called Excellence: The Character of God and the Pursuit of Scholarly Virtue (Crossway, 2011). You can read the table of contents, introduction, and first chapter online for free, or read this Q&A hosted by Justin Taylor:

I’m grateful he was willing to answer a few questions:

1. You start the book with your personal story and say this is the most personal book you wrote. What is it that makes the topic of excellence such an intensely personal one for you?

My call to excellence came at my conversion when I was gripped by a realization of the utter excellence of God. I was impressed by the fact that because God is excellent in every way, everything I do for him ought to be characterized by excellence. This, to me, is what it means to bring glory to God—to do everything I do for him with excellence.

2. In your book, you say that many Christians are “addicted to mediocrity.” Why do you think that is and what is your message to those Christians in your book on excellence?

Yes, sadly, I have found that while many in the evangelical community pay lip service to excellence, far fewer have a demonstrated track record of excellence. Frank Schaffer wrote about evangelicals’ “addiction to mediocrity” years ago. While I’m sure there are many causes, one key one, I believe, is the notion of cheap grace. People don’t understand grace. The other day, I taught on Romans 6, and once again was impressed by the fact that Paul says that while we were once slaves to sin, we now have become slaves to God! In other words, as recipients of God’s grace we don’t simply move from a state of bondage to a state of freedom where there are no more constraints whatsoever. Rather, as committed Christian disciples, we are now expected to serve God with distinction—not because we have to, but because we want to. God is more than worthy of us giving him everything we’ve got, rather than just presuming on his grace and being satisfied with mediocrity.

So, my message in the book to my fellow believers is simply this: God is a God of excellence, and if you are a Christian, he has called you to pursue excellence in everything you do, whether in the personal, moral, or vocational arena.

3. In your book, you seem to be taking a somewhat critical approach toward the customary emphasis in Christian circles on spiritual disciplines. Why is that?

As someone who grew up Roman Catholic, I have found that we as evangelicals have at times imported an ethos that owes more to medieval monasticism than to biblical spirituality. When we look at the life of Jesus, we don’t find someone who practiced a monastic-type lifestyle at all. Jesus was grounded in a close relationship with God but he was also actively immersed in vibrant ministry in community with his followers. For this reason I propose in chapter 4 of my book on Excellence that spirituality must not become an end in itself; it must be vitally connected to the gospel. A biblical understanding of spirituality must be centered in the work of the Holy Spirit, not self-effort, no matter how sincere or noble one’s motivation might be.

4. There are a lot of secular books on excellence. How does a Christian approach to excellence differ from secular ones?

“Excellence” has been a buzzword in the business community for many years. I remember reading In Search for Excellence by Peters and Waterman a couple decades ago. Usually, the approach taken in secular books on excellence is that researchers identify traits of greatness in companies or individuals and then study what makes these individuals or companies great. This is then held up as an example for others to emulate. Another popular approach is simply to assemble quotes of famous people and to produce an anthology on the topic of excellence. One such book is Excellence: Inspiration for Achieving Your Personal Best, edited by J. Pincott. There is nothing particularly wrong with such efforts, but I believe they remain very much on the surface when it comes to understanding what true excellence is really all about. By contrast, a Christian approach to excellence, as I argue in my book, must start with the excellence of God. On this theological foundation, we must understand our own call to excellence, which entails the pursuit of virtues such as diligence, courage, passion, restraint, integrity, humility, interdependence, and love.

5. How can we as Christians pursue vocational, relational, and moral excellence?

In the book, I make a case for the need to pursue excellence not merely in the vocational realm but also in one’s personal life and moral sphere. Too often we see people in public life—including Christians—succeed professionally but succumb to personal or moral failure. The key passage in Scripture that I use in my book as a blueprint for pursuing Christian virtue is 2 Peter 1:3-11, which speaks of God calling us to his own glory and excellence and urges believers to make every effort to supplement their faith with virtue. I find this striking—as Christians, we are called to supplement our faith by pursuing a series of virtues! How can we as Christians pursue such virtues? To find out, you’ve got to read the book! After discussing the excellence of God, our call to pursue excellence, and chapters on holiness and spirituality, I devote 13 chapters to individual virtues that believers are called to cultivate, with special emphasis on the pursuit of scholarly virtues. God’s call to excellence is both a daunting and an exhilarating call. Together, let’s pursue personal, moral, and vocational excellence for the glory of God.

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November 8, 2011 | Posted in: General | Author: Angie Cheatham @ 9:09 am | 0 Comments »

Adoption: Gospel and Mission

by Russell Moore from Christianity Today
Read full article here
or read more about Adopted for Life by Russell Moore.

When someone learns that I’m going to speak at their church about adoption, typically the first question is, “So will you be talking about the doctrine of adoption or, you know, real adoption?” That’s a hard question, because I cannot address one without addressing the other. We cannot master one aspect and then move to the other, from the vertical aspect of adoption to the horizontal aspect, or vice versa. Families, the Bible tells us, reflect something eternally true about God. It is God’s fatherhood after which every family in heaven and on earth is named (Eph. 3:14-15). We know what human parenting should look like based on our Father’s behavior toward us.

The reverse is also true. We see something of God’s fatherhood in our relationship with our human fathers. Jesus tells us that our fathers’ provision and discipline show us God’s active love toward us (Matt. 7:9-11; Heb. 12:5-17).

The same principle is at work in adoption. Adoption is, on one hand, gospel. Our identity and inheritance are grounded in our adoption in Christ. Adoption is also mission. In this, our adoption spurs us to join Christ in advocating for the poor, the marginalized, the abandoned, and the fatherless. Without the theological aspect, the growing Christian emphasis on orphan care too often seems like one more cause wristband for compassionate conservative evangelicals to wear until the trend dies down. Without the missional aspect, the doctrine of adoption too easily becomes mere metaphor, just another way to say “saved.” Read more.

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November 7, 2011 | Posted in: Church and Ministry | Author: Angie Cheatham @ 10:35 am | 0 Comments »