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Andy Naselli

Thoughts on Theology

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My Contributions to the Evangelical Drudge Report Last Week

August 3, 2008 by Andy Naselli

Here is  what I contributed to Justin Taylor’s blog last week (note especially the posts in bold):

  1. Schreiner Online (A Reminder)
  2. Eckhard Schnabel: “Paul the Missionary”
  3. Interview with John Frame on Seminary
  4. Hypocrites at Panera: An Illustration of Fallen Human Nature
  5. Interview with David Reimer on Ezekiel in the ESVSB
  6. J. I. Packer on Worship Styles
  7. “Worldliness,” Edited by C. J. Mahaney
  8. The Essential IVP Reference Collection 2.0
  9. Interview with Andreas J. Köstenberger on 1 Timothy 2:12
  10. SBJT: “Learning from the Church Fathers”
  11. Ligonier’s 2009 National Conference: “The Holiness of God”
  12. iTunes U
  13. Albert N. Martin’s Farewell Sermons
  14. Interview with Tom Schreiner on NT Theology
  15. Jonathan T. Pennington on Life and Ministry
  16. Helm’s Deep: More Essays from Paul Helm
  17. Interview with Lig Duncan
  18. Special Discount on Logos Bible Software
  19. Bush Family Calls “The Rush Limbaugh Show”
  20. Defining Jonathan Edwards
  21. Zondervan Academic’s Blog
  22. D.A. Carson Interview: “Is Our Gospel Too Big?”

Filed Under: Other Tagged With: Justin Taylor

Contributing to the Evangelical Drudge Report

July 25, 2008 by Andy Naselli

For the next week, I’ll be blogging occasionally for a friend on vacation. He’s known online in several ways:

  1. Justin Taylor (Crossway | Reformation 21 | New Attitude)
  2. Between Two Worlds
  3. theologica.blogspot.com
  4. the evangelical Drudge Report (which is actually pretty accurate!)

JT is a real blogger. I’m not. That’s why he asked three people to take the reins while he is away! Anyway, I mention this because the one or two posts that I might have published here over the next week will probably end up on JT’s blog.

Filed Under: Other Tagged With: Justin Taylor

More T4G 2008 Pictures

July 24, 2008 by Andy Naselli

In April I posted some pictures from T4G 2008. This morning I became aware of many more such pics (partly from watching this slideshow): see the first 25 pages here (the rest are from T4G 2006). Here are a few examples:

Filed Under: Other Tagged With: Conferences

Carson Reviews “Rescuing the Bible”

July 23, 2008 by Andy Naselli

The latest batch of RBL reviews includes D. A. Carson’s review of Roland Boer’s Rescuing the Bible. The analysis and conclusion are refreshingly blunt:

This book, a fascinating mix of dogmatic left-wing self-righteousness combined with rich and scathing condescension toward all who are even a tad less left than the author, is rich in unintended irony. Boer cannot see how implausible his arguments become. While nominally allowing “religious” people to believe in the supernatural so long as they support his left-wing agenda and join forces with him in a “worldly” secularism, what he says about the Bible and about biblical scholarship is so blatantly committed to philosophical naturalism and historical minimalism that even the most mild supernaturalism is ridiculed: no allowance can be made for divine revelation, anyone who thinks Moses existed is not really a scholar, biblical studies can be called “scientific” only if the scholars themselves do not preach, and so forth. Boer consistently damns everyone on the right by ridiculing the obvious targets, but probably he would not appreciate it if a counterpart on the right ridiculed those on the left by skewering Joseph Stalin and Pol Pot. It turns out that Boer wants to “rescue” the Bible not only from what people on the right say that it means but from what the Bible itself says, for whenever the Bible, in all its multivalence, disagrees with Boer’s vision of the summum bonum, it is to be undermined, set aside, and mocked—not even wrestled with. Readers are repeatedly told that those nasty right-wingers have “stolen” the Bible. Boer never considers the possibility that quite a few left-wingers have simply abandoned the Bible, leaving the terrain open for those who at least take it seriously. What will satisfy Boer, it seems, is not the liberation of the Bible but the liberation of the Bible from any agenda he considers right-wing, so that it can be locked in servitude to a left-wing agenda. Boer’s dismissive arguments to prove the Bible is hopelessly multivalent—a commonplace among many modern and postmodern readers today—is spectacularly unconvincing because he does not interact with any serious literature (and there is two thousand years’ worth of such literature) that argues, with various degrees of success, how the Bible does hang together. But perhaps this is not too surprising from an author who cherishes chaos precisely because chaos undermines God’s authority—and all authority save Boer’s must be overthrown. I think that many biblical writers would call that choice idolatry. At the end of the day, Boer is trying to rescue the Bible from God.

Filed Under: Systematic Theology Tagged With: D. A. Carson

From Bloglines to Google Reader

July 22, 2008 by Andy Naselli

Yesterday I switched my blog reader from Bloglines to Google Reader. (If you don’t use a blog reader or aren’t certain what one is, perhaps you’d find my short tutorial on blogs to be helpful.)

Four of my friends and former seminary classmates in Greenville just persuaded me. (They also happen to be bloggers: Brian Collins, Phil Gons, Matt Hoskinson, and Mark Ward.) After a day using Google Reader, I’m sold (though it took a little work to figure out how to set it up for maximum efficiency). The shortcuts are great, especially hitting the j-key to advance immediately from blog post to blog post.

Kudos to Google for another free first-class product.

Google : Internet :: kudzu : southeastern United States

Filed Under: Other Tagged With: technology

The Gospel Coalition’s New Website

July 8, 2008 by Andy Naselli

It’s finally up and running: www.TheGospelCoalition.org.

Here are a few features to check out:

  1. Resources: This links to audio, visual, and written resources by TGC council members. For example, check out the resources for D. A. Carson and Mike Bullmore.
  2. Themelios: The first new issue is available as a 103-page PDF.
  3. 2009 Conference: This includes speakers, topics, and dates for The Gospel Coalition’s 2009 national conference.
  4. About: This includes descriptions of TGC council members.

More updates are forthcoming, including a series of video interviews.

Filed Under: Other Tagged With: The Gospel Coalition

Pithy Quotes from Carl Trueman’s “Minority Report”

July 5, 2008 by Andy Naselli

Minority Report I recently reviewed Carl R. Trueman‘s Minority Report: Unpopular Thoughts on Everything from Ancient Christianity to Zen-Calvinism (Scotland: Mentor, 2008). (You may read the front front matter and introduction here.) This second volume of his collected essays follows in the train of his first: Wages of Spin: Critical Writings on Historic and Contemporary Evangelicalism (Scotland: Mentor, 2004). It’s typical Trueman: provocative, humorous, wry, clever, witty, engaging, thought-provoking, delightful, entertaining.

I didn’t have space in my review to share pithy quotes from Trueman’s twenty short essays in the volume, so I’ll share some here:

[Read more…] about Pithy Quotes from Carl Trueman’s “Minority Report”

Filed Under: Practical Theology Tagged With: Carl Trueman

Kevin Bauder: “Baptist Church Cooperation”

July 3, 2008 by Andy Naselli

Kevin Bauder just finished another thoughtful series of short essays: “Baptist Church Cooperation.”

  1. Introduction
  2. The Associational Principle
  3. The Service Organization
  4. The Approval System
  5. The Preachers’ Fellowship
  6. The Ecclesiastical Conglomerate
  7. The Ad Hoc Model
  8. The End of the Matter

Note: Central Seminary emails these essays every Friday afternoon. You can join the mailing list (as well as access the archives) here.

Filed Under: Historical Theology Tagged With: Kevin Bauder

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God's Will and Making Decisions

How to Read a Book: Advice for Christian Readers

Predestination: An Introduction

Dictionary of the New Testament Use of the Old Testament

Tracing the Argument of 1 Corinthians: A Phrase Diagram

https://www.amazon.com/dp/1433580349/?tag=andynaselli-20

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40 Questions about Biblical Theology

1 Corinthians in Romans–Galatians (ESV Expository Commentary)

How Can I Love Church Members with Different Politics?

Three Views on Israel and the Church: Perspectives on Romans 9–11

That Little Voice in Your Head: Learning about Your Conscience

How to Understand and Apply the New Testament: Twelve Steps from Exegesis to Theology

No Quick Fix: Where Higher Life Theology Came From, What It Is, and Why It's Harmful

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

NIV Zondervan Study Bible

Perspectives on the Extent of the Atonement

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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