Saturday, December 29, 2007
The Loveliness of Christ
"Why should I start at the plough of my Lord, that maketh deep furrows on my soul? I know he is no idle husbandmen, he purposeth a crop." Page 8
"'In all their afflictions he was afflicted.' Then Christ bore the first stroke of this cross: it rebounded off him upon you, and ye got it at the second hand, and he and ye are halvers in it. And I shall believe for my part, he mindeth to distil heaven out of this loss, and all others the like; for wisdom devised it, and love laid it on, and Christ owneth it as his own, and putteth your shoulder only beneath a piece of it." Page 77-78
"This soul of ours hath love, and cannot but love some fair one; and O, what a fair One, what an only One, what an excellent, lovely ravishing One is Jesus." Page 53
Wednesday, November 7, 2007
What Jesus Demands from the World
Tuesday, October 30, 2007
Pierced for Our Transgressions
Description
The belief that Jesus died for us, suffering the wrath of his own Father in our place, has been the wellspring of hope for countless Christians through the ages. However, with an increasing number of theologians, church leaders, and even popular Christian books and magazines questioning this doctrine, which naysayers have described as a form of “cosmic child abuse,” a fresh articulation and affirmation of penal substitution is needed. And Jeffery, Ovey, and Sach have responded here with clear exposition and analysis.
They make the case not only that the doctrine is clearly taught in Scripture, but that it has an impeccable pedigree and a central place in Christian theology, and that its neglect has serious consequences. The authors also systematically analyze over twenty specific objections that have been brought against penal substitution and charitably but firmly offer a defining declaration of the doctrine of the cross for any concerned reader.
Endorsements
“The Bible historically has been understood to teach explicitly and implicitly that Christ died as a penal substitute for sinners. That’s what this excellent volume teaches us, too. Carefully studying the primary biblical texts and then answering numerous objections, this book explains and defends the understanding that Christ died in our place, taking our penalty for us. From the biblical material to patristic quotations, from pastoral implications to present objections, this book is a responsible and comprehensive introduction. All the authors’ careful work promises to make this book the new standard text on Christ’s atoning work. Now, I can’t wait to read it again, devotionally.”
- Mark Dever, Pastor, Capitol Hill Baptist Church
“This book is important not only because it deals so competently with what lies at the heart of Christ’s cross work, but because it responds effectively to a new generation of people who are not listening very carefully to what either Scripture or history says.”
- D. A. Carson, Trinity Evangelical Divinity School
“One of the most comprehensive treatments available of the doctrine of penal substitutionary atonement. The writing is clear and understandable to non-specialists, but its authors fully understand the technical issues, so that the book makes a real contribution to the academic discussion as well.”
- John M. Frame, Reformed Theological Seminary, formerly of Westminster Theological Seminary
“This book is faithful to Scripture, knowledgeable of history, conversant with current debate, and deeply committed to seeing the church flourish in our day.”
- David F. Wells, Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary
“An important scholarly contribution to a current doctrinal debate with enormous spiritual and pastoral implications.”
- Timothy George, Beeson Divinity School
“The authors defend the doctrine of penal substitution with sparkling clarity and winsome logic.”
- Thomas R. Schreiner, Southern Baptist Theological Seminary
“I commend this book for its comprehensive and fair scrutiny of the many objections brought against the doctrine of penal substitution in recent years.”
- I. Howard Marshall, emeritus professor, University of Aberdeen
“A very significant book. The authors have carefully and convincingly evaluated the biblical material on which the teaching of penal substitution has been based and reaffirmed it.”
- Peter T. O’Brien, Moore Theological College
Tuesday, October 16, 2007
Communion with the Triune God
No one else has laid open the paths of personal fellowship with the three persons of the Trinity the way Owen does. It is simply extraordinary.The book is broken into three parts with each part devoted to communion with a Person of the Trinity.
I have two copies on the way and they should be available by Sunday, October 21st. 448 Pages, $15.00.
Saturday, October 13, 2007
The Great Exchange: My Sin for His Righteousnesss
Those of us fortunate enough to go to the Desiring God National Conference this year were able to hear Jerry Bridges speak. This was my first encounter with Bridges of any kind. He exhorted us in enduring to the end 1) to keep a daily time of focused personal communion with God, 2) to daily appropriate the Gospel to our souls, 3) to daily commit our lives as a living sacrifice to God and 4) to firmly believe in the sovereignty and love of God. He struck me as a very wise man, unromantic about the doctrine of sin and serious about holiness.
If you like me have not read anything by Bridges, I can't imagine a more worthy topic to cut your teeth on. For the rest of you who have previously been blessed by Bridges (his Transforming Grace has recently been taught at FCC), you need no encouragement from me to pick up this book.
I hope to have this on the stand on Sunday, October 21th. 304 Pages, $11.00. Let me know what you think.
Growing Up Christian
Publisher's Description: Many teens are active in church youth programs, yet drop out of church later in life and never return. Other young adults rest on the merits of their parents’ faith without ever experiencing their own relationship with Jesus Christ. In Growing Up Christian, Karl Graustein and Mark Jacobsen seek to help teenagers who have grown up in Christian homes by reminding them of the blessings of growing up in a Christian home, warning them of some of the dangers they face, providing practical suggestions for avoiding these dangers, and urging them to think and live in a way that pleases God.
"Growing Up Christian is a great book. Karl Graustein gets it! He understands the pitfalls and dangers that track with the rich privilege of growing up in a Christian home. He addresses all the standard temptations; getting ensnared by sin, presuming oneself to be saved, craving for popularity. In winsome, “kid friendly” ways he turns the reader to knowing God, knowing the Bible, solid theology, fellowship with others. This book has a look and feel that young people will appreciate. Much of the teaching is found in engaging interactive text boxes that will make this book a small group leader’s dream. I look forward to seeing this book used in the church I serve. " - Ted Tripp, Author of Shepherding a Child's Heart.
The Expository Genius of John Calvin
From the lawgiver Moses to the apostle John, and from the early church fathers to modern defenders of the faith, there has marched onto the stage of human history a long line of godly men, a triumphant parade of spiritual stalwarts who have upheld the doctrines of grace. In this book, the first in the five-volume A Long Line of Godly Men series, Dr. Steven J. Lawson takes readers on a heart-stirring survey of the Scriptures to show that the Bible in its entirety teaches the doctrines of grace.The research for this work was originally done for a teaching series for the men of his church. You can download that teaching series and other sermons, and subscribe to the podcast here. The Expository Genius of John Calvin is an individual profile in this series.
I have ordered a single copy of Expository Genius for the book stand. It should be there by Wednesday, October 17 for $11.00. 142 Pages. Let me know if there is interest in the Long Line of Godly Men series. The books are a bit expensive (about $20.00 at wts) and long (Foundation of Grace is 584 pages).
Thursday, October 11, 2007
Stop Dating the Church!
By request we now have Josh Harris' book, Stop Dating the Church! Fall in Love with the Family of God. I haven't read this one but the TOC looks good.
Table of Contents
1. Can This Relationship Be Saved? What We Miss When We Date the Church
2. He Still Calls Her Bride. Seeing the Church from Heaven's Perspective
3. Why We Really Need the Local Church. Thinking Globally, Loving Locally
4. Join the Club. What Passion in Action Looks Like
5. Choosing Your Church. The Ten Things That Matter Most
6. Rescuing Sunday. How to Get More from the Best Day of the Week
7. The Dearest Place on Earth. It's Time to Say Yes
Wednesday, October 3, 2007
WTS Bookstore
The Gospel and Personal Evangelization
I have long benefited from the 9 Marks interview series conducted by Mark Dever. One of the most recent interviews is not by Dever but of Dever and by CJ Mahaney. This is a great and funny listen of a conversation between three close friends (Matt Schmucker is also in the interview). At one point in the interview, Dever is discussing his beautiful study and he calls it his "golden cage". He says that he would rather be out with people than tucked away in his study. This has been my impression of him. He is warm, funny and a great conversationalist. I am sure that this book was written with that warmth and theological precision.
128 Pages, $8.00 at the FCC Book stand on Sunday, October 7.
Thursday, September 27, 2007
A Call To Spiritual Reformation
Monday, September 24, 2007
The Truth of the Cross
"The Truth of the Cross is the best book on the cross I have read. It is a 'must' for every church library and a book that I will give away many times to friends. This is so because it is sober (i.e., it contains historically informed reflections on salient biblical texts), sensible (i.e., it is well-argued), simple (i.e., it holds the reader's attention through grabbing illustrations and even a seventh-grader can its substance), and spiritual (i.e., it comes from a heart set ablaze by the Spirit)." — Dr. Bruce K. Waltke, Professor, Reformed Theological Seminary
Saturday, September 22, 2007
Polishing God's Monuments
Joni Eareckson Tada says, "This book doesn't tiptoe around the topic of suffering, but hits head-on the hardest questions we have about the goodness of God and the problem of suffering. Juli's story will shake you as well as inspire you!"
I put two copies of this on the book stand last week. I have not read it. If anybody has read it, I would love to hear your thoughts!
Update 9/27/2007: I have been told by a reader that this is one of the best books they have read in a long time. Tim Challies agrees.
Update 10/3/2007: Placed 5 more copies on the book stand.
The Mark of the Christian
Friday, September 21, 2007
Reformed Expository Commentaries
Here's a taste from Duguid's commentary on Esther. This comes as Duguid comments on the morality of Mordecai's edict to allow "the Jews who were in every city to gather and defend their lives, to destroy, to kill, and to annihilate any armed force of any people or province that might attack them, children and women included, and to plunder their goods." Esther 8:11
"It is important that we see why we are not called to this kind of holy war. It is not because holy war was somehow wrong in its original historical context, or was a sub-christian procedure, unworthy of the followers of Christ. It is not even because holy war seems out of date and old fashioned, a barbarous and uncivilized practice. We have not abandoned holy war simply because we have become modern people and have grown more civilized. Rather, we have abandoned holy war in its Old Testament form because we live in a different era in the history of redemption. We live in the era of the outpouring of grace, in which we fight with spiritual weapons to bring the gospel to the nations, defeating God's enemies by seeing them graciously transformed into His friends. Now we fight with the sword of the Spirit, the Word of God, which instead of turning live foes into dead corpses can transform dead sinners into live saints. Now we wrestle in prayer, seeking God's enlivening work in the hearts and souls of our friends and neighbors." Iain Duguid, Esther & Ruth, pages 108-109To find out more read Tim Challies interview with Richard Phillips.
Overcoming Sin & Temptation
• provided overviews of the thesis and arguments for all three booksI started reading this book on July 6th and just finished on September 21st. Reading it was a fairly severe beat down. It is the best help in understanding sin I have read.
• footnoted difficult vocabulary words or phrases (at their first occurrence in each book) and collected them into a glossary
• Americanized the British spelling (e.g., behaviour to behavior)
• updated archaic pronouns (e.g., thou to you)
• updated other archaic spellings (e.g., hath to have; requireth to requires)
• updated some archaic word forms (e.g., concernments to concerns, surprisals to surprises)
• corrected the text in places where the nineteenth-century edition incorrectly deviated from the original
• modernized some of the punctuation
• placed Owen’s Scripture references in parentheses7
• added our own Scripture references in brackets when Owen quotes or alludes to a passage but does not provide a reference
• transliterated all Hebrew and Greek words, and provided a translation if Owen didn’t provide one
• translated all Latin phrases that Owen leaves untranslated
• provided sources for quotations and allusions where possible
• removed Owen’s intricate numbering system, which functioned as an extensive outline
• added headings and italics throughout this volume, and extensive outlines of our own at the end, to aid the reader in following the flow of Owen’s thought. Pages 17-18
The book is made up of 3 individual books, Of Mortification of Sin in Believers, Of Temptation: The Nature and Power of it, and Indwelling Sin. I suggest that you read Indwelling Sin first then on to Mortification and Temptation. It was half way thru Indwelling Sin that I realized I was going to have to read it again; it's that good.
Here's a taste...
Indeed, in opposition unto this deceit lies much of the wisdom of faith and power of gospel grace. When the mind is fully possessed with, and cast habitually and firmly into, the mold of the notion and doctrine of gospel truth about the full and free forgiveness of all sins in the blood of Christ, then to be able to keep the heart always in a deep, humbling sense of sin, abhorrency of it, and self-abasement for it, is a great effect of gospel wisdom and grace. This is the trial and touchstone of gospel light: If it keeps the heart sensible of sin, humble, lowly, and broken on that account—if it teaches us to water a free pardon with tears, to detest forgiven sin, to watch diligently for the ruin of that which we are yet assured shall never ruin us—it is divine, from above, of the Spirit of grace. If it secretly and insensibly makes men loose and slight in their thoughts about sin, it is adulterate, selfish, false. If it will be all, answer all ends, it is nothing. Hence it comes to pass that sometimes we see men walking in a bondage-frame of spirit all their days, low in their light, mean in their apprehensions of grace; so that it is hard to discern whether covenant in their principles they belong unto—whether they are under the law or under grace; yet walk with a more conscientious tenderness of sinning than many who are advanced into higher degrees of light and knowledge than they—not that the saving light of the gospel is not the only principle of saving holiness and obedience; but that, through the deceitfulness of sin, it is variously abused to countenance the soul in manifold neglect of duties, and to draw off the mind from a due consideration of the nature, desert, and danger of sin. John Owen, Indwelling Sin, Pages 301-302
Also, Kris Lundgaard's book, The Enemy Within, which has been studied at FCC in Sunday School, is a meditation on Owen's work on sin. I am looking forward myself to reading this soon.
Come and Welcome to Jesus Christ
John Bunyan is my favorite Puritan, as he his of many. My favorite book of his that I have read thus far is Come and Welcome to Jesus Christ. It is an exposition of John 6:37 "All that the Father giveth me shall come to me; and him that cometh to me I will in no wise cast out." Oh what a wonderful encouragement this book is for the coming sinner! It is vintage Bunyan, written in a way only he could write.
I got a good deal on these at amazon (Buy 3 get the 4th one free). They should be on the stand on Wednesday, 9/26 for $6.75.
A little taste...
"Object. 4. But, saith another, I am so heartless, so slow, and, as I think, so indifferent in my coming, that, to speak truth, I know not whether my kind of coming ought to be called a coming to Christ.
Answ. You know that I told you at first, that coming to Christ is a moving of the heart and affections towards him.
But, saith the soul, my dullness and indifferency in all holy duties, demonstrate my heartlessness in coming; and to come, and not with the heart, signifies nothing at all.
1. The moving of the heart after Christ is not to be discerned, at all times, by thy sensible affectionate performance of duties, but rather by those secret groanings and complaints which thy soul makes to God against that sloth that attends thee in duties.
2. But grant it to be even as thou sayest it is, that thou comest so slowly, &c., yet, since Christ bids them come that come not at all, surely they may be accepted that come, though attended with those infirmities which thou at present groanest under. He saith, "and him that cometh;" he saith not, If they come sensible; so fast; but, "and him that cometh to me I will in no wise cast out." He saith also in the ninth of Proverbs, "As for him that wanteth understanding," that is, an heart (for oftentimes the understanding is taken for the heart), "come, eat of my bread, and drink of the wine which I have mingled."
3. Thou mayest be vehement in thy spirit in coming to Jesus Christ, and yet be plagued with sensible sloth; so was the church when she cried, "Draw me, we will run after thee;" and Paul, when he said, "When I would do good, evil is present with me" (Song 14; Rom 7; Gal 5:19). The works, strugglings, and oppositions of the flesh, are more manifest than are the works of the Spirit in our hearts, and so are sooner felt than they. What then? Let us not be discouraged at the sight and feeling of our own infirmities, but run the faster to Jesus Christ for salvation.
4. Get thy heart warmed with the sweet promise of Christ's acceptance of the coming sinner, and that will make thee make more haste unto him. Discouraging thoughts they are like unto cold weather, they benumb the senses, and make us go ungainly about our business; but the sweet and warm gleads8 of promise are like the comfortable beams of the sun, which liven and refresh. 9 You see how little the bee and fly do play in the air in winter; why, the cold hinders them from doing it; but when the wind and sun is warm, who so busy as they?
5. But again, he that comes to Christ, flies for his life. Now, there is no man that flies for his life, that thinks he speeds fast enough on his journey; no, could he, he would willingly take a mile at a step. O my sloth and heartlessness, sayest thou! "Oh that I had wings like a dove! for then would I fly away, and be at rest. I would hasten my escape from the windy storm and tempest" (Psa 55:6,8).
Poor coming soul, thou art like the man that would ride full gallop, whose horse will hardly trot! Now, the desire of his mind is not to be judged of by the slow pace of the dull jade he rides on, but by the hitching, and kicking, and spurring, as he sits on his back. Thy flesh is like this dull jade; it will not gallop after Christ; it will be backward, though thy soul and heaven lie at stake. 10 But be of good comfort, Christ judgeth not according to the fierceness of outward motion (Mark
Thursday, September 20, 2007
Welcome to the FCC Bookstand Blog
We will see how this goes. If it proves beneficial, I will do my best to keep it updated. If not, it can wither and fade away, and that is fine too.
Nate