Why Public Prayer Is About More Than Culture Wars
Most of us support voluntary public prayer not because we oppose the separation of church and state but because we support it
A prayer, by definition, isn’t a speech made to a public audience but is instead a petition made to a higher Being. For the government to censor such prayers is to turn the government into a theological referee, and would, in fact, establish a state religion: a state religion of generic American civil religious mush... Continue Reading
A Review of A Year of Biblical Womanhood
With all the research that Evans does, she seemingly doesn’t understand the basic principles of biblical hermeneutics
Evans believes that we read what we are looking for in Scripture, that it really is like a wax nose. Therefore, she encourages readers to read with a prejudice of love rather than power, self-interest, and greed. Ultimately, I’m afraid that my concerns move beyond Evans’ problems with interpretation, and straight to her view of... Continue Reading
Mind and Cosmos
A review of Thomas Nagel's book, Mind and Cosmos: Why the Materialist Neo-Darwinian Conception of Nature is Almost Certainly False
The core thesis of Mind and Cosmos can be simply stated. Darwinian materialism has failed to account for several undeniable features of human existence: consciousness, reason, meaning, and moral values. The problem is not that the answers haven’t yet been found, but rather that the paradigm itself precludes any satisfactory answers. All attempts to explain the mental and... Continue Reading
God in My Everything
A review of Ken Shigematsu's book directed at helping Christians develop a full-orbed spiritual life
There were, to my mind two significant shortcomings to the book, that are related. The first is an real appreciation for the role of the church in the spiritual life of the individual. He does have a place for attendance at worship, but that seems to be the extent the involvement of the church. The... Continue Reading
Review: The Gospel Call and True Conversion
A review of Paul Washer's latest book.
The aim of The Gospel Call and True Conversion is to present a thorough treatment of repentance and genuine conversion. According to Washer, gospel reductionism has filled our churches with false converts. Paul Washer. The Gospel Call and True Conversion. Grand Rapids, MI: Reformation Heritage Books, 2013. 200 pp. $20.00. Many millennials have fallen victim to easy believism.... Continue Reading
How on Earth Did Jesus Become a God?
A review of Larry Hurtado's book on worship of Jesus in the early Church
Hurtado concludes, therefore, that the earliest devotion to Jesus was in some sense “binitarian.” Christians worshiped Jesus not a second god, but worshiped him alongside the one true God of the Jews. Such a radical and astounding “mutation” within early monotheistic Judaism cannot be accounted for, argues Hurtado, by the evolutionary model (or, for that matter, most... Continue Reading
Art, Nakedness, and Redemption
Scripture and history indicate that nudity in art (and now film) is not actually the domain of the mature, the wise, or those engaged in “redemptive activity"
To reject nudity in art and film is no denial of artistic ability, nor of created beauty. It is a realistic, careful, humble acknowledgment of God’s redemptive work in Christ and His precepts for a grace transformed, holy, happy life in a fallen world. This includes the need for covering nakedness. Real redemptive activity seeks... Continue Reading
An Addendum to Crazy Busy?
Thoughts on Kevin DeYoung's book on busyness
I’ve not mastered “busyness” myself and fully expect a lifelong battle to maintain a healthy work/life balance, but here are some practical ideas that have helped me over the past few years. Obviously they are ministry focused, but many of them can be applied more generally as well: I thoroughly enjoyed reading Kevin DeYoung’s... Continue Reading
Covenantal Apologetics
A review of K. Scott Oliphint's Covenantal Apologetics: Principles and Practice in Defense of Our Faith.
One of the greatest strengths of Oliphint’s project is that, in a covenantal apologetic, there is no clear boundary between apologetics and evangelism. As Oliphint reiterates throughout his work, apologetics ought to be understood foremost as persuasion; persuading men and women of the truth of the Gospel. K. Scott Oliphint, Covenantal Apologetics: Principles and Practice... Continue Reading
Noll, the Evangelical Mind, and the Elephants in the Room
A critique of The Scandal of the Evangelical Mind
The most interesting part of Noll’s criticism is the fact that he chooses not to look closely at his own brand of evangelicalism: the Reformed churches. When Mark Noll’s Scandal of the Evangelical Mind hit the market in the early 1990s it created a “title” wave that continues to move out in multiple directions. This fact... Continue Reading
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