Review of Richard B. Gaffin Jr.’s, “In the Fullness of Time: An Introduction to the Biblical Theology of Acts and Paul”
This book is essentially a work on eschatology, arguing that the inbreaking of the last day in Christ’s advent is a primarily encompassing feature of New Testament theology, and tracing out its implications.
Gaffin’s most recent book is a searching exploration of how to apply New Testament eschatology to the unfolding sweep of redemptive history, particularly regarding how the ascended Christ has ushered in the end of the ages by pouring out his Spirit on his church. Dr. Richard Gaffin, professor emeritus of biblical and systematic theology... Continue Reading
Christian Education in Seven Books (3)—Less Than Words Can Say
Words are the basis of rationality and self-awareness.
Just as you cannot do algebra without numbers, so you cannot know, discover or communicate meaning without clear, accurate, and precise language. It is not too much to say that bad grammar is the enemy of truth. Christians should then prioritise language, since it is the media of propositional truth. For we let our... Continue Reading
Spiritual Scoliosis
Until we come to the Lord Jesus Christ, our back will be bent under the heavy burden of our sin, and nothing we do, say, or think can change that.
We were dead (not just sick, not just dying) in our sins. We were helpless apart from the saving work of Christ. He came not to save the righteous, but to save sinners – even the chief of sinners. So why do we bristle so much at this notion? The short answer is that we probably... Continue Reading
The Mystery of Providence, An Excerpt
Excerpt taken from “The Mystery of Providence, Divine Providence: A Classic Work for Modern Readers” by Stephen Charnock and edited by Carolyn B. Whiting.
Providence is mysterious in such a way that we shortsighted souls are not able to catch the spectacle of God’s distant ends. God does not focus on the present advantage for himself and his creatures, but his eye is to his own glory in all, even to the very last ages of the world. God... Continue Reading
The Abolition of Mania
Lewis pictures the human person—philosophically considered—as being made up of three parts: the head, the belly, and the chest.
This philosophical chest joins those two parts of us that, while good in themselves, have a tendency to fly apart from each other and so become bad. Our reasonings are all too apt to evaporate into abstraction, floating upward into false spirituality, as if we weren’t also embodied, feeling creatures. Our feelings are all too... Continue Reading
Book Review: Typology by Dr. James M. Hamilton Jr.
Understanding the Bible’s Promise-Shaped Patterns
It was definitely a book I had to read slowly, but it’s also a book I’m grateful to have read. It is certainly one I will return to for reference in my preaching and teaching! Typology is a useful tool to help us better understand the Bible as well as to help others see it... Continue Reading
What the Left Fears Most: The Church Militant
Boldly, Unapologetically Defending the Faith
I am not here praising or calling for any physical militancy. After all, and unlike the aforementioned Defenders of the West, who had no choice but to fight, today’s Christians need not take up arms in a physical manner. Rather, if today’s men were simply to reclaim their manhood and start behaving like men — and, most... Continue Reading
So You’ve Been Told You Should Read Some Old Books…
Some Christian classics to consider reading.
If I had to plot out a short reading list with one book from each era, I might go in this order: The Pilgrim’s Progress, The Rare Jewel of Christian Contentment, A Little Book on the Christian Life, Holiness, Knowing God, Confessions, the Religious Affections. Either way, I hope this article brings some clarity and motivates you... Continue Reading
The Scholarly Lewis: A Review of The Medieval Mind of C.S. Lewis
Jason Baxter aims to show that, in addition to these two better known “Lewises” – the imaginative and apologetic (or devotional) – there is a “third” Lewis: Lewis the medieval scholar, a role that provided the inspiration for his imaginative and apologetic works.
In my view, chapter 5, where Baxter illuminates Dante’s influence on Lewis, is Baxter at his best. Baxter compellingly shows that in Dante Lewis found a model poet who is able to furnish our imagination with images that enable us to love God and his kingdom as we should. Dante’s images of core Christian teachings... Continue Reading
Authoritative Homes
Book Review—Liberal States, Authoritarian Families: Childhood and Education in Early Modern Thought, by Rita Coganzon
“The family,” Koganzon writes, “does prepare the child for citizenship, but not by having him rehearse civic principles from a young age. Rather it does so by inoculating him against the worst tendencies of liberalism—the tendencies to be ruled by fashion, custom, and the opinions of the majority.” This essential rootedness is in urgent demand... Continue Reading
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