The film Courageous opens at 900 theaters nationwide on September 30.
Cf. my review.
by Andy Naselli
The film Courageous opens at 900 theaters nationwide on September 30.
Cf. my review.
by Andy Naselli
[I]t is important to remember that the Reformers did not break the epistles down into verses in the way that we do (verses were not invented until about 1550, after Luther’s death!) and were struck by the force of their overall argument more than perhaps we tend to be. To appreciate them it is useful to read the epistles straight through, without paying too much attention to the internal divisions, and feel the impact.
by Andy Naselli
Logos Bible Software is giving away nearly 1,500 books: The Perseus Collections.
You heard that right: nearly 1,500 free books.
I’ve already downloaded and browsed the collections, and I’m impressed. I love having all these resources in Logos format.
Learn more about the Perseus Collections here:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yo8MgoI2p6k&feature=player_embedded
You can pre-order these collections by selecting these items:
There are no strings attached, but there is a timing-issue: When the Perseus Collections go live on September 30, Logos won’t be able to continue taking orders for a while as they process all the pre-orders they’ve received. So if you want to get the Perseus Collections as soon as possible, pre-order them before September 30.
by Andy Naselli
Chapter 8 of this book is entitled “Mediums”:
John Dyer. From the Garden to the City: The Redeeming and Corrupting Power of Technology. Grand Rapids: Kregel, 2011. [endorsements]
“The message is the content we transmit from our minds to our audience, while everything that surrounds those words can be considered a medium.” Mediums may include “an email, a handwritten note, a phone call, a Facebook wall post, or any other tool we use to communicate” (p. 117).
Dyer makes three arguments about mediums (pp. 117–31):
Related: Among other things, John Dyer maintains the extraordinarily useful “Best Commentaries” site.
by Andy Naselli
Douglas Groothuis, Christian Apologetics: A Comprehensive Case for Biblical Faith (Downers Grove: IVP, 2011), 329:
ID [intelligent design] should take its rightful place in the overall circle of evidence. Standing alone, it cannot provide a full apologetic for Christianity. Rather, ID provides strong evidence against the reigning naturalism in the realm of biology, as well as some support for theism as an overarching worldview.
That’s how Groothuis concludes his chapter “Evidence for Intelligent Design” (pp. 297–329).
by Andy Naselli
Robert W. Kellemen. Equipping Counselors for Your Church: The 4E Ministry Training Strategy. Phillipsburg, NJ: Presbyterian & Reformed, 2011.
It’s endorsed by Paul Tripp, Elyse Fitzpatrick, Ed Welch, and several others.
Kellemen’s 4 E’s:
More info (including a video and endorsements) here.
by Andy Naselli
Our three-year-old daughter enjoyed this new book after it arrived in the mail yesterday:
R. C. Sproul. The Barber Who Wanted to Pray.
Paintings by T. Lively Fluharty. Wheaton: Crossway, 2011. 33 pp.
It’s about Martin Luther teaching his barber, Master Peter, a simple way to pray.
You can read the whole book online here (“Preview the Book”).
Related: See Carl Trueman, “A Lesson from Peter the Barber,” Themelios 34 (2009): 3–5. Trueman’s article ends with this footnote (numbering added):
Martin Luther’s treatise on prayer can be found in the following works:
- Martin Luther, “To Peter Beskendorf,” in Luther: Letters of Spiritual Council (ed. and trans. Theodore G. Tappert; Philadelphia: Westminster, 1955), 124–30;
- idem, “A Simple Way to Pray,” in Luther’s Works (ed. Jaroslav Jan Pelikan, Hilton C. Oswald, and Helmut T. Lehmann; trans. Carl J. Schindler; Philadelphia: Fortress, 1968), 43:187–209;
- idem, “Luther the Confessional Theologian: A Practical Way to Pray (1535),” in Martin Luther’s Basic Theological Writings (ed. William R. Russell and Timothy F. Lull; 2nd ed.; Minneapolis: Fortress, 2005), 12–17.
by Andy Naselli
Kevin Boling interviewed (MP3) me this afternoon re Four Views on the Spectrum of Evangelicalism on his “Knowing the Truth” radio program.
Related: Kevin interviewed (MP3) me a year ago re Keswick theology.