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soul-of-lifeRHB is giving away 5 copies of The Soul of Life: The Piety of John Calvin, by Dr. Joel R. Beeke to some of the followers of The Gospel Coalition Network.

FOLLOW THEM HERE!

Book Information: 
John Calvin is the most notable figure from the Reformed tradition. Unfortunately, he is often characterized as a stern and cerebral individual who had little concern for practical matters. However, Calvin was actually influential in promoting a profound sense of piety among early Protestantism. In “The Soul of Life”, Joel R. Beeke presents the life and ministry of Calvin with a special emphasis on Calvin’s efforts for cultivating healthy spirituality among the churches. The selections from Calvin’s own work will give readers a firsthand look at Calvin’s emphasis on godliness, and by God’s grace, will be a means for spurring on greater godliness in our day.


An Expert Searcher

For thus saith the Lord God; Behold, I, even I, will both search my sheep, and seek them out. (Ezekiel 34:11)

This He does at the first when His elect are like wandering sheep that know not the Shepherd or the fold. How wonderfully doth the Lord find out His chosen! Jesus is great as a seeking Shepherd as well as a saving Shepherd. Though many of those His Father gave Him have gone as near to hell-gate as they well can, yet the Lord by searching and seeking discovers them and draws nigh to them in grace. He has sought out us: let us have good hope for those who are laid upon our hearts in prayer, for He will find them out also.

The Lord repeats this process when any of His flock stray from the pastures of truth and holiness. They may fall into gross error, sad sin, and grievous hardness; but yet the Lord, who has become a surety for them to His Father, will not suffer one of them to go so far as to perish. He will by providence and grace pursue them into foreign lands, into abodes of poverty, into dens of obscurity, into depths of despair; He will not lose one of all that the Father has given Him. It is a point of honor with Jesus to seek and to save all the flock, without a single exception. What a promise to plead, if at this hour I am compelled to cry, “I have gone astray like a lost sheep!”


Conference in the Philippines

(Posted by Brian Golez Najapfour)

We have good news. I just talked this afternoon with Dr. Beeke about the upcoming conference in Manila. He said to me that someone graciously donated money for the conference to make it FREE for whoever wants to attend. No conference fee; food is free; books are free; everything is free. What a blessing! We really praise the Lord for that!

Please forward this good news to our fellow laborers there in the Philippines. 

WHEN: May 4-5, 2009 Registration starts at 8:00 a.m.

WHERE: Faith Baptist Church, #4 Bulletin St. Corner West Ave. West Triangle, Quezon City

For more information about the conference, visit here.


Christians, Luther Stood for our Faith!

I did NOT think about it, but JT did. Thanks to him for this reminder.


PRTS Distance Learning

(Posted by Chris Engelsma, Director of Distance Learning at PRTS)

Those of you who always wondered what goes on in a seminary classroom can now have your question answered.  Anyone can now purchase a PRTS course for $40 per course.  You will receive access to the course homepage where you can download all the materials a normal student would.  If you go to the seminary’s course website  you can browse a list of courses, read descriptions of the courses, listen to the first lecture, see the syllabus, and make a purchase.  Check it out!


Look for Me at The Gospel Coalition Conference

Are you attending the Gospel Coalition Conference? If so, be sure to find me at the RHB table. I will be selling ALL Reformation Heritage Books and Soli Deo Gloria titles for those who are attendees at the conference for massive discount, like a 50% OFF of their retail value discount!!! This is a great chance for you (if attending) to be able to afford the books you want, and at prices you can afford. 

Also, I heard that Puritan Reformed Theological Seminary will be there as well, passing out FREE copies of their 1st Theological Journal, while supplies last that it.

I hope to see you their! 

 

 


From The Calvin500 Tour

Calvin500 is an international, interdenominational, and interdisciplinary commemoration of the life and work of John Calvin (b. 1509). Climaxing with conferences in multiple locations in 2009, this celebration combines history, spirituality, and culture to recall appropriately the life and work of the Genevan Reformer.

Dr. David W. Hall, Executive Director of Calvin500, stated its four purposeful aims as: (1) to encourage Reformed institutions, groups, and councils to have their own autonomous celebration of Calvin’s legacy during 2009; (2) to publish a commemorative series of books (below) highlighting Calvin’s work and life; (3) to host a historical tour of the major French and Swiss sites of Calvinistic heritage in 2009; and (4) to sponsor two conferences in historic Geneva in July 2009, one academic and one for expository preaching.

This multi-faceted approach seeks to introduce many people to one of the most important thinkers in history. Participants may find information about or register for the tour/conferences online at our website. We are seeking to inform a new generation about the positive contributions of Calvin. Since many people have heard only or primarily negative assessments of Calvin, in some respects we will be re-telling parts of the narrative that have been ignored or forgotten by a modernity that has often been venomous toward Calvin.

Hundreds of people will gather at St. Pierre Cathedral in Geneva, July 5-10, to commemorate this occasion. Leading up to that and in Geneva, tour participants will visit historic sites for themselves and see the major sites of Calvinistic heritage. We invite all to join us. You may register for the conference with 38 sessions

Among our speakers are: Anthony N. S. Lane (England), Herman Selderhuis (Holland), Joel Beeke (USA), Sinclair Ferguson (Scotland), W. Robert Godfrey (USA), Henri Blocher (France), Geoffrey Thomas (Wales), Ted Donnelly (Ireland), John Witte, Jr (Canada), Martin Holdt (South Africa), Jae Sung Kim (Korea), and Henry Orombi (Uganda),

A complete program for the conference is posted on our “Speakers” page. Free downloads are available here.

We also sponsor an up-to-date blog with posts, reviews, comments, and information here.

Eight volumes will be published between 2008 and 2010 by Presbyterian &Reformed to commemorate John Calvin.

Those eight volumes are:

1. The Legacy of John Calvin (which begins by highlighting ways that Calvin impacted the world, followed by a brief biography and tributes). This is a short, non-technical introduction to Calvin.

2. A Theological Guide to Calvin’s Institutes: Essays and Analysis (Co-edited with Peter Lillback); this volume contains essays, each of which focuses on a section from Calvin’s Institutes by 20 top Calvin scholars. This will serve as a natural companion to Calvin studies.

3. Calvinism and Political Ideas. This volume traces the ideas and impact of Calvin and his disciples on political and governmental concepts.

4. The Commemorating Calvin Conference will contain 18 expository sermons delivered from Calvin’s pulpit in Geneva July 5-9, 2009, by some of the finest Calvinist preachers today.

5. The Tribute Conference will contain 20 research essays by leading Calvinist academics; delivered in the Auditoire (the original site of Calvin’s Academy) in Geneva, July 6-9, 2009.

6. The Capitalistic Ethic and the Spirit of Calvinism (with Matthew Burton) is a study of Calvin’s teachings on business, finance, charity, and economic matters.

7. Calvin and Culture: An Enduring Worldview (co-edited with Marvin Padgett) is a collection of essays by practitioners of various academic disciplines. Each chapter will focus on how Calvinism impacts an area of human life such as law, art, education, economics, history, medicine, etc.

8. The Piety of John Calvin, a reprint of an anthology originally collected by Ford Battles, which focuses on the practical albeit oft-ignored spirituality of the Reformer.

We cordially invite our friends to join us in Geneva for these historic conferences. We hope to celebrate the positive aspects of the Reformed faith and inspire future generations as well.


Children at the Lord’s Table

The Post below is by Dr. R. Scott Clarkblogger and professor of Church History and Historical Theology atWestminster Seminary California. You can read Dr. Clark’s first post in the series here or the second one here.  

Buy a copy of the book here.


Calvin 500 Conference Schedule

Calvin 500 Conference Schedule here.


Eric Alexander Website

Letting you know about a new website dedicated to the life and ministry of Eric Alexander. You can find out about it from my (Th.M. brother) Nicholas T. Batzig post here, or go here.


Close Fellowship

And they shall teach no more every man his neighbor, and every man his brother, saying, Know the Lord: for they shall all know me, from the least of them unto the greatest of them, saith the Lord. (Jeremiah 31:34)

Truly, whatever else we do not know, we know the Lord. This day is this promise true in our experience, and it is not a little one. The least believer among us knows God in Christ Jesus. Not as fully as we desire; but yet truly and really we know the Lord. We not only know doctrines about Him, but we know Him. He is our Father and our Friend. We are acquainted with Him personally. We can say, “My Lord, and my God.” We are on terms of close fellowship with God, and many a happy season do we spend in His holy company. We are no more strangers to our God, but the secret of the Lord is with us.

This is more than nature could have taught us. Flesh and blood has not revealed God to us. Christ Jesus had made known the Father to our hearts. If, then, the Lord has made us know Himself, is not this the fountain of all saving knowledge? To know God is eternal life. So soon as we come to acquaintance with God we have the evidence of being quickened into newness of life. O my soul, rejoice in this knowledge, and bless thy God all this day!


Thoughts for your Saturday

God has a fatherly care over us.

“Now if we are so much bound to a mortal man as to maintain his honour when we are kept at his expense, what ought we to do for our God? Are we not in his house as long as we live in this world? Have we so much as one drop of water except by his goodness and generosity? Behold, God has a fatherly care over us, and yet we allow his name to be blasphemed, his majesty to be robbed and spoiled of all reverence, his Word to be torn in pieces, all order (that he has commanded) to be broken, the church (which is his wife) to be corrupted and misused, and his children to be debauched, and in the meanwhile we keep our mouths closed. I ask you, whether such silence does not sufficiently show that we are not worthy to eat one more morsel of bread, nor to be counted in the number of earthworm, lice, bugs, and all the vilest and filthiest things of the world?

Therefore let us think well upon it, that we shall be found guilty of the despising of God’s majesty (as we see) because we do not rebuke men’s vices. That is a reason why the wicked and profane become bolder and imagine they have won all to their side, and triumph in their despising of God in that way. It comes partly as a result of our silence.”

John Calvin, Sermons on Ephesians, p. 525


We’re Losing


Eostre and the Hare

(Resurgence) 

When Pope Gregory the Great (540-604) sent missionaries to the British Isles, he instructed them to adapt the existing religious places and festivals for Christian use. He wrote, “Since the people are accustomed, when they assemble for sacrifice, to kill many oxen in sacrifice to the devils, it seems reasonable to appoint a festival for the people by way of exchange. The people must learn to slay their cattle not in honor of the devil, but in honor of God and for their own food…” Because the celebration of the Resurrection replaced the old spring feast of Eostre, the Christian holiday came to be called Easter, and Eostre’s pet animal the hare apparently came along for the ride.


Question of the day…

Question: Why do we expect or accept less out of a Youth Pastor or a Children’s Pastor then a Senior or Associate Pastor when it comes to the ministry of the church, and the people in it?

Problem in the church: Then we wonder why so many teenagers are leaving the church at the age of 18 and 19? 

My Answer: Could it not be because of the lack of good, sound Biblical Teaching that is thick and meaty for them to continue in growth?But yet we instead sing songs that make you jump up and down, videos to make you ask 101 more questions and a bible stories that give you a good moralistic value to apply to being a good person in life.

Maybe the whole mind-set of, “as long at they don’t get pageant, don’t drink heavy, and don’t do drugs then we made a good kid” doesn’t work? 

You have any thoughts?


Saved by Grace?

Read here.


Children at the Lord’s Table? Review

So you know, Dr. R. Scott Clark started his review of Dr. Venema’s Children at the Lord’s Table? today. This first post is more the background for the review. It looks like he will review the book in multiple posts.


10 Reasons Why to be a Professor

#1 You can say anything you want and get away with it, because you have a Ph.D.

#2 You can wear a suite coat with anything, jeans, t-shirt, or even shorts!

#3 You can wear jeans to teach class and no-one can say one thing. Why? Because you have a Ph.D. and that is allowed.

#4 You can grade subjectively, you do me wrong, you get a D. You bring me coffee, and you get an A. 

#5 You can have a coffee marker in your office!

#6 You can have any hair-style you want, and it will be acceptable. Why? Because you’ll have a Ph.D. and that is allowed. 

#7 You can wear outfits that don’t match, but it will be acceptable. Why? Because you’ll have a Ph.D. and that is allowed.

#8 You can fish all summer long!!!

#9 You can pull a cigar or pipe out of your suite -coat pocket and smoke in class. Why? Because you’ll have a Ph.D. and that is allowed.

#10 You can assign 30 page papers to 18 year-olds on a subject you need to learn about, and learn from them.

 

You have any to add?


The Calvin500 Tour is becoming more affordable!

 

For those seeking a more economic approach to The Calvin500 Tour, flights have dropped about 25% recently. If you wish, you can now pick up a flight to Paris and return from Geneva for just a little over $800 (Like I have done), that’s down dramatically! Then register for the Conference Only Package before May 15th for the best price, and seek lodging on your own. Some hotels will offer specials, so check Expedia.com or Tripadvisor.com.
 
A once-in-a-lifetime opportunity may be more affordable than ever!
 
Join me in Geneva!! And if so, let me know because I am looking for a roommate while there! 

Doug Wilson on Baptism

Douglas Wilson writes:

“In a sacrament we have a covenantal union between the sign and the thing signified. The Roman Catholic position destroys the possibility of having a sacrament through identifying the sign with the thing signified. The modern evangelical position destroys the definition of a sacrament through divorcing the sign and the thing signified. In this position, the sign is a mere memorial of that to which it points, and thus there can be no sacramental union between the two.”

Taken from —> Douglas Wilson, Mother Kirk: Essays and Forays in Practical Ecclesiology (Moscow, ID: Canon Press, 2001), p. 93.

Seems neither Catholic nor Reformed to me, maybe Eastern Orthodox? What do you think?

 


Pastor In A Box Easter Marketing Stunt

You might be a Calvinist if… this gets under your skin!

Watch video here!

See the website here —> Pastor In A Box Easter Marketing Stunt

(From A Little Leaven-Blog)

Let the Easter circus stunts begin! Calvary Church in Irving Texas is promising to put their pastor in a six foot, clear plastic box on top of the church for three days if 4,000 people show up for Easter weekend. The potentially boxed pastor, Ben Dailey, says:

“This might be cheesy, but what can I say? I am passionate about the church getting out and being the church, not just within our walls, but outside of them as well. It’s time for the church to get out of the box and let our world know that we serve a great God and have fun doing it.”


God’s Hornets

And I will send hornets before thee, which shall drive out the Hivite, the Canaanite, and the Hittite, from before thee. (Exodus 23:28)

What the hornets were we need not consider. They were God’s own army which He sent before His people to sting their enemies and render Israel’s conquest easy. Our God by His own chosen means will fight for His people and gall their foes before they come into the actual battle. Often He confounds the adversaries of truth by methods in which reformers themselves have no hand. The air is full of mysterious influences which harass Israel’s foes. We read in the Apocalypse that “the earth helped the woman.”

Let us never fear. The stars in their courses fight against the enemies of our souls. Oftentimes when we march to the conflict we find no host to contend with. “The Lord shall fight for you, and ye shall hold your peace.” God’s hornets can do more than our weapons. We could never dream of the victory being won by such means as Jehovah will use. We must obey our marching orders and go forth to the conquest of the nations for Jesus, and we shall find that the Lord has gone before us and prepared the way; so that in the end we will joyfully confess, “His own right hand and his holy arm, have gotten him the victory.”


Doug Wilson on the NPP

Douglas Wilson has noted six foundational principles of the New Perspective on Paul. 

  1. Justification by faith was present in the Old Testament as well as the New Testament.
  2. Faith and works are not opposed to one another in the Bible. Faith was always present, even in the Old Testament. The Jews were not trying to earn anything by works.
  3. Law and grace are not opposed to one another, or that the Old Testament was mostly law and the New Testament was mostly grace.
  4. Paul’s focus was not individual salvation.
  5. Judaism was not a religion based on salvation by works or merit.
  6. Judaism satisfied Paul’s burden of guilt; rather than what the Old Perspective thought, that Judaism could not ease Paul’s conscience.

From —> Douglas Wilson, “A Pauline Take on the New Perspective,” Credenda/Agenda, 15(5). I have turned the negatives of the original into positive affirmations to make it easier to understand.


Doug Wilson writes on N. T. Wright

“I believe that N. T. Wright has many particular things of great value to offer the Church. But it is here, in his treatment of the unconverted Saul, that I think his entire project (taken as a whole) goes astray. The converted Saul had a much lower estimate of his pre-Christian activities than do many advocates of the NPP. … But after his conversion, Saul described himself as a wicked and insolent man. I have no doubt that Saul was looking forward to the vindication of God for all Torah-keepers like himself. But when God did intervene, it was to reveal that Saul was actually a Torah-breaker. On the Damascus road, Saul discovered more than who Jesus was. He discovered who Saul was—an evil man, and one who in substance and at the fundamental level, despised and hated the Torah.” 

Taken from —> Douglas Wilson, Saul as Torah-Breaker All of Wilson’s interaction with and criticism of Wright’s work can be found on his blog under N. T. Wrights and Wrongs.


Dr. Cornelis Venema will be a guest

April 29, 2009 2:00 PM EDT (11:00 AM PDT): Dr. Cornelis Venema will be a guest on the program to discuss his latest book: Children at the Lord’s Table: Assessing the Case for Paedocommunion.

While studying at Princeton Theological Seminary from 1979-1981, Dr. Venema was a Teaching Fellow in the Department of Theology. He served as pastor of the First Christian Reformed Church of Ontario, California, for six years before coming to Mid-America Reformed Seminary. Dr. Venema serves as President of the Seminary in addition to his systematic theology teaching responsibilities. He serves as an elder in his church and preaches on a regular basis. Dr. Venema also speaks and teaches in a variety of church and conference settings.

His special interest lies in Reformation theology, particularly the work of the Reformers John Calvin and Heinrich Bullinger. Dr. Venema’s most recent book, Heinrich Bullinger and the Doctrine of Predestination: Author of “The Other Reformed Tradition”?, reflects this interest. He is the author of several other books including But for the Grace of God: An Exposition of the Canons of Dort; What We Believe: An Exposition of the Apostles’ Creed; and The Promise of the Future. Dr. Venema is a co-editor and frequent contributor to The Outlook and the Mid-America Journal of Theology.