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Andy Naselli

Thoughts on Theology

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Two Sermons on 1 Timothy 2:1-8

June 30, 2008 by Andy Naselli

Here are links to a couple sermons I recently preached:

  1. Pray For Those In Authority (1 Tim 2:1-8) (6-22-08) | MP3 (48:13) | outline
  2. Does God Have Two Wills? Does He Want All People to Be Saved in One Sense and Not Want All People to Be Saved in Another Sense? (1 Tim 2:4) (6-29-08) | MP3 (45:26) | outline

The first is expositional, the second more theological (and heavily indebted to John Frame’s The Doctrine of God and John Piper’s “Are There Two Wills in God?”).

Filed Under: Exegesis Tagged With: John Frame, John Piper, MP3, problem of evil

Don’t Waste Your Cancer

June 29, 2008 by Andy Naselli

Two and a half years ago, John Piper wrote a moving article entitled “Don’t Waste Your Cancer.” I’m now observing one of my best friends, Matt Hoskinson, evidence God’s grace in yet another way—this time by modeling Piper’s wise advice. Check out Matt’s letter that Danny Brooks read to Heritage Bible Church this morning.

(Matt is the tallest one in the pic below.)

Filed Under: Practical Theology Tagged With: Matt Hoskinson

A Personal Update

June 24, 2008 by Andy Naselli

Here’s a mid-year update for family and friends on some recent changes in the Naselli home. (I’ve lost track of whom I’ve told what at this transitional time, so this post should fill in the gaps!) God has been so good to us—far better than we deserve!

1. Family

1.1. Kara Marie!

Kara's Birth AnnouncementWe are grateful to God to announce the birth of our first child: Kara Marie Naselli! She was born on June 8, 2008. (Click here to view a PDF of our birth announcement.) She’s healthy and beautiful! We are so joyful and grateful. (More details and pictures are available on our password-protected family blog.)

1.2. Jenni

Jenni holding KaraJenni is now a stay-at-home Mom! She has yearned to have her very own children since she was a little girl. She babysat all through high school and college, earned a degree in Early Childhood Education, and then taught young children full-time until three days before Kara Marie was born. She’s been taking care of children belonging to other people for about thirteen years, and she has unselfishly served me by teaching full-time for the first four years of our marriage. She is eager to rear her own children, and I’m so thrilled that she is realizing her godly ambition for the high calling of wife and motherhood! I thank God for my wife.

1.3. CrossWay

CrossWayWe are getting more connected at CrossWay Community Church, a deliberately gospel-centered assembly. We hope to join a care group shortly. I’ve especially enjoyed being part of Mike Bullmore‘s “ministry trajectory group” that meets monthly in his home; his humble wisdom is so edifying.

2. School

2.1. Completed

By God’s grace I’ve completed my coursework that I began in August 2006! So I’ve completed all of the requirements for languages and classes for Trinity’s PhD program, which has been rigorous, enlightening, and edifying.

2.2. Remaining

Next up are comprehensive exams and a dissertation.

  • I hope to take my comps in the fall. This consists of a four-day battery of exams covering the spectrum of NT exegesis and theology, including sight-reading the Greek NT and correlating the NT’s historical and literary context with exegesis, biblical theology, historical theology, and systematic theology, with a bit more weight placed on my corpus (Paul’s letters). Who is adequate for these things?! This is probably the most daunting and humbling part of the PhD program!
  • The dissertation process begins with a “dissertation proposal hearing,” which I hope to have at the beginning of 2009. Once the project is approved, I become a PhD “candidate.” After writing the long paper, I must successfully pass a “dissertation defense.”

3. Work/Ministry

3.1. Yarbrough, Greek, Trinity Journal

Trinity JournalI’m no longer serving as Robert Yarbrough‘s teaching assistant (that was only a two-year arrangement) nor teaching Greek as part-time faculty. I will, however, continue on the editorial board for Trinity Journal (edited by Robert Yarbrough).

3.2. Carson

DACI’m still serving as D. A. Carson‘s part-time research assistant (I started in August 2006), but the exciting news is that beginning August 4, I will serve as DAC’s first full-time research assistant! This is a long story, but the short version is that the Lord has provided for this job for at least the first year through some generous donors. Ideally, this will be at least a two-year arrangement if funding is available. I’m so grateful to serve the church by serving DAC, leveraging his astonishing productivity just a bit more.

3.3. Themelios

I’ve been serving as administrator and interim managing editor for Themelios since March 2008, and I’ll continue serving as administrator while working full-time for DAC, who is the journal’s new editor. The first issue has been ready for publication since May, and it will be published online with the imminent launch of the new website for The Gospel Coalition. [Update: The first issue is available as a PDF.]

3.4. Editing and Writing

I’ve been doing a bit of part-time copy-editing and working on projects, articles, and reviews. The most time-consuming project at present is editing an abridgment of D. A. Carson and Douglas J. Moo’s 781-page An Introduction to the New Testament (a project for Zondervan, independent from my work for DAC).

3.5. Scholarship

I’m so grateful to receive the Hansen Fellowship in 2008–09. This may involve a small amount of work for the Henry Center during the school year.

3.6. Preaching

A church about eighty minutes away is without a preaching pastor, and I and three other friends recently began serving as an interim preaching team. (None of us could commit to serving as the sole interim preaching pastor, so we proposed this alternative.) We are currently preaching through 1 Timothy, and the general rhythm is that each of us preaches twice every eight Sundays (two weeks on, six weeks off) until the church finds a pastor.

Kara in Andy's hands

  • “What do you have that you did not receive?” (1 Corinthians 4:7)
  • “Give thanks to the LORD, for He is good; / For His loving-kindness is everlasting” (1 Chronicles 16:34; Psalm 107:1; 118:1, 29; 136:1; cf. 106:1; 2 Chronicles 7:3; Ezra 3:11).
  • We would be grateful for your prayers, namely, that we would be good stewards of God’s varied grace, serving with the strength that God supplies, so that in everything God will be glorified through Jesus Christ (1 Peter 4:10).

Bringing Kara home from the hospital

Filed Under: Other Tagged With: personal

Piper: “Impatient people are weak”

June 15, 2008 by Andy Naselli

Here’s a convicting excerpt (pp. 173–74) from John Piper’s “Faith in Future Grace vs. Impatience” (chapter 13 in Future Grace): [Read more…] about Piper: “Impatient people are weak”

Filed Under: Practical Theology Tagged With: John Piper

Mark Dever Defends His Practice of Separation

June 15, 2008 by Andy Naselli

Mark Dever just posted this short article on the 9Marks blog: “Mark Dever doesn’t practice separation”?

He concludes:

To sum it up, I want my separation from the world to be more pronounced than my separation from other Christians.  Does this make sense?

Filed Under: Systematic Theology Tagged With: fundamentalism, Mark Dever, Mark Minnick

The Offense of the Cross

June 6, 2008 by Andy Naselli

Paul’s argument in Gal 5:1–12 defends Christian liberty over a distinctive Jewish practice: circumcision. Note Paul’s logic in v. 11:

Ἐγὼ δέ, ἀδελφοί, εἰ περιτομὴν ἔτι κηρύσσω, τί ἔτι διώκομαι; ἄρα κατήργηται τὸ σκάνδαλον τοῦ σταυροῦ.

Now, brothers and sisters, if I am still preaching circumcision, why am I still being persecuted? In that case the offense of the cross has been removed (NET).

Adding circumcision to the gospel removed “the offense of the cross,” which is essential to the gospel.

Questions for reflection:

  1. How does our culture remove “the offense of the cross” (e.g., through mainstream media)?
  2. How do Christians remove “the offense of the cross” (e.g., through writings, sermons, ministry philosophies)?
  3. How might I remove “the offense of the cross” when I communicate with (1) non-Christians, (2) other Christians, and (3) myself?

Filed Under: Exegesis Tagged With: cross

John Piper: “20 Reasons I Don’t Take Potshots at Fundamentalists”

June 2, 2008 by Andy Naselli

See here. Piper’s attitude is commendable.

On a related note, I enjoyed observing him and interacting a bit last week at the annual pastor’s colloquium for The Gospel Coalition. The man is passionate about guarding and advancing the gospel, and for that I gratefully thank God!

Filed Under: Historical Theology Tagged With: John Piper

Mark Dever Interviews Mark Minnick

May 25, 2008 by Andy Naselli

The latest 9Marks interview by Mark Dever is now available: “Fundamentalism and Separation with Mark Minnick: Pastor and Bob Jones University professor Mark Minnick presents the case for the Fundamentalist doctrine of separation.”

Related:

  • 9 Marks interviews and Henry Forums
  • Mark Minnick MP3s
  • Minnick: “Theology Matters”

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

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Predestination: An Introduction

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