The Heart of the Matter
What should the purpose and goal of discipline be? A response to the Pearls' book, To Train Up a Child
My concern is with the attitude the Pearls seem to have towards children. While I certainly agree that children need to learn that the universe doesn’t revolve around them, the universe also doesn’t revolve around the parents. According to the Pearls, a three month old child who cries when you walk away is attempting to... Continue Reading
Antinomianism by Mark Jones: A Review
A worthwhile resource on the topics of grace, law/gospel, justification, and sanctification
Jones’ chapter on antinomian rhetoric (where the opening quote above is found) is very helpful. I agree that there is much moralistic preaching in churches today. But we have to be careful not to overreact and overemphasize justification at the expense of sanctification. We have to be careful not to overemphasize Jesus’ work (what he’s... Continue Reading
An Oldie But Goodie
Those who relish Matthew Henry’s commentary will enjoy a new biography of the English pastor.
Matthew Henry’s six-volume Commentary on the Whole Bible has long been an evangelical favorite for its combination of thoroughness, specific detail, and price: It’s never been hugely expensive, and its Kindle edition now sells for 99 cents. Those who relish it—I’m one—will profit from Allan Harman’s readable new biography, Matthew Henry: His Life and Influence (Christian Focus, 2012). Henry... Continue Reading
Canon Revisited: A Review
This book is essential reading on the canon, all the more so for those engaged in Roman Catholic-Protestant debate
A third reason (and the reason I picked up the book to read in the first place) has to do with his treatment of Roman Catholicism vis-a-vis the canon. Kruger is always quick to point out strengths and truth in opposing viewpoints while pointing out the extremes. In his treatment of Roman Catholicism on the... Continue Reading
What Is The Meaning of Sex?
A review of Denny Burk's new book
While there is a great deal to commend in What Is The Meaning of Sex?, let me point to just three of its most notable strengths: This book is biblical. No matter his topic, Burk never strays from a biblical text and as he looks at those texts he consistently applies careful, nuanced exegesis. This book is timely. While the... Continue Reading
‘Silent No More’: A Review
This book diagnoses the cultural maladies and prescribes biblical responses to them
Milton admits that the primary work of pastors, like himself, is the gospel ministry of Word, Sacrament, and Prayer. Fulfilling the role of shepherds, pastors are to be on watch to announce with clarity the enemies of truth who are storming the walls of our soul. So pastors, who are being faithful, must stand in... Continue Reading
Until There is No Need for a Gatekeeper
Is it right to read without discernment, to let every claim about God, his Word, and man in the gate of acceptance?
My ultimate freedom is not in my choice of books. I long for that ultimate freedom that I will have in eternity, when I will be free from sin. I won’t have to worry about separating the truth from the lie, because I will only being living in 100% pure truth. I will no longer... Continue Reading
Spiritual Formation in Emerging Adulthood
A Review of Spiritual Formation in Emerging Adulthood: A Practical Theology for College and Young Adult Ministry
This is really a fantastic resource for those who minister to, and want to understand, the present generation of 18-30 year olds. As a College Chaplain, I found the work full of practical insights that will contribute to how I relate to, communicate with, and preach the gospel to my students. David P. Setran... Continue Reading
New Books Alert: The Many Minds of Evangelicalism
Review of Apostles of Reason: The Crisis of Authority in American Evangelicalism
For Worthen, though, the problem is not that the evangelical straw man doesn’t have a brain; it has too many. The evangelicals of the American Century want to have it all: faith AND reason, status AND separateness, the Great Commission AND Great Low Prices. Molly Worthen’s Apostles of Reason: The Crisis of Authority in American... Continue Reading
Boring Grace?
A review of Tullian Tchividjian’s One Way Love- Inexhaustible Grace for an Exhausted World
There are doubtless those who live by the law and don’t quite get grace, but is that the world most of the readers of this book inhabit? Maybe it is, but maybe it has just become the accepted norm to repeat that there are lots of people out there drowning in legalism endorsed by... Continue Reading
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