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Andy Naselli

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Historical Theology

Collin Hansen Discusses “Young, Restless, Reformed”

May 9, 2008 by Andy Naselli

On April 24, 2008, Dr. Doug Sweeney and Collin Hansen discussed Hansen’s Young, Restless, Reformed: A Journalist’s Journey with the New Calvinists (Wheaton: Crossway, 2008). An MP3 of this discussion, sponsored by the Henry Center, is now available from the Henry Center’s media archive (MP3 | video).

I reviewed Hansen’s book in March for the forthcoming issue of Themelios (more on that later). Highly recommended!

Filed Under: Historical Theology Tagged With: Calvinism, Collin Hansen, MP3

T4G Highlights and Pictures

April 21, 2008 by Andy Naselli

I thoroughly enjoyed attending T4G 2008 last week (thanks to T4G’s generosity!). It was edifying and God-glorifying.

t4g-logo.jpg

Here are some highlights and pics:

[Read more…] about T4G Highlights and Pictures

Filed Under: Historical Theology Tagged With: Al Mohler, C. J. Mahaney, Conferences, Ligon Duncan, Mark Dever, MP3

D. A. Carson on Evangelicalism (and Fundamentalism)

April 8, 2008 by Andy Naselli

The following two (lengthy) MP3s by D. A. Carson are penetrating:

  • What is an Evangelical? An Assessment of the Evangelical and Roman Catholic Project
  • What is Evangelicalism? (1.28.08, Grace Fellowship Church in Toronto)

This afternoon I listened to the more recent one (“What is Evangelicalism?”), and I was encouraged by Carson’s 4.5-minute analysis of the current state of fundamentalism. It is not particularly constructive when evangelicals and fundamentalists broad-brush and launch grenades at each other. Contrast Carson’s conciliatory attitude here: listen from 42:10 to 46:30.

Update: A transcript of the 4.5-minute analysis is available here.

Filed Under: Historical Theology Tagged With: D. A. Carson, evangelicalism, fundamentalism, MP3

Kevin Bauder: “Fundamentalism and Scholarship”

March 28, 2008 by Andy Naselli

Kevin BauderBauder has finished another thoughtful series of short essays: “Fundamentalism and Scholarship.”

I’ve combined all 12 short essays into one PDF.

  1. Not Me (January 4, 2008)
  2. What Is a Scholar? (January 11, 2008)
  3. Hazards of Scholarship (January 18, 2008)
  4. Does Fundamentalism Need Scholars? (January 25, 2008)
  5. Does Fundamentalism Have Scholars? (February 1, 2008)
  6. How Do We Get Scholars? (February 8, 2008)
  7. To Make a Scholar (February 15, 2008)
  8. The Scholarly Life (February 22, 2008)
  9. Models of Scholarship (February 29, 2008)
  10. Scholarship and Separatism (March 14, 2008)
  11. The Dual Responsibility of a Christian Scholar (March 21, 2008)
  12. The Christian Scholar’s Christian Responsibility (March 28, 2008)

Note: Central Seminary emails these essays every Friday afternoon. You can access the archives here.

Filed Under: Historical Theology Tagged With: fundamentalism, Kevin Bauder, scholarship

The History of Southern Seminary

February 22, 2008 by Andy Naselli

This semester a couple recent M.Div. graduates from The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary entered Trinity’s Ph.D. historical theology program: Owen Strachan (blog) and Mark Rogers (blog). Jenni and I have enjoyed getting to know them and their families, and I’ve already learned a bit more about Southern Seminary. This week I learned that a history of Southern Seminary is available online at Southern’s “Archives and Special Collections.”

“The History of the SBTS“ efficiently organizes over 100 pages worth of fresh, concise, readable, popular, official, fascinating history.

Owen

Owen Strachan, who wrote nearly all of the site’s content, worked on this project nonstop for a year and a half, reading books, articles, and dissertations on Southern’s history (cf. the project staff).

“The History of the SBTS” is divided into seven parts:

  1. story: This traces Southern’s history from its founding (1859–78) to its conservative resurgence (1993–present).
  2. presidents: Nine presidents have served at Southern since 1859: Boyce, Broadus, Whitsitt, Mullins, Sampey, Fuller, McCall, Honeycutt, and Mohler.
  3. professors: Influential professors include Robertson, Beasley-Murray, George, and Dockery.
  4. beliefs: Southern’s faculty teaches in accordance with two confessions: The Abstract of Principles and The Baptist Faith and Message.
  5. buildings: Southern’s campus is historic and stately. Its current campus is beautiful, especially with the combination of classy, red-brick buildings, large trees, green grass, and a sunny, blue sky. My wife and I thoroughly enjoyed spending a couple days on campus for our third anniversary last July! Here’s a picture we took of the library:

    SBTS Library
  6. lore: Interesting “facts and curiosities” contribute to Southern’s body of tradition.
  7. sources: A couple bibliographies are helpful for further study: books & dissertations and articles & other stuff.

Filed Under: Historical Theology Tagged With: Owen Strachan, SBTS

Mark Minnick MP3s

January 29, 2008 by Andy Naselli

This week Mount Calvary Baptist Church (where Jenni and I were members prior to moving to Chicago) updated its website, and I correspondingly updated this entry on my “MP3s” resource page:

*Mark Minnick (bio): some of the finest expositional preaching I have ever heard. Dr. Minnick, my former pastor, had a formative influence on my theology and philosophy of ministry. (Most downloads are not free, but some are.)

Minnick

Some of the sermons that are (temporarily) available for free downloads include the following series by Dr. Minnick:

  1. 1 Corinthians 13
  2. Galatians 1–2
  3. a Christian view of illness
  4. restoring scripturally defined modesty
  5. responding to trials
  6. the deity of Christ
  7. Mount Calvary’s philosophy of ministry
  8. assurance of salvation

HT: Daniel Threlfall

Filed Under: Historical Theology Tagged With: Mark Minnick, MP3

John Piper’s Fundamentalist Father

January 8, 2008 by Andy Naselli

John Piper just posted an article entitled “A Birthday Gift to My Father on His 89th Birthday.” The second section of this brief article—which quotes his father quoting Bob Jones Sr.—opens with this:

“My father was a card-carrying fundamentalist, with a twist. He was irrepressibly happy in the grace of God. I suspect there are a lot of fundamentalists out there like that. For all I know, I may be one. So here is a taste of what I grew up with, which may be why abstaining from dancing, smoking, drinking, movie-going, and card-playing never felt like big sacrifice.”

On a similar note, Piper dedicates The Future of Justification: A Response to N. T. Wright to his father:

“This is the year (2007) that my father died. Who can estimate the debt we owe our fathers? Bill Piper preached the gospel of grace for over seventy years, if you count the songs and testimonies at the nursing home. He was an evangelist—the old southern, independent, fundamentalist sort, without the attitude. He remains in my memory the happiest man I ever knew” (p. 9).

Filed Under: Historical Theology Tagged With: fundamentalism, John Piper

Bob Jones Jr. on Reading Evangelicals

January 3, 2008 by Andy Naselli

Jenni and I are visiting family in Greenville, South Carolina, and this afternoon I guided one of my brothers on a tour of the Jerusalem Chamber at Bob Jones University‘s library. On our way out, I showed him the seminary building, which includes several interactive kiosks, one of which contains video testimonials from faculty, pastors, and graduates attempting to convince prospective students to come to BJU Seminary. That kiosk includes a letter on BJU letterhead with this explanation: “In 1994 a young man preparing for the ministry wrote to Dr. Bob Jones Jr. asking for his advice to someone who is called to preach. The following is Dr. Jones’ reply.”

Bob Jones Jr.

[Read more…] about Bob Jones Jr. on Reading Evangelicals

Filed Under: Historical Theology Tagged With: Bob Jones University, evangelism, fundamentalism

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1 Corinthians in Romans–Galatians (ESV Expository Commentary)

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Conscience: What It Is, How to Train It, and Loving Those Who Differ

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From Typology to Doxology: Paul’s Use of Isaiah and Job in Romans 11:34–35

Four Views on the Spectrum of Evangelicalism

Let God and Let God? A Survey and Analysis of Keswick Theology

Introducing the New Testament: A Short Guide to Its History and Message

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