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Saturday, January 24
by
David N
on Sat 24 Jan 2009 10:56 PM PST
The videos of all speaker addresses and panel discussions from this year's T4G conference are available online for free at Ligonier.org (for a limited time). These conferences are amazing, encouraging (and often humorous) and it would be well worth your time to watch the videos (if you don't have a lot of time, just watch the panel discussions!)
Check them out here. Thursday, January 22
by
David N
on Thu 22 Jan 2009 10:31 PM PST
Unfortunately this will not be a book review. I haven’t had the opportunity yet to read the book, though I plan to in the near future. I did however read the Christianity Today article bearing the same title two years ago, and I’ve seen, heard or read several interviews with the author (here's a good one). Here I simply wish to make a few comments in light of a recent study done by ChurchRelevence.com (more on that in a moment). Basically, a good chunk o’ Christian youth (roughly 18 – 25)
are moving away from the Arminian, mainstream evangelicalism of their childhood
toward (to differing degrees) classical Reformed theology (the primary motive being, at least according to the CT article, a desire for deeper theology grounded in historic creeds and confessions). The majority of the credit for this
Renaissance of Reformed thought is given to John Piper. Because of his passionate preaching and
evident concern for world missions, Piper has managed to break into circles
(such as the annual Passion Conference) that were previously closed, sometimes
even hostile, to Reformed theology. Thus, Let The Nations Be Glad became a “gateway
drug” to Piper’s deeply Reformed emphasis on the radical sinfulness of man, the
radical holiness of God, and His absolute sovereignty in all things. All this makes sense to me (and I have no doubt that it’s
true), but as a blogger, I can’t help but wonder if the recent advent of New
Media has contributed to this exodus into the Reformed promised land. R. C. Sproul was on the cutting edge in the late
80’s and 90’s. Ligonier made use of
every available medium of communication, from radio to cassette tapes, to
videos. Now Dr. Sproul’s teaching series
are available daily on the internet and satellite TV. So, you might ask, why wasn’t there a
Reformed Renaissance in the 90’s? I
think it has been slowly building. Many
today who are in the 18 – 25 bracket could have grown up with Dr. Piper’s or
Dr. Sproul’s ministries, or their parents could have been first introduced to
it. The use of so many different forms
of media mean that some folk who would not have otherwise been exposed to
Reformed teaching had the opportunity to see loving, Christ-like pastors and
teachers arguing passionately for the clear teaching of Scripture as expressed
by historic Reformation theology. Both
Piper and Sproul (and others), it must be admitted, break the mold of what most
non-Reformed people tend to think of Reformed people (or worse…Calvinists!). The point being, there have probably been 1,000
John Pipers preaching faithfully to their small Reformed congregations over the
last 100 years, but no one outside their limited communities knew them. And no one would actually pick up the
writings of Calvin or Edwards because of the stigma surrounding “Calvinism.” Godly men like John Piper, in most cases, remove that stigma. Now fast forward to 2009.
ChurchRelevance.com has posted a list of the “Top 60 Church Blogs.” As I looked at the list I was suddenly struck
by how many of these blogs are Reformed (some of them are even “confessional”!). Not only are the top 2 blogs Reformed, which
really says something all by itself, but of the 60, a total of 10 are
definitely Reformed, at least 1 (the Evangelical Outpost, formerly of Joe
Carter) was Calvinist, though Joe didn’t wear it on his sleeve, and perhaps 2
or 3 others as well, but I’m not confident enough to say for sure. Now 10 – 12 isn’t a LOT out of 60, but
consider that no other single theological strain or movement has nearly so many
(the Emergent movement had 3 or 4 by my count). Now, the correlation-causation relationship is always
tricky. Are there so many popular
Reformed blogs because of the movement, or has the movement grown, at least in
part, because of so many average Reformed Joes and more-than-average Reformed
mega-stars getting into New Media and using it more effectively than the other
guys? I can’t really say for sure, but
given what I’ve seen happen with New Media in other arenas over the past
decade, I’m inclined to think the latter. Has anyone read Hansen’s book? Does he address this issue at all, and if so,
what does he have to say? Friday, January 16
by
David N
on Fri 16 Jan 2009 02:17 PM PST
In honor of John Calvin's 500th birthday, Westminster Seminary California's 2008 Conference is on the lasting legacy of John Calvin's life and work for the contemporary church. The conference is tonight from 6 - 9pm and tomorrow from 8am - 2:45pm. Unfortunately it is sold out, but for those of you interested in following the conference online, Dr. Scott Clark (Professor of Systematic and Historical Theology at WSC) will be live blogging here. The live blogging will begin right at 6pm tonight and run through the whole length of the conference (minus Dr. Clark's session, if he can't find someone to fill in for him).
You can subscribe via RSS feed here. Also, here is the conference schedule. And here are the speaker bios. Saturday, January 10
by
David N
on Sat 10 Jan 2009 12:44 PM PST
Molly Worthen has written an interesting article for The New York Times Magazine on Mark Driscoll and his "hip" Mars Hill Church entitled Who Would Jesus Smack Down?
The point of her article seems to be to highlight the "paradoxes" that surround Mars Hill. Not only is it an Evangelical church where the pastor swears and talks explicitly about sex and the members are pierced and tatooed. Not only is it a thriving megachurch in the Country's most secular and unchurched city. But Driscoll preaches a hard-edged, no-holding-back Complementarianism and Calvinism. The paradoxes here being that Complementarianism, which teaches that women ought to be functionally subordinate to men in the church, is helping men in the congregation to treat women better than in their non-Christian days, and Calvinism, which teaches the total depravity and moral inability of all people, is creating a church of passionate activists and evangelists. I'd only like to make 2 comments and then I'll just let you read the article for yourself. First, Worthen doesn't really seem to know any actual history of Calvin or his work in Geneva. At one point she comments on Driscoll's unwillingness to compromise and how quick he is to "shun" church elders or revoke a congregant's member privaleges when they voice disagreement with him, suggesting that Driscoll is just like Calvin in this respect. She then goes on to say, "John Calvin had heretics burned at the stake and made a man who casually criticized him at a dinner party march through the streets of Geneva, kneeling at every intersection to beg forgiveness." As far as I know Calvin only oversaw the burning of one person in Geneva, and from several sources I've read the general consensus seems to be that he was reluctant (perhaps even unwilling). As to the other charge, I'd really like to know where she gets this story from. Dr. Scott Clark comments, More to the point, she resurrects the worst caricatures of Calvin. I
suppose her resuscitation of them is a good reminder that we have to keep
repeating the history. I admit, I don’t remember hearing or reading any
story about Calvin making “a man who casually criticized him at a
dinner party march through the streets of Geneva, kneeling at every
intersection to beg forgiveness.” As far as I know the polity in
Geneva, he didn’t have that sort of authority. Typically the Consistory
fined people. I’ve never seen any instances of this sort of discipline.
If everyone who criticized Calvin in Geneva was made to do this there
would have been no place to walk! In any case, my point is that her assessment of Driscoll's Calvinism would be far less paradoxical if she better understood the theology, the history, even the man himself (I noticed that most of her quotes come from random members of the congregation, rather than elders or Drsicoll himself. I wonder why that is). Lastly, some of the things she says about Drsicoll's disciplining practices are a bit alarming. In traditional Reformed churches, it could take years to officailly excommunicate someone, and in my denomination (URC) the final step cannot be taken until a regional assembly of elders is called. Again, as Dr. Clark (half jokingly) comments, "shunning is an Anabaptist practice." I'd like to give Driscoll the benefit of the doubt for now. I really hope he isn't practicing a dangerous kind of authoritarianism that could backfire. Read Worthen's article here. |
Order the book co-edited by Roger Overton! About The A-Team
Interviews
Justin Taylor on the ESV Study Bible - Teaser / I / II / III
Justin Taylor on John Owen - I / II / III James Spiegel - Gum, Geckos and God Richard Abanes on Tolle- I / II / III / IV Michael Ward- Intro / I / II / III Kim Riddlebarger- Part I / II / III R. Scott Smith- Part I / II / III Glenn Lucke- Part I / II / III / IV What Roger's Reading
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