“The new birth enables you to hear Scripture and use
Scripture helpfully, redemptively. The new birth doesn’t use the promise “We
have an Advocate” to justify an attitude of cavalier indifference to sin. The
new birth doesn’t use the warning “No one born of God makes a practice of
sinning” to pour gasoline on the fires of despair. The new birth brings a spiritual
discernment that senses how to use John’s teachings: The new birth is chastened
and sobered by the warnings, and the new birth is thrilled and empowered by the
promise of an Advocate and a Propitiation” (John Piper, Finally Alive, 151).
"Let us cross over the river and rest under the shade of the trees." - T.J. "Stonewall" Jackson
Thursday, May 31, 2012
Nevin: Reformation Thought, Again - Theology Wars
“The notable 80th Question proved a constant
stench [Q. 80: What difference is
there between the Lord's supper and the popish mass?], in many nostrils.
In some cases, when it was known that the minister was to preach upon this
questions, troublesome persons would slip into the Church, for the purpose of
creating interruption and disorder” (J. W. Nevin, History and Genius of the Heidelberg
Catechism (Chambersburg, 1847), 92).
Labels:
Heidelberg Catechism,
J. W. Nevin,
Nevin,
Theology Wars
Nevin: Reformation Thought, Again - "Leading Symbol of the Church"
“In the Reformed Church, as thus prevailing in different
principalities throughout Germany, various catechisms appeared, and secured to
themselves a more or less extensive use. In the end however all of these were
either cast aside, or sunk into a secondary rank; while the Catechism of the
Palatinate attained to a sort of universal authority, as the leading symbol of
the Church” (J.
W. Nevin, History and Genius of the Heidelberg Catechism (Chambersburg,
1847), 90).
Labels:
Heidelberg Catechism,
J. W. Nevin,
Nevin
Sunday, May 27, 2012
Book Review: John Calvin's American Legacy - Chapter 3 - Implausible: Calvinism and American Politics
Chapter 2 review here.
Chapter 1 review here.
Introduction review here.
Initial thoughts here.
D. G. Hart’s Implausible:
Calvinism and American Politics wraps up the section on Calvin’s legacy in
American society by examining historical evidence and providing surveys of the
two disparate Calvinistic camps of thought on American politics, which he
refers to as Libertarian Calvinists and Authoritarian Calvinists. After these
historical examinations, Hart concludes that it is implausible—it is dubious—to
claim that Calvinism was the source and root of American politics.
To set the stage Hart opens with a scene from 1898, Abraham
Kuyper’s third lecture delivered on Calvinism at Princeton Theological Seminary,
which was on the positive link between Reformed theology and personal liberty.
Kuyper’s optimism is incredible—he not only believed that Calvinism was the
source and root of all of the political goodness that had expanded across the
Western hemisphere (as exemplified in his homeland, the Netherlands, and also
in Great Britain and the United States), but, as Hart says, Kuyper “set his
sights even higher” (66). How high exactly? Hart quotes Kuyper at length:
The fact remains that the broad stream of the development of our race runs from Babylon to San Francisco, through the five stadia of Babylonian-Egyptian, Greek-Roman, Islamitic [sic], Romanistic, and Calvinistic civilization, and the present conflict in Europe as well as in America finds it main cause in the fundament[al] antithesis between the energy of Calvinism which proceeds from the throne of God . . . and its caricature in the French Revolution, which proclaimed its unbelief in the cry of “No God no master.”
Hart calls Kuyper’s (and other like-minded academics) take
on the matter a “rosy view of Calvinism’s contribution to the modern world”
(67). In light of historical evidence, Hart does not think it is tenable to
view and attribute the positive political advancements across the Western
nations to Calvinistic thought.
Lest this rosy view sit on the reader’s mind too long, Hart quickly
goes on to remind readers that the wide-spread credit given to Calvinism
eventually turned to blame in the 1960s, however, Hart doesn’t dwell on those
criticisms to advance his thesis, rather, he digs deeper into Calvinistic
history in order to show that a “survey of Presbyterian advocates and critics
of the liberties that became the standard fare of modern statecraft in the
West” demonstrates that there always has been varying Calvinistic
“perspectives.” Hart believes this enforces that the “effort to correlate
politics with theology is never easy,” even going so far as to claim that the
surveyed Calvinistic thought teaches, contrary to Kuyper, that the “the relationship between Calvinism and
liberty, like that between Christianity and politics more generally, is
fundamentally paradoxical” (66-67).
As I said earlier, Hart divides American Calvinists into two
groups: Libertarian Calvinists and Authoritarian Calvinists. The former group
is comprised of recognizable household names, e.g., John Witherspoon, Charles
Hodge and Albert Barnes. This group believed Calvinism was the source of American
and religious liberty. For example, Hodge “believed that the success of
Presbyterian government was dependent on the same sorts of virtues that made
republicanism tick” (70), both which he viewed as stemming from “scriptural
liberty.” This view would eventually mature to the point that it might be
encapsulated within the pithy phrase/slogan, “A free Church in a free State.”
Many are familiar with Francis Schaeffer, whose thought and writings provided
much fuel for the fires of political activism among conservative Christians
during the “culture wars” of the 1980s—Hart lumps him among Libertarian
Calvinists—although, kudos to Hart, he mentions that from Witherspoon to
Schaeffer there certainly is a development, albeit one which essentially argues
for the same outlook, namely, that the “American experiment of a republic based
on limited government and civil liberty” is rooted in and indebted to
Calvinistic thought. After surveying the Libertarian Calvinistic development in
America, Hart then goes on to survey those Calvinists for whom a “free Church
in a free State” would not have been considered very Calvinistic.
This latter group, the Authoritarian Calvinists, Hart
introduces (foregoing name dropping) by noting that “practically every major
confession from sixteenth-century Reformed or Presbyterianism churches affirmed
that the civil magistrate was responsible for enforcing the true religion and
had a duty to protect the true church” (77). Knowing that is key, for it means that civic and religious liberties are
intertwined.
Originally, before America
was a twinkling in the eye of all of the Framers, the Reformed consensus on the
church/state relationship was antithetical to the current architecture of
American statecraft. The Reformers clearly saw the magistrates (aka, the
government) were responsible for enforcing the Lordship of Christ (true
religion) as well as protecting the Church, which for most contemporary
Americans would be an entirely foreign concept. Hart follows this Authoritarian
thought from the Continent and traces it through Presbyterian History in America
to its modern yet few expressions, like Christian reconstruction, or theonomy,
and the Reformed Presbyterian Church of North America.
Hart emphasizes that “the first Protestants did not have any
conception of a religiously mixed society,” and that “practically no one linked
civil and religious liberty the way that American Presbyterians did” (77),
which helps readers realize that American Presbyterians truly broke from
historical Presbyterianism on this issue. On the one hand, the civil
magistrates are responsible for enforcing true religion, but on the other hand,
the civil magistrates also had a duty to protect the true church, however, the
American Presbyterian understanding of civic and religious liberty capitulated
toward the latter portion of this dual-affirmation, and in doing so they turned
the magistrate into merely a “nursing father” (protector) to the church. This
view over time, maturing in a cultural space designated as “neutral” and
“secular” obviously got watered down to, well, the America we know today. But
how and why did American Libertarian Presbyterians do this?
Starting in 1729, American Presbyterians revised the
Westminster Standards for the colonies. At the Synod, held in Philadelphia,
reservations were taken regarding the Westminster Confession’s teaching on
government, and by the revisions in 1788, as Hart says, “in one fell swoop, the
American Presbyterian church swept away almost two centuries of Presbyterian
politics” (80). The New World was thinking fundamentally different about
politics and religion. The categories of thought had changed. The sphere of
magistrate and the sphere of religion were distinct and meaningfully separated.
We know motives for doing this, worries about the state
overstepping her bounds and meddling in religious affairs, etc., but the
motives and reasoning laid aside, it is still remarkable and historically
significant (and very intriguing) to understand
that this was a revolution of sorts in Presbyterian thought. Still, Hart
tries to keep the balance on the two views and reminds readers that “the
contrast developed here between the libertarian and authoritarian wings of
Reformed Protestantism may be stronger on paper than it has been in practice”
(83).
And that very well may be true, but clearly the two
Calvinist views are mutually exclusive. Yet, in order to bring some relief to
the tension between the two, Hart appeals to Philip Benedict’s social history of
the Reformation. Benedict argued that, contrary to Kuyper and Libertarian
Calvinists, the roots of democratic/representative government (aka, the
“American experiment”) can be found in the “feudal” shared experiences of
Medieval decentralized society. Hart likes the sound of that. The historical events
interpreted through that framework teach us that Calvinism is not a
political/economic ideology or “orientation." Therefore, Hart is confident
concluding that the genesis of American statecraft is not Calvinism; American
politics do not proceed from the throne of God.
My thoughts: Instead of spending time circumventing
bickering Calvinists by attributing genesis of the thing opposed by the one
group and promoted by the other group to the social memory and imagination shaped
by shared experiences during the feudal and decentralized Middles Ages, I wish
that Hart had addressed a very important question: Which Calvinistic view of American Politics (or politics in general) is
harmonious with what the Bible teaches? Hart
doesn’t really address the truth claims of one group over against the other’s
view in relation to the political imperatives and narratives found in
Scripture. Hart's historical surveys are excellent, but I think not interacting with the historical witness in that type of fashion is a real shortcoming, although it may be outside the purview of an article for this type of editorial. Simply to say, after reading this chapter I thought to myself, "That was really interesting, but . . ."
Tuesday, May 22, 2012
Parental Joy - Sanctifying
A good day, indeed. My wife and I spent time after dinner watching our two-and-a-half-year-old son play his imaginary violin, using a wooden spoon as a bow. He played and danced; he pranced to Bach and John Willams while parental joy filled our hearts. Sometimes I think that parenting is sanctifying because of the sacrifice required, but this evening I know that parenting is also sanctifying because of parental joy.
This evening I have watched our son, and now I feel equipped even more so to "ride the eruption of Easter" (N. D. Wilson) and to revel in the thought of someday witnessing the child that shall play on the hole of the asp (Isa 11:8).
This evening I have watched our son, and now I feel equipped even more so to "ride the eruption of Easter" (N. D. Wilson) and to revel in the thought of someday witnessing the child that shall play on the hole of the asp (Isa 11:8).
Labels:
Parental Joy,
Sanctification
Saturday, May 19, 2012
Renewing Dogmatic Theology
I enjoyed the article "Renewing Dogmatic Theology" by Bruce D. Marshall (First Things, May 2012). Marshall is interacting with Catholic theologian Matthias Joseph Scheeben, and looking for virtues for contemporary dogmatic enterprise. Lots of good things therein, my summary: With "supernatural focus, sympathetic learning, and humility," the dogmatic theologian disciplines himself to be drawn into the "mysteries of God revealed only in Christ." Once revealed, he meditates upon these mysteries (Dogmatic theology has its own "domain"--not being Natural). A dogmatic theologian is not a "virtuoso intellectual," rather, he is a humble man. Humble because of "love for and gratitude to God," who has exalted mankind beyond our wildest dreams. Therefore, "Dogmatic theology is most creative when it is most genuinely submissive."
Labels:
Dogmatic Theology,
Theology
Thursday, May 17, 2012
Resource: Holy Bible Crib Sheet
If you look under the header Pages at the top of the right hand column, I have created a Writings and Resources page. On that page I have posted URL for retrieving a Holy Bible Crib Sheet I created; you can use the crib sheet for studying/memorizing books of the Bible and key verses. Download it, print it off and fold it; stick it in your pocket and retrieve for studying during down time. Or, stick it on your smart phone. :)
Tuesday, May 15, 2012
Piper: Regeneration, Again
“The internal call is God’s sovereign, creative, unstoppable
voice. It creates what it commands. God speaks not just to the ear and the
mind, but he speaks to the heart. His internal heart-call opens the eyes of the
blind heart, and opens the ears of the deaf heart, and causes Christ to appear
as the supremely valuable person that he really is. So the heart freely and
eagerly embraces Christ as the Treasure that he is. That’s what God does when
he calls us through the gospel (see 1 Pet. 2:9; 5:10 )”
(John Piper, Finally Alive, 84).
Labels:
John Piper,
New Birth,
Regeneration
Book Review: John Calvin's American Legacy - Chapter 2 - Calvinism and American Identity
Chapter 1 review here.
Introduction review here.
Initial thoughts here.
The second chapter carries the title “Calvinism and American
Identity.” The author is David Little, he has served as a professor at Harvard
Divinity School .
Little demonstrates that there is no consensus on Calvinism’s contribution to American
national identity, showing readers that contemporary historical interpretation
of Calvinism’s contribution to American identity are as variegated as the “division
over religion and national identity” originating with the New England Puritans,
an ambivalence which Little suggest is rooted in the thought of John Calvin
himself.
Little’s thesis is tucked away five pages into the article,
all that to say, it takes a bit of reading to get to his declared aim, which
is, “that the deep division over religion and national identity did not
originate with the New England Puritans . . . that ambivalence is at the root
of the Calvinist tradition of which they were a part, going back to the
founder, John Calvin himself” (47). In the remainder of the article, Little
illustrates this division by examining the Puritans thought and then Calvin’s
own thought.
Little sees in the Puritans ambivalence regarding whether or
not a nation could be considered “Christian”—part of his case study is the
Massachusetts Colony where renowned historical figures like Governor John
Winthrop and Pastor John Cotton worked through the issues that arose as a
society of faith organizes formal civic laws, which in that case led to codified civil rights, e.g. Bay Colony's Body of Liberties which gave "rights pertaining to religious belief and practice" (see pages 50-53 for key background). However, as these events unfolded one contemporary divine, Urian Oakes, noted that “church and
commonwealth are twisted together.”
Although twisted together, this did not mean that there was
uniformity of thought and ideals. There was great concern about the potential
of church and state opposing one another, since men like John Winthrop wanted
society to be “nursing fathers to the churches” (52). Therefore, he opposed the interpretation of "free religion" to permit elders of churches to freely consult "without the concurrence of civil authority" (see page 52-53), which some at that time were advocating. Clearly we see even
within this “twisted together” view of Church and state that there is division of
thought. This division, however, is mild compared to the position put into motion by Puritan
Roger Williams, who spearheaded the Rhode Island charter, which most resembles
our current secular, neutral view of government (Rhode Island was the first
colony that did not require civil office holders to be Christian).
Little then goes on to examine similar tensions evident in John
Calvin’s writings, demonstrating Calvin’s original teaching regarding over the division of religion and national identity, which Calvin later softened in the
face of the Geneva council’s
execution of heretic Michael Servetus.
In all of this, I have barely begun to scratch the surface of the detailed
work laid out before us by Little, but I hope I have shown even with these few
brief summarizing paragraphs why Little feels confident asserting in the last sentence of the article: “If Calvinism is as
divided as I say, then it is no longer possible to speak unequivocally about
its contribution to American national identity” (60).
My thoughts: recommended reading for those interested in or who are currently exposed to the "Two Kingdom" debates (again) being reignited in the Reformed world (e.g., I'm thinking of current buzz regarding Westminster Seminary California, Michael Horton, and John Frame's The Escondido Theology).
Saturday, May 12, 2012
The Patristic Shape of the Reformers
“The Reformers learned from Athanasius about Christian
psalmody, from Ambrose about catechetical instruction, from John Chrysostom
about preaching, and from Augustine about the sacraments” (Hughes Oliphant Old,
Worship:Reformed according to Scripture (Revised and Expanded Ed.,
WJK Press, 2002), 4).
Labels:
Patristic,
The Reformation,
Worship
Friday, May 11, 2012
Obama: Sin-Approval-Graphs/Charts
Social Media news outlet Mashable has done us the favor of creating some sin-approval-graphs/charts (not to be confused with flannelgraphs from Sunday School days) analyzing Internet buzz after President Obama's recent support of gay marriage. From the adjoined article: "The chart below shows just how much of a positive sentiment infusion Obama got from his announcement . . ." Positive sentiment infusion?!? Oh, they meant standeth in the way of sinners.
Monday, May 7, 2012
Nevin: Reformation Thought, Again
“The Heidelberg Catechism was designed, as we have already
seen, to serve the cause of union and peace. . . . From beginning to end, it is
occupied with what is positive in truth; rather than with its negative aspects
and relations. . . . This is truly remarkable, when we consider the particular
period in which it appeared, and the tone that had come to characterize too
generally at the time the thinking and speaking of the different parties in the
Protestant world” (J. W. Nevin, History and Genius of the Heidelberg Catechism
(Chambersburg, 1847), 57-58).
Labels:
Heidelberg Catechism,
Irenic Theology,
J. W. Nevin
Piper: Regeneration, Again
Following the heading, “Never Separate the New Birth and Faith in
Jesus,” John Piper goes on to say:
The life given in the new birth is the life of faith. The two are never separate. . . . Therefore, when answering the question What happens in the new birth? never separate these two sayings of Jesus in John 3: “Unless one is born again he cannot see the kingdom of God” (v. 3), and, “Whoever believes in the Son has eternal life” (v. 36). What happens in the new birth is the creation of life in union with Christ. And part of how God does that is by the creation of faith, which is how we experience our union with Christ” (John Piper, Finally Alive, 33)
Labels:
John Piper,
New Birth,
Regeneration
Scripture & Christ
Scripture is God speaking to us; Scripture is God abstracting the world in order to teach us about the world. This is why Scripture is more like a poem, a song, or a novel, and less like a textbook. Scripture is more like an italicized word--carrying emphases and nuance--and less like a proper noun or another part of speech. In Scripture we see God isolating, enhancing, and highlighting elements of history. Why? Because Scripture is all about Jesus. Through the inspiration of the Holy Spirit the Father is telling the created world (God is telling us) about his son, the second person of the Trinity, who is the Lord Jesus Christ.Why? Because God loves the world (John 3:16), and this means that Scripture provides for Christians both true and enhanced knowledge of God and the world.
Labels:
Jesus Christ,
Scripture
Poem: Strength - Proverbs 31:25
Girl
Thou haveth fierce strength
Comely Woman
What type of strength is this?
From your womb
Comes forth the dragon-slayer
Skeletal crushing man
Mother Mary
The offspring of your holy womb
He is
Terrible as an army with banners
Silencing, mouths of fools
Dashing, the wicked's child
They shatter against, the Rock
That Rock in the wilderness
Terrible as an army with banners
Girl
What type of strength is this?
Thou haveth fierce strength
Comely Woman
What type of strength is this?
From your womb
Comes forth the dragon-slayer
Skeletal crushing man
Mother Mary
The offspring of your holy womb
He is
Terrible as an army with banners
Silencing, mouths of fools
Dashing, the wicked's child
They shatter against, the Rock
That Rock in the wilderness
Terrible as an army with banners
Girl
What type of strength is this?
Labels:
OT: Proverbs,
Poem
Friday, May 4, 2012
God and the World
At First Things you can read article by Dr. Peter J. Leithart on the worldliness of God. One could mediate on Leithart's musings at length.
Christian worldliness is cruciform: We seek the world’s good by denying ourselves and sharing the cross of Jesus. To get this right, we have to move in circles: We worship God, but worshiping the Triune God drives us back to the world God rescues; we serve this world, but we offer up our service to God, the God who rescues the world.
However we keep our balance on the tightrope, it is clear that we cannot follow Jesus without sharing His passion to see the world redeemed. For Christians, the issue is never whether to be worldly but how.
Thursday, May 3, 2012
Piper: Regeneration
Some of John Piper’s thoughts on regeneration from Finally Alive:
“The new birth, as you will see, is not a work of man. No human makes the new birth happen. . . . When you are truly born again and grow in the grace and knowledge of what the Lord has done for you, your fellowship with God will be sweet, and your assurance that he is your Father will be deep. I want that for you” (18).
“What is the new brith? That is, what actually happens? What is it like? What changes? What comes into being that wasn’t there before” (19)?
“What happens in the new birth is not getting new religion but getting new life” (28).
“[W]hat happens in the new birth is not merely affirming the supernatural in Jesus but experiencing the supernatural in yourself” (30). . . . He [Holy Spirit] blows where he wills. We don’t control him. He is free and sovereign. He is the immediate cause of the new birth” (31).
“Jesus himself is the life that the Holy Spirit gives. Or we could say: The spiritual life that he gives, he only gives in connection with Jesus. Union with Jesus is where we experience supernatural, spiritual life” (32). See John 14:6.
“So there is no spiritual life—no eternal life—apart from connection with Jesus and belief in Jesus. We will have lots more to say about the relationship between the new birth and faith in Jesus. But we can put it this way for now: In the new birth, the Holy Spirit unites us to Christ in a living union. Christ is life. Christ the vine where life flows. We are the branches (John 15:1-17). What happens in the new birth is the supernatural creation of new spiritual life, and it is created through union with Jesus Christ. The Holy Spirit brings us into vital connection with Christ who is the way, the truth, and the life. That is the objective reality of what happens in the new birth” (32).
“The new birth, as you will see, is not a work of man. No human makes the new birth happen. . . . When you are truly born again and grow in the grace and knowledge of what the Lord has done for you, your fellowship with God will be sweet, and your assurance that he is your Father will be deep. I want that for you” (18).
“What is the new brith? That is, what actually happens? What is it like? What changes? What comes into being that wasn’t there before” (19)?
“What happens in the new birth is not getting new religion but getting new life” (28).
“[W]hat happens in the new birth is not merely affirming the supernatural in Jesus but experiencing the supernatural in yourself” (30). . . . He [Holy Spirit] blows where he wills. We don’t control him. He is free and sovereign. He is the immediate cause of the new birth” (31).
“Jesus himself is the life that the Holy Spirit gives. Or we could say: The spiritual life that he gives, he only gives in connection with Jesus. Union with Jesus is where we experience supernatural, spiritual life” (32). See John 14:6.
“So there is no spiritual life—no eternal life—apart from connection with Jesus and belief in Jesus. We will have lots more to say about the relationship between the new birth and faith in Jesus. But we can put it this way for now: In the new birth, the Holy Spirit unites us to Christ in a living union. Christ is life. Christ the vine where life flows. We are the branches (John 15:1-17). What happens in the new birth is the supernatural creation of new spiritual life, and it is created through union with Jesus Christ. The Holy Spirit brings us into vital connection with Christ who is the way, the truth, and the life. That is the objective reality of what happens in the new birth” (32).
Labels:
John Piper,
New Birth,
Regeneration
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