Mark Driscoll on why Theology is important
Posted: June 20, 2007 Filed under: Mark Driscoll, Theology Leave a commentMark Driscoll on how America has ruined the Gospel
Posted: June 20, 2007 Filed under: Mark Driscoll, The Gospel Leave a commentMark Driscoll on the real Gospel
Posted: June 20, 2007 Filed under: Mark Driscoll, The Gospel Leave a commentMark Driscoll on the Outlaw, Jesus Christ
Posted: June 20, 2007 Filed under: Mark Driscoll Leave a commentEmerging vs. Emergent
Posted: June 20, 2007 Filed under: Emergent Church, Mark Driscoll Leave a commentJohn Piper on what it means to be saved?
Posted: June 20, 2007 Filed under: John Piper Leave a commentJohn Piper on suffering and God’s sovereignty
Posted: June 20, 2007 Filed under: John Piper Leave a commentInterview with Tony Jones from Emergent Village
Posted: June 20, 2007 Filed under: Emergent Church, Interviews, Tony Jones 1 CommentTony: I am 39 years old, I have 3 kids, and been married for 10 years. I grew up Minnesota and I live there now.
I went to a public high school then on to Dartmouth College and from there went to Fuller seminary in California. Now I am working on a PhD at Princeton Seminary.
2. What exactly is your ministry/job?
Tony: I am the National coordinator of the emergent village, and I am also a speaker and writer.
3. Who were some of your mentors or idols in life?
Tony: My youth pastor, my Latin and Greek professor, also a guy named Bob Guelich who wrote a great commentary on the Sermon on the Mount, and others are Nancey Murphy, Jim McLendon, and Miroslav Volf.
4. How do you view the gospel?
Tony: I would say, Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John. Actually, Genesis through maps, it is the whole bible. It’s all about the life, death, burial and resurrection of Jesus Christ and the story of that event.
5. Do you believe the gospel is meant for believers or unbelievers?
Tony: I would say that it is meant for all of creation. It is made to be our liberation and transformation. It’s for everyone
6. What do you think the emergent village is doing in helping the means of the gospel in today’s culture?
Tony: We are opening up space to help the people in today’s culture act or live out the gospel. Today’s people have problems with 20th century church and we are trying to make space on what it means to be a Christian so that they can live that out.
Tony: We use media, and blogs, cell phones and social networking sites. It’s always been the poor and women that didn’t have a voice. So we want to give everyone a chance to be heard. We also have people getting together at events, parties, face to face conversations, and just talk with one another. Christianity has always been an ongoing conversation, about who Jesus is and what theology is. So we are just trying to make that happen.
Tony: Yes, I have had some contact with him and have a great deal of respect for him.
Tony: I would say that there are a lot of emergent churches that follow Tim Keller’s approach. Since the emergent church does have just one method, we tend to take after others such as Dr. Keller.
10. Lastly, what do you believe the emergent village has to offer this country in America, that we so badly need?
Tony: Off the top of my head, the American culture needs to see the way we understand God, bible and truth, is a fluid thing. It is a process of ever changing thought, and it continues to grow constantly through history. The American culture needs to see God the best way they can, and we are all on the quest to figure out who God is.
Why You Should Read the Puritans: Part Ten
Posted: June 20, 2007 Filed under: Joel Beeke, Puritans Leave a comment8. Puritan writings teach the importance and primacy of preaching.
To the Puritans, preaching was the high point of public worship. Preaching must be expository and didactic, they said; evangelistic and convicting, experiential and applicatory, powerful and “plain” in its presentation, ever respecting the sovereignty of the Holy Spirit.
If you would help evangelicals recover the pulpit and a high view of the ministry in our day, read Puritan sermons. Read William Perkins’s The Art of Prophesying and Richard Baxter’s The Reformed Pastor.
Why You Should Read the Puritans: Part Nine
Posted: June 19, 2007 Filed under: Joel Beeke, Puritans Leave a commentThe Puritans were excellent covenant theologians. They lived covenant theology, covenanting themselves, their families, their churches, and their nations to God. Yet they did not fall into the error of hyp
er-covenantalism, in which the covenant of grace becomes a substitute for personal conversion. They promoted a comprehensive worldview, a total Christian philosophy, a holistic approach of bringing the whole gospel to bear on all of life, striving to bring every action in conformity with Christ, so that believers would mature and grow in faith. The Puritans wrote on practical subjects such as how to pray, how to develop genuine piety, how to conduct family worship, and how to raise children for Christ. In short, they taught how to develop a “rational, resolute, passionate piety [that is] conscientious without becoming obsessive, law-oriented without lapsing into legalism, and expressive of Christian liberty without any shameful lurches into license” (ibid., xii).If you would grow in practical Christianity and vital piety, read the compilation of The Puritans on Prayer, Richard Steele’s The Character of an Upright Man, George Hamond’s Case for Family Worship, Cotton Mather’s Help for Distressed Parents, and Arthur Hildersham’s Dealing with Sin in Our Children.
Why You Should Read the Puritans: Part Eight
Posted: June 15, 2007 Filed under: Joel Beeke, Puritans Leave a comment6. Puritan writings explain true spirituality.
The Puritans stress the spirituality of the law, spiritual warfare against indwelling sin, the childlike fear of God, the wonder of grace, the art of meditation, the dreadfulness of hell, and the glories of heaven. If you want to live deep as a Christian, read Oliver Heywood’s Heart Treasure. Read the Puritans devotionally, and then pray to be like them. Ask questions such as: Am I, like the Puritans, thirsting to glorify the Triune God? Am I motivated by biblical truth and biblical fire? Do I share their view of the vital necessity of conversion and of being clothed with the righteousness of Christ? Do I follow them as far as they followed Christ?
John Piper on Joy in the Supremacy of Christ in a Postmodern World
Posted: June 15, 2007 Filed under: John Piper Leave a commentWhy You Should Read the Puritans: Part Seven
Posted: June 15, 2007 Filed under: Joel Beeke, Puritans Leave a comment5. Puritan writings show you how to handle trials.
Puritanism grew out of a great struggle between the truth of God’s Word and its enemies. Reformed Christianity was under attack in Great Britain, much like Reformed Christianity is under attack today. The Puritans were good soldiers in the conflict, enduring great hardships and suffering much. Their lives and their writings stand ready to arm us for our battles, and to encourage us in our suffering. The Puritans teach us how we need affliction to humble us (Deut. 8:2), to teach us what sin is (Zeph. 1:12), and how that brings us to God (Hos. 5:15). As Robert Leighton wrote, “Affliction is the diamond dust that heaven polishes its jewels with.” The Puritans show us how God’s rod of affliction is His means to write Christ’s image more fully upon us, so that we may be partakers of His righteousness and holiness (Heb. 12:10–11).
If you would learn how to handle your trials in a truly Christ-exalting way, read Thomas Boston’s The Crook in the Lot: The Sovereignty and Wisdom of God Displayed in the Afflictions of Men.
John Piper on the Supremacy of Christ
Posted: June 14, 2007 Filed under: John Piper 2 CommentsI will go as far as saying this might be the best 10 minutes I have ever heard on the Supremacy of Christ, and may be the best 10 minutes i have ever spent in listening to any message.
John Piper: A problem with Christians in Evangelicalism
Posted: June 14, 2007 Filed under: John Piper Leave a commentWhy You Should Read the Puritans: Part Six
Posted: June 14, 2007 Filed under: Joel Beeke, Puritans Leave a commentJohn Piper on the prosperity gospel
Posted: June 13, 2007 Filed under: John Piper, The Gospel Leave a commentWhy You Should Read the Puritans: Part Five
Posted: June 13, 2007 Filed under: Joel Beeke, Puritans Leave a comment
e: “Christ is the sum of the whole Bible, prophesied, typified, prefigured, exhibited, demonstrated, to be found in every leaf, almost in every line, the Scriptures being but as it were the swaddling bands of the child Jesus.” Likewise, the Puritan Isaac Ambrose wrote, “Think of Christ as the very substance, marrow, soul, and scope of the whole Scriptures.”The Puritans loved Christ and exalted in His beauty. Samuel Rutherford wrote: “Put the beauty of ten thousand worlds of paradises, like the Garden of Eden in one; put all trees, all flowers, all smells, all colors, all tastes, all joys, all loveliness, all sweetness in one. O what a fair and excellent thing would that be? And yet it would be less to that fair and dearest well-beloved Christ than one drop of rain to the whole seas, rivers, lakes, and foundations of ten thousand earths.”
If you would know Christ better and love Him more fully, immerse yourself in Puritan literature. Read Robert Asty’s Rejoicing in the Lord Jesus.
Why You Should Read the Puritans: Part Four
Posted: June 12, 2007 Filed under: Joel Beeke, Puritans Leave a comment First, they address your mind. In keeping with the Reformed tradition, the Puritans refused to set mind and heart against each other, but viewed the mind as the palace of faith. “In conversion, reason is elevated,” John Preston wrote.
The Puritans understood that a mindless Christianity fosters a spineless Christianity. An anti-intellectual gospel quickly becomes an empty, formless gospel that never gets beyond “felt needs,” which is something that is happening in many churches today. Puritan literature is a great help for understanding the vital connection between what we believe with our minds and how that affects the way we live. Jonathan Edwards’s Justification by Faith Alone and William Lyford’s The Instructed Christian are particularly helpful for this.
Second, Puritan writings confront your conscience. The Puritans are masters at convicting us about the heinous nature of our sin against an infinite God. They excel at exposing specific sins, then asking questions to press home conviction of those sins. As one Puritan wrote, “We must go with the stick of divine truth a
nd beat every bush behind which a sinner hides, until like Adam who hid, he stands before God in his nakedness.”Devotional reading should be confrontational as well as comforting. We grow little if our consciences are not pricked daily and directed to Christ. Since we are prone to run for the bushes when we feel threatened, we need daily help to be brought before the living God “naked and opened unto the eyes of with whom we have to do” (Heb. 4:12). In this, the Puritans excel. If you truly want to learn what sin is and experience how sin is worse than suffering, read Jeremiah Burroughs’s The Evil of Evils and Thomas Shepard’s The Sincere Convert and the Sound Believer.
Third, the Puritan writers engage your heart. They excel in feeding the mind with solid biblical substance and they move the heart with affectionate warmth. They write out of love for God’s Word, love for the glory of God, and love for the soul of readers.
For books that beautifully balance objective truth and subjective experience in Christianity; books that combine, as J.I. Packer puts it, “clear-headed passion and warm-hearted compassion” (Ryken, Worldly Saints, x); books that inform your mind, confront your conscience, and engage your heart, read the Puritans. Read Vincent Alsop’s Practical Godliness.


