Unsettled Christianity

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Archive for the ‘Book Review’ Category

April 30th, 2012 by Travis

Review: What God Thinks When We Fail: Finding Grace and True Success @ivpress

what does god think

It has been a while since I have a reviewed a book that I read and I really want to do it justice.  So here goes….

David, Jacob, Abraham, Peter, Paul, Elijah.  What do you and I have in common with these “Giants Of Faith” (GOF hereafter)?  We, and they, have failed. Yes, failure is a part of our lives and when it comes to following God, all have failed.  We don’t like to admit that fact, but it is true and it is something that binds us all together.

But the question comes, what does God think when we fail?  Particularly, what does God think of us when we fail?  This is the question tackled in the book What God Thinks When We Fail by Steven C. Roy, IVP Publishers, 2011.

Roy is a professor and former pastor and knows a thing or two about failure.  He opens with his story and then jumps right into the examination of what success and failure are.  In success he asks what constitutes success, especially in God’s eyes.  Telling the stories of GOF, dealing especially with Jacob and Moses, he informs us of what most of us know:  Success to God is following His will and what He wants us to do.  When we do this, we can expect that God is pleased.

Roy moves on to his treatment of failure and how we respond to it.  The majority of the book is dedicated to this and Roy does very well making sure we know failure is inevitable and how we respond is how it defines us.  Within this is wrestling with failure theologically.  Dealing with failure and what God thinks of that is the heart of the book.

If one takes nothing else away from this book, I would say the five Truths of Grace that Roy supplies are alone worth the price of the book.  They are as follows:  1. Not all failures are sinful; 2. All sinful failures are forgiven by God; 3. God is progressively working to transform us and our sinful failures; 4. No failure defines our identity as Christians; and 5. No failure will have the last word in our lives.  Roy provides further insight into each of these truths, but the truths themselves tell us more than most of us are willing to admit.  Too often we let the failure define who we are and not propel us to who we can be.

The final chapter, Helping Others, was to me the most challenging.  It called upon all Christians (pastors, leaders, volunteers) to reach out to those who have failed.  Roy states that often times we hear of failure from a distance (i.e. the pulpit, the Sunday School teacher position), but people need to hear of failure in relationships.  He calls us all to reach out to those whose failures are the result of sin and help bring them back.  The old saying “Hate the sin.  Love the sinner.” is recalled here saying that we are very good at hating the sin and not so good at loving the sinner.  This is a risky position because it can bring accusations of “accommodation”.  But wasn’t Jesus accused of being a sinner?  In helping them deal with failure, Roy says it is hard, it is dirty and it is what God wants from us all.  Because in the end we all fail and are in need of grace.  And when we reach out to each other and to God, we can turn the failure into ultimate success.

This is an excellent book.  At only 160 pages, Roy packs a pretty good punch.  I have struggled with failure recently and this book was extremely helpful in my struggles.  I also needed to read the chapter on helping others as I believe we all need to get our hands dirty and reach down and lift up.  All in all, this is a very good book.  I intend to make some time to read it again.  If you have struggled, or are still struggling, with failure, you owe it to yourself to read this book.

April 27th, 2012 by Joel

Book Announcement: Jesus the Messiah @kregelbooks

Jesus messiah

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It is not yet ready to order, but it looks interesting, never the less.

Description:

Few books have sought to exhaustively trace the theme of Messiah through all of Scripture,
but this book does so with the expert analysis of three leading evangelical scholars. For the Bible student and pastor, Jesus the Messiah presents a comprehensive picture of both scriptural and cultural expectations surrounding the Messiah, from an examination of the Old Testament promises to their unique and perfect fulfillment in Jesus’ life.

Students of the life of Christ will benefit from the authors’ rich understanding of ancient biblical culture and pastors will find an indispensable help for understanding the unity and importance of the ancient promise of Messiah. This handsome volume will be a ready reference on Messiah for years to come.

Here is my stance. No one, really, in the Old Testament was necessarily looking for a Messiah, and as a matter of fact, when the Jews started too, the concept was still varied. Does this mean that the Messiah cannot be found in the Old Testament? No. I mean, look at Cyrus. If we have a proper understanding of Matthew, then we can use the Old Testament to ‘find’ the Messiah.

Anyway…

April 27th, 2012 by Joel

(late) Book Announcement: Psychological Analyses and the Historical Jesus: New Ways to Explore Christian Origins

I know it’s late and all, but this might be of some interest:

psychological historical jesus

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Since Albert Schweitzer’s monumental work, nearly a century ago, psychology has been banned from Historical Jesus research. But both disciplines have advanced and it is time to review the contribution that psychology can make. Bas Van Os examines the problems which surround both the historical and the psychological study of Jesus, such as the fact that we can only work with the surviving traditions that some of his early followers left us. Following this, Van Os proposes a theoretical framework that combines sound psychological theories and critical biblical scholarship to explain how Jesus’ life and religious experience impacted the beliefs of his friends and family after his death.

You can find a recent review here:

Review of Biblical Literature.

April 24th, 2012 by Joel

The Gospel According to Isaiah 53 – Video with Dr. Darrell Bock #contest

See it here:

Now, go get the book here… if you can win it… and if not… then buy it here.

April 20th, 2012 by Joel

Book Announcement: Kneeling with Giants

kneeling with giantsI’m pleased to announce the first publication by Gary Neal Hansen:

Do you sometimes find yourself searching for a way to approach God or wondering how to get out of a devotional slump? Do you long for spiritual guides you can trust? This guide to prayer is rooted in centuries of Christian tradition. In each chapter you’ll meet a figure from church history, such as St. Benedict, Martin Luther, John Calvin, St. Ignatius, Teresa of Ávila and Andrew Murray. You’ll learn how each of these spiritual giants uniquely connected to God through prayer. Each chapter provides an opportunity to practice a different method for prayer, including the divine office, the Lord’s Prayer, the Jesus Prayer, healing prayer and meditation on the Psalms. In the process your own prayer practice will be refreshed and renewed. Journey into church history and enliven each day of your prayer life.

This sounds like a great book, and for those who like to take prayer as a form of spirituality or spiritual discipline, this book may in fact be for you.

Prayer… It does a soul good.

Kneeling with Giants by Gary Neal Hansen

April 2nd, 2012 by Joel

Thank God for Edward W.H. Vick @energion

inspiration to understanding vick

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Vick writes, regarding the authority of Scripture -

Authority which has to be demonstrated and then attributed to the Bible is secondary and not primary. Christians do not believe the Bible because of something else, this E, this extrinsic thing. They believe it on account of its effectiveness. That is the kind of authority it has. They have already experienced its effectiveness. They do not need persuasion by argument….

And have a short, but powerful stance against the need to prove the Bible, he writes,

The Bible whose authority can be demonstrated is not the church’s ‘Word of God.’ Archaeological evidence is interesting. Here it is irrelevant. Between historical demonstration and religious authority lies an unbridgeable gulf. (98-99)

And regarding fundamentalists and the “literal” debate, he writes,

It is not then a question for the fundamentalist that the Scripture can be taken literally. It must be taken so as not to compromise its inerrancy. (129)

All I can say is…. bam.

Where is your faith? What do you have to demonstrate the authority of Scripture? Why? Because your faith is not in Christ, but in the merits of your own demonstration.

Bam.

March 28th, 2012 by Joel

Quote of the Day: Edward W.H. Vick @energion

inspiration to understanding vick

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I’m about a third of the way through, and finding that Vick’s book is going to become something to chew on for a while. He is first and foremost a philosopher. Coming from the Seventh Day Adventist Tradition, he still maintains some connection in his writings with his past, but he is ever reaching into the highest heights of a philosophical view towards the subject. Something I want to highlight from this first third.

“‘The most important thing we find in the Bible is not “doctrine” but something that helps us in a new attitude to God and life.’ If we treat the Bible as a source of information, whether  doctrinal information or historical information, we are missing the point….”

He goes on to suggest that the authority of the Bible is in its doctrinal statements, which more often than not we have put there, but in the way it guides us towards God. It is not meant to be static:

“That means that we are caught up in a progressing movement, in which (as the New Testament says) the Spirit of God is leading us into a developing and forward-looking experience. It is in performing this activity that the authority of Scripture consists. (61-62)

And a powerful statement on pg 92,

But the church cannot pretend that it does not intervene between what the Bible contains and what it pronounces that the Bible teaches.

That thought there is worth a thousand more pages, I think.

His doctrine of Scriptural authority sounds a lot like mine which I posted a few weeks ago. Inspiration is, like Justification/Sanctification, is about a process. It’s easy to get confused about these terms, like many are confused about what prophecy actually is. Hopefully, by reading Vick, thought who are under the oppression of arrogant doctrine will come to the light.

I have some minimal problems, such as the focus on 66 books. Vick remains thoroughly Protestant in this view. He does not hold to casual human terms like inerrant and infallible, so I can be a bit forgiving for his gloss over the other books in the Canon!

Wish this book was on Kindle…

March 21st, 2012 by Joel

Review: Justification: Five Views (Spectrum Multiview Books) @ivpacademic

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Before we get into the review proper, let me say that these books are important for at least two reasons. First, the theological topics which the Spectrum series from IVP-Academic are covering is essential to the Christian doctrinal life. We are losing ground in the battlefield of the intellect because theology is no longer being examined, and if not examined, it will not be lived. It needs examined; it needs examined and if found wanting, it needs reformed. By allowing different views to be presented, the reader can gain a pretty sizable view of the angles which need to be used to approach a particular theological issue, and in this case, justification. This feeds into the second. For too long, education has been about regurgitation; with a series like with, where views are presented and responded to in the same volume, it demands that the reader use a book such as this as a foundational source to begin to explore their own theological views.

Michael S. Horton begins with the Traditional Reformed view, which is the basis of the Reformation. Horton’s writing is almost polemical, beginning with the disagreement that the Progressive Reformed should not contain the connotation of Reformed, noting that it is not Progressive to fall away from the truth. This is the problem with Horton and others who insist on the Traditional view, that for them, the dogma of justification is the measure by which to test new exegesis, facts and studies. Horton shows that it is not the fair evaluation of the other perspectives and doctrines which he is after, so much as it seems to be the denial of their validity and the attacks to thwart actual consideration of their views. As several of the respondents have shown, Horton misses the many nuances of the other positions in attempt to defend his own. For instance, his usual anti-Catholic biases come forth when he writes of the Council of Trent and dismisses the importance of the document signed between Rome and the World Lutheran Federation. Further, he is unable to truly handle Dunn’s New Perspective, accusing them, not of misunderstanding Paul so much as misunderstanding the Reformation. As Dunn points out, this is simply not true, as for many in the non-monolithic NPP, he wants to bring an added dimension to Paul’s theology which was missing during the Reformation.

I am almost persuaded by Michael F. Bird’s essay, given his use of both substitutionary atonement as well as hints of Christus Victor and his idea that such an important issue is not so one-sided. Indeed, Bird is able to show that “justification is multifacted” (156) with at least five different angles to examine. While he falls clearly within the Calvinistic-Reformed line of thought, he has reformed this somewhat to reflect current scholarship and gotten under the usual patina to examine verses outright and not through the lens of the fathers of the Reformation. My main issues are with the reading of Romans as the zenith of Paul’s theology. We seem to believe that we know the Apostle’s mind on such matters. Wouldn’t it be odd to find out that Paul thought little of the self-serving Roman Epistle (if Stowers and others, including myself, are correct) and instead saw, say, Philemon, as the height of his own theology? Further, I take issue with the usual focus on Romans 1.16-17 as the central thesis to the entire letter as well as the reading which Bird places on Romans 1.18-32. I do, however, appreciate his enthrallment with Galatians and his grace in such a manner. Bird presents his case supported firmly with a near complete biblical picture. Again, he’s almost persuaded me, and not just because he has the word “progressive” in the title of his position.

My initial bias lies with the New Perspective (NPP), but I was hoping for something more than what Dunn presented. Perhaps, this only solidifies the assertion that not all NPP theologians arrive at the same conclusions and helps me to understand why I prefer Tom Wright’s results, shaded differently, than others in the NPP (and why it seems that Horton spoke forcefully against Wright, who is not included in the book but remains an ever present shadow, instead of focusing his attention on Dunn). One of the most palatable things about Dunn’s essay is his admission that while there are indeed sticking points, the NPP remains open to revision. It’s not forever settled, but picks up where the Reformation left off – reformed, and ever reforming. This apparent when he discusses some of Paul’s “warts.” (200) Further, Dunn allows for tensions within Paul and the New Testament, something that appeals to me in that Paul was himself continuing to explore and to be led by the Spirit in articulating the new life in Christ Jesus. Further, he calls for acceptance of these warts, tensions, and difficult parts in a way befitting a theologian and a scholar. His view is simple, really, that Paul tensely showed that works must be manifested for the life in Christ. Further, he dismisses the notion that Paul was completely set against the Judaism of his day, but allows that Paul saw the Law as something to be done away with. His pays attention to Paul’s historical context, which surprisingly, was not post-Middle Ages Europe with a real forensic justice philosophy developing not just in theology, but in the political realm as well. The focus is still on faith, heating the argument over whether or not it is faith in or the faith of. I tend to stick with the latter. Frankly, I do not know how the Reformed get around the idea of total participation if they continue to rely on the faith in translation, but that is neither here nor there.

I am more nearly convinced with Kärkkäinen’s views than I have been before. It, for me, carries the necessary elements of sound theology. First, it is biblically based and allows for a broad interpretation so that the various tensions through images are upheld as equal. Second, it is based in history with both Luther and Athanasius contributing their respective intellects to the development of the overall view. Third, it contains the elements of the Spirit, what I believe would be a sacramental theology (this is somewhat validated with both Horton’s and Bird’s responses), and the call to good works. Finally, it is of an ecumenical, albeit a somewhat cautiously realistic one, nature in that the author begins with the Joint Declaration signed by the Vatican and the World Lutheran Federation in 1999 and moves into broader Protestantism (mentioning the Anabaptists and even Methodists along the way) while seeking to encounter the East as a living and necessary stream to Christianity, something that should not be surprising from Finland. Let me add that this theology seems to be rooted as well in recent biblical scholarship, specifically, from the New Perspective on Paul. It meets the progression of theology with open arms. What I found lacking (and this is echoed in Bird’s response) is that theosis is simply not defined.

History is never as one-sided as the sectarians would have us believe, and the essay giving the history of the still-Roman Catholic debate which led to Luther and from Luther to Trent, shows that the usual Protestant banter around this particular topic is often devoid of an objective view of history. Further, the entire essay by these two authors shows that the movement of Scripture is still alive and well in the Roman Catholic Church. The essay is split in twain, with Rafferty giving the general lead up to Trent, as well as the actual discussion of Trent (although it is light on this subject) and O’Collins adding a theological reflection as well as a personal journey regarding the present topic. If we Protestants continue to see Rome through Trent, we will continue to allow Rome to out pace us in ecumenical moves and theological discussions. Other than the spirituality expressed in this essay, there is not much here to tell. These scholars of theological history show that Trent is often misunderstood, which allows the responders to, rightly, call into question the fact that even with all the change Vatican II put into place, the 16th century council was never revisited. Further, they stress as those before, during, and after Trent, that justification is a many splendored image. If it is misinterpreted, and rarely used rightly, allowing O’Collins to issue his own personal theories, then it should be reexamined and in some way changed. Further, given that both the West and the East have recognized that justification is a theme, an image, that fits into the Scriptural view of salvation, then Trent should be reexamined in such a way as to allow for some of the anathemas to be rescinded, which is a major sticking point for Protestants, and rightly so. But Rome has a great deal to show us in the way it tackles theological questions, often without alienating the factions, but finding a way to strengthen the entire Church.

There are some issues here with this book, however. For instance, the views are selectively picked. Granted, there is only so much space in which to discuss such a deep topic, but the choices are only those familiar to Western theologians. Granted, the deification view is present, but it is not a purely Eastern presentation, as it is written by a Lutheran, himself noticing that no real Lutheran view can be found in the volume. There should have been voices from the outside as well. The book seemingly comes with a warning label, “No Women Where Consulted in the Production of this Book.” I note that while this book is not one which is reviews the sociological impacts of the doctrine(s) of justification, it would have been helpful to hear at least one feminine voice in this theological treatise. The final issue I see with this book is that it does not allow a final response by the essayist. The format used in a previous work in which responders to N.T. Wright were answered by Wright would have worked well here, I think.

Overall, this is an excellent book and one well worth reading over and over again.

March 20th, 2012 by Joel

Reading Justification: The Roman Catholic View (Joel) @ivpacademic

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There were no essays in this volume which I approached with any amount of trepidation, except for this one by the Roman Catholic theologians, O’Collins and Rafferty. Perhaps it was because that I have known for sometime my predilection to the Roman Catholic position on Justification. History is never as one-sided as the sectarians would have us believe, and this essay, giving the history of the still-Roman Catholic debate which led to Luther and from Luther to Trent, shows that the usual Protestant banter around this particular topic is often devoid of an objective view of history. Further, the entire essay by these two authors shows that the movement of Scripture is still alive and well in the Roman Catholic Church.

The essay is split in twain, with Rafferty giving the general lead up to Trent, as well as the actual discussion of Trent (although it is light on this subject) and O’Collins adding a theological reflection as well as a personal journey regarding the present topic. If we Protestants continue to see Rome through Trent, we will continue to allow Rome to out pace us in ecumenical moves and theological discussions. Other than the spirituality expressed in this essay, there is not much here to tell. These scholars of theological history show that Trent is often misunderstood, which allows the responders to, rightly, call into question the fact that even with all the change Vatican II put into place, the 16th century council was never revisited. Further, they stress as those before, during, and after Trent, that justification is a many splendored image. If it is misinterpreted, and rarely used rightly, allowing O’Collins to issue his own personal theories, then it should be reexamined and in some way changed. Further, given that both the West and the East have recognized that justification is a theme, an image, that fits into the Scriptural view of salvation, then Trent should be reexamined in such a way as to allow for some of the anathemas to be rescinded, which is a major sticking point for Protestants, and rightly so. But Rome has a great deal to show us in the way it tackles theological questions, often without alienating the factions, but finding a way to strengthen the entire Church.

Full review to follow soon enough

March 19th, 2012 by Joel

In the Mail: The Wonder of the Universe: Hints of God in Our Fine-Tuned World

Wonder of the Universe Giberson

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This looks to be a fine volume. Get it!

Like detectives sleuthing out the greatest mystery of all, scientists over the centuries have uncovered clues about the structure and origins of the universe. The work of Galileo, Newton, Einstein, and a host of other tenacious researchers and thinkers reveals a cosmos of almost unimaginable wonder and beauty.

If we then honestly follow the evidence of science wherever it leads, where do we end up?

Karl Giberson takes us on a fascinating guided tour of planets and protons, galaxies and gamma rays. We discover that if gravity were slightly stronger, neutrons a tiny bit lighter, the size of our sun somewhat larger or a dozen other factors altered by fractions, there would be no life.

The author shows that for many observers, even those who do not embrace religious faith, all of this looks suspiciously like the expression of a grand plan–a cosmic architecture capable of both supporting life such as ours, and inspiring observers like us to seek out hints of a creator.

Join this cosmic expedition and discover the wonder of it all.