7 Lessons from 50 Shades of Grey
What can the 50 Shades phenomenon teach us today?
50 Shades may be a wake-up call for the individual and corporate drifting that has been at play in our lives. It may be a spotlight shining on the pain of the vulnerable in our society. It might be an alarm bell sounding a message of danger ahead if we do not change. But it... Continue Reading
Review: Conjugal Union: What Marriage Is And Why It Matters
'What Is Marriage?' can be credited for reviving natural law arguments about the nature of marriage within the public square as well as the evangelical world.
Conjugal Union isn’t a book about the Bible’s view on marriage; it’s a philosophical account that works out the ethical and legal ramifications of a controversial view. But it’s the kind of book that will help us read the Bible and other books better, as it will reward patient and attentive readers with new thoughts on... Continue Reading
Masculinity and Family Values: The Cure to Society’s Ills?
What is the effect of rampant individualism on America and the church?
I’m very skeptical about “Christian” patriarchy and the Family Integrated Church movement for biblical and (Reformed) theological reasons. I’m also skeptical of these things for social (or sociological) reasons. I agree with many of the points made by the authors of Habits of the Heart: Individualism and Commitment in American Life. Here’s an excerpt from... Continue Reading
A More Generous Calvinism
A review of Oliver Crisp's book, Deviant Calvinism: Broadening Reformed Theology
This is not the first book I’ve read by Oliver Crisp, nor will it be the last. Even when exploring “liminal places” (3), his theology is deeply informed by and respectful of the Reformed tradition. This work is no exception. The history is informative, the breadth of knowledge striking, and the arguments provocative. One can... Continue Reading
Cross-Contamination at the Lord’s Table
Thomas Oden wrote his book, Requiem, after a chapel service at Drew University introducing the goddess Sophia as worthy of Christian worship
I love how Oden didn’t merely focus on the seminary and the religious professionals. He wrote a book to expose them to the congregants who were affected by this poison. Discerning worshippers had already been noticing something different being preached from their pulpits. When theology is reduced to ideology, it’s the local church that is... Continue Reading
On Friendship: A Review of “The Company We Keep”
True Christian friendship has to do with Christ’s work for his people – friends are also brothers and sisters in Christ
If you’ve been thinking about friendship, desire good friendships (or if you think negatively about friendships!) I highly recommend this booklet: The Company We Keep by Jonathan Holmes. It’s a brief (just over 100 small pages), concise (to the point), and clear (outlined and explained well) biblical discussion of Christian friendship. The contents include 1)... Continue Reading
Divided By Reason (Book Review)
Worthen narrates a gripping tale, cohering a clunky, disparate constellation of religious groups
“Worthen finds this intellectual project of postwar evangelicalism largely to be a failure, and she explains why. It produced pseudo-intellectuals like Lindsay and Schaeffer. It fashioned a theological scheme of inerrancy that seemed primarily intended to police ecclesiastical boundaries. And, in the end, the movement’s constituents did not agree on much.” In 1994, historian... Continue Reading
Preaching: More Than Teaching
The hard part is preaching it in such a way that God’s people see how his Word is applicable to and practical in all areas of faith and life.
“If the goal [of preaching] is solid biblical teaching, then a sermon full of the truth always comes up trumps. But if the goal of expository preaching is that God’s Word changes lives – converting sinners and sanctifying saints – then, all of the sudden, the stakes are much higher…. If the point of preaching... Continue Reading
The Last Act Is Bloody. Always Bloody.
The denial of death, or at least of the necessary horror at death, has come to infect our world.
“I have remarked in the past that too often Christians celebrate the resurrection of Christ from the grave without really acknowledging why he was in the grave in the first place. We jump from Good Friday to Easter Sunday without lingering outside the tomb. That explains not simply the Malarkey incident but also much of... Continue Reading
Modern Bible Is Too Dull, Says Philip Pullman
“Speaking of the demise of the King James Bible and the Book of Common Prayer, the author said: ‘I do regret that children don’t have this experience of language which is grand and stately, and above their heads if you like. Because it gave me an immense amount of pleasure to hear the cadences and... Continue Reading
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