Thursday, June 26, 2008

Book Review: The Outrageous Idea of Academic Faithfulness

The following book has been reviewed by David Wenkel. You can read this review at SharperIron.org.

Opitz, Donald, and Derek Melleby. The Outrageous Idea of Academic Faithfulness: A Guide for Students. Grand Rapids: Brazos Press, 2007. 144 pp. Softcover. $13.99.

(Review copy courtesy of Baker Publishing Group.)

Purchase: Brazos Press | CBD | Amazon

ISBNs: 1587432102 / 9781587432101

Excerpt: Table of Contents, Introduction and Chapter 1

Derek Melleby (M.A., Geneva College) is the director of the College Transition Initiative for the Center for Parent/Youth Understanding in Elizabethtown, Pennsylvania, through a unique partnership with the Coalition for Christian Outreach.

Donald Opitz (Ph.D., Boston University) is associate professor of sociology and higher education at Geneva College in Beaver Falls, Pennsylvania. He is the author of numerous articles and has worked as a pastor and a campus minister.


Click here to learn more about SharperIron book reviews. We're looking for reviewers for both TheoSource and SharperIron. If you are interested in this ministry please send me an email.
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Tuesday, June 24, 2008

Book News and Notes

I would like to share some newsworthy book notes with you from the past couple of weeks:
What have I missed?
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Monday, June 23, 2008

John Lafayette Girardeau (1825-1898)





(November 14, 1825 - June 23, 1898)

Before moving to Charleston, SC I was introduced to John L. Girardeau by Prof. Willborn at Greenville Presbyterian Theological Seminary. I have not read it, but he wrote his dissertation on Girardeau. My family and I traveled back and forth from Greenville to Charleston for over six months before we made the move, and I spent as much time as possible trying to track down information on the life and ministry of Girardeau.

His son-in-law, the Rev. George A. Blackburn, put together an excellent biography and a collection of sermons which have been reprinted by Sprinkle Publications:

Blackburn, George A., editor, The Life Work of John L. Girardeau, D.D., LL.D. (Sprinkle Publications, nd), 412 pp.

See also:
Kelly, Douglas. Preachers with Power: Four Stalwarts of the South, (Edinburgh: Banner of Truth Trust, 1992), 198 pp. [Amazon | WTS | CBD]

Girardeau was born on James Island, immediately south of the city. His parents, John Bohun and Claudia Herne Freer Girardeau, were of Huegenot descent and were members of the Presbyterian Church on the island (ie. James Island Presbyterian Church). (Columbia, S.C. : The State Co., 1916), 432 pp.

This church was planted in 1706 by the Rev. Archibald Stobo (a very interesting man, too). The building shown (left) was erected in 1908. Girardeau's mother died when he was seven years old and was buried in the church's graveyard.

After he finished his seminary training, Girardeau began to preach for the Congregational Church of Wappetaw, which met in the Parish of Christ's Church. He preached there for six months (Nov. 9, 1848-May 1849). In 1849, Girardeau accepted the call to preach at Wilton Presbyterian Church. He commenced to preach on June 10, 1849 and was called to the pastorate in the spring of 1850. He was ordained and installed (officially under the Charleston Presbytery) on June 9, 1850, and served this church until November, 1853. The work here was simple but formative. It was during these years that he became increasingly burdened to expend himself as a minister of the Gospel to the numerous slaves in the South Carolina Lowcountry.

In 1853, Girardeau took the pastorate of Dr. Adger's congregation in Charleston (Zion Church). This church originally met on Anson street where a Reformed Episcopal congregation now meets. Having outgrown that location a new sanctuary was erected at the corner of Calhoun and Meeting Street. The site is marked by a simple plaque near the sidewalk facing Calhoun Street. The building has since been replaced by a hotel.



Under the spell of [Girardeau's] oratory the congregation grew till Zion Church, the largest church in the city, and one of the largest in the Assembly, was erected for its special benefit by the contributions of the people of Charleston. From the first, the main floor seating a thousand Negroes and the balcony holding about 250 whites were crowded. Time and time again, Dr. Girardeau declined flattering calls to white congregations, that he might do something for his 'brother in black.' When the war broke out he resigned his charge to become a chaplain in the army. Gradually he passed into the larger service of the church, and in 1876 became professor of systematic theology in Columbia Theological Seminary, a position which he continued to hold till 1895. (Earnest Trice Thompson, Presbyterians in the South. John Knox Press, 1963. Pp. 442.)
Girardeau spent the latter part of his life as a theological professor in Columbia, SC. He entered into the presence of his Savior 110 years ago today, and his body was laid to rest under the magnolia trees at the Elmwood Cemetery in Columbia. He is buried near J.H. Thornwell and his son-in-law George A. Blackburn.

In closing I would like to share stanzas 1 and 4 of an anonymous poem published in The Southern Presbyterian of July, 1989:

"ON THE DEATH OF A BELOVED MINISTER.
Affectionately dedicated to the family of Rev. J. L. Girardeau."

"Brother, all thy toils are ended;
All thine earthly warfare's done;
To thy long-sought rest ascended,
Thou hast won thy starry crown!
There the welcome plaudit met thee;
Well-done Servant of thy Lord,
Faithful toiler in My vineyard,
Enter on thy full reward!

"Wile on earth, Redemption's story,
Ever dwelt upon his tongue.
And to him the 'Songs of Jesus'
Were the sweetest ever sung.
Now the loved ones led to Heaven,
By his earnest pleadings here,
Join with him to praise the Saviour,
Who redeemed and brought them there."

(Blackburn, Life and Works, p.p. 391-392.)

Reference -
Willborn, C. N. "John L. Girardeau: Pastor to Slaves and Theologian of Causes", unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, (Philadelphia, PA: Westminster Theological Seminary, 2003).
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Brevard Springs Childs (1923–2007)

One year ago today, June 23, 2007, marks the passing of one of the 20th century's most influential Biblical scholars. I can neither lay claim to having met Childs nor brag of having read any of his massive tomes. So far, I only own his commentary on Exodus and I've only read a few pages. However, in my dealings with theological books and through reading other theological works (and blogs) I am becoming more and more aware of the contribution Childs made in his field of expertise. Of course, one of the things I am most interested in is the measure to which a Christian benefits the church and the cause of the Gospel. Some of the articles I have read indicate that Childs was very interested in bridging the gap between academia and ecclesia. Like many modern biblical scholars, he was not an inerrantist. If I correctly understand what I've read, he was opposed to attempts at interpreting the OT by the NT and he argued for a Christological interpretation of both Testaments. Both liberal and conservative camps claim him, which puts him in company with a host of influential theologians throughout Church History. It seems to me that he strove to maintain a theological position somewhere between the 'biblicists' and the 'liberals.' Beyond these few details, I am still reading and learning.

Life -
Brevard Childs was born in South Carolina on September 2, 1923. G. T. Sheppard notes, in the HHMBI, that Childs "grew up in Southern Presbyterian churches," but Daniel Driver, per Christopher Seitz, contends that Childs was "baptized Episcopalian" and worshiped in Presbyterian churches in New York. Whichever it is, being a South Carolina resident for nearly 15 years, I enjoy learning of influential figures in Church History who hale from this state. (I recently listened to a lecture by Seitz in which he mentions having grown up in Charleston. How about that!)

Anyway, Childs grew up in Queens, New York and went on to earn an A.B. and M.A. from the University of Michigan and a B.D. from Princeton Theological Seminary. He pursued a doctorate at the University of Basel, Switzerland and took advantage of further studies at Heidelberg University.

While in Europe, Childs studied under Walther Eichrodt (noted for his Theology of the Old Testament, 2 vols.) and Walter Baumgartner. At Basel he became immersed in the methods of form criticism while he wrote his thesis. During this time he seems to have been greatly influenced by Karl Barth, who was also one of Childs' professors at Basel.

Works -
Among his major writings are the following:
Biographical Resources -
  • Yale Divinity School's notice of the passing of Brevard Childs (06/25/07).
Current Research
  • Daniel Driver is currently working on a doctoral thesis that deals with the work of B. S. Childs: “Scripture’s Textual Authority”: The Work of Brevard Childs in International Context. You can find his proposal here.
  • Philip Sumpter is working on a thesis on the work of Childs and Seitz and their canonical approach. Read his proposal here.
Miscellanious -
An interview with Brevard Childs conducted by Westminster John Knox Press regarding his canonical studies and his forthcoming commentary on Isaiah has been reproduced here.

Walter Brueggemann's review of Child's Biblical Theology of the Old and New Testaments: Theological Reflection on the Christian Bible (Minneapolis, Fortress Press, 1993, 745 pp.): Against the Stream: Brevard Childs's Biblical Theology
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Thursday, June 19, 2008

Book Review: Communion with the Triune God by John Owen

This morning I posted a review of the following title at SharperIron.

Reviewed by Paul Martin Henebury, Ph.D, founder and president of Veritas School of Theology.

Owen, John. Communion with the Triune God, edited by Kelly M. Kapic and Justin Taylor. Wheaton, Ill: Crossway, 2007. Paperback, 448 pages. $22.00

(Review copy courtesy of Crossway Books.)

Owen Communion.jpgPurchase: Crossway | WTS | CBD | Amazon

ISBNs: 1581348312 / 9781581348316

Features:

Forward by Kevin J. Vanhoozer (pp. 11-13)

Introduction by Kelly M. Kapic (pp. 17-46)

A Note on This Edition by Justin Taylor (pp. 47-49)

A detailed Outline including page numbers (pp. 51-83)

Editorial footnotes; Glossary; Subject Index; Name Index; Scripture Index

Excerpts:

Contents
Foreword, A Note on This Edition, Preface, Chapter 1, and Glossary - 544K PDF

Subjects: Biblical Theology, Trinity

John Owen (1616-1683), an English Puritan theologian, was a prolific author. His book Of Communion with God the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost first appeared in 1657. (from the cover)
Read the review here.

For further reading on the life and theology of John Owen we suggest the following titles:

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Tuesday, June 17, 2008

Firefox Download Day

Download Day - English

Download the NEW Firefox browser today. I've been using it and love it. It's a great improvement over the previous version which is also great.

My favorite feature is the integration of my search history and bookmarks into the address bar. What's your favorite feature?

To Download the New Version, Click Here: Firefox 3
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More on George Ladd & the Biography by D'Elia

On May 1, 2008, John A. D'Elia presented a 45 minute lecture at Fuller Theological Seminary on George Eldon Ladd. This lecture was presented in conjunction with the celebration of Fuller's 60th anniversary. (So far, I haven't found a recording of the the lecture, but I'm checking on it. **See the comment below.**)

Fuller Seminary Press Release: Lecture Explores Life and Legacy of George Eldon Ladd
The title of the paper he presented is "George Eldon Ladd, Fuller Seminary and the Renaissance of American Evangelicalism."
D'Elia's new book, A Place at the Table: George Eldon Ladd and the Rehabilitation of Evangelical Scholarship in America (OUP, 2008) is actually a rework of his Th.M. thesis "The Mediatorial Character of the New Evangelical Movement in the Life and Work of George Eldon Ladd" (Fuller Theological Seminary, 1992) 2005 Ph.D. thesis at the University of Stirling in Scotland (under David Bebbington). You can also find a short biographical sketch entered into the Biographical Dictionary of Evangelicals edited by Timothy Larsen, et al. (IVP, 2003), pp. 354-356 [Also available in a digital format from Logos Bible Software].

John D'Elia is in the blogosphere here: An American Minister in London.
  • The Big Event. In this post D'Elia give a play-by-play view of his day at Fuller to present his lecture on Ladd. Some pictures are provided.
  • The Cover.
For further reading on the life and labors of George Eldon Ladd, I recommend to you Donald A. Hagner's biographical esay in Bible Interpreters of the 20th Century edited by Walter A. Elwell, & J. D. Weaver, pp. 228-243. [This title is out of print but you can find used copies and a digitial version from Logos Bible Software.] Hagner (now retired) was the George Eldon Ladd Professor Emeritus of New Testament and Senior Professor of New Testament at Fuller Theological Seminary. He relied on a number of sources including D'Elia's Th.M. thesis.

I do not have a copy of this book, but Hagner references David Allan Hubbard's "Biographical Sketch and Appreciation" in Unity and Diversity in New Testament Theology: Essays in Honor of George E. Ladd, edited by Robert A. Guelich (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1978), xi-xv.

**Corrected (6/28/08)
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Monday, June 16, 2008

Michael Bird Reviews A Place at the Table: George Eldon Ladd

Michael Bird has published a review of this brand new biography at Euangelion:

Book Review: A Place at the Table by John A. D'Elia

D'Elia, John A. A Place at the Table: George Eldon Ladd and the Rehabilitation of Evangelical Scholarship in America. Oxford; New York: Oxford University Press, 2008. Hardback, 304 pages. $45.00 USD (list price).

ISBN13: 978-0-19-534167-6 ISBN10: 0-19-534167-8

Purchase
: OUP ($36.00) | Amazon ($36.00)
[HT: Biblia Theologica]
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Collin Hansen Interviews Thomas Schreiner | NT Theology

This volume has been available for a few weeks and has been receiving favorable reviews. Today, Christianity Today has published Collin Hansen's interview with Thomas Schreiner.
Tom Schreiner's New Testament Theology searches for Scripture's unifying themes.
_____________________
by Thomas R. Schreiner
ISBNs: 9780801026805 / 0801026806
Price: $44.99
Format: Hardcover | 976 pages
Publication date: May. 08 | Division: Baker Academic

Excerpt here.

WTS ($27.89) | CBD ($32.99) | Amazon ($29.69)

See also Andy Cheung's interview.
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Sunday, June 15, 2008

"Doctrinal Preaching at its Best"

Today marks 8 years since the passing of James Montgomery Boice, who died June 15, 2000. Dr. Boice wore many hats: pastor, radio preacher, Christian leader, defender of the faith. I never heard Dr. Boice preach in person or even on his radio program. So, on this anniversary of his home-going I’d like to spotlight JM Boice in the role in which I know him best—author.

According to Theopedia, “Boice was a prolific author, having published over 50 different works, including a collection of hymns.” Many of Boice’s books are expositions of books of the Bible. Probably the first Boice book I ever purchased was his three-volume commentary on Genesis. Among others, I also have his commentary on the Minor Prophets and one of the volumes in his Romans series. How I wish I had bought all four volumes in that series when it was available in hardback!

Dr. Boice wrote other kinds of books as well as expositional commentaries. He wrote biblical/topical studies like Christ’s Call to Discipleship and Renewing Your Mind in a Mindless World: Learning to Think and Act Biblically. He also published a fine collection of his Easter sermons under the title, The Christ of the Empty Tomb.

Possibly the most important book Boice ever wrote (and this is just an opinion) is the four-books-in-one Foundations of the Christian Faith: A Comprehensive & Readable Theology (Downers Grove, Ill: InterVarsity Press. 1986). This 740-page hardcover consists of sermons he first preached to his own church, Tenth Presbyterian in Philadelphia. He revised the sermons and published them in four books from 1978 – 1981. The books appear as the four parts of the one-volume edition: The Sovereign God, God the Redeemer, Awakening to God, and God and History. What he gives us is a detailed, theological explanation of the Christian life, “a basic theology from A to Z” (Boice, Foundations of the Christian Faith, p. 11).

In this way Boice’s book is like Calvin’s Institutes of the Christian Religion, but without being a mere rehash. Boice describes his book as

an attempt (a) to cover the same ground in highly readable language yet at the same time (b) to introduce themes which Calvin did not treat but which call for treatment today and (c) to seek to relate all doctrine to contemporary rather than ancient views and problems. Book one deals with the doctrine of God and how we know God, book two with sin and the redemptive work of Christ, book three with the Holy Spirit and the application of redemption to the individual, and book four with the church and the meaning of history.

(Boice, p. 12)

Would we be able to comprehensively explain Christian theology to a new believer? Dr. Boice explained it to his congregation and made it available to the church at large. There is solid meat here. Even Christians from a non-Reformed tradition will find much to chew on. I highly recommend Foundations of the Christian Faith and agree with Cyril Barber that a work such as this “illustrates doctrinal preaching at its best” (Cyril J. Barber, The Minister’s Library, Vol. 2. Chicago: Moody Press, 1987. p. 187).

Do you have this book? What are your thoughts on it? Or do you have another favorite book by James Montgomery Boice? I hope we will soon see a book about James Montgomery Boice. Know of any biographies?


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TheoSource Updates

This past weekend I've been doing a bit of updating on the Psalms posts. There have been a number of new books published on the Psalms and I've tried to add as many as I thought would be profitable. I've also found helpful reviews of some of these books at RBL and have added links where appropriate. Here is a list of the posts that have been updated:

I’ve also been updating links to conversations on the subject of the 9Marks interview Mark Minnick.

Other than that, I’ve been picking away at the Logos Scholar’s Library [also at the Logos site] with the intention of posting a review. I’m fairly new to this software package and need a bit more time to find my way around it. Some initial impressions are as follows:

  • Every student ought to own this!
  • It’s worth the money!
  • It takes a good bit of time to learn it in order to make the best use of it.
  • It is set up primarily for Bible study, but it allows for building and searching a large database of e-books.
  • I’ve already begun the hunt for more PC memory to speed up my searches. The default searches allow for a lot of unnecessary searching which extends the time the computer takes to produce search results. I’ve got some ideas of how to customize this and will share my suggestions in the near future.
  • I LOVE THE REMOTE LIBRARY SEARCH FUNCTION! I search the Library of Congress and WorldCat.org numerous times per week as I research book data. This function has dramatically improved this process. It’s taking a little bit of work to figure out the full capabilities of this single function, but I’m already benefiting from it. Did I say I love this feature? Oh, yeah!
  • I’m already making a list of other packages I want to add to this system, and other books that ought to belong on it. (Maybe, we could figure out a way to incorporate TheoSource into the database. J )
  • More to come later…

Finally, I have been reading some fantastic books that I need to review:

I have a handful of books that need to be reviewed and I need help. I direct the book reviews for SharperIron.org but I also am permitted to post reviews here on TheoSource. Many of the books I’ve received would not do well for reviews at SI, but I would like for them to be reviewed here. If you would be interested in receiving a free book in exchange for a book review, I’d be glad to hear from you.

The following is a list of books available to be reviewed:



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Father's Day Book Review: Memoirs of an Ordinary Pastor by D.A. Carson

Carson, D. A. Memoirs of an Ordinary Pastor: The Life and Reflections of Tom Carson. Wheaton, ILL: Crossway, 2008. Trade Paperback, 160 pages. $15.99


Purchase: Crossway | WTS | CBD | Amazon

Excerpt: Preface and Chapter 1 - 541K PDF

ISBNs: 1433501996 / 9781433501999

I read this book a few weeks ago and decided to hold off on my review until today, Father’s Day. Over the past few months I have learned a great deal from D. A. Carson regarding fatherhood. These lessons began with my downloading and listening to his three messages delivered at the 2008 Desiring God Conference for Pastors:

  1. The Pastor as Son of the Heavenly Father (MP3 audio | MP4 video)
  2. The Pastor as Son of an Earthly Father (MP3 audio | MP4 video)
  3. The Pastor as Father to His Family and Flock (MP3 audio | MP4 video)

[HT: Andy Naselli]

While addressed to a group of pastors, these messages would be beneficial to any Christian father. At the root level, these messages present a theology of the father/son relationship with special attention given to the Father/Son relationship and how it is a model for pastoral ministry. Sprinkled throughout the messages are anecdotes from Carson’s own experience. Many of the stories shared are elaborated upon in Carson’s memoir of his father, Tom Carson. It was after listening (and re-listening) to these messages that I determined to request a copy of this book so that I could review it here.

Some years ago I asked my pastor about a particular biography and he responded that one ought to be concerned with not only the subject of the biography but also the biographer. A biographer can either make or break your perception of the subject. Normally you want to read about a subject by a biographer who was very close to that subject. For instance, Jill Morgan’s biography of G. Campbell Morgan, her father-in-law, is considered to be the best on his life. Theodore Beza on Calvin is very helpful; Islay Burns on his brother, William C. Burns, is fantastic; Dr. & Mrs. Howard Taylor on J. Hudson Taylor is a classic; A. T. Robertson on his friend and colleague, John A. Broadus is superb; and S. Pearce Carey on his great-grandfather, William Carey, is not to be passed by. However, some of those who seem to be best-suited to write on a particular subject’s life are not always to be preferred. The temptation is to put the subject into the best light possible diminishing faults and errors.

Over the past year I’ve read a handful of critical biographies by researchers who did not have a prescribed agenda. They didn’t have anything to lose by exposing an area of weakness, nor did they necessarily have anything to gain by inflating the praiseworthy features of their subject. Certainly, every biography leans subjectively toward the biographer’s limited perspective and knowledge of the facts; however allowing “the warts and all” to remain is a benefit to the reader. The biographer’s job is not to campaign for the canonization of his subject as a saint, but rather to display how God selected, taught and used a jar of clay.

I find in D. A. Carson’s biography of his father a respectable balance between a loving memoir of one who was very dear to him, and a careful accounting of the work of a fellow-servant of Christ with respect to his times, place of ministry, giftedness for service, ecclesiastical struggles, display of leadership in the home, and personal battles. In the technical sense, this memoir is not a critical biography, however Carson’s giftedness as a researcher shines through in the way that this biography is outlined and filled out. Carson does use footnotes (not endnotes, Thank you!) but only sparingly.

Carson begins with a historical sketch of Canada, its growth as a nation and the makeup of its people. This is a very important chapter and ought not to be neglected. It sets the stage for a proper understanding of the types of ministries Tom Carson pursued and how the changes that came in the latter part of his ministry were so significantly different from those in the former.

Chapters two and three introduce us to Tom and Marg Carson. Chapter two unwraps Tom’s educational track, his marriage to Marg and the early years of his ministry among both English and French Speaking congregations. Chapter three gives us a glimpse into the tasks of this “ordinary pastor” as he labored to evangelize the residents of Montréal, Canada. Tom was not out for numbers, but for souls. He systematically carried out his missionary calling via door-to-door evangelism, tract distribution and regular mailings. The work was very difficult and it seemed as if the town, being predominantly Catholic, was completely against the simple, Baptist Protestant. Even though the results were few, Tom is shown to have remained persistent in his duties.

Chapter four introduces a major crisis in Tom’s ministry. A promising opportunity presented itself in another city but a division ensued between Tom and the Union of Regular Baptist (of which Tom was a dedicated member). Here the reader is left to rely upon the Carson’s understanding and research into the details of this crisis. I’m not in a position to critique Carson’s account of this incident; however, having been reared in a very similar circle, it all appears to be believable. In fact, Carson is very careful in this section to document his claims by reproducing portions of key letters and documents. He also adds as an Appendix to this book “The Letter of 5 May 1948”. In this letter Tom Carson presents his position and accounts for the way in which he dealt with the crisis over finances for planting the Drummondville church. One further note about this chapter that I cannot pass up is the point Carson makes about Tom not mentioning this issue to his children, and his choice "to accept the loss, speak softly, weep over the deterioration of a great leader, and move on" (p. 58). This is profound wisdom and a powerful display of trust in the sovereign Lord who alone is able to right all wrongs.

The most fascinating portion of chapter five is Carson’s account of family life. After a hilarious story about Carson’s mother counseling his sister, Joyce, to strike back “once, as hard as she could” in an effort to deal with a young tormentor, Carson walks us through some of the things that were most sacred to the family. For instance, Tom and Marg used the mealtimes to feed their children both physically and spiritually. Tom is remembered as being eager and willing to play with his children. Having small children myself, I’m learning how much they need this and was glad for the reminder/instruction found here. Tom, although a studious minister, did not neglect physical exercise either. The family valued music and the children were taught to sing. Discipline was a coordinated effort between the parents, disrespect and bad attitudes were punishable offenses, and whining was not tolerated. The children were taught to respect Tom’s study and prayer times. The image of a praying father is still burnt on Carson’s memory (this is invaluable). And Tom was a man of the Word, having memorized so many texts that he was able to use phrases for his natural responses.

All of these positive features of the Carson home are balanced out by the admission of particular weaknesses. Carson does not dwell long on these things, not that we should desire him to, but he at least mentions them so that the reader might have a more balanced view of the subject of this biography. It is also important to note the fact that Tom was a very private person, one reticent to show outward affection, often overly concerned with details so that we might see more clearly how the Lord caused him to grow and mature.

Chapter six serves as the heart of this memoir. The previous crisis was awful, but this one seemed to be nearly devastating. For me, this was a hard chapter to read and I’m not a pastor. I know a handful of men who have or are struggling in similar situations. In this chapter the reader is introduced to Tom’s journal-keeping exercise. It seems that this exercise stemmed from Tom’s extremely high work-ethic. Tom tended by be very introspective and held himself to rigorous goals. He kept records of what he did, when he preached and how many were present in each of the services.

In this chapter, we also come to the place where Tom decides that it is time for him to resign his ministry. This is a difficult thing to read through, but many circumstances brought Tom and Marg to follow through with this. The work was very difficult, the costs were very great, and the fruit was very small. Tom was burdened to see sinners brought to Jesus and when a long period of barrenness came he became discouraged. This leads into a “must read” section of this memoir where Carson outlines nine reflections intended “not only [to] put some of Tom’s comments into perspective but…[also to] help discouraged ministers of the gospel today” (92). Let me say it this way, these four-plus pages are worth more than the price of the book.

Chapter seven recounts Tom’s transition from full-time sacred service to secular service. This, I’m sure, was a difficult step to take, but this chapter is very encouraging as the reader gets to see how the providence of God worked to continue to allow Tom to be useful and to be able to grow spiritually in new ways. During this period the Lord opened up new doors of “academic” opportunity and leadership within a different local assembly.

Chapter eight brings the story full-swing from the hard, depressing days of the first seven chapters into days of transformation and growth in the Gospel. New leadership had arisen and a new air of openness in the Canadian society was being evidenced. In fact, the Lord was working in ways that men like Tom Carson had prayed for and prepared for throughout the previous decades. This brought about new challenges for Tom as he learned to deal with the success of others, and it also brought about further opportunities of service for the sake of the gospel.

Chapters nine and ten take us into the final days of weakened health for both Marg and then Tom. First we see Marg’s struggle with Alzheimer’s and Tom’s adjustment to the more supportive role up until her death. Then we are taken into the final years of Tom Carson, as he learns to cope with the loss of his life-long friend, and as his body begins to weaken. However, during this period Tom begins to share his theological reflections and meditations more frequently in his journals. During these years he includes many poems and hymns in his entries. I found it interesting that Carson chose to include Tom’s opinion of Graham, regarding his cooperation with Roman Catholics, as “Jehoshaphat with Ahab” (p. 142).

[Interestingly enough, this is the same biblical account that Mark Minnick shared with Mark Dever in a 9Marks interview that touched on the issue of ecclesiastical associations.]

In his final days, Tom was surrounded by family, but when he crossed over Jordan, “there were no crowds outside the hospital, no editorial comments in the papers, no announcements on the television, no mention in Parliament, no attention paid by the nation. In his hospital room there was no one by his bedside” (p. 148). He was an ordinary pastor, who did not seek notoriety, but earnestly sought for the well-being of his family and the cause of gospel of Jesus Christ.

This is a thoroughly engaging book, well-written, well-documented, easy to read, and spiritually encouraging. If I had the means I would send a copy to every pastor I know. In this memoir the reader is caused to reflect upon the mystery of God’s providence. We don’t always have the best perspective on what God is doing, but the ordinary pastor continues to be faithful, committed to Christ, his family and the ministry allotted to him, believing that God is in control and that He alone deserves the glory.


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Friday, June 13, 2008

Audio Books for $9.49

ChristianAudio.com is advertising a sale on their digital downloads. From Friday, June 13 through Sunday, June 22 most digital downloads are $9.49 each. They offer titles like The Knowledge of the Holy by AW Tozer, Desiring God by John Piper, and many more. As they say on their website: listen, enjoy, think, grow.
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Wednesday, June 11, 2008

Congratulations to the Nasellis on the Birth of Their Daughter!

We would like to praise the Lord for, and congratulate Andy and Jenni Naselli on, the arrival and safe delivery of Kara Marie Naselli.

June 8, 2008, 8:58 PM
8 lbs., 9 oz., 19.5 inches long

We're very happy for you two!

BTW, I recommend to you Andy's theology blog.

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Book Review: Future Israel by Barry E. Horner

This morning we have posted a review of the following title at SharperIron. I hope that you'll take a few minutes to head on over, read it, and leave your comments, questions, and/or impressions.

Reviewed by Andy Efting.

Horner, Barry E. Future Israel: Why Christian Anti-Judaism Must Be Challenged. NAC Studies in Bible & Theology. Nashville, TN: B&H Academic, 2007. Jacketed Hardcover, xxii + 394 pages. $19.99.

(Review copies courtesy of B&H Academic.)

Future IsraelPurchase: B&H | Amazon | CBD

ISBNs: 0805446273 / 9780805446272

Note: This is volume 3 in the NEW AMERICAN COMMENTARY STUDIES IN BIBLE AND THEOLOGY.

Features: Footnotes; 5 Appendices including an Annotated Bibliography of Jewish-Christian Relations in Church History; Author, Subject, and Scripture Indexes

  • Table of Contents, Preface and Foreword (PDF format)
  • Read a sample chapter (PDF format)
  • LCCN: BM535 .H68 DCN: 261.26

    Subjects: Eschatology, Judaism, Christianity, Biblical Theology

    Barry E. Horner (D. Min., Westminster Theological Seminary, California; M.Div., Western Conservative Baptist Theological Seminary) is pastor of Christ’s New Covenant Church in Sahuarita, Arizona. He has also written several works on the writings of the seventeenth-century Puritan, John Bunyan (see www.bunyanministries.org).

    Read the full review here.

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    Tuesday, June 10, 2008

    Salvation Belongs to Our God by Christopher J.H. Wright

    Today, I received a review copy of Christopher Wright's new book, Salvation Belongs to Our God: Celebrating the Bible's Central Story, from InterVarsity Press. This is the sixth volume in the Christian Doctrine in Global Perspective series, edited by David Smith and John Stott.

    I've been scanning through it and am deeply impressed with, not only the subject matter, but also the way in which he presents this study. This is a biblical theology of salvation. In his own words Wright describes this study as one
    that strives to treat its topic by gaining a biblical perspective that is as broad as possible. The Bible uses the vocabulary of salvation very widely indeed. I did not want to predetermine what constitutes acceptable theological categories within a structured doctrinal framework. I rather wanted to take that text in Revelation 7:10 and find out what biblical assumptions, content, expectations and implications are nested within its simple phrases. (p. 12)
    In the concluding chapter, Wright summarizes God's plan of salvation. He writes,
    God's mission was that
    • sin should be punished and sinners forgiven
    • evil should be defeated and humanity liberated
    • death should be destroyed and life and immortality brought to light
    • enemies should be reconciled, to one another and to God
    • creation itself should be restored and reconciled to its creator
    And all of these led to the cross of Christ. The cross was the unavoidable cost of God's mission--as Jesus himself accepted, in his agony in Gethsemane: "Yet not as I will, but as you will (Mt 26:39). So as we get our minds around the biblical concept of salvation, let us make room for all that the Bible teaches. Salvation, we have reminded ourselves often in this book, is not just a theory, a doctrine, or a merely subjective state or experience. Salvation is what God has done. Biblical salvation is the historic reality that God sent his Son into the world and his Son willingly gave up his life on the cross in fulfillment of that mission. (p. 187)
    Oh, the text goes on, but the publishers would not be happy with me reproducing too much of it. I'm hooked, and I expect to be up a good while tonight reading this book.

    Table of Contents
    Series Preface
    Preface
    1 Salvation and Human Need
    2 Salvation and God’s Unique Identity
    3 Salvation and God’s Covenant Blessing
    4 Salvation and God’s Covenant Story
    5 Salvation and Our Experience
    6 Salvation and the Sovereignty of God
    7 Salvation and the Lamb of God
    Conclusion
    Notes
    Scripture Index

    Wright, Christopher J. H. Salvation Belongs to Our God: Celebrating the Bible's Central Story. Christian Doctrine in Global Perspective. Downers Grove, Ill: IVP Academic, 2007. Paperback, 202 pages. $16.00

    IVP Academic ($11.20) | Amazon ($10.88) | WTS ($12.00) | CBD ($11.99)


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    A Biography of George Eldon Ladd (OUP, 2008)

    I just received an email from Oxford University Press announcing to release of a critical biography of George Eldon Ladd. I've enjoyed and have benefited much from some of Ladd's works and I'm very interested in acquiring a copy of this new work.

    A Brief Introduction to Ladd and His Writings...
    I was introduced to George Eldon Ladd while taking a seminary level class on Eschatology. We were given a list of titles representing the various positions on the rapture, and Ladd's The Blessed Hope (Eerdmans, 1956; reprinted 1980) [also available at the WTS bookstore] and The Last Things (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1978; reprinted, Eugene, OR: Wipf & Stock, 2004) were recommended for a post-tribulational view. I, to my surprise, found these to be among the best treatments of the subject. Ladd handled the Biblical texts more carefully than any of the others I read. I found this to be so, because he did not approach the texts with a preconceived framework (at least not with one that was so strong and inflexible). His presentation was the most fair and evenhanded when dealing with stronger dispensational and/or covenantal perspectives.

    Well, since that introduction to Ladd about 10 years ago I've collected a handful of his works. His A Theology of the New Testament (1974; revised by Donald A. Hagner, Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1993) [WTS Bookstore] remains to be a preferred text in evangelical seminaries. Other key works by Ladd are as follows:
    • Gospel of the Kingdom (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1959) [Amazon | CBD]
    • Jesus and the Kingdom (New York: Harper & Row, 1964; London: SPCK, 1966) [Amazon]
      • Now Published as - The Presence of the Future (New York: Harper & Row, 1964; Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1974; reprinted in 2000) [Amazon | CBD]
    • A Commentary on the Revelation of John (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1972; reprinted 1993) [Amazon | CBD]
    • The Meaning of the Millennium (Downers Grove: IVP, 1977) [Amazon | CBD]
    • The New Testament and Criticism (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1966) [Amazon]
    You also may be interested in Robert Bradshaw's full Bibliography of the works of George Eldon Ladd (1911-1982).

    Short biographical sketches:
    Details on the Biography...
    D'Elia, John A. A Place at the Table: George Eldon Ladd and the Rehabilitation of Evangelical Scholarship in America. Oxford; New York: Oxford University Press, 2008). Hardback, 304 pages. $45.00 USD (list price).
    ISBN13: 978-0-19-534167-6 ISBN10: 0-19-534167-8
    Purchase: OUP | Amazon

    Description (the following information is from the OUP website)

    George Eldon Ladd was a pivotal figure in the resurgence of evangelical scholarship in America during the years after the Second World War. Ladd's career as a biblical scholar can be seen as a quest to rehabilitate evangelical thought both in content and image, a task he pursued at great personal cost. Best known for his work on the doctrine of the Kingdom of God, Ladd moved from critiquing his own movement to engaging many of the important theological and exegetical issues of his day.

    Ladd was a strong critic of dispensationalism, the dominant theological system in conservative evangelicalism and fundamentalism, challenging what he perceived to be its anti-intellectualism and uncritical approach to the Bible. In his impressive career at Fuller Theological Seminary, Ladd participated in scholarly debates on the relationship between faith and historical understanding, arguing that modern critical methodologies need not preclude orthodox Christian belief. Ladd also engaged the thought of Rudolf Bultmann, the dominant theological figure of his day. Ladd's main focus, however, was to create a work of scholarship from an evangelical perspective that the broader academic world would accept. When he was unsuccessful in this effort, he descended into depression, bitterness, and alcoholism. But Ladd played an important part in opening doors for later generations of evangelical scholars, both by validating and using critical methods in his own scholarly work, and also by entering into dialogue with theologians and theologies outside the evangelical world.

    It is a central theme of this book that Ladd's achievement, at least in part, can be measured in the number of evangelical scholars who are today active participants in academic life across a broad range of disciplines.

    Reviews

    "George Ladd was arguably the leading 'new evangelical' biblical scholar in the mid-decades of the twentieth century. He was also a person whose life and work were filled with intriguing tensions and contrasts. John D'Elia tells this poignant and fascinating story well." --George M. Marsden, Francis A. McAnaney Professor of History at the University of Notre Dame, and author of Fundamentalism and American Culture

    "In this poignant and gracefully written account, John D'Elia unflinchingly but sympathetically recounts the personal and professional torments of George Eldon Ladd. Making extensive use of Ladd's own files, D'Elia sketches the twin paradoxes of Ladd's life: although eager to find 'a place at the table' of the larger scholarly community, Ladd deemed his own efforts towards that end a failure, and although he wrote extensively of the presence of the kingdom, he struggled to taste its fruits in his own life. Ironically, Ladd never truly understood his greatest legacy -- his crucial role in the development of evangelical biblical scholarship. D'Elia offers a welcome tribute to Ladd's legacy." --Marianne Meye Thompson, George Eldon Ladd Professor of New Testament, Fuller Theological Seminary

    "D'Elia's biography of George Eldon Ladd is powerful and perceptive. He introduces us to a person who is spiritual and ambitious, intelligent and insecure, bold and troubled all at the same time. This is compelling reading for anyone interested in either the intellectual history of Evangelicalism or the movement's continuing struggle to secure and maintain 'a place at the table' of the mainstream scholarship." --Douglas Jacobsen, Distinguished Professor of Church History and Theology at Messiah College, and author of Thinking in the Spirit: Theologies of the Early Pentecostal Movement

    About the Author

    John A. D'Elia is the Senior Minister of the American Church in London. He is a graduate of UCLA, Fuller Theological Seminary, and the University of Stirling in Scotland. He is from Burbank, California.


    Final Thoughts...
    This promotional summary with reviews has piqued my interest for a number of reasons (his critique of dispensationalism, his interaction with critical scholarship, and his personal battles [Marianne Meye Thompson's statement that "although he wrote extensively of the presence of the kingdom, he struggled to taste its fruits in his own life" is haunting.]). I must note that I have not read anything on his life, but I have wondered about him (I'm always interested in learning as much biographical information as is available on the authors of the books I read; this kind of information is very important!). Here is a view into the life and theology of one of the leading "new evangelicals" of this past century. This, along with Garth Rosell's forthcoming book The Surprising Work of God (Baker, 2008) (see this earlier post) which deals with two other prominent figures in "new evangelicalism" should provide a very helpful introduction to the "movement".

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