I am not particularly enthralled with the spiritual gifts debate that is currently undergoing a renaissance of sorts, via John MacArthur鈥檚 Strange Fire conference and publications. Been there. Done that. I was a new believer when the same debate was raging back in the late 1970s, and it is a bit discouraging to see the church divided, once again, over a topic that was beat into the ground a generation ago.
The dynamics of shame are one of the greatest cultural dynamics of the New Testament. This paradigm is key in understanding other concepts and various texts accurately especially as it relates to topics such as approval, reputation, glory, and status. While these practices were prevalent in the 1st century of the Mediterranean, they also have current bearing to different segments of society today, specifically Asian-Americans in the 21st century. This blog will be the first in a series of blogs that will demonstrate the correlation of Paul鈥檚 use of shame in light of the framework of Roman cultural practices as well as how it relates to modern 21st century Asian-American spiritual tendencies.
When I was a research student holed up in a windowless office in the library for a year, the PhD student next to my office was Jeremy Howard. While I struggled through stacks of research trying to avoid drowning in the historical theology portion of my dissertation, Jeremy was blazing through the writing of his dissertation on the Copenhagen interpretation of quantum physics and its use for Christian apologetics. His research world couldn鈥檛 have been farther away from mine. Years later, he has recently piloted a work that fits a gap I didn鈥檛 know I was looking for. To pass on an introduction to this new series, I interviewed the general editor, Jeremy Howard with several questions here.
The Christian calendar marks the observance of various feasts and celebrations throughout the year. January 6 is the day on which the Christian church celebrates Epiphany. The Season of Epiphany then extends until the day before Ash Wednesday. Epiphany means manifestation or appearance. It is a time in which the church focuses on the divine presence as manifested in Jesus Christ in New Testament times and the implications of that manifestation for today. The season is an occasion to contemplate the unfolding of the revelation of God鈥檚 presence on earth through his son, Jesus Christ. It is a time to watch and wait as the mystery and glory of the presence of God in our midst is unveiled. What will it look like for God to walk among us? How will Jesus manifest God to the watching world?
One of my self-imposed projects over the January break is to read through N. T. Wright鈥檚 (most recent) magnum opus, Paul and the Faithfulness of God. The work is actually two separate books (@ 600 and 1200 pages, respectively!). Book I is primarily concerned with backgrounds, and Paul鈥檚 worldview vis-脿-vis paganism and Judaism. Book II deals with Paul鈥檚 theology and more directly engages the text of his letters.
Yes. If you deny that Adam was a historical person it negatively impacts other Christian doctrines. An affirmation of the historicity of Adam positively and necessarily connects with a number of key Christian doctrines.
In Part One, I introduced the implausible situation that Jesus lived from His infancy with full divine awareness. I presented one argument that the New Testament presents Jesus as functioning with a human mind. This claim has been affirmed by the Council of Chalcedon (451) in opposition to some teachers such as Apollinaris, who denied that Jesus possessed a human mind and will. An incarnation involving two minds is complicated, but such is the historic teaching of the church.
As a rule, Evangelicals are great defenders of the deity of Christ. That鈥檚 not something we mess around with, and anyone who might had better take care鈥攂e they Bart Ehrman or the Jehovah鈥檚 Witness at your door!
One professor in this school playfully describes the birth of Jesus this way. There is Jesus, lying in the manger and looking out through the doorway of the stable at the stars in the night sky. I made all those stars. The baby then has another sensation alongside this new experience of seeing His creation through eyeballs, and it鈥檚 uncomfortable. I鈥檓 suddenly wet all through my diaper, and it鈥檚 getting cold! A normal infant would scream at this point until mom showed up. But not Jesus. He looks over at His teen-aged mom and thinks, I鈥檇 like to have this wet diaper changed, but Mary鈥檚 had such a hard night after so long of a trip. I鈥檒l wait a few hours until she鈥檚 had some more rest. And so, baby Jesus, the pint-sized God-man waits until His mom has gotten the rest she needs. Probably not. It strains at plausibility to think that Jesus lived with His full divine consciousness from the beginning of His human life. We can be sure that Jesus knew His unique identity and relationship to God as His Father when He was twelve, having declared as much to Joseph and Mary in Jerusalem (Luke 2:49). Luke adds, 鈥淛esus kept increasing in wisdom and stature, and in favor with God and men鈥 (v. 52, NASB). Jesus certainly knows who He is when He begins teaching, but beyond these details we don鈥檛 have revelation how much He knew before age twelve, or when.
A couple days ago I was reading Ephesians 1 in Greek during my morning Bible-reading time. As I read, I was drawn to two phrases that are clearly present in Greek but are often eliminated in English. The two expressions that get removed are 鈥渋nto him鈥 (蔚峒跋 伪峤愊勏屛) in the middle of verse 5 and (鈥渋n him鈥) (峒愇 伪峤愊勧糠) at the end of verse 10. Presumably these expressions get cut because they are deemed unnecessarily repetitive.
Genealogies rarely contain interesting tidbits about our ancestors, especially the more unacceptable ones. But Jesus鈥 genealogy does. In fact, it even seems to highlight several rather shady characters. And they are women.
This is the first of a series of blogs dealing with gun control from a Christian perspective. In this first installment, I sketch the general theological case for sane restriction on guns, particularly assault weapons, and apply biblical principles to common objections. In subsequent (shorter) posts, I will respond to alleged 鈥渂iblical鈥 arguments used by gun advocates, who claim that Scripture supports unrestricted access to lethal weaponry for private individuals. [I have slighly modified this post in the wake of the horrible tragedy at the Pulse nightclub in Orlando.]
After thirty-five years of service, James Adamson鈥檚 NICNT commentary on the Epistle of James has received a much-needed update by Scot McKnight. McKnight鈥檚 contribution to the series significantly expands on its predecessor volume鈥攂eing more than twice its size鈥攚hich is due, in part, to the mounting scholarship on James appearing since its 1976 publication date.
2013 is the inaugural year of an innovative biblical commentary series edited by John Walton and Mark Straus (published by Baker Books). It鈥檚 called Teach the Text because that is what it is about: helping people to teach the biblical text effectively. It combines literary, background and exegetical analysis with theological, pedagogical and homiletical discussion. But it does this in a surprisingly concise and accessible manner.
Dave Brunn recently gave a gift to the English-speaking church in his book One Bible, Many Versions: Are All Translations Created Equal? (IVP, 2013). Dave Brunn is a professional translator and trainer of translator-wannabes within New Tribes Mission. To the best of my knowledge, he has never worked on an English-language translation project. His translational claim to fame is a translation of the Bible (done alongside dedicated national co-translators) into Lamogai, one of the multitude of languages in Papua New Guinea. Consequently, Dave Brunn brings an outsider鈥檚 perspective to our recent English translation battles. (You know what I鈥檓 talking about, the 鈥渕ine is the best translation and all others are suspect鈥 battles.) And his outsider鈥檚 perspective is clarifying and challenging. Here is a summary of the book, in the author鈥檚 own words (from pages 189-190), focusing on what translations share, rather than how they differ.
Most of us are familiar with Jesus鈥 words at the Last Supper鈥攐r at least with some of those words. When we celebrate communion together, we regularly hear 鈥渢his is my body given for you; do this in remembrance of me鈥 and 鈥渢his cup is the new covenant in my blood, which is poured out for you.鈥 Recently, however, I read through Luke 22, which includes the Last Supper and the events surrounding it. In addition to these familiar words from the Last Supper, I was struck by some of the other words spoken by Jesus on this momentous occasion.
Reza Aslan鈥檚 new book, Zealot: The Life and Times of Jesus of Nazareth (Random House, 2013), is in most ways a typical attempt to paint a new picture of Jesus. Because so many hundreds of books of this type have been published, Aslan鈥檚 book would most likely not have received significant attention at all, except for two factors. First, a botched interview of the author on Fox News caused a huge surge of interest, making his book an overnight best seller. And second, Aslan is a very good writer. His primary teaching role, after all, is as a professor of creative writing at UC Riverside. Aslan is able to take a lot of important historical background and present it in a riveting manner, accessible to most readers.
The Baker Illustrated Bible Dictionary, edited by Tremper Longman III (with Peter Enns and Mark Strauss), is now available for purchase as an E-Book or in hardcover. This one-volume dictionary offers 1767 full-color pages and more than 5,000 articles by 124 Bible scholars. You might ask, 鈥淲hy should I care about this Bible dictionary?鈥 You should care because many of the contributors are Talbot faculty.
The most recent issue of the Journal of Spiritual Formation & Soul Care carried an article I wrote on the relationship between spiritual formation and mission. Here's an outline...
A couple years ago I was asked to lead a discussion for the Talbot School of Theology faculty on 鈥淭he New Perspective on Paul.鈥 Now, you should know up-front that (for the most part) I am not very positive about the overall approach that New Perspectivists take when they interpret the letters of Paul (esp. Galatians and Romans) and when they try to set those letters in a reconstructed first century Jewish theological context. But I also do not believe that it is right or wise for people to be dogmatic about topics that they don鈥檛 know very much about. So, to help you interact responsibly with the New Perspective, I want to revisit the lecture I did for the Talbot faculty try to help you understand the New Perspective on Paul so that you can critically weigh for yourself its merits and demerits.
When we read the Bible, how do we get to theology? Should we read the Bible as the word of God for the church, as an artifact of history, or as the material for systematic theology? The term biblical theology has been used to describe all of these perspectives. So, what is biblical theology? Some would describe it is a theology that is biblical, theology that is grounded in Christian Scripture. Others might insist that biblical theology is only the theology contained in the Bible, that is, descriptively the theology of the Bible itself. In Mark Elliott鈥檚 The Heart of Biblical Theology, reading the Bible theologically demands both notions of biblical theology above. Elliott鈥檚 book argues for the undervalued role of providence in understanding how biblical theology must be both constructive theology grounded in Scripture and rigorously descriptive of the theology of the Bible itself.
Recently, while reading through the minor prophet Haggai in the LXX (the Greek Old Testament), I noticed a phrase that looked familiar: 鈥渂efore a stone was laid on a stone (位峤肺肝课 峒愊峤 位峤肺肝课) in the Temple of the Lord鈥︹ (Hag 2:15). Hmm鈥 where had I seen 位峤肺肝课 峒愊峤 位峤肺肝课 before? Yes: in Jesus鈥 Olivet Discourse, when he describes the coming destruction of the Temple buildings: 鈥淒o you see all these things? I tell you the truth: there will not be a stone left on a stone (位峤肺肝肯 峒愊峤 位峤肺肝课) here; all will be torn down鈥 (Matt 24:2; see parallels in Mk 13:2, Lk 19:44).
A search of the Internet will reveal several different kite parables, including one in support of the (un-Christian) idea that by holding tight to the string of God鈥檚 commandments people can fly themselves up into the heavens. I鈥檇 like to suggest a different kite parable, one that is more in keeping with Christian orthodoxy. My parable focuses on the kite itself (not the string) as the gospel of salvation through faith in Christ alone, but not a faith that is alone.
A few weeks ago I had an early morning meeting that required me to get up and leave home way before it was light. As I walked out my front door, I noticed for the first time that, not only was the world still shrouded in darkness, but it was also shrouded in fog. This immediately brought back strong memories of the years I lived in California鈥檚 Central Valley where heavy fog at certain times of the year was commonplace. And most of those memories were not pleasant.A few weeks ago I had an early morning meeting that required me to get up and leave home way before it was light. As I walked out my front door, I noticed for the first time that, not only was the world still shrouded in darkness, but it was also shrouded in fog. This immediately brought back strong memories of the years I lived in California鈥檚 Central Valley where heavy fog at certain times of the year was commonplace. And most of those memories were not pleasant.