9marks Journal 2012 Mar-Apr Conversion
9marks Journal 2012 Mar-Apr Conversion
9marks Journal 2012 Mar-Apr Conversion
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Contents
Editors Note Jonathan Leeman
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His Arm Is Strong to Save: A Trajectory of Conversion in America Historical changes in Americas doctrine of conversion show up in all sorts of interesting places By Owen Strachan Page 11 Conversion and the Story of Israel The New Testament doctrine of conversion doesnt come out of nowhere. Its anticipated in the Old Testament story of Israel Page 18 By Thomas R. Schreiner Conversion in the New Testament The promise of redemption becomes a reality in the New Testamenta reality that includes a new covenant, a new exodus, new hearts, and a new creation. By Thomas R. Schreiner Page 21 Conversion, God, and the Whole Self Conversion is absolutely necessary for salvation. Why? Because of what our problem is, who God is, and what the gospel demands. By Stephen J. Wellum Page 24
The Corporate Component of Conversion Does your doctrine of conversion include the body of Christ? If not, it may be time to rethink it. By Jonathan Leeman Page 28 Book Review: Revival and Revivalism By Iain Murray Reviewed by Bobby Jamieson
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Audio
Finding Faithful Elders and Deacons with Thabiti Anyabwile Thabiti Anyabwile discusses how to recognize and cultivate godly church leaders. Posted on March 1, 2012 *Listen online Now A Biblical Vision for the Church with Mark Dever Mark Dever proclaims what the church should be in this overview of 1 Corinthians. Posted on February 1, 2012 *Listen online Now
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Jonathan Leeman
Editors note
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f you were a fan of the comic strip Calvin and Hobbes, you might remember that Calvin had a transmogrifier machine. The boy Calvin leads his imaginary tiger Hobbes up to a cardboard box with the word Transmogrifier handwritten on it, and explains, You step into this chamber, set the appropriate dials, and it turns you into whatever youd like to be. Hobbes wryly observes, Its amazing what they do with corrugated cardboard these days. The promise of true change is a little unbelievable, isnt it? Its the stuff of comic strips and childhood daydreams. But make no mistake: this is exactly what Christianity promisestrue and real change. Divine pardon. Reconciliation with God. Smashed idols. A new spirit. A new self. A new family. Since this years Together for the Gospel theme is the Underestimated Gospel, we thought wed jump on the bandwagon and devote the pre-T4G Journal to the underestimated doctrine of conversion. Forget Calvins transmogrifier machine. How about a whole new creation! 9Marks is deeply interested in the doctrine of conversion (its the fourth mark) because its tightly tied to the doctrine of the church. If the church is a house, conversion is the timber. The timber you use will dramatically affect the kind of house you get. Will you include the timber of divine sovereignty? Human responsibility? Repentance? Faith? My own article on the corporate component of conversion explores these matters further. But start with Jared Wilsons reflections on the beauty of the doctrine and Owen Strachans historical observations. Thomas Schreiner and Steve Wellum also help us to get our doctrine right. This is critical, friends. Owens piece especially will help you to see why, as will Bobby Jamiesons instructive book review on Revival and Revivalism. Once youve got the doctrine right, you need to think about how it connects to the life of the church. For that purpose weve called in Jeramie Rinne, Michael Lawrence, Mike Mckinley, and Shai Linne. Zach Schlegels review of Finally Alive might also surprise you with its pastoral insight. There is underestimated power in the doctrine of conversion, but only if we get it right. Have you? Have your people? Does it show up in the habits, practices, and structures of your churchs life together?
By Jared Wilson
he predestined he also called, and those whom he called he also justified, and those whom he justified he also glorified. Our eyes can behold people repenting and professing their faith in Christ, but they cannot behold the eternal weight of glory leading up to it and flowing out after. There are multiple volumes to write about each step in Romans 8:30s outline. There is beauty within beauty within beauty. A mustard seed of faith planted in the broken heart of a desperate sinner is the culmination of Gods foreknowing this sinner from before the foundations of the earth. Even in eternity past God, in grace, overlooked the eternal offense of this individuals cumulative lifelong sin, predestining him in love for adoption as a cherished son. And then God sent his only begotten Son to provide the sinless atonement for him, that he could be justified by the righteousness of Christ upon the Spirits regenerating of his stony heart. Its simply staggering, isnt it? And that this seed of justifying faith would grow through the faithfulness of the Father to administer a sanctifying faith, again through the Spirits work, all the way to the promise of glorification, is more staggering still.
We want our gods to be God. What we are looking for is, in fact,
The gospel reveals the real hope for me and for this world. All the beauty of creation, of the arts, of the human striving for progress and enlightenment is summed up and found true in Jesus Christ incarnate, crucified, buried, resurrected, and glorified. And just as his resurrection is firstfruits (1 Cor. 15:20-23), so our conversion to saving faith is the promise of conversion to immortalitythat we shall all be changed (1 Cor. 15:50-53).
as in the expectant prayers at the sanctuary altar, or in the solitude of a lonely soul reading a Bible in an armchair, eternity drops down. The myriad ways God brings dead people to life are beautiful, some instantaneously recognizing stark new realities, others realizing of their need over time. Some hear the message for the first time and respond in faith. Others hear the message all their lives but do not have the spiritual ears to hear until some day far down the road. This is artful. There is God, in the vast array of human experience and daily life, in the mundane and the spectacular, rehearsing resurrection over and over again. And even the most ordinary of conversions is extraordinary. The angels celebrated no less for my daughters first expression of saving faith in her room at bedtime a few years ago than they did Pauls 2,000 years ago. Every conversion is a miracle. And the great beatific vision of Christ makes beatific visions of us (2 Cor. 3:18).
in the greatness and majesty of his glory, the weighty sum of all his attributes and qualities.
On the other hand, Gods beautymore often called his gloryis reflected, magnified even, in the increase of beholding. So one of the beauties of Gods raising dead men to new life is that they come to reflect his beauty in sermon and song and hearts filled with thanksgiving (Col. 3:16). After Peter witnessed the sufferings and resurrection of Christ, he was able to refer to himself as a partaker in the glory that is going to be revealed (1 Pet. 5:1). To answer the call of the gospel in saving faith, then, is in some way to obtain that beauty, and so magnify it. To this he called you through our gospel, Paul writes in 2 Thessalonians 2:14, so that you may obtain the glory of our Lord Jesus Christ. Conversion is beautiful because God is beautiful. He is beautiful in the greatness and majesty of his glory, the weighty sum of all his attributes and qualities. The way the Bible talks about Gods beauty is, well, beautiful. From the holiness brought to bear in the Pentateuch narratives to the gushing of the psalmists to Gods epic reply to Job to the wonderment of the prophets to the witness of the Gospels to the epistles ecstatic exultations and divine doxologies to Johns bewildering apocalypse, the Bible is beautiful with Gods intrinsic and overwhelming beauty. And this Godthis marvelous, inscrutable, and holy Godknows us and loves us and chooses us and calls us and saves us. For God, who said, Let light shine out of darkness, has shone in our hearts to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ (2 Cor. 4:6). For all the beauty of conversion (and there is still more to be explored for all eternity), it is sourced in and overshadowed by the beauty of God himself, whose glory extends without limits for all time, as well as to us, that we would see it and know Jesus and be changed forever.
[1] Bruce Marshall, The World, The Flesh and Father Smith (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1945), 108. [2] C.S. Lewis, That Hideous Strength (New York: Macmillan, 1970), 318-319.
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By Owen Strachan
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occurs by Gods pleasure, yet that hearers were still responsible to respond. Thousands heard a variation of this message, and thousands responded in true faith in the period known as the First Great Awakening.
Conversion for Finney did not require a miracle; it was, with the
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Finney avowed that in the sinners inward being, he or she is conscious of ability to will and of power to control their outward life directly, and the states of their intellect and of their sensibility, either directly or indirectly, by willing (Lectures on Systematic Theology, 35). With statements like these the die was cast. Edwardss revival work was Calvinisticit depended on the Spirit of God to regenerate the sinner through the free offer of the gospel. Finneys revival work was Arminianit did not depend on such spiritual intervention. This meant that conversion, dammed up by Edwardsian error, could now be loosed. Finney even saw himself as an evangelistic hero for unblocking the dam: It fell to my lot, in the providence of God, to attack and expose many fallacies and false notions that existed in the churches, and that were paralyzing their efforts and rendering the preaching of the Gospel inefficacious (Memoirs, 536-37). Conversion in Finneys scheme therefore became a matter of discovering the right agitator of the will. He put it like this: conversion is a purely philosophical result of the right use of the constituted means (Lectures on Revivals of Religion, introduction and notes by William G. McLoughlin [Cambridge, Ma.: Harvard University Press, 1960], 13.) Accordingly, he instituted the anxious bench and other methods that placed tremendous psychological and emotional pressure on the sinner. This contrasted with Edwardss own preaching, which placed theological or biblical pressure on the conscience. Conversion for Finney did not require a miracle; it was, with the proper techniques, a given. Finney exerted a tremendous influence on fellow Christian preachers. According to Randall Balmer and Lauren Winner, scads of other Protestants began to adopt his practices when they saw just how many converts Finney could win in a single night of preaching (Protestantism in America, 59). This can-do spirit fit perfectly with a changing America. The spirit of the Revolution continued to pervade, and the American psyche still believed impossible is nothing, to borrow from the athletic shoemaker Adidas. The so-called Dedham Decision of 1820 proved a tipping point for what had been developing for decades, even centuriesthe final disestablishment of the Christian church. After the implications of this decision unfolded, local assemblies no longer enjoyed the tax support of every land-owning citizen. Now every pulpit would compete for adherents. Ministers would have to draw a crowd in order to continue preaching, to say nothing of eating. This brought a truly stunning change in American life that fit the political mood of the country perfectly. It resulted, as Nathan Hatch has shown in his hugely important book The Democratization of American Christianity, in a spiritual free-for-all. Innovation and no-holds-barred gospel proclamation were in; careful training and theological precision were out. As Hatch has said, religious upstarts eagerly tackled the challenges of this new age, changing the nature of American ministry and preaching: Passionate about ferreting out converts in every hamlet and crossroads, they sought to bind them together in local and regional communities. They continued to refashion the sermon as a popular medium, inviting even the most unlearned and inexperienced to respond to a call to preach. These initiates were charged to proclaim the gospel anywhere and every day of the weekeven to the limit of their physical endurance. The resulting creation, the colloquial sermon, employed daring pulpit storytelling, no-holds-barred appeals, overt humor, strident attack, graphic application, and intimate personal experience. (Democratization, 57) Hatch concludes his sweeping summary with this: The result of these intensive efforts was nothing less than the creation of mass movements that were deeply religious and genuinely democratic at the same time (57-8). In one generation, America went from a nation featuring an established church (the exact form of which varied by region and state) to one in which disestablishment was the only rule. Highly gifted populist communicators like Finney flourished in such an open market.
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Nevertheless, a second major force had emerged in the evangelical wing of American Protestantism. In the latter half of the nineteenth century, figures like Henry Ward Beecher dropped the hellfire stuff altogether and began preaching a gospel of love that won national acclaim and secured Beecher a resplendent new parish in Brooklyn. Evangelists like D. L. Moody and Billy Sunday carried the revivalistic torch into the twentieth century. Both men had an incredible desire to win people to Christ and an aversion to complicated doctrine. Sunday famously said that he knew as much about theology as a jack-rabbit knows about ping-pong, a quip that historian George Marsden noted was stated with some accuracy. Sunday in particular hewed to the course charted by Finney. He preached a free-will gospel at revival events that were as carefully orchestrated as Finneys. Though Finney has acquired a reputation in some circles as anti-intellectual due to his fiery sermonizing, he was actually a brilliant man (his systematic theology is technical and impressive in its argumentation). Sunday was not intellectually prone (though he had a near-photographic memory) and his homiletical style was perhaps even more emotional than Finneys. Roger Bruns has said that, though the content of his message was pedestrian and simple, he had begun to turn loose on the platform the kind of fury and force that moved people elementally (Preacher: Billy Sunday and Big-Time American Evangelism, 78). Sunday brought his athletic background to bear on his messages, a charge that would not be said of many today: He pumped his arms, gestured with every phrase, the pitch of his voice rising and falling with emotional moments. He seemed bursting with kinetic energy. The man had a presence under those lights, held audiences in a captivating fire (ibid., 78). Under Sunday, evangelism almost became a performance art. A preacher would make a spectacle and preach a simple gospel, and thousands would stream down the sawdust trail to convert to Christian faith. Sundays exploits were unparalleled in evangelistic history; by many estimations, he preached to more people than had any other revivalist in history. That is, until Billy Graham exploded on the scene. Grahams star shot into the ether in 1949 after newspaper magnate William Randolph Hearst (the inspiration for no less a cinematic character than Citizen Kane) told his staff to puff Graham after a number of celebrities publicly converted to Christ at the evangelists Los Angeles rally. Graham and his team had learned from forebears like Whitefield, Finney, and Sunday and had publicized these conversions. In a thoroughly disestablished and secularizing mid-twentieth century climate, publicity, more than ever, became the hand that rocked the cultural cradle. Grahams theology and methodology has been hotly, even ferociously, debated by scholars and pundits. Some see him as the methodological harbinger of evangelical doom; others see him as a beacon of unvarnished purity. (He was for many years the most admired man in America.) It seems to this writer that the truth, as often, lies somewhere in the middle. Graham is an evangelist whose preaching has introduced millions to the good news of Jesus. On the other hand, he made some regrettable choices, whether in seating liberal Protestant clergy on his crusade platforms or in delving into political matters (see Nancy Gibbs and Michael Duffys The Preacher and The Presidents). Though Graham did not believe that conversion came only from the right use of the proper means and credited salvation ultimately to Gods initiative, he did use language that many Calvinists dislike, such as inviting people to accept Jesus into their hearts. Graham, then, is a direct theological descendant neither of Finney nor Edwards. His language, reflecting a belief in mans free-will, did dovetail with the general direction of American revivalism, though the evangelist spoke openly of his belief in providence and Gods control. Grahams position both influenced and displayed the general bent of many Southern Baptists and American evangelicals in the twentieth century. Revivalism of the more Arminian, free-will kind influenced the way modern churches have understood preaching, evangelism, and church membership. For many, preaching was basically evangelistic. It aimed at leading sinners to make a personal decision for Jesus. Churches as a whole, too, centered their evangelistic enterprises around producing as many verbal commitments as possible. Once an individual signaled his or her conversion by praying a prayer of faith, the church welcomed him or her into membership regardless of whether the person kept attending the church or not. God would be thanked for conversions, but the real credit would be given to effective evangelistic methods. The persons conversion prayer would also become the ground of assurance.
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and bid every sinner come and partake, knowing as he does so that a magnificent God, resplendent in holiness, majestic in strength, awesome in righteousness, delights to save.
Yet we must also go further, doing what we can to stimulate a movement of God-centered evangelism and preaching in our day. We must recognize afresh that God alone saves the sinner, and that conversion is no by-product of staging and psychology but a gift of Gods Spirit, who, like the wind, blows where he wishes and converts whom the Father has chosen (John 3:8; 17:6). The task of the preacher is to lift up Christ in all his perfections and bid every sinner come and partake, knowing as he does so that a magnificent God, resplendent in holiness, majestic in strength, awesome in righteousness, delights to save. In an environment that trains us to be man-centered, results-driven, and pragmatically minded, our challenge is simply to remember that Christ must be preached. As we do so, praying with all our strength for God to convert wicked sinners just like us who are in danger of hell, we remember as well that Gods arm is not weak or short. It is, now as always, strong to save.
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By Thomas R. Schreiner
Since Israels history occupies the vast majority of the Bibles storyline, Id like to offer a brief sketch that demonstrates why conversion is fundamental to the story.
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Subsequent to their sin, Adam and Eves fundamental need was to be converted. They could hardly rule the world for God and extend his blessing to the earth when they were not in a right relationship with him. God promised, however, that the offspring of the woman would triumph over the serpent and the serpents offspring (Gen. 3:15). The early history of humanity demonstrates the radical evil of human beings. All human beings enter into the world as the sons and daughters of Adam (Rom. 5:12-19) and offspring of the serpent (Matt. 13:37-38; John 8:44; 1 John 5:19). Only those who experience the saving grace of God would be delivered from Satans dominion. Cain, for example, showed which side he was on by slaying righteous Abel (Gen. 4:1-16). How strong were the forces of evil? By the time of Noah there were only eight righteous left in the world! Human beings were radically evil, and Genesis 6:5 attests to the pervasiveness of sin. The offspring of the serpent held sway over the earth, but God showed his holiness and lordship by destroying sinners with a flood. So there is a new beginning, but its hardly an improvement since human hearts had not been changed (Gen. 8:21). The state of affairs at the Tower of Babel (Gen. 11:1-9) shows that the new creation was not around the corner. The world was not being ruled by human beings who loved the Lord. The new creation could not come without a new heart. The scattering and judgment of human beings at Babel was countered by the calling of Abraham (Gen. 12:1-3). Once more there was one man in an evil world. But this one man was called by God and promised blessing. Canaan would be, so to speak, the new Eden, and Abraham was in some respects a new Adam. Abrahams children would be the children of God, and the blessing given to Abraham would eventually spread to the whole world. Human beings would rule the world under Gods lordship, just as Adam and Eve were called upon to do. What is remarkable is how long it takes the story to unfold. The promises were not fulfilled for almost two thousand years! The book of Genesis focuses on the granting of the children promised to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. These men did not inherit the land of Canaan, and they certainly did not see blessing spread to the whole world. Exodus through Deuteronomy advances the narrative, recounting Israels liberation from Egyptian slavery (Ex. 1-15). God was now fulfilling his promise of many childrenIsraels population was exploding. The Lord freed them from Egypt to bring them to a kind of new Eden, the land of Canaan. In this land Gods kingly rule over his people would be expressed, and the nations were supposed to see the righteousness, peace, and prosperity of a people who lived under Gods lordship. But the generation which left Egypt never got to the land (Num. 14:20-38). They refused to trust Gods promise, even after seeing the great deliverance from Egypt and all Gods signs and wonders. Most of the people of Israel who were rescued from Egypt were stubborn and rebellious, and did not truly know the Lord (cf. 1 Cor. 10:1-12; Heb. 3:74:11). Their hearts needed to be circumcisedconvertedso that they would love the Lord and fear him (Deut. 30:6), clinging to him as their God and walking in all his ways. The children who arose after the wilderness generation succeeded where the previous generation failed. Joshua and Israel trusted in and obeyed the Lord, inheriting the land of Canaan promised to Abraham (Josh. 21:45; 23:14). Now Israel was poised to live in their new Eden and to show the beauty and glory of living under the lordship of Yahweh. But there was still a worm at the core of the apple. Israels obedience to the Lord was short lived. According to the book of Judges, Israel did not become a blessing to the nations, but instead imitated them. They relapsed into pagan ways. The Lord kept delivering the people when they repented, and yet their hearts remained unchanged, for they kept reverting to their sin. What was Israel to do? Nearly 1000 years had passed since the promise was made to Abraham. Israel had an ample population and lived in the land, but the promises of worldwide blessing were not even close to being realized. Israel desired a king, convinced that he would deliver them from their enemies just as kings did from other nations (1 Sam. 8:5). When Saul was appointed as king, he was, like Abraham, a new Adam in some ways, appointed by God to rule Israel for the glory of God. But Saul, like Adam, rebelled against the Lord, and hence was removed as king (1 Sam. 13:13, 15:22-23). The rule of the Lord over Israel was not realized in Sauls reign. God then anointed David as king, and, unlike Saul, he was a man after Gods heart, ruling the nation for Gods glory (1 Sam. 13:14). Still, Davids adultery with
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Bathsheba and murder of Uriah demonstrated that he would not be the agent by which Gods blessings would reach the entire world (2 Sam. 11). When Solomon took the throne, the paradise of the new creation seemed to be around the corner (1 Kgs. 2:13-46). Peace characterized his reign, and he built a magnificent temple for the Lord (2 Kgs. 3-10). Solomon ruled the people wisely and in the fear of God at the beginning, but he departed from the Lord and turned towards idolatry (1 Kgs. 11). As a result, the nation was divided into two kingdoms: Israel in the north and the Judah in the south (1 Kgs. 12). What commenced was a long slide into sin, which concluded with Israel being exiled by the Assyrians in 722 B.C. and Judah being exiled by the Babylonians in 586 B.C (2 Kgs. 17:6-23, 24:10-25:26). Nearly 1500 years since the calling of Abraham had passed. The promises of land, offspring, and blessing given to Abraham werent even close to coming to pass. Israel was no longer in the land but in exile. Instead of blessing the whole world, Israel had become like the world. Why was Israel in exile? What was the problem? The prophets teach repeatedly that Israel was in exile because of its sin (e.g., Isa. 42:24-25; 50:1; 58:1; 59:2, 12; 64:5). In Isaiah the Lord promises a new exodus and a new creation. But the new exodus and new creation would only come through the forgiveness of sins (Isa. 43:25; 44:22), and this forgiveness would become a reality through the death of the Servant of the Lord (Isa. 52:13-53:12). Jeremiah teaches the same truths. What Israel needed was a circumcised heart (Jer. 4:4; 9:25). In other words, they needed to be regenerated and converted. Jeremiah prophesies that a new covenant is coming in which the Lord will write his law on the hearts of his people, enabling them to obey him (Jer. 31:31-34). Similarly, the book of Ezekiel looks forward to the day when the Lord would cleanse his people from sin, removing their hearts of stone and giving them a heart of flesh (Ezek. 36:25-27). Their changed hearts would be a result of the work of the Holy Spirit, and as a consequence Israel would walk in Gods ways and keep his commands. Israel did return from exile in 536 B.C., but the great promises found in the prophets were not completely realized. Israel struggled in the days of Haggai and Zechariah, Ezra and Nehemiah and Malachi. The promised work of the Spirit had not yet come to pass. They were waiting for a king. They were waiting for the arrival of the new creation.
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By Thomas R. Schreiner
onversion may be defined as turning away from sin and turning to God. Perhaps the classic verse which captures this definition is 1 Thessalonians 1:9: For they themselves report concerning us the kind of reception we had among you, and how you turned to God from idols to serve the living and true God. Here we see clearly the two elements of conversion, turning to God and turning away from idols.
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Conversion in John The centrality of conversion is also apparent in the Gospel of John. Indeed, John wrote his Gospel so that people would believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God, and that by believing you may have life in his name (John 20:31). John uses the verb believe 98 times in the Gospel, underscoring the importance of this theme in his Gospel. Nor is believing in John passive. John uses a number of terms to convey the depth and activity of faith: believing is like eating, drinking, seeing, hearing, abiding, coming, entering, receiving, and obeying. The radical nature of conversion is expressed through the various verbs John uses to describe what it means to believe that Jesus is the Christ. Conversion, then, is at the very heart of the message of the Gospel of John. Eternal life (life in the age to come) belongs only those who believe in Jesus as the Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world (John 1:29). In other words, only those who are converted enjoy eternal life. Conversion and the Kingdom in Acts It seems clear from the above discussion that conversion plays a central role in the Gospels, and we can draw the same conclusion from the book of Acts. In Acts we find a number of sermons in which the gospel is explained to the hearers (e.g., Acts 2:14-41; 3:11-26; 13:16-41). Those hearing are often summoned to repent (Acts 2:38; 3:19; 8:22; 17:30; 26:20), which is also defined as turning to God (Acts 3:19; 9:35, 40; 11:21; 14:15; 15:19; 26:18, 20; 28:27). The gospel message involves an urgent call to turn away from sin and ones old life. At the same time, those hearing the good news are summoned to believe and to exercise faith (Acts 16:31; 26:18). Indeed, the word believing is used nearly 30 times in Acts to describe Christians, indicating that faith characterizes those belonging to Christ. It is scarcely surprising that conversion plays a major role in Acts since it records the spread of the gospel from Jerusalem to Rome (Acts 1:8; cf. also 1:6; 14:22). But it should also be observed that the kingdom of God is a major theme in Acts. It frames the book at the beginning (Acts 1:3) and end (Acts 28:31). Paul preached the kingdom in Rome (Acts 20:35; 28:23, 31), and Philip preached the good news about the kingdom of God and the name of Jesus Christ (Acts 8:12), demonstrating that the kingdom centers on the gospel. The gospel that was proclaimed called upon the hearers, as we saw above, to repent and believe. Hence, we have another piece of evidence that conversion is foundational to any proclamation of the kingdom. The restoration of the world to Gods rule is the glorious hope of believers, but only those who have repented and believed will enjoy the new world that is coming. Those who refuse to believe, as Acts emphasizes frequently, will be judged. Conversion in Paul Paul doesnt use the term kingdom of God often, but his eschatological worldview is well-known, and it accords with the eschatological character of the kingdom. Like the Gospels, he proclaims an already/not yet eschatology. Most scholars would agree that faith and repentance are crucial themes in the Pauline epistles. Paul often teaches that justification and salvation are obtained only by faith (cf. Rom. 3:21-4:25; 9:30-10:17; 1 Cor. 15:1-4; Gal. 2:16-4:7; Eph. 2:8-9; Phil. 3:211). He doesnt use the word repentance as often, but it is not completely absent (e.g., Rom. 2:4; 2 Cor. 3:16; 1 Thess. 1:9; 2 Tim. 2:25). Paul uses many terms for the saving work of God in Christ, including salvation, justification, redemption, reconciliation, adoption, propitiation, and so on. It is indisputable that the saving work of God in Christ plays a major role in Pauline theology, but such salvation is only granted to those who believe, to those who are converted. According to Paul, believers eagerly await the return of Jesus Christ and the restoration of creation (Rom. 8:18-25; 1 Thess. 4:13-5:11; 2 Thess. 1:10), and yet only those who are converted will belong to the new creation that is coming. Hence, Paul labors intensely to spread the gospel to the Gentiles (Col. 1:24-2:5), striving to bring the gospel to those who have never heard (Rom. 15:22-29), so that they will be among the circle of those saved.
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Conversion in the General Epistles The remaining letters of the NT are occasional writings addressed to specific situations. Still, the importance of conversion is stated or implied. For instance, we find in Hebrews that only those who believe and obey will enter the end-time rest (Heb. 3:18, 19; 4:3; 11:1-40). James has often been misunderstood, but rightly interpreted he teaches that a repentant faith is necessary for justification (Jas. 2:14-26). So too, Peter teaches that salvation is by faith (1 Pet. 1:5; 2 Pet. 1:1), and 1 John was written to assure those who believe that they have eternal life (1 John 5:13). Conversion in Revelation The book of Revelation culminates the story, assuring believers that Gods kingdom, which has already come in Jesus Christ, will be consummated. Those who practice evil and compromise with the Beast will be judged forever, but those who persevere to the end will enter the heavenly city, which is the new Jerusalem. Revelation underscores that only those who repent (Rev. 2:5, 16, 21, 22; 3:3, 19; 9:20, 21; 16:9, 11) will find life.
in a small way or even a significant way to the improvement of this world (as helpful as this is), if one is not converted.
But conversion is foundational and fundamental to the story, since only those who are converted will enjoy the new creation. Human beings must turn from sin and turn to God to be saved. They must repent of their sins and believe in the gospel of Jesus Christ crucified and risen. It will be small consolation on the last day if one has contributed in a small way or even a significant way to the improvement of this world (as helpful as this is), if one is not converted.
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By Stephen J. Wellum
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Let me also stress that these three truths are completely interrelated. One cannot correctly understand what the Bible teaches about conversion apart from getting these other truths right, which is simply a reminder that our theological beliefs are mutually dependent on one another. To get one area of our theology wrong will greatly affect other areas, and this is certainly true in our understanding of conversion. The Human Problem The first foundational truth which grounds and makes sense of the Bibles teaching on conversion is the Bibles view of the human problem. Even though human beings are created as Gods image-bearers and thus possess incredible value and significance, in Adam we rebelled against our Creator and thus became sinners who are subject to Gods wrath (Gen. 3; Rom. 5:12-21). When the Bible speaks of sin and humans as sinners, it does not view this as a minor problem. It is not something that can be remedied by self-help, more education, or even personal resolve to become a better person. Such perennially present solutions greatly underestimate the nature of the human problem that Scripture powerfully and graphically describes. Viewed biblically, sin is not only a universal problem which no person escapes due to our solidarity in Adam as our covenant representative (Rom. 3:9-12, 23; 5:12-21; 1 Cor. 15:22); it also constitutes us as sinners by nature and by action (Eph. 2:1-3). In Adam and by our own choices, we have become moral rebels against God, born into this world as fallen creatures. This is a condition we cannot change by our own initiative and action. And it is a condition, sadly, that we do not want to change, apart from Gods sovereign grace. In our fallenness, we not only delight in our sin and willingly stand in opposition to Gods rightful rule over us, but that very willingness is evidence that we are unable to save and change ourselves (Rom. 8:7). As a result, we stand under Gods judgment and wrath (Rom. 8:1; Eph. 2:1-3) whether we acknowledge it or not. In our sin, our state before the Judge of the universe is one of condemnation and guilt (Ezek. 18:20; Rom. 5:12, 15-19; 8:1). Scripture describes this state as death, both spiritual and, ultimately, physical (Gen. 2:1617; Eph. 2:1; Rom. 6:23). Salvation, the biblical remedy to this problem, reverses this dire situation. And the decisive point in this reversal is conversion. What we need first is a savior who can pay for our sin before God and satisfy Gods righteous requirements and judgment against us. Our Lord Jesus Christ, God the Son incarnate, does just this in his cross-work for us. He meets Gods own demands; our sin is paid for in full (Rom. 3:21-26; Gal. 3:13-14; Col. 2:13-15; Heb. 2:5-18). In addition, we not only need our sin paid for, we also need to be brought from spiritual death to life, which results in a transformation of our entire nature (Rom. 6:1-23; Eph. 1:18-23, 2:4-10). We need the triune God to call us from death to life and, by the agency of the Spirit of God, to give us new birth (Eph. 1:3-14; Jn. 3:1-8). We need a resurrection from the dead parallel to our covenant heads own resurrection in order to enable us to turn from our sin willingly, to put aside our opposition to God and his rule, and to respond in repentance and faith to the gospel (John 3:5; 6:44; 1 Cor. 2:14). In sum, conversion is necessary because it is part of the solution to the serious nature of the human problem as described by Scripture. The Doctrine of God The second foundational truth that grounds and makes sense of the Bibles teaching on the necessity of conversion is the Bibles teaching about the nature and character God. As noted above, these first two truths explain each other. The human problem is what it is because of who the God of the Bible is. Our problem can only be seen in its true colors in light of Gods own personal, righteous, and holy character.
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Conversion is necessary because we as sinful and rebellious creatures cannot dwell in Gods holy presence. Sin has not only contravened Gods character, which is the moral law of the universe, it has also separated us from Gods covenantal presence (Gen. 3:21-24; Eph. 2:11-18; Heb. 9). We who were made to know God and to live before him as his vice-regents, ruling as little kings and queens over creation for Gods glory, now stand under Gods wrath and condemnation. Therefore, without Gods holy character being satisfied in Gods own sacrificial provision of himself in his Son, we cannot savingly know God (Rom. 6; Eph. 4:20-24; Col. 3:1-14). Further, it is not enough for a legal transaction to take place, as important as that is in the verdict of our justification before God. Salvation also involves the inner removal of sin and the transformation of our entire fallen nature. This begins when we are united to Christ by the regenerative work of the Spirit, which enables us to willingly turn from sin and rest in the finished work of Christ our Lord.
perfect righteousness, and his demand that his creatures act like obedient sons and image-bearers, we will never grasp why conversion
is so important in Scripture.
In other words, conversion is absolutely necessary because God demands that his creatures be holy as he is holy. Therefore, in order to dwell before him we must be clothed with the righteousness of Christ, transformed by the power of the Spirit, and made new creations in Christ Jesus (2 Cor. 5:17-21). There is no way for image-bearers to be brought back to the purpose of their creation and to enjoy all the benefits of the new creation without having their sin paid for in full, being born anew by the Spirit, and being united to Christ by faith. If we fail to grasp something of Gods blazing holiness, his perfect righteousness, and his demand that his creatures act like obedient sons and image-bearers, we will never grasp why conversion is so important in Scripture. In addition, if we do not grasp that our conversion only takes place due to the sovereign initiative of the triune God of grace, then we will never fully appreciate the depth and breadth of Gods love for us, his people. Conversion Involves Repentance and FaithOur Whole Selves Turning to God The third foundational truth that helps us understand the Bibles teaching on conversion is that conversion affects the whole person, and it affects the person as a whole. That is, in Scripture, conversion involves both turning from sin (repentance) and turning to Christ (faith). Both are necessary for conversion. And so repentance and faith are rightly viewed as two sides of the same coin. In other words, biblical conversion is never merely a change of intellectual perspective that results in no change in the individuals life. Unfortunately, in many of our churches, we find people who profess to have been converted, but they exhibit merely an intellectual assent to the gospel apart from any evidence of real change in their life. Scripture clearly regards this kind of mere mental assent as false conversion (Matt. 7:21-23). God demands a wholeperson response to him as his covenant creatures: our sin is a whole-person rebellion against God, and Christian salvation is a whole-person transformation, literally a new creation. Conversion involves turning from sin and turning to Christ, which involves the whole persontheir intellect, will, and emotions (Acts 2:37-38; 2 Cor. 7:10; Heb. 6:1).
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Gods sovereign and gracious work in our lives, giving us new life and enabling us, by the work of the Spirit of God, to repent and believe the gospel.
Our faulty understandings of conversion are often due to our faulty theologies. The remedy to this situation is to return to the Scriptures on our knees, asking that our great God would again revive his church so that in our proclamation of the gospel, men and women and boys and girls would repent of their sins and believe in Christ Jesus our Lord.
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By Jonathan Leeman
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Receiving mercy (vertical reconciliation) is simultaneous to becoming a people (horizontal reconciliation). God has mercy on us by forgiving our sins, and a necessary consequence of that is inclusion in his people.
new identity contains an ecclesial element. Christ has made us ecclesial persons.
Heres an easy way to see it. When mom and dad go down to the orphanage to adopt a son, they bring him home and place him at the family dinner table with a new set of brothers and sisters. To be a son is not the same thing as being a brother. And sonship comes first. But brotherhood follows necessarily. That is to say, conversion signs you up for a family photo.
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Im broad-stroking, of course. Things dont fall out quite this neatly. But the basic idea in all of these examples trades on the tight connection between conversion and the church. If conversion necessarily involves a corporate element, or,
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more concretely, if individual conversions necessarily produce a united people, then everything else that you stick into your doctrine of conversion will dramatically affect what kind of church you get. Do you want a healthy church? Then work on your doctrine of conversion, and teach all sides of it to your people. Make sure, furthermore, that the structures and programs of your church cohere with this multi-faceted and powerful doctrine.
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BOOK REVIEW:
Revival and Revivalism: The Making and Marring of American Evangelicalism, 1750-1858
Reviewed by Bobby Jamieson
Iain Murray, Revival and Revivalism: The Making and Marring of American Evangelicalism, 1750-1858. Banner of Truth, 1994. 480 pages. $33.00.
ow did we get here? is a question that is always relevant and often illuminating. Yet contemporary evangelicals dont ask it as often as we should. In his book Revival and Revivalism: The Making and Marring of American Evangelicalism, 1750-1858, Iain Murray tells a story that helps explain how evangelicalsBaptists, Presbyterians, Methodists, and moregot to where we are today.
FROM REVIVAL
The books title tells the whole story in a nutshell. Over the one hundred and nine years Murray examines, from 1750 to 1858, American evangelicals understanding and experience of evangelism morphed from revival to revivalism. Background: The First Great Awakening Not that what came before 1750 wasnt important. From about 1735 to 1740, under the preaching of Jonathan Edwards, George Whitefield, and others, the American colonies experienced a massive spiritual enlivening which came to be
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known as the First Great Awakening. This phenomenon was driven by preaching that emphasized the biblical truths of the holiness of God, the gravity of sin, mans enslavement to sin, and the need for the Holy Spirit to give new birth so that people might repent, believe, and be saved. Though superficial responses to such preaching inevitably got mixed up with the true, contemporaries of these events regarded them as a genuine revival. They believed this spiritual movement had been caused by Gods sovereign choice to pour out his Spirit in a profound and unusual way, thus causing the ordinary, biblically appointed means of evangelism to bear extraordinary fruit. Heirs of Edwards and Whitefield Murrays story, then, begins with the heirs of the First Great Awakening who ministered from New England to Virginia, men such as Samuel Davies and Alexander McWhorter (chs. 1-4). These pastors held to the same theology that drove Edwards and Whitefields preaching, and they had been personally impacted by the events of 1735-1740. Throughout the second half of the eighteenth century, these men and the ministers who followed them periodically experienced the blessing of God on their ministries in ways that also merited the label revival. Revival: Gift of God, not Guaranteed Result Like their predecessors, these pastors knew that revivals were the sovereign work of God and could not be explained in any other way. Therefore, they preached the gospel, pleaded with sinners, and prayed for fruit like they had for years; and for reasons known only to God, he sometimes blessed these labors remarkably, and sometimes he didnt.
achieved by men. They did not involve any unusual or novel evangelistic techniques. They were understood, therefore, to be gifts of God.
These revivals, in other words, were neither planned by men nor achieved by men. They did not involve any unusual or novel evangelistic techniques. They were understood, therefore, to be gifts of God.
TO REVIVALISM
Then, beginning around 1800, revival began to break out on a greater scale across the young nation, from the northeast to the western states of Kentucky and Tennessee. And whats truly remarkable is that this large-scale revival continued in one form or another for about thirty years, rightly earning it the title of the Second Great Awakening. The Second Great Awakening In the beginning, this revival was understood in the same terms as previous ones. Yet over time, theological and practical shifts began to occur that amounted to a revolution by the revivals end. (For this part of the story, see chapters 5 through 12.)
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For example, in 1800 in Cane Ridge, Kentucky the Presbyterians outdoor communion seasons (which followed a traditional Scottish practice) became the flashpoint for what looked like a major movement of the Spirit. The meetings grew quickly. Ministers from other denominations, such as the Methodists, shared in the preaching. Large numbers of people who were unaffiliated with any church traveled great distances to come and hear. Many people responded to the preaching and singing, sometimes in disruptively dramatic ways. Eventually, the leaders of these meetings divided over how to respond to excessive displays of emotion in these meetings. Somemost of the Presbyteriansthought such displays should be permitted or rebuked depending on the case, while othersthe Methodiststended to treat all of them as proof of the work of Gods Spirit. From this point, the Methodist leaders of this work in Kentucky took a strategy that was originally a response to revival namely, protracted outdoor meetingsand made it a key component of their efforts to bring about revival. Further, these Methodists and some others, undergirded by a radically different doctrine of conversion, began to focus their efforts on inducing outward, immediate responses to the gospel. Two Major Shifts The story runs along similar lines elsewhere. By the 1820s and 1830s, two major shifts had occurred throughout American evangelicalism. The first is a doctrinal shift regarding conversion. Up to 1800, evangelicals almost universally believed and preached that God must sovereignly give someone a new nature to enable him or her to repent and believe. By the 1830s, this was widely replaced by an understanding of conversion in which the decision to repent and believe lay entirely within an individuals own power. This led to (or, in some cases, followed) a shift in evangelistic practice. Many evangelicals adopted practices that sought to bring about an immediate decision. The anxious bench, the altar call, singling people out personally in public prayer, warning hearers to respond immediately or else lose their chance to repentall these practices and more grew out of the new belief that conversion is something within a persons power to achieve, or even to effect in others. The Result: Revivalism The result of these two shifts is that church leaders began to regard revival as something that could be infallibly secured through the use of proper meansproper being whatever would induce an immediate decision or external token of decision. This understanding was most vigorously promoted by Charles Finney, but by the end of the Second Great Awakening it had become a given among a strong majority of American evangelicals. Historian William McLoughlin even went so far as to say that by the mid-nineteenth century, this new system was the national religion of the United States (277). Thus, revivalism was born. To be sure, revivalism grew up in the soil of genuine revival. But this new practice of revivalism radically differed from the previous understanding of revival it so quickly supplanted. A revival became synonymous with a meeting designed to promote revival. Unlike previous generations, evangelicals after 1830 gained the ability, so to speak, to put a revival on the calendar months in advance. The goal of such revivals was to secure as many immediate decisions for Christ as possible. As such, awareness of the possibility of false conversion seemed to simply vanish from the evangelical consciousness. Few asked whether their new measures just might create as many false converts as true disciples.
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Assurance of salvation is possible for the youngest and weakest Christian, but it should always be grounded in the objective work of Christ and corroborated by the fruit of a transformed life. So pastors, be cautious about giving immediate assurance of salvation. And be careful not to give it on the wrong basis. 4. Tether your Ministry to What God Requires in his Word. Fourth, tether your ministry to what God requires in his Word. In some ways, the crucial turning point in Murrays narrative comes when the early nineteenth-century Methodists came to regard certain novel, extra-biblical practices long-duration outdoor camp meetings, techniques to secure immediate decisions, and so onas the crucial keys to producing conversions (184). Certainly, Christians are free to pursue evangelism in ways that are not directly exampled in Scripture. If Paul could rent the hall of Tyrannus (Acts 19:9), why shouldnt modern evangelicals evangelize in stadiums? But the catch is that these new methods became mandates. They became magic bullets. And they became the givens without which people could not imagine anyone getting saved. Instead, place your confidence in what God has required you to dopreach the Word. Trust that God has given you, in his Word, what you need to be a faithful pastor. Labor with the tools hes given, and trust that he will cause your work to bear fruit. 5. Make Sure your Theology Drives your Practice, not Vice Versa. Fifth, make sure your theology drives your practice, not vice versa. Murray writes about the spread of the altar call among Baptists, who in the early 19th century were almost unanimously reformed in their soteriology: It had not captured anything like the majority of the churches in the 1830s but there can be no doubt that, with the Baptists also, it was the alleged success of the new evangelism which hastened both its adoption and the gradual doctrinal shift to justify it. (325-326) In this case the practical tail wagged the theological dog. The logic of the new evangelism worked its way into their theological system and rewrote the DNA. Without realizing it, huge numbers of Baptists adopted an evangelistic method that was not only at odds with their theological commitments, but eventually undid them. 6. Dont Equate Outward Success with a Divine Endorsement. Sixth, dont equate outward success with a divine endorsement. During the conflicts Murray chronicles between the old guard and the new, the revivalists often played the trump card of outward success (282). As one contemporary pastor has famously put it, Never criticize what God is blessing.
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The first problem with the argument from success is that success is not always success. Murray writes, What was indisputable was that making conversion a matter of instant, public decision, with ascertainable numbers immediately announced in the religious press, produced a display of repeated successes on a scale never before witnessed (283). But how many of these decisions represented genuine conversions? How many were baptized, joined churches, and began new lives? If the numbers back then match the numbers generated through similar methods today, the likely answer is, Not many. The second problem with the argument from success is that, in one way or another, God is always blessing us in spite of ourselves. Every time God uses a pastors preaching to convert people, hes blessing that mans work in spite of that mans sins and errors. So how can you be sure that God is blessing a ministry because of some new method rather than in spite of it? Certainly we should expect God to bless preaching and practices that are in line with his Word. But we cant reduce his workings to the mechanics of most faithful = most blessing. Nor can we work backwards from apparent success to discern what must be correct theology and practice. 7. Celebrate the Normal. Murray writes of the earlier generation of ministers who regarded revival as a gift from God, The men of the Old School, while believing in revival as fervently as they didnevertheless knew no biblical reason to be cast down by the normal (385). These men knew that most of the time, ministry is slow and plodding work. They knew that some sow and others reap. They believed that God would grant his blessing in the measure that was appropriatewhether in its heightened formor in quieter ways (385). So, finally, dont be discouraged by slow-ripening fruit. Instead, rely on God to work through the regular means of grace. Celebrate the normal.
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By Jeramie Rinne
GOOD INTENTIONS
It was a confusing time for the church. Why would God lead us so far only to be denied? Why wouldnt God want an evangelical church to grow, especially in New England? But perhaps the most confusing thing was that our primary motive for the building was community evangelism. The projects centerpiece was a full-sized gymnasium. We envisioned using the space, dubbed the Family Life Center, for outreach programs: Christian basketball and floor hockey leagues for kids, teen drop-in times in the afternoon, and even adult sports leagues and exercise classes. We hoped to draw people into the facility, build relationships, and perhaps win a hearing for Jesus. In our community with lots of kids and lots of sports, the project seemed like a perfect example of contextualized evangelism. Why wouldnt God bless our sincere desire for community outreach?
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But sometimes, in order to move forward in effective evangelism we must pause and take a step back. Rather than speeding ahead asking What works? we need to pull over and ask a more fundamental question: How are people saved?
However, if conversion is fundamentally an act of Gods Spirit changing a heart through the gospel message itself, our practice of evangelism will trend in a very different direction. We will labor to make the gospel itself clear, rather than appealing to felt needs. If what works is Gods Spirit working through Gods Word, then we will spend the bulk of our mental energies studying the Scriptures so we can express them accurately, rather than assessing how the elements of our services might connect with peoples various learning styles. We will struggle more over selecting songs with biblically faithful lyrics than over orchestrating an instrumental arrangement that will put people in the right mood.
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By Jonathan Leeman
PERSONAL ILLUSTRATION
Let me jump right in with an illustration. I once confessed a wrongful desire to a friend of mine, and I explained that, frustratingly, my theology knew it was wrong, but part of me was tempted to justify it because it felt woven into the very fabric of my person and part of the very wiring of my soul. Those were the words I used to explain how much the desire felt like me. My friend, sweetly, simply quoted Ephesians 4 to me: put off your old self, which belongs to your former manner of life and is corrupt through deceitful desires. And he emphasized your old self like that. Yes, its true that such desires may be woven or wired into my very person. Youre old self is corrupt. What did you expect, Jonathan? Those desires, in one sense, are me.
Ah, but there was good news just around the corner. My friend finished the passage: but be renewed in the spirit of your mindsand put on the new self, created after the likeness of God in true righteousness and holiness. Wait a second, I have a new self, dont I? There is an old me, sure, but there is also a new me. And this new me is being createdhold on, get thisafter the likeness of God. In short, my friend reminded me of my conversion with a few choice words from Scripture. And where my mood had been melancholic that day, fueled by the frustration of wanting something I couldnt have, his reminder restored my joy. It gave me hope.
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By Michael Lawrence
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In other words, the church becomes a plausibility structure for faith. Make sense?
former way of living. But when we begin to deliberately blur the line, we confuse Christians about what it means to be a follower of Jesus in the first place.
Surely we should expect a range of spiritual maturity in the church, and Christians will sin. But what does it really mean to be a Christian in this context? And what do we do with the awkward statements that Jesus made, like Whoever does the will of my Father in heaven is my brother and sister and mother (Matt. 12:50) or Anyone who does not take his cross and follow me is not worthy of me (Matt. 10:38)? Jesus talked about following him as a radical break with our
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former way of living. But when we begin to deliberately blur the line, we confuse Christians about what it means to be a follower of Jesus in the first place. It Confuses Non-Christians Second, belonging before believing confuses non-Christians. Not long after I arrived at my church, an anonymous phone call came into the office informing us that one of our leaders was living in sin in the old-fashioned sense of that phrase. When we investigated, it turned out to be true. In one sense, that wasnt the biggest problem. Again, Christians fall into sin, even grievous sin. The real problem, from a pastoral standpoint, occurred when this person was confronted. The response was striking: I didnt sign up for this! If Id known this is what would happen, I would never have joined in the first place. (Ironically, you can have a culture of belonging before believing and still have formal membership, as we did.) Apparently, for this individual, being a Christian wasnt about obeying Jesus. And the gospel wasnt about repenting and believing. Instead, it was about belonging to our family, being accepted, and having the opportunity to express your own gifts and interests. Accountability certainly didnt enter into the equation, and neither did commitment. Before we could even talk about it, that leader had left. When non-Christians are never told that they are non-Christians, but are instead taught to think of themselves as fellow travelers, seekers, or people at different stages of the same journey, its easy for them to become confused about what it really means to be a Christian, and what it looks like to trust in the gospel. The desire to belong to a wonderful family of people can too easily lead someone to sign up for Jesus community, but never really sign on to Jesus command to repent and believe. It Fundamentally Redefines the Local Church Third, belonging before believing fundamentally redefines the local church. The local church is a community, and at the end of the day, a community is defined, not by its documents, buildings, or programs, but by its peopleand a people whose lives participate in new creation realities of love and holiness, thereby creating new plausibility structures. Thats what Jesus taught. By this all men will know that you are my disciples, if you love one another (John 13:35). Thats what Paul taught. Dont you know that a little yeast works through the whole batch of dough? Get rid of the old yeast that you may be a new batch without yeastas you really are. For Christ, our Passover lamb, has been sacrificed (1 Cor. 5:6-7). And elsewhere: Do not be yoked together with unbelievers. For what do righteousness and wickedness have in common? Or what fellowship can light have with darkness? (2 Cor. 6:14). Thats what Peter taught. Live such good lives among the pagans that, though they accuse you of doing wrong, they may see your good deeds and glorify God on the day he visits us. (1 Pet. 2:12). Thats what John taught. This is how we know we are in him. Whoever claims to live in him must walk as Jesus did (1 John 2:5-6). This is the power of the churchs witness to Christ, according to the New Testament. When the world looks at the church, of course it sees sinners. But thats not all it sees. It sees sinners whose lives are being radically transformed by the good news of the gospel. It sees sinners whose love for one another cannot be explained by anything other than the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ. It sees sinners who not only love each other, but who love God through Jesus Christ, and whose lives display that love in holiness and truth.
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To return to where we began, the church can be a plausibility structure for faith only if consists of people who have faith. All of that changes when the church becomes the community of those who are merely on a journey together. For many, the outcome of the journey is unclear and uncertain. For others, the journey has come to a halt before the final destination is reached. For still others, the goal of salvation has been found. But the community itself is not a witness to the truth of Jesus Christ and his gospel. It cant be if you can belong before you believe. Instead, the community is merely a witness to itself, its warmth, openness, and inclusiveness. But what, in the end, is so unique and compelling about that? There are many warm and open communities, sub-cultures if you will, within the city of Portland, where I live. But they dont testify to Jesus. Only the local church can do that. And even then, the church can do that only if you must believe in order to belong. In short, the philosophy of belonging before belief fundamentally redefines the church, which in the long run undermines the power of the churchs witness.
A BETTER IDEA
Belonging before believing is a bad idea. A better idea is what Jesus described in John 13: a community that profoundly believes the gospel so that its life is marked by a love for one another. Such a community, he said, will provoke those on the outside not only to recognize they are outside, but to desire to come in. The image that comes to mind is of a bakery on a cold, snowy day. Whiffs of delicious bread and hot chocolate occasionally waft outside. And a child has his nose pressed against the window pane. That glass is a barrier. Without it, the warmth and delicious smells would soon disperse in the cold wind, and no one would know there was anything good to be found there. But its a transparent barrier, allowing that child to see the good things inside and invite him in. And there is a way in, a narrow door that he must walk through. Until he does, he can see and appreciate whats inside, but its not his to enjoy. Once he walks through, its his for the asking. When non-Christians encounter your church it should be like standing at that window, not staring blankly at a brick wall. They should feel the warmth of your love, as you welcome them and engage them as people made in the image of God. They should see the depth of relationships, as they witness people who have no reason to care for one another go out of their way to serve. They should taste the richness of the gospel, as Gods word is preached and taught in a manner that connects with their lives. And they should hear the inviting sounds of a joyful community, as they listen to the praises and prayers of a people who worship our crucified and risen Lord.
publicly celebrate the stories of grace and transformation that are happening in your midst.
Like a bakery that pumps the delicious smell of its bread outside,
So go out of your way to create a community that welcomes the outsider. Give thought to the language you use. Be deliberate in your hospitality. And be strategic in your transparency. Like a bakery that pumps the delicious smell of its bread outside, publicly celebrate the stories of grace and transformation that are happening in your midst. And then, when youve done all else, make the gospel clear and invite people to respond to it in repentance and faith. Call them, not to walk an aisle, but to enter through the narrow door, and join with you in the riches of faith in the gospel.
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If the church is to display the good things of the gospel, the barrier of belief must not be removed, for it is that shared belief on display that works most powerfully to invite people in.
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By Shai Linne
TOUGH QUESTION
In some ways, this is a difficult question to answer, because no two inner cities are exactly the same. There are common elements, but each inner city possesses a wide range of worldviews, cultures, education levels, and theological backgrounds. Also, over the past forty-plus years since the beginning of the civil rights movement, the churchs influence over the minds, life philosophies, and values of many people in the hood has steadily diminished, especially over the young men. People dont view the church as a viable option for addressing the needs and crises that press in upon them. Christianity is often seen as either grandmoms religion or something for drug addicts and the incarcerated when they hit rock bottom. In place of the church, a wide range of religions and non-Christian cults have literally grabbed the mic. Hip-hop culture, too, has been used as a pipeline through which unbiblical ideologies flow into the hearts and minds of many.
inner-cities, aside from the ubiquitous church buildings and storefronts, you may not see or hear much evidence of Christian thought or influence.
All that to say, if you were to explore the outdoor areas of most
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All that to say, if you were to explore the outdoor areas of most inner-cities, aside from the ubiquitous church buildings and storefronts, you may not see or hear much evidence of Christian thought or influence.
NON-CHRISTIAN CULTS
You will find groups such as the Nation of Islam, Hebrew Israelites, and The Five Percent Nation having a very public presence, often preaching or selling their literature on the corner. All of these groups stress the political and socioeconomic empowerment of African-Americans and have been seen by many young African-American men as an attractive alternative to traditional Christianity. As religions, these groups are works-based, and they each focus on the ethnic heritage of African-Americans as a basis for divine privilege, to the exclusion of other ethnicities. They use different writings and holy books to justify their ethnocentrism, but this is precisely what they emphasize. Each of these three groups has surfaced as a religious response to the effects of the systemic oppression that find myriad expression in their neighborhoods. If you were to ask them how someone converts to Christianity, as they understand it, they would say that someone would have to make a choice and then follow the rules. No divine action is necessary. Jehovahs Witnesses also have a strong presence in many inner cities. They would see participating in Kingdom Hall activities, refraining from celebrating holidays, and aggressively going door-to-door and evangelizing on the street as evidence of conversion. Again, it would be a matter of the individual making a conscious choice to conform to external standards of behavior. Because these are not Christian groups, they obviously fall short of a biblical understanding of conversion.
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sinners from darkness to light through the regenerating work of the Holy Spirit (1 Pet. 2:9, Jn. 3:8, Tit. 3:5). This grace is received by faith in Jesus Christ alone (Acts 26:18, Rom. 5:2). A good number of these young people from the inner cities of places like Memphis, Atlanta, Phoenix, and Houston are enrolling in reformed Bible colleges and seminaries, with desires to plant indigenous churches in the neighborhoods in which they grew up. We may not see the fruit of these movements for years to come, but the seeds are certainly being plantedoften through the unlikely vehicle of Christian hip-hop music! Surely God uses the foolish things of the world to shame the wise. Join me in praising God for what hes already done and in praying that he would raise up a generation of pastors and church planters who would take the gospel to the hood as they boldly and lovingly proclaim that, Salvation is of the Lord! (Jonah 2:9).
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Russell Moore: I came to know Christ as an adolescent, walking and looking up at the stars on the road outside my house in Biloxi, Mississippi, while reflecting on the gospel I heard preached and taught in my home congregation, Woolmarket Baptist Church. Darrin Patrick: I was converted by reading the Bible and hanging out with some guys who were like me, but not like me. John Piper: Since I have no memory of the first time I trusted Christ, I take my mothers word for it that my sister had spoken to me at the age of six concerning my soul, and I came to my mother who knelt with me at a motel in Florida where I received the Lord Jesus and put my faith in him. David Platt: The Lord converted me through the influence of Bible-believing parents and a Bible-teaching church. Jeff Purswell: The compelling witness of a community of believers at Berry College prepared me to respond to the gospel that I had long heard but by turns ignored and doubted. Matt Schmucker: I was converted during my senior year at the University of Maryland through hearing an open-air preacher after listening to him for three years. Mack Stiles: While pursuing what passions and pleasures I could scrape out in the world, I landed in a cheap hotel at a skiing and mountain climbing school in Zermatt, Switzerland where God used a fellow seventeen-year-old named Robert Smith to share not only the gospel but his life with me; after reading a tract which Robert had given me (from The Cross and the Switchblade) I bowed my knee to Christ in Roberts room above a bar, and from then to this day have called Jesus my Savior, Lord, and Hope of the world. Carl Trueman: I was converted through the witness of a charismatic friend, hearing Billy Graham preach, and reading Jim Packer. Peter Williams: My parents explained and modeled the gospel, and public preaching particularly drove it home for me even before I was a teenager. Learn more about the April 2012 Together for the Gospel conference here.
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By Mike McKinley
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In short, dont preach moralism. Ever. Preach the gospel every week. And then, with the indicatives of the gospel firmly in place, preach the imperatives that necessarily follow. 2. Give Them a Superficial View of Sin The Bible teaches us that sin is not just something that we do, its who we are in our fallen state. The Scriptures teach us that we are all spiritually dead (Eph. 2:1-2), slaves to sin (John 8:34), guilty of breaking the entirety of the law of God (Jas. 2:10), and condemned to experience Gods righteous wrath (Rom. 1:18). We are sinners through and through.
week. And then, with the indicatives of the gospel firmly in place, preach the imperatives that necessarily follow.
People with unfounded assurance often misunderstand sin. If sin is merely a matter of external and observable behaviors, then with some effort and discipline they can solve their own problems. But if we can compel them to wrestle regularly with the biblical teaching about their sin, then they will be forced to see their need for the new birth and a salvation that comes from outside of their own person. 3. Treat Church Membership and Discipline Casually Membership in a local congregation is meant to give believers assurance of their salvation. Its a corporate seal of approval on someones claim to be a Christian. When a congregation examines someones profession of faith and way of living and then baptizes that person and admits them to the Lords Table, the church is saying, As far as we can tell, and with the power and wisdom given to us by Christ, you are one of us. On the flip side of the coin, when a church excommunicates someone, they are taking away that seal of approval. The congregation is telling the individual that his or her actions have undermined the credibility of their profession of faith and the basis of their assurance.
But when a church is promiscuous with its membership, when it allows people who do not attend the church to maintain their membership, it fosters false assurance. How many people are going to hell because their lazily-overseen church membership gave them false confidence? 4. Teach Them to Base their Assurance on a Past External Action. As weve already noted, the gospel demands a response from us. And churches and evangelistic programs have sometimes found it helpful to present some method for people to express their newfound commitment to Christ. Some offer people with the chance to say a Sinners Prayer. Others offer them with the chance to walk the aisle on Sunday or
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fill out a response card. And those external actions may indeed be a genuine response to the converting work of the Spirit. But they can also be deceptive. It is possible to pray a prayer, walk an aisle, and sign a card and still be completely lost in your sins. So if we encourage people to have assurance based on some sort of external activity that can be performed quite apart from the new birth, we put them in grave spiritual danger. How many people are walking around completely lost, but sure they are going to heaven because they prayed a prayer once as a child? 5. Dont Connect Justification and Sanctification for your People. In a well-motivated effort to magnify the free grace of God, it is possible to teach the truth of justification by faith alone through Christ alone without connecting all of the dots for our hearers. But the teaching of Scripture is that the justifying work of Christ will always produce the fruit of righteousness in the lives of believers, as I said earlier (for just one example, see the logic of Romans 6:1-14). A disconnect between justification and sanctification is very dangerous for believers. It undermines their understanding of the need for personal holiness and their motivation for loving God with their obedience. But it is doubly dangerous for those who have false assurance, because it encourages them to think that it is possible to live in open rebellion against God and still be righteous in his sight. 6. Teach Them to Ignore the Bibles Warnings. The Scriptures are full of dire warnings to those who would embrace sin and/or leave the faith (e.g., Matt. 5:27-30, Heb. 6:1-6). In our efforts to clearly teach Gods sovereign care for his people, it is possible to undermine the force of these warnings by giving the impression that they dont apply to believers. But those warnings are in the Scriptures for a purpose. They are true and they are one of Gods ways of keeping his people from wandering away. A wise pastor will press home the gravity of sin and apostasy and call all of his hearers to endure in the faith.
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BOOK REVIEW:
Finally Alive
Reviewed by Zach Schlegel
John Piper, Finally Alive. Christian Focus, 2009. 208 pages. $14.99
he last time I visited my hometown, I received a history lesson from an old family friend at the dinner table. She told us how two churches in our town had multiplied into six over the past fifty years. That might sound like a pretty impressive church planting strategy for a town of 2,000 people, at least until you discover that all this growth was due to a number of church-splits. The splits were the result of bitter feuds between families, a stubborn refusal to forgive, and quarrels exploding well beyond the walls of the church. As I listened to this wise and godly woman rehearse a sad history, it was clear that the pain of those experiences ran deep. She was not angry or bitter, but she was bewildered by how people who claim to bear the name of Christ could be so nasty to each other. If I could go back in time to ask the church leaders and others involved in these church splits, Are you born again? my guess is theyd answer, Of course! But is this the way born again people treat each other? Didnt Jesus say that the way that the world would know we are his disciples is by how we love each other (John 13:3435)? What then does it mean to be born again? What difference does it make for an individual Christian? For a church? In his 192-page book Finally Alive, John Piper sets out to answer those questions as a careful theologian and experienced pastor. In many respects, the book is one Id recommend for anyone who claims to follow Christ. But what Id like to do here is to think specifically about how this can be a helpful book for pastors and church leaders.
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Dear Church Leader, Im sorry to hear about the challenges youre facing right now. Caring for the church of God is not something for the faint of heart, but it is without a doubt an amazing privilege! Ive included a book with this letter that I hope youll take the time to carefully read in light of the difficulties your church is facing. If youre like me when facing a problem, its easy to focus first on circumstances rather than theology. Youll notice the book Ive sent you is not a practical how-to guide but rather a book focusing on the theological idea of being born again. Why might this be a useful resource for you and your church right now? It explains what the new birth is and why its necessary. Piper explains, Most people do not know what is really wrong with them. One way to help them make a true and terrible and hopeful diagnosis is to show them the kind of remedy God has provided, namely the new birth (20). Jesus didnt say we needed a little moral tidying up. He said, No one can see the kingdom of God unless he is born again. He provides a radical remedy for a radical problem. Teaching our churches the biblical truth of the new birth motivates us to let go of petty differences because we see the real problem more clearly. It also humbles us because were reminded that, apart from the mercy of God, his wrath would remain on us (John 3:36). I pray that considering these truths would move you and your congregation to be humble, forgiving, and united. It helps clarify what a Christian is. Jesus is no fan of hypocrisy. Thats why he called the religious leaders serpents and a brood of vipers when they lied about God with their hypocrisy. What characterizes a true Christian, as opposed to a hypocrite? In chapters 10 to 13, Piper looks at Johns first epistle to show that a Christian loves others, obeys God, and believes the truth about Jesus. Well do none of these things perfectly this side of heaven, but all of them are necessary characteristics of one who is born again. A Christian loves Jesus more than his or her sin. When a Christian is confronted about sin, he or she doesnt stubbornly hold on to it, he or she repents. A biblical understanding of the new birth demands that we first examine ourselves as leaders, then encourage our congregation to do the same. Piper follows the Bibles example in calling those who bear the name of Christ to either follow him faithfully or stop pretending and dragging his name through the mud. That might seem harsh or unloving, but just the opposite is true. If we see a friend in danger, we warn them because we love them. Better is open rebuke than hidden love (Prov. 27:5). It models how to lead with love and truth. The new birth can be unsettling. It confronts us with our dire condition and our inability to fix things on our own. But as you read the book (and I hope you do) youll be led by a wise pastor who sets a good example for us to follow. He writes, I do not want to cause tender souls any unnecessary distress. And I do not want to give false hope to those who have confused morality or religion for spiritual life (27). Let him guide you in his example of warning and encouraging. But also, follow his example of depending on God. When we see the truth about the new birth, it shapes the way we preach, pray, counsel, and lead others because we realize we are dependent on him to do the work. I pray God would use the truth about the new birth to give your congregation the humility, love, and unity that brings honor to his name. I pray he gives new birth to any among your congregation who are still dead in sin.
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And I pray that as you read this book, you will be encouraged, strengthened, and awed by the God who gives new life and grows churches in unity and love. Your friend, Zach
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BOOK REVIEW:
expect that many Christians might not think that a book with the title 40 Questions about Christians and Biblical Law would be that helpful for their daily Christian lives. After all, the law is not the most enticing subject. Further, we are not under the law as members of the new covenant, right? Well-known and widely-respected New Testament scholar Thomas Schreiner would beg to differ. Do you want to interpret the Bible rightly? Comprehend justification? Understand what parts of the law do apply to your life? Then you need to understand the law. Further, recent controversies over interpreting Pauls letters have made understanding the law important on still another level (see my review of Barcley and Duncans Gospel Clarity in this issue of the 9Marks Journal).
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BOOK REVIEW:
So asks N. T. Wright in his book Justification, likening those who hold the old perspective on Pauls gospel to anyone who insists that the sun revolves around the earth because thats what they see looking up in the sky (Justification, 95).
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Pauls chief concern in Galatians and Romans, therefore, was not to establish how sinners could be in the right with God, but why such barriers must come down in order to incorporate all whom God has called to be his peopleJew and Gentile. In short, Paul does not look up but out. His concerns are horizontal not vertical. The question on the table is not how can sinners stand before God but how uncircumcised Gentiles can sit with Sabbath-keeping Jews. Barcley and Duncan concede that this is where the new perspective on Paul is probably at its strongest, but where it also presents us with a false dichotomy. Must we read Paul as an evangelist or a churchman? Does he care about soteriology or ecclesiology? Are the concerns of reconciliation with God and reconciliation with each other even that far removed? Barcley and Duncan contend that Dunns definition of the works of the Law (and therefore the false dichotomy) is the result of misreading the relationship between the biblical covenants. Dunn flattens the covenants without giving due credence to the covenant of worksunder which Adam could have, yes, earned salvation for himself and his posterity had he kept Gods command. While the Mosaic covenant is indeed gracious, given under the auspices of the covenant of grace made with Abraham, it nonetheless contains the principle of the covenant of works (84). It reexhibits the covenant of works for the purpose of pointing sinners to the one who would succeed where Adam and Israel failed: the Lord Jesus Christ. It does, therefore, teach sinners that salvation indeed must be earned and that we cannot earn it ourselves. Pauls concern with the works of the Law, then, is firstly vertical. Ones relationship to the law acts as a badge that defines ones relationship with the God of the covenant. Thus, the gospel which people need describes how to be reconciled to Godhow to be declared righteous before him. The good news is that Jesus Christ was the perfect covenant head. Additions to Christs active obedience through ones own merits (works of the Law) is, therefore, what Paul opposes. Now we have come full circle. As Dunn misunderstands the relationship between the covenants with Adam, Abraham, and Israel, he equally misunderstands the role of the law in Pauls theology. Ironically, it is over this very pointhow Paul understood the OT covenantsthat the disagreement between Wright and Barcley/Duncan comes to a head. It is ironic because Wright argues that the strength of his reading of Paul is precisely in his account of the covenant. According to Wright, the covenant with Abraham, from which the entire Old Testament takes its cue, was Gods plan to set the world back to pre-fall Edenic conditions which involves creating one people out of all the nations (Gen. 12:13). It is a glorious planone that Barcley and Duncan certainly promote. The problem is that a covenant is not a plan, its an agreement. The Abrahamic covenant, then, is Gods agreement with Israel, though surely the nations benefit from that agreement when God makes good on his end of the agreement (Gen. 12:3). In other words, Wright is right on the plan but wrong to equate the plan with the covenant. The covenant is part of the plan, not the plan itself. Narrowly speaking, the covenant with Abraham was the matrix of the relationship between God and Israel. And, as mentioned above, that covenant relationship is further defined by the addition of the Mosaic covenant which re-exibits the covenant of works. This is not a medieval imposition, but ancient Near-Eastern covenantal logic. Wrights novel reading of the Abrahamic covenant also enables him to redefine justification and reject the imputation of Christs righteousness. This is where many critiques of the new perspective begin. But that will not do because, as Barcley and Duncan note (109, 111), Wrights understanding of justification fits within his larger covenantal narrative reading of the whole Bible. Thus, one cannot engage with Wright on these issues unless its on the level of the metanarrative. So, because Barcley and Duncan have first considered first-century Judaism, and then the larger covenantal logic for understanding the law within Wrights narrative framework for reading Paul, their critique carries weight. In short, to Wright, the problem in need of resolution in Israels story is the way in which they are ruled by Gentiles in the first century. The forces of evil are opposed to the kingdom of God. Jesus triumphs at this very point and his now-oppressed people will be vindicated (Wrights gloss on justified) on the last day for their lives that overcome evil with good. Barcley and Duncans primary contention with this readingas might be expected given their understanding of the
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covenants and the lawis that the primary problem for Paul in seeking to carry out his task as the apostle to the Gentiles is that God is the enemy, not other people (117). Human beings in their sin are cut off from God. They have become Gods enemies (Rom. 5:910; 11:28). This was one of the things that Saul of Tarsus came to recognize on the road to Damascus when the Lord said to him, Saul, Saul, why are you persecuting me? Saul had believed that he was among true Israel, zealous for Torah, devoted to doing Gods work. He was Gods friend. But he came to see that he was Gods enemy, as is true of all Jews who reject Christ (Rom. 11:28). The solution to the problem, then, is that individual human beings must be reconciled to God, and this happens only as they repent of sin and trust in Christ to save them. When they do this, they are justified, declared to be in right relationship with God, and thus have peace (reconciliation) with God (Rom. 5:1). (117) Thus, [s]alvation in the New Testament is first and foremost salvation from the wrath of God (118), not from the (broadly and vaguely defined) forces of evil. To arrive at this point ones narrative reading of Gods plan must see problems that predate Abraham. Human beings were created to glorify and delight in God. This requires fellowship with God, the precise state that Adam and Eve enjoyed. But their sin ruptured that fellowship. God had warned them, in the day that you eat of [the tree of the knowledge of good and evil] you shall surely die (Gen. 2:17). This death, of course, was not immediate physical deaththey lived on earth many years after their sin. It was primarily spiritual death separation from God, under Gods condemnationwhich was also the cause of later physical death. If there is a fundamental story for Paul, this is it. (118) The Climax of the Argument and the Heart of the Disagreement For my part, I believe these extended quotations get to the pith of the disagreement. Another way of getting at the same issues is to ask, what was it that Christ propitiated? What did he accomplish on the cross? Once that is answered with clarity and precision, I believe other parts of the puzzle fall into place. (In addition to the above quotations, see also pages 12628 and 141.) Barcley and Duncan bring their argument to a climax by considering Christs imputed righteousness, the rejection of which they regard as the most dangerous departure from Reformation teaching (148). Given the larger biblical story and relationship between the covenants a la Barcley and Duncan, there is no reason to abandon the doctrine of the imputation of Christs righteousness. To the contrary, in light of the demands of the covenant of works (cf. Rom. 5:12 21, but see also Rom. 4; 1 Cor. 1:30; 2 Cor. 5:21), there is every reason to keep it. One does wonder, however, why something on the covenantal notion of an exchange between covenant members and their covenant head is not more clearly emphasized on pages 15055.
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Finally, the book is well organized and easy to navigate. While a reader will feel the strength of its argument most by reading the book cover to cover, the book will also serve as a helpful reference for considering the many questions that orbit around this huge Pauline-centric universe.
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FOR FURTHER READING: The following list is far from exhaustive. It provides only a helpful starting point for pastors who would like to dig into these issues further than Barcley and Duncan take them. John Murray, Redemption Accomplished and Applied. Eerdmans, 1955. R. C. Sproul, Getting the Gospel Right: The Tie That Binds Evangelicals Together, Baker, 1999. John Piper, Counted Righteous in Christ: Should We Abandon the Imputation of Christs Righteousness? Crossway, 2002. Stephen Westerholm, Perspectives Old and New on Paul: The Lutheran Paul and His Critics, Eerdmans, 2004. Brian Vickers, Jesus Blood and Righteousness: Pauls Theology of Imputation, Crossway, 2006. John Piper, The Future of Justification: A Response to N. T. Wright, Crossway, 2007. N. T. Wright, Justification: Gods Plan and Pauls Vision, InterVarsity, 2009. Kevin J. Vanhoozer, Wrighting the Wrongs of the Reformation?: The State of the Union with Christ in St. Paul and Protestant Soteriology, pages 23561 in Jesus, Paul and the People of God: A Theological Dialogue with N. T. Wright, Nicholas Perrin and Richard B. Hays eds., InterVarsity, 2011. Thomas R. Schreiner, Justification: The Saving Righteousness of God in Christ, JETS 54.1 (March 2011): 1934. Michael F. Bird, What is There Between Minneapolis and St. Andrews? A Third Way in the Piper-Wright Debate, JETS 54.2 (June 2011): 299309.
[1] Those chapters themselves are already summaries; any further condensation would only do violence to the theological positions discussed therein. [2] Pauls own words should also contribute to our understanding of first-century Judaism, not merely serve as the object of inquiry after we think we have figured it out without letting Paul weigh in. [3] For example: i) it is not helpful on pages 5456 to reference Second Temple texts without quoting them, and ii) the degree of foreknowledge assumed on pages 12130 seems higher than the rest of the book. [4] As I mentioned above, it is my opinion that clarity on propitiation would be the most fruitful way forward, as would further thinking on the mutual exchange which occurs by virtue of our covenantal union between the covenant head, Jesus Christ, and his people where believers inherit all that is hisespecially his righteousness. [5] Perhaps the main reason this is so is that new perspective advocates often contend that even after his conversion Paul continued in a covenantal nomistic mindsetanother point Barcley and Duncan disprove.
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BOOK REVIEW:
avid Murray wants the church to benefit from the faithful preaching of the Word of God. You can tell just by looking at the callings hes pursued as listed on his blog, Leadership for Servants: he identifies himself, in order, as a follower of Christ, a preacher of the gospel, and a Professor of Old Testament and Practical Theology at Puritan Reformed Theological Seminary in Grand Rapids, Michigan. And before joining a seminary faculty he served as a pastor in Scotland. Murrays passion for faithful preaching is also evident in his new book How Sermons Work.
You can get a good idea about the book in this entertaining promotional video by HeadHeartHand Media. It begins with a church member receiving an email from the church office. The pastor is sick and has called upon him to preach! The man begins to type, Not in a million years only to delete those words and retype, Sure. For the rest of the promo the man scours the Internet for counsel on how to preach. He finally finds Murrays book, How Sermons Work. The video is a helpful reminder that the books main audience is lay elders and other church members looking for a simple step-bystep guide to help them to prepare sermons in an efficient enjoyable and edifying way (9).
OVERVIEW
How Sermons Work is divided into eight parts. First, prepare to preach. Every preacher, even someone asked to deliver a message while the pastor is sick, should strive to ensure that his heart is in the right place and that he has the requisite gifts to preach the Word.
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Second, select a text. Murray doesnt take a stand on whether it is better to preach from one verse or from an entire passage. Instead, he drives home the main point that the Bible must be our text. He also suggests that some verses more than others lend themselves to being preached. Third, exegete the text. This chapter is a fine overview of the questions that need to be asked when dealing with the original languages, translations, context, and so on. I especially appreciated his reminder that exegeting the text is hard work. Fourth, vary the sermon. Murray lists a number of different kinds of sermons, ranging from doctrinal to apologetic to political. His main point is a good one: those who preach regularly should be careful not to tire their congregation by preaching sermons that are too similar in style and substance. Nonetheless, he acknowledges that variation is better achieved by varying the books we preach from and the type of application we include in each message. Fifth, begin the sermon. The section on what not to do when preparing introductions is excellent. Murray is aware of the dangers as he counsels preachers, Dont be too long, Dont be too showy, Dont be too ambitious, and Dont be too personal, to name just a few. Sixth, organize the sermon. Murray devotes two chapters to arguing that a well-structured sermon is crucial, does not demand a complicated outline, and will flow from one clear idea. For those who are brand new to coming up with sermon outlines, Murray offers an exhaustive list of possibilities. Seventh, apply the sermon. These two chapters impress upon the reader the necessity of rooting clear and personal application in the text. While I found the second chapter on types of application overwhelming (he lists twenty examples), the principles he offers are helpful. Eighth, preach a sermon. Delivery matters. The purity of the preacher, the prayer he puts into the message, his personality, posture, passion, and even his pronunciation all play a role. (The alliteration is Murrays.)
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Where Should One Look for a Sermon Text? Second, where should one look for a sermon text? I know Murray is open to a preaching calendar set months in advance, but I walked away from his chapter on selecting a text thinking Murray was pointing me everywhere but the table of contents of my Bible, to places like a sermon suggestion box or the nightly news. Certainly the Lord can lay a particular text upon a preachers heart. I want to be sensitive to Gods leading (29). But Im not sure Spurgeon, who cried out for a text the night before he preached, is the most reliable guide for the average pastor. Is it Most Authentic Not to Use Notes? Third, is it true that the preachers deemed most authentic shy away from sermon notes? I dont think so. Yet Murray warns preachers not to use exhaustive manuscripts since this age prefers to be spoken to personally and relationally. There is nothing more authentic than a man preaching eyeball to eyeball, heart to heart, without anything intervening (149). This is a small point and its hardly crucial to Murrays task. Still, it is a point I hear regularly, and Im not sure it is accurate. Authenticity in preaching does not stem from the use or lack of notes, but from a preacher so engaged in the Word, so convinced of its relevance for today, so gripped himself by the power of the gospel, that his conviction is powerfully and spiritually evidentnotes or no notes.
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