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Andy Naselli

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Planet Earth: A Theological Documentary

July 26, 2007 by Andy Naselli

Last month one of my close friends emailed me a link to a 14-minute video that serves as a preview for the recently released Planet Earth: The Complete BBC Series (also available in HD DVD and Blu-ray). After reading more about this BBC series, I became aware of another BBC series released a few years ago called The Blue Planet: Seas of Life.

planet-earth.jpg

Jenni and I had the opportunity to watch these series, and they are excellent! Over the last three years, we have checked out a few dozen nature DVDs from the library (e.g., many produced by IMAX), but none of those compares to Planet Earth! Wow. It includes five DVDs: the first four contain eleven 50-minute episodes, and the fifth contains three episodes on “the future” and environmentalism. The last ten minutes or so of the eleven episodes on disks 1-4 share interesting stories about what the film crew endured to secure such unusual footage. (Warning: Occasionally a crew member’s speech is a bit offensive.) The footage on the main episodes is stunningly majestic and detailed, colorful and brilliant. The vistas are breathtaking. I learned something new in every episode, usually viewing (1) fascinating animals and plants on God’s earth that I never knew existed and (2) behavior by well-known organisms that shocked me because I had never heard of such things (e.g., a pride of lions attacking an elephant).

In preparation for watching these, we listened to John Piper’s sermon “The Pleasure of God in Creation,” which Piper later published as this chapter in The Pleasures of God, my favorite book by Piper. Thrilling! Moving! Worshipful! Watching first-class films about God’s planet is a worshipful experience—even if the people who make the films have entirely different agendas! How many more reasons do we have to praise God than did the authors of Scripture, whose knowledge of God’s earth was significantly limited in comparison to ours today? Piper calls Ranger Rick “a theological journal,” and I think it is appropriate to call Planet Earth a theological documentary.

Related: Piper on “Planet Earth”

Filed Under: Practical Theology Tagged With: films

Porter reviews “Thiselton on Hermeneutics”

July 20, 2007 by Andy Naselli

The prolific Stanley Porter recently reviewed a massive volume by his former mentor, Anthony Thiselton (Wikipedia): Thiselton on Hermeneutics: Collected Works with New Essays (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2006), xvi + 827 pp. Porter’s review, which expresses both appreciation and negative criticism, is available as a 7-page PDF (published 14 July 2007).

Filed Under: Exegesis Tagged With: hermeneutics

Welcome to AndyNaselli.com

July 19, 2007 by Andy Naselli

We’re excited to welcome you to our new site. Thanks for stopping by!

1. Explanation

1.1. The primary impetus for this new site is a digital camera, a generous end-of-the-year gift my wife received from the parents of her students. In order to share pictures with family and friends, we looked into various options and concluded that it would be most efficient to combine a family blog and my theology blog under the same website domain. Our first choice was www.naselli.com, but it was already taken. We settled on the current domain name in order to keep it relatively short and memorable (as opposed to something like www.AndyandJenniNaselli.com or www.ThisDomainNameIsWayTooLong.com).

1.2. Enter Scott Aniol. Scott designed the whole site with expertise as he patiently, flexibly, and kindly interacted with us, and he will continue to be our webmaster as new ideas arise. His company is called WebRight Design, and his professional services are under-priced. He designs sites for individuals, corporations, churches, and much more. Check it out.

2. Introduction

2.1. Andy’s theology blog and resources page are designed primarily for friends who share a passion for theology.

  • The blog posts that predate this one are imported from Andy’s previous blog, and future posts will likely be similar: sporadic and short.
  • The resources are divided into four categories: blogs, MP3s, theological writings, and general research tools.

2.2. The password-protected family blog is designed for family and friends, so please contact us for a user name and password.

Filed Under: Other Tagged With: admin

Blomberg Reviews Roy’s "How Much Does God Foreknow?"

June 26, 2007 by Andy Naselli

In the latest RBL, Craig Blomberg positively reviews Steven Roy‘s How Much Does God Foreknow: A Comprehensive Biblical Study. The review is available as a four-page PDF.

Filed Under: Systematic Theology Tagged With: Craig Blomberg

C. S. Lewis: "Fern-Seed and Elephants"

June 19, 2007 by Andy Naselli

I just finished reading an engaging essay that Robert Stein recommends in his hermeneutics textbook and lectures: C. S. Lewis, “Fern-Seed and Elephants,” [warning: the linked article is filled with typos] in Fern-Seed and Elephants and Other Essays on Christianity (ed. Walter Hooper; London: Fontana, 1975), 104-25. Lewis originally titled the essay “Modern Theology and Biblical Criticism,” which he read at Westcott House, Cambridge, on 11 May 1959. What follows is a brief summary.

Context: Many “Christian” leaders (esp. within the Church of England) had embraced modern (i.e., higher, liberal, non-evangelical) biblical criticism. Lewis, a lay person, addresses those leaders in this essay. “I am a sheep, telling shepherds what only a sheep can tell them. And now I begin my bleating” (105).

C. S. Lewis’s four bleats

  1. “These men ask me to believe they can read between the lines of the old texts; the evidence is their obvious inability to read (in any sense worth discussing) the lines themselves. They claim to see fern-seed and can’t see an elephant ten yards way in broad daylight” (111).
  2. “All theology of the liberal type involves at some point—and often involves throughout—the claim that the real behavior and purpose and teaching of Christ came very rapidly to be misunderstood and misrepresented by his followers, and has been recovered or exhumed only by modern scholars. . . . I see—I feel it in my bones—I know beyond argument—that most of their interpretations are merely impossible . . . . The idea that any man or writer should be opaque to those who lived in the same culture, spoke the same language, shared the same habitual imagery and unconscious assumptions, and yet be transparent to those who have none of these advantages, is in my opinion preposterous” (111-12).
  3. “I find in these theologians a constant use of the principle that the miraculous does not occur. Thus any statement put into our Lord’s mouth by the old texts, which, if he had really made it, would constitute a prediction of the future, is taken to have been put in after the occurrence which it seemed to predict. This is very sensible if we start by knowing that inspired prediction can never occur. Similarly in general, the rejection as unhistorical of all passages which narrate miracles is sensible if we start by knowing that the miraculous in general never occurs” (113).
  4. “All this sort of criticism attempts to reconstruct the genesis of the texts it studies; what vanished documents each author used, when and where he wrote, with what purposes, under what influences—the whole Sitz im Leben of the text. This is done with immense erudition and great ingenuity. . . . Until you come to be reviewed yourself you would never believe how little of an ordinary review is taken up by criticism in the strict sense” (113-14). “The superiority in judgement and diligence which you are going to attribute to the Biblical critics will have to be almost superhuman if it is to offset the fact that they are everywhere faced with customs, language, race-characteristics, class-characteristics, a religious background, habits of composition, and basic assumptions, which no scholarship will ever enable any man now alive to know as surely and intimately and instinctively as the reviewer can know mine. And for the very same reason, remember, the Biblical critics, whatever reconstructions they devise, can never be crudely proved wrong” (117-18). “I could not describe the history even of my own thought as confidently as these men describe the history of the early Church’s mind” (122).

Conclusion: “Such are the reactions of one bleating layman to Modern Theology. It is right that you should hear them. You will not perhaps hear them very often again. Your parishioners will not often speak to you quite frankly. Once the layman was anxious to hide the fact that he believed so much less than the vicar; now he tends to hide the fact that he believes so much more. Missionary to the priests of one’s own church is an embarrassing role; though I have a horrid feeling that if such mission work is not soon undertaken the future history of the Church of England is likely to be short” (125).

Filed Under: Exegesis Tagged With: C. S. Lewis

Carson on the implications of 1 Cor 2:15

June 12, 2007 by Andy Naselli

ὁ δὲ πνευματικὸς ἀνακρίνει [τὰ] πάντα, αὐτὸς δὲ ὑπ᾽ οὐδενὸς ἀνακρίνεται.

But the one who is spiritual discerns all things, yet he himself is understood by no one.

-1 Cor 2:15 NET

Unfortunately, this verse has been ripped out of its context to justify the most appalling arrogance. Some people think of themselves as especially spiritual and discerning Christians and judge that this verse authorizes them, the elite of the elect, to make well-nigh infallible judgments across a broad range of matters. Moreover, they insist, they are so spiritual that others do not have the right to judge them. After all, does not the apostle say that the “spiritual man” is “not subject to any man’s judgment”?This simply will not do. In the context, the “spiritual man” is the person with the Holy Spirit, over against “the man without the Spirit.” The “spiritual man,” in short, is the Christian, not a member of an elite coterie of Christians. . . . “[A]ll things” covers the range of moral and spiritual experience from the rawest paganism to what it means to be a Christian. The Christian has lived in both worlds and can speak of both from experience, from observation, and from a genuine grasp of the Word of God. But the person without the Spirit cannot properly assess what goes on in the spiritual realm–any more than a person who is color-blind is qualified to make nice distinctions in the dramatic hues of a sunset or a rainbow, any more than a person born deaf is qualified to comment on the harmony of Beethoven’s Fifth or on the voice and technique of Pavarotti.

It is important to think through the implications of this verse. Christians in contemporary Western society are constantly being told that they are ignorant, narrow, and incapable of understanding the real world. Paul says the opposite: Christians are as capable as other sinners of understanding the complex and interwoven nature of sin, of grasping the ways in which “wannabe” autonomous human beings reason, and of explaining what the world looks like to modern pagans in our post-modern world. But because they have received the Spirit of God, they are also capable of saying something wise and true about the way the world appears to God. . . . And all this makes them much more comprehensive in outlook than their pagan peers. The really narrow perspective is maintained by the sinner who has never tasted grace, by the fallen human being who has never enjoyed transforming insight, afforded by the Holy Spirit, into God’s wise purposes.

From this perspective, it is idiotic–that is not too strong a word–to extol the world’s perspective and secretly lust after its limited vision. That is what the Corinthians were apparently doing; that is what we are in danger of doing every time we adopt our world’s shibboleths, dote on its heroes, admire its transient stars, seek its admiration, and play to its applause.

–D. A. Carson, “The Cross and the Holy Spirit: 1 Corinthians 2:6-16,” in The Cross and Christian Ministry: Leadership Lessons from 1 Corinthians (Grand Rapids: Baker, 1993), 58-60.

Filed Under: Exegesis Tagged With: D. A. Carson

Carson at College Church in Wheaton

June 9, 2007 by Andy Naselli

D. A. Carson recently preached at College Church in Wheaton, Illinois, three Sundays in row: May 20, May 27, and June 3.

  1. May 20: “How to Think About Pastors” (1 Timothy 3:1-7)
  2. May 27: “How to Think About Money” (1 Timothy 6:3-19). In this sermon Carson highly recommends Craig Blomberg‘s Neither Poverty Nor Riches: A Biblical Theology of Possessions.
  3. June 3: “How to Think About the Last Days” (2 Timothy 3:1-17)

College Church is still looking for a pastor. R. Kent Hughes “retired from his pulpit ministry at College Church and was given the title Senior Pastor Emeritus in December 2006.“

Filed Under: Exegesis Tagged With: D. A. Carson, MP3

Piper: "Is There Injustice with Our God?"

June 1, 2007 by Andy Naselli

While meditating this morning on Romans 9:14-18, I recalled a hymn that John Piper penned to accompany his sermon “The Hardening of Pharaoh and the Hope of the World.” It’s entitled “Is There Injustice With Our God?” Glorious. Check it out.

Filed Under: Systematic Theology Tagged With: John Piper

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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

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1 Corinthians in Romans–Galatians (ESV Expository Commentary)

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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

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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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