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Andy Naselli

Thoughts on Theology

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Levels of Systematic Theology and the Role of Logic

May 20, 2021 by Andy Naselli

This new article on theological method is stimulating:

Layton Talbert. “Levels of Systematic Theology and the Role of Logic.” Journal of Biblical Theology and Worldview 1.2 (2021): 4–22.

[Read more…] about Levels of Systematic Theology and the Role of Logic

Filed Under: Biblical Theology, Systematic Theology Tagged With: Layton Talbert

Providence

March 7, 2021 by Andy Naselli

John Piper’s 751-page magnum opus is now available:

John Piper. Providence. Wheaton, IL: Crossway, 2021.

The print book is available from Amazon, but the best deal is currently from Westminster Bookstore.

Crossway and Desiring God are generously making the entire book available for free as a PDF.

My endorsement: “John Piper helps us see and savor God’s purposeful sovereignty by inductively demonstrating what the whole Bible teaches about its ultimate goal, its nature, and its extent.”

My wife and I enjoyed watching Joe Rigney interview John Piper about the book in this 85-minute video:

For more DG resources on the sovereignty of God, see here.

Update on 5/7/2021: Mark Dever interviews John Piper in this hour-long video:

Filed Under: Systematic Theology Tagged With: John Piper, sovereignty of God

And They Lived Happily Ever After: The Resurrection of the Body and the Life Everlasting

January 11, 2021 by Andy Naselli

Here are some of my thoughts on the last two lines of the Apostles’ Creed:

“Death Is Not the End: What We Still and Will Believe.” Desiring God, 11 January 2021.

Filed Under: Systematic Theology

What the Bible Teaches about Ethnic Harmony

December 10, 2020 by Andy Naselli

In this new 44-page article, I support eight propositions about ethnicity:

Naselli, Andrew David. “What the Bible Teaches about Ethnic Harmony.” Midwestern Journal of Theology 19.2 (2020): 14–57.

    1. God created every human in his image with equal worth in his sight, so ethnic partiality is sinful.
    2. Humans in the Bible’s storyline are multiethnic.
    3. God’s global plan to save sinners includes people from every ethnic group.
    4. God approves of interethnic marriage.
    5. God’s people must love their neighbors across ethnic lines.
    6. The church—both Jewish and Gentile Christians—must maintain the unity (including ethnic harmony) that Christ powerfully created.
    7. The church should welcome ethnic diversity.
    8. The church should love justice, which entails treating all ethnicities justly and encouraging its members to pursue justice in society.

Update: I helped condense the gist of this article into “Ethnic Harmony Affirmations and Denials,” a statement by the Bethlehem Baptist Church elders on February 6, 2021.

Filed Under: Practical Theology Tagged With: ethnicity

12 Books I Recently Endorsed

December 2, 2020 by Andy Naselli

Here are 12 books I recently endorsed (nine for 2020, three for 2021):

  1. Albuquerque, Roque N. Presupposition and [E]Motion: The Upgraded Function and the Semantics of the Participle in the New Testament. New York: Lang, 2020. “Dr. Albuquerque skillfully analyzes what the authors of the Greek New Testament intend to communicate when they begin a sentence with an adverbial participle before the main clause.”
  2. Beale, G. K., and Benjamin L. Gladd. The Story Retold: A Biblical-Theological Introduction to the New Testament. Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 2020. ”Beale and Gladd concisely survey each book of the New Testament through a biblical-theological lens. I plan to require this book for my seminary course that focuses on the theological message of each New Testament book.“
  3. Crowe, Brandon D. Every Day Matters: A Biblical Approach to Productivity. Bellingham, WA: Lexham, 2020. “Brandon Crowe distills the best secular books on productivity but with a distinctively Christian approach. What drives his common-sense advice is for us to glorify God.”
  4. Grudem, Wayne. Systematic Theology: An Introduction to Biblical Doctrine. 2nd ed. Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2020. ”Grudem’s Systematic Theology is well organized, easy to understand, usually persuasive, and devotional. Grudem does not merely inform you; he stirs your affections to love and worship the triune God. Grudem is not attempting to write a cutting-edge contemporary theology that plays theological Ping-Pong with trendy non-evangelical theologians. Nor is he attempting to write a historical theology that exhaustively explains what significant Bible interpreters and theologians have believed. Rather, he is serving the church by helping Christians who are not experts in theology better understand what the whole Bible says about God, God’s word, man, Christ, the Holy Spirit, angels and demons, salvation, the church, and the end times.”
  5. Harris, Murray J. Navigating Tough Texts: A Guide to Problem Passages in the New Testament. Bellingham, WA: Lexham, 2020. “Murray Harris is a veteran New Testament scholar who knows the Greek of the New Testament better than most English-speaking people today know English. In this book he shares 66 short devotional interpretations of challenging passages in the New Testament.”
  6. Leeman, Jonathan. One Assembly: Rethinking the Multisite and Multiservice Church Models. 9Marks. Wheaton, IL: Crossway, 2020. “Evangelical churches that are multisite and/or multiservice are like that for good-intentioned pragmatic reasons. Jonathan Leeman challenges us to think exegetically and theologically about a popular practice that may not be as strategic as so many assume.”
  7. Morgan, Christopher W., with Robert A. Peterson. Christian Theology: The Biblical Story and Our Faith. Nashville: Broadman & Holman, 2020. ‘‘Chris Morgan’s systematic theology is concise, easy to understand, and edifying. He models how to do theology by rooting his conclusions in exegesis and biblical theology while considering historical theology and culminating in practical theology.”
  8. Verrett, Brian A. The Serpent in Samuel: A Messianic Motif. Eugene, OR: Resource, 2020. “Brian Verrett’s work on the serpent is first-class. He skillfully combines rigorous exegesis with whole-Bible biblical theology.”
  9. Winston, Richard Wellons. Misunderstanding, Nationalism, or Legalism: Identifying Israel’s Chief Error with Reference to the Law. Eugene, OR: Wipf & Stock, 2020. ”Winston demonstrates that the main idea of Romans 9:30–10:13 is not that Israelites are guilty for zealously maintaining their nationalistic boundary markers—circumcision, Sabbath, and food laws. Rather, Paul argues that many Israelites failed to believe in Jesus and foolishly attempted the impossible—to earn righteousness based on the law.”
  10. Crabtree, Sam. Practicing Thankfulness: Cultivating a Grateful Heart in All Circumstances. Wheaton, IL: Crossway, 2021. “I thank God for Sam Crabtree. He is a wise and jovial brother who practices what he preaches in this book: he gives thanks in all circumstances. (Don’t miss the last chapter—a creative list of one hundred practical ways to be thankful.)”
  11. Piper, John. Providence. Wheaton, IL: Crossway, 2021. “John Piper helps us see and savor God’s purposeful sovereignty by inductively demonstrating what the whole Bible teaches about its ultimate goal, its nature, and its extent.”
  12. Wellum, Stephen J. The Person of Christ: An Introduction. Short Studies in Systematic Theology. Wheaton, IL: Crossway, 2021. “Christians affirm seemingly contradictory claims about Jesus: self-existent and depending on food and water; all-powerful and getting tired and sleeping; all-knowing and growing in knowledge; everywhere present and localized; eternal and born from a mother’s womb; unable to sin and tempted as we are; immortal and dying; in short—God and man. How can that be? And why is that so glorious? I require my seminary students to read Steve Wellum’s 500-page God the Son Incarnate: The Doctrine of Christ because Wellum masterfully answers such questions by integrating exegesis, biblical theology, historical theology, and systematic theology. This book is shorter, more accessible, and less intimidating—an ideal entry point for someone who wants to better understand who Christ is.”

Filed Under: Other

Two Recent Interviews on the Conscience

November 21, 2020 by Andy Naselli

Here are two recent podcast interviews I did on the conscience:

1. “The Conscience and the Home” with Abigail Dodds and Tilly Dillehay for their Home Fires podcast (recorded 10/8/2020)

(By the way, you won’t regret subscribing to that podcast. Lots of wisdom and encouragement. My family loves the Dodds family. No pretense. Genuine. Hospitable. Earnest. Joyful. Delightful. Faithful and fruitful.)

2. “Applying the Bible to Conscience Issues” with Mark Ward for Faithlife’s Bible Study Magazine Podcast (recorded 5/15/2020, about two months into the initial COVID lockdowns)

(Mark Ward is a longtime friend. As I wrote a few years ago, he’s a sharp thinker and witty communicator.)

Filed Under: Practical Theology Tagged With: Abigail Dodds, conscience

40 Questions about Biblical Theology

November 10, 2020 by Andy Naselli

I teamed up with two friends—a Christ-centered Old Testament scholar (Jason DeRouchie) and a Christ-centered systematic theologian (Oren Martin)—to write an introduction to biblical theology:

Jason S. DeRouchie, Oren R. Martin, and Andrew David Naselli. 40 Questions about Biblical Theology. 40 Questions. Grand Rapids: Kregel, 2020. 400 pages.

  • 35-page sample PDF. That PDF begins with 13 generous endorsements and includes the introduction and first two chapters.
  • Available from Amazon (including Kindle), Westminster Bookstore, and Logos Bible Software.

From the introduction: [Read more…] about 40 Questions about Biblical Theology

Filed Under: Biblical Theology

Kill the Dragon, Get the Girl! A Biblical Theology of Snakes and Dragons (The Serpent and the Serpent Slayer)

October 19, 2020 by Andy Naselli

This book is my attempt to present a biblical theology of snakes and dragons:

Andrew David Naselli. The Serpent and the Serpent Slayer. Short Studies in Biblical Theology. Wheaton, IL: Crossway, 2020. 157 pp.

Available from Amazon (including Kindle), Westminster Bookstore, and Logos Bible Software.

Serpent is an umbrella term that includes both snakes and dragons. It’s the big category. Snakes and dragons are kinds of serpents. [Read more…] about Kill the Dragon, Get the Girl! A Biblical Theology of Snakes and Dragons (The Serpent and the Serpent Slayer)

Filed Under: Biblical Theology

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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

Tracing the Argument of Romans: A Phrase Diagram of the Greatest Letter Ever Written

The Serpent Slayer and the Scroll of Riddles: The Kambur Chronicles

The Serpent and the Serpent Slayer

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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