I just listened to Rick Holland’s recent interview of John MacArthur, who reflects for over an hour about his last forty years of ministry at Grace Church (MP3 | transcript). Enjoyable and edifying.
No Anonymous or Pseudonymous Comments, Please
I haven’t laid out guidelines for leaving comments on this blog. Perhaps I should. But here is one request I’d like to underscore: When you submit a comment, please use your full real name and one of your active email addresses. The real name is for the benefit of everyone (including yourself!), and the active email address is for me (i.e., it is not viewable to others) in case I’d like to contact you privately.
Thanks.
A Quibble with John Piper
On December 17, 2008, John Piper warmly recommended Leif Enger’s novel Peace Like a River. Jenni and I read it together over the last month and finished it last night.
Enger is a gifted writer who crafts words like an artist, and his novel has several redeeming qualities. The problem, however, is that the story’s plot is far too thin. It starts well but then fizzles. We kept waiting for it to get better, but it never did. Perhaps this says more about us than it does about Enger—sort of like how the only thing being evaluated at fancy art museums is the people looking at the paintings, not the paintings themselves!
Should you read Peace Like a River? A cheeky side of me wants to answer, “No, don’t waste your life.” :-)
Collin Hansen Reflects on Young, Restless, Reformed
Collin Hansen reflects on his book Young, Restless, Reformed: A Journalist’s Journey with the New Calvinists. (Cf. my review.)
Note his comments re fundamentalism:
Increasing my coverage of Reformed blogging is not the only change I would make. Readers have emerged from the woodwork to tell me about growing pockets of Reformed interest in Great Britain and among African Americans and fundamentalists. . . . As for fundamentalists, I have heard testimonies of college and seminary students who tell me something big is stirring. Perhaps there is hope that these young Calvinists will rebuild the bridges burned generations ago between evangelicals and fundamentalists.
Fireproof
Last night Jenni and I watched the film Fireproof, which came out on DVD this week. I was intrigued for at least two reasons: nearly every review I’ve read has been positive, and a wholesome movie with a $500,000 budget has already grossed about $33.5 million!
We weren’t disappointed. Rather, we were surprised how well done and edifying the movie is. Highly recommended, especially for married couples.
One of the best lines illustrates how counter-cultural this film is: “Don’t just follow your heart. You gotta lead your heart.” That’s one reason I think that this film is great for singles to watch, too. So many other films (starting with Disney “classics”!) promote exactly the wrong message (i.e., a self-serving, follow-your-heart, do-whatever-you-think-will-gratify-you approach).
About
- official site (includes more videos, pics, resources)
- Wikipedia
- Kirk Cameron: “I’ll only kiss my wife”
- trailer:
Reviews
- Phil Johnson (read this one first)
- Baptist Press
- Tim Challies
- Alex Chediak
- Christian Spotlight
- Christianity Today
- Joy McCarnan
- Plugged In
- James White
Abortion
I just listened to Justin Taylor’s Sunday morning sermon on abortion that he preached at his church on January 18, 2009. Three words come to mind:
- Sobering
- Convicting
- Motivating
After listening to Justin’s sermon, I have the kind of feeling that I might have felt if I could have watched Schindler’s List while living near Nazi concentration camps while WWII was still in progress. How can this unspeakably horrific evil legally be happening all around me? What am I doing about it?
Cf. these posts on abortion by Justin Taylor and John Piper this month:
Justin Taylor’s Recent Posts on Abortion
- Number of Abortions Since 1973
- How Support for Abortion Became Kennedy Dogma
- Conversation on the Gospel, Abortion, and Politics
- World Magazine on Abortion
- On Abortion and Gay Rights, Evangelicals and Liberals Join to Advise Obama
- Why I Hate Sanctity of Human Life Sunday
- An Open Letter to Barack Obama
- Life
- A Sermon on Abortion
- Roe No More
- One Simple, Practical Way You Can Make a Difference for Women and the Unborn
- The Case for Life, Around the Web
- Four Reasons You Might Be Aborted
- Abortion and the Early Church
- Moral Accountability
- Abortion and Obama’s First Few Days
- Amusing or Sad?
- Piper Responds to Obama on Abortion
- Being Pro-Life in a Culture of Death
John Piper’s Recent Posts on Abortion
- Being Pro-Life Christians Under a Pro-Choice President
- Lincoln’s Logic on Slavery Applied to Abortion
- Holding A Miracle
- Fifteen Pro-Life Truths to Speak
- The Baby in My Womb Leaped for Joy
See also John Piper’s resources on abortion.
The NT in Antiquity
I’ve just spent some time examining an outstanding book hot off Zondervan’s press:
Gary M. Burge, Lynn H. Cohick, and Gene L. Green. The New Testament in Antiquity: A Survey of the New Testament Within Its Cultural Contexts. Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2009. 480 pp.
Introduction
- overview of the book and authors (Note that all three authors are NT professors at Wheaton College and Graduate School.)
- 10-page PDF of the front matter and chapter 1
- video interview with all three authors
- blog interview with Gary Burge
Endorsements
- Craig L. Blomberg, PhD, Distinguished Professor of New Testament, Denver Seminary: “. . . one of the best introductions and surveys in recent times. Remarkably attractive in its layout, with color pictures, color pictures, charts, diagrams and sidebars galore . . . If it’s backgrounds you want to highlight in a one-semester introduction to the New Testament, this is the text to assign.”
- Darrell L. Bock, Research Professor of New Testament Studies, Dallas Theological Seminary: “The New Testament in Antiquity is a beautifully done, carefully presented, evangelically sensitive work to introduce the New Testament. I have longed for a text like this. There is richness on virtually every page. Read, savor, learn.”
- Craig S. Keener, Professor of New Testament, Palmer Seminary of Eastern University: “Complete with an extraordinary array of visual illustrations, this book covers important topics needed for an introductory text in New Testament in a way that is both understandable and well-informed. It emphasizes many details that help students discover the biblical text in new ways they would rarely get on their own.”
- Scot McKnight, Karl A. Olsson Professor in Religious Studies, North Park University: “For years I have searched in vain for a book that would introduce students to the New Testament—with clear outlines, graphic images, historical contexts, timelines, maps, and bibliographies. My search is over; this is that book.”
Initial Evaluation
While flipping through every page and dipping in here and there, I noticed a few relatively minor disappointments (e.g., the bibliography on p. 122 lists the first rather than the second edition of Craig Blomberg’s The Historical Reliability of the Gospels, and the book lacks an author index), but overall, I agree with the above scholars. My text for New Testament introduction in college was Robert G. Gromacki’s New Testament Survey (Grand Rapids: Baker, 1974). I sure wish that it would have been this one!
Josh Moody’s Installation Service at College Church in Wheaton
Last Sunday afternoon D. A. Carson preached a sermon on 1 Timothy 1:1–20 for Josh Moody‘s Installation Service at College Church in Wheaton: “The Glorious Gospel of the Blessed God.” The sermon is an adaptation of an address that Carson has given once or twice before on this passage, but it is considerably adapted at points.