Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Quick Thought: In All Things Charity?

March 10th, 2010 by Todd Hertz

Last week, I casually mentioned a well-respected Christian ministry to a fellow Christian. With vitriol and definitiveness, he blurted out, “They’re not Christians.”

Unfortunately, I’ve seen enough in our Christian culture—even in the last week—to know this is not some rare ugly example of how Christians can treat fellow believers with whom they don’t agree. Arguments are fine, but why do we seem so quick to turn to hatred, discrediting and exclusivity when we come upon a brother or sister who’s too conservative, too liberal, too fundamentalist, etc?

(Reminder: Quick Thought is a quick post for you to respond to with your first reactions and thoughts.  The goal is to keep comments short, too.  Maybe a couple sentences but no more than 100 words or so.)

Baptist 21 to Host “GCR Panel” @ SEBTS Chapel

March 10th, 2010 by nathanakin

Baptist21 is excited about putting on a GCR panel discussion during a Wednesday Chapel hour at Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary. This is a critical time in the life of our convention. The GCR Task Force preliminary report is causing much buzz, and this will only increase as we move closer to Orlando in June. This panel will seek to address the issues being raised so that there is great clarity when the final report and recommendations are given at the annual meeting.

-          What: A panel discussion about the Great Commission Resurgence and the Task Force Report.

-          When: Wednesday April 28th at 10AM-11AM

-          Where: Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary’s Binkley Chapel

-          Who:

  • Danny Akin
  • Al Gilbert
  • J.D. Greear

-          Also Participating:

  • Ronnie Floyd
  • Albert Mohler
  • Johnny Hunt
  • Baptist21: will moderate this discussion

-          Why: No doubt the GCRTF Report delivered by Ronnie Floyd to the Executive Committee has raised many questions and concerns. This panel will be focused on the Task Force Members bringing answers and clarity to these questions and concerns. What is the report about? And what will be the consequences if the report is adopted in Orlando? These questions and more will be answered.

  • Will ending the Cooperative Agreements destroy State Conventions and Local Associations, especially in “frontier” states?
  • What will this mean for church planting in the frontier states and most unreached places in our country?
  • Do you think State Conventions will try to compensate for the loss of Cooperative Agreement funds by raising the percentage of CP dollars kept in state?
  • Why did the Task Force not recommend a Global Mission board?
  • Does the Preliminary Report from the GCRTF actually address the global mission crisis Southern Baptists find themselves in?
  • Is this just bureaucratic reorganization?
  • Is the report advocating a “top-down” strategy, merely empowering a national missions entity? Or, is the report designed to empower local churches for mission?
  • Will “Great Commission Giving” return us to “societal giving” and destroy the Cooperative Program?
  • The ending of the Cooperative Agreements will certainly affect the way that associations and state conventions operate. It looks like fewer dollars and less staff. How can they function with any kind of viability if this is the case?
  • Why is CP giving at such a low? Is it due to the example of national leaders or a perceived lack of emphasis on mission in our CP allocations? How do these recommendations hope to address lack of resources?

Most likely the event will be live-streamed on the internet. This will allow those unable to attend in person to watch what is happening. This will also allow you to participate in the panel Q & A. The Task Force has openly asked for the questions, concerns, suggestions, etc. of Southern Baptists. This panel will give Southern Baptists an opportunity to present these to Task Force members. In a future blog we will give an opportunity for Southern Baptists to submit questions for the panel members to answer during the panel. We also hope to give opportunity for questions to be text messaged in during the panel. Stay tuned and make every effort to be at the panel if you can!

Jesus: The Only Way to God

March 10th, 2010 by Desiring God Blog

(Author: Tyler Kenney)

Jesus: The Only Way to God This July Baker Books will be releasing Jesus: The Only Way to God, a short paperback by John Piper on the need for people to hear and believe the name of Jesus in order to be saved.

You can buy one (or more) from us in advance at the special price of just $4.99 each. Just call 888.346.4700 on a weekday between 8 and 5pm Central Time. We'll ship your order in July, immediately after they come in.

Here's the blurb:

If the evangelical church at large was ever too confrontational in its evangelism, those days are gone. In our shrinking, pluralistic world, the belief that Jesus is the only way of salvation is increasingly called arrogant and even hateful. In the face of this criticism, many shrink back from affirming the global necessity of knowing and believing in Jesus.

In Jesus: The Only Way to God, John Piper offers a timely plea for the evangelical church to consider what is at stake in surrendering the unique, universal place of Jesus in salvation.

Meet Jonathan Edwards

March 10th, 2010 by C.J. Mahaney's view from the cheap seats & other stuff

Theologian Jonathan Edwards looms large in church history and in the history of theology. Yet because his writings are often very difficult to read, they are inaccessible to many readers. Making Edwards’s theology and writings accessible to a broad audience was the burden behind a new series of books: The Essential Edwards Collection.

The set contains short paperback volumes for a total of 760 pages. It was written and edited by Owen Strachan and Doug Sweeney with an introduction by John Piper. The series includes five topical books:

  • Jonathan Edwards: Lover of God
  • Jonathan Edwards: On Beauty 
  • Jonathan Edwards: On Heaven and Hell
  • Jonathan Edwards: On the Good Life 
  • Jonathan Edwards: On True Christianity

C.J. endorsed The Essential Edwards Collection. Here’s what he wrote:

Books on the life and theology of Jonathan Edwards could fill a library. So where does an average reader (like me!) begin? Right here, with The Essential Edwards Collection. Strachan and Sweeney provide a doorway into the life and teaching of one of the church’s wisest theologians. But this book is more than history. The authors have included notes of personal application to help us apply the life and teaching of Edwards to our own lives. I’ve read no better introduction to Jonathan Edwards.

And here are four other noteworthy endorsements:

D.A. Carson: “Everyone says Jonathan Edwards is important. Quite frankly, however, his writing style is pretty dense by contemporary standards, so few pastors and other Christian leaders have invested much time reading him. Edwards is one of the ‘greats’ of whom everyone has heard and whom relatively few have read. This new series tackles the problem. Here is the kernel of much of Edwards’s thought in eminently accessible form.”

Mark Dever: “In The Essential Edwards Collection, Owen Strachan and Doug Sweeney play the role of the good friend who pulls the book down off the shelf. With knowledge and excitement, they open the large and intimidating tomes, and point to some clear and searching section which illuminates God’s truth and searches our hearts. In this collection, Edwards is introduced to a new generation of readers. His concerns are made our concerns. This is a worthy effort and I pray that God will bless it.”

Al Mohler: “Why hasn’t this been done before? The Essential Edwards Collection is now essential reading for the serious-minded Christian. Doug Sweeney and Owen Strachan have written five excellent and accessible introductions to America’s towering theological genius—Jonathan Edwards. They combine serious scholarship with the ability to make Edwards and his theology come alive for a new generation. The Essential Edwards Collection is a great achievement and a tremendous resource. I can’t think of a better way to gain a foundational knowledge of Edwards and his lasting significance.”

Carl Trueman: “Jonathan Edwards is surely one of the most influential theologians of the eighteenth century, yet until now a representative sample of his work has required the reader either to wade through poorly printed double-column editions or to purchase incredibly expensive scholarly editions. Now at last we have a wide-ranging and representative sample of his work published in an attractive, accessible and, most important of all, readable form. The authors are to be commended for the work they have put into this set and I hope it will become an important feature of the library of many pastors and students of the Christian faith.”


Posted by Tony Reinke

Proclamation Trust and the Holy Spirit – EMA 2010

March 10th, 2010 by adrian.warnock@gmail.com (Adrian Warnock)

The Evangelical Ministry Assembly 2010 will focus on the ministry of the Holy Spirit in the life of the preacher, with John Piper as the headline speaker and Terry Virgo also involved.

Those of you who know British Church life, and particularly the history of the last few decades, will be amazed at this. To be clear, the leadership team behind the Proclamation Trust have not suddenly all become card-carrying tongues-speaking charismatics. Rather, as I read the information about this exciting conference, I think two things are behind what may seem like a digression from their previous event subjects.

Firstly, there is clearly a recognition of something I often bang on about here on the blog: that the experiential work of the Spirit is not something unique to the charismatics! Previous generations of Christians were very clear that they had a relationship with the living Jesus (something I explore fully in Raised With Christ).  Thus, no matter what your opinion on the gifts is, the Spirit should have a tangible effect in the life of every believer, and certainly in the life of the preacher.  This conference aims to explore more about what that place should be.

Secondly, there is no doubt that recent controversies within the broader evangelical tent have made people on both sides of the so-called “charismatic divide” realize that we have more in common with each other than we previously realized.  The line between the reformed and the reformed charismatic movements is less distinct now than ever before.

John Piper seems more comfortable than almost anyone else in bridging this so-called divide.  His response to a question about the Holy Spirit in the recent Desiring God Conference demonstrated just how comfortable he is. I suspect that he is relishing the prospect of this forthcoming conference.

An interesting feature of this conference will be that there is no attempt to sweep the real differences that remain under the carpet.  If we can truly understand what each of us thinks about these things, our respect will only increase. So, what they describe as a “public and honest conversation about the work of the Holy Spirit” will happen with a goal of learning “how to discuss secondary matters over which we do not always agree, always with a view to thinking through how our theology impacts church life.”

When? 23-25 June 2010, between 10.30 AM and 4.30 PM each day.

Venue? St. Helen’s Bishopsgate, London – in the heart of the square mile of the City of London, just a few minutes walk from Liverpool Street Station.

Cost? The assembly costs £30 per day to attend.

Full speaker list
* Christopher Ash
* Rupert Bentley-Taylor
* John Piper
* Vaughan Roberts

With
* John Coles
* Liam Goligher
* Wayne Grudem
* Marcus Honeysett
* Wanyeki Mahiaini
* Tim McMahon
* Mike Reeves
* Terry Virgo

More information at EMA 2010 » The Details.

Unfortunately, I have run out of Annual leave to take this year, so will not be able to attend the event, but I may be able to make it to an extra session being run on Thursday 24th at 5:30 PM with Wayne Grudem talking about how Christians should speak out on moral issues.

Sin and Sorrow in Pakistan Today

March 10th, 2010 by Desiring God Blog

(Author: Tyler Kenney)

Today in the news:
Suspected Islamist militants stormed an office of a U.S.-based, Christian aid agency [World Vision] in Pakistan on Wednesday, killing six Pakistani aid workers after singling them out and then blowing up the building. (Read full article from Reuters)

From the World Vision website:

Please pray for World Vision's staff members in Pakistan, and the friends and loved ones of those who were attacked. Pray for God's protection on our workers there, and pray that our relief and development efforts in this country can continue soon.

Monergism Urgent Needs

March 10th, 2010 by Monergism
Monergism Urgent Needs

John Hendryx New!

One Way a Very Public Christian Spoke

March 10th, 2010 by Desiring God Blog

(Author: John Piper)

Charles Malik

On September 13, 1980, Charles Malik gave an address called "The Two Tasks" at the opening of the Billy Graham Center at Wheaton College. He was the Lebanese Ambassador to the United States. The message was so seminal that in 2006 (his centenary) it was republished with a collection of essays built around it. What strikes us as he stands to speak is the personal dimension and the public scope of his Christian commitment.

I speak to you as a Christian. Jesus Christ is my Lord and God and Savior and Song day and night. I can live without food, without drink, without sleep, without air, but I cannot live without Jesus. Without him I would have perished long ago. Without him and his church reconciling men to God, the world would have perished long ago. I live in and on the Bible for long hours every day. The Bible is the source of every good thought and impulse I have. In the Bible God himself, the Creator of everything from nothing, speaks to me and to the world directly, about himself, about ourselves, and about his will for the course of events and for the consummation of history. And believe me, not a day passes without my crying from the bottom of my heart, ‘Come, Lord Jesus.'

Charles Malik (1906-1987), Lebanon's ambassador to the USA (1945-55), President of the UN General Assembly (1958-59), professor of philosophy at the American University of Beirut (1962-76). Quoted from "The Two Tasks" in The Two Tasks of the Christian Scholar: Redeeming the Soul, Redeeming the Mind, eds. William Lane Craig and Paul M. Gould (Wheaton, Illinois: Crossway Books, 2007), p. 55.

Picking Fruit Off of a Tree by Deepak Reju

March 10th, 2010 by Deepak Reju

One of the ideas I've learned on our staff is to be strategic about the men I disciple and invest in. One of our staff pastors has often talked about being deliberate in investing in low-hanging fruit---men who show a lot of potential, who demonstrate a teachable heart and desire to grow, and with a little investment will themselves be able to invest in others.  These low-hanging fruit quickly become disciple-making disciples! 


The nature of pastoral ministry is that you get all types of requests for help---bad marriages needing attention, wives struggling with depression, young men and women sorting through who to marry and what to do with their life, physical sickness and hospitalizations,  etc.  Pastors tend to spend most of their time investing in high-hanging fruit--those situations which take a lot of time, energy, prayer, love, and investment, and often reap very little fruit.  Without trying, you'll get plenty of these situations come across your door.  

Don't get me wrong---to be a pastor is to be a shepherd.  A fundamental part of your job is to care for the sheep, both through their good and bad days.  Yet, what often happens is that a pastor's schedule can get over-run with high-hanging fruit, and we rarely take the time to deliberately invest in the low-hanging fruit.   We spend our days investing in that which reaps very little harvest, without spending any time picking the low-hanging fruit.  

So, here's my question for pastors:  How deliberate are you at investing in the low-hanging fruit?  

Are there men in your congregation who are FAT (faithful, available, teachable) and with a little investment might also be reaping greater fruit for the kingdom?  Are you strategically investing in men who might one day become elders and one day come alongside you to shepherd the flock?  Look at your schedule and consider if you are always reacting defensively to the problems that arise in your church, or are you deliberately scheduling time with the members who seem to be low-hanging fruit? 

Both parts of necessary for pastor ministry, and yet one (high-hanging fruit) tends to get much more attention in our schedule compared to the other (low-hanging fruit).   

The Next Story: Introducing the Team (Agent)

March 10th, 2010 by Tim

I have been introducing you to the team who will help make my next book a reality. First you met Ryan the Editor and then Chris Fann the Marketing Man. Today I want to introduce you to Agent Andrew (known to some as Andrew Wolgemuth). He is, as you may have guessed, my agent. His job is to represent me before the publisher (first to help find one who would like to publish my work, then to negotiate a contract and then with anything else that happens to come up). He will stay involved with the work from beginning to end.

I'll let Andrew introduce himself... 

I’m Tim’s literary representative. Or – a bit less dramatically – his agent. Though I didn’t set the course of my professional life after seeing Jerry Maguire (I’m sure a movie about a literary agent would be just as compelling) and while I didn’t grow up aspiring to be a member of the publishing industry, I’ve been surrounded, challenged, taught, and blessed by books and great authors for my entire life.

In fact, my first official paycheck came from Wolgemuth & Hyatt Publishers a couple of decades ago (the “Wolgemuth” in that company was Robert, the owner of the agency that I now work for; the “Hyatt” was Mike – now the CEO of Thomas Nelson; my dad, Dan, was CFO for this house. They published Orel Hershiser’s Out of the Blue, Max Anders’ 30 Days to Understanding the Bible, and Patrick Morley’s Man in the Mirror, among many other excellent titles). I helped W&H with mailings or marketing…or something that felt pretty big time for a seven-year-old.

My second employer was Can-Do Trash and Recycling Service. That was a good gig, but it’s significantly less relevant to my present occupation.

I now work for Wolgemuth & Associates with Robert Wolgemuth (my uncle), Erik Wolgemuth (my brother), and Susan Kreider (our assistant). We’re intensively collaborative and cooperative, and I’m honored to be a part of the (virtual) team (Robert and Susan are based in Orlando; Erik and I are in Denver).

In my role as Tim’s agent, I have the privilege of being involved at virtually every stage of the publication process. Describing the development of The Next Story (TNS) provides a pretty good overview of the work that I do. Tim and our team began discussing different book ideas about a year ago. As you can probably imagine, Tim had a number of solid concepts, but TNS rose to the surface as the best. Tim then developed proposal material, our team reviewed the documents and provided suggestions and guidance, and – within an iteration or two – we had material that was ready for publishers to review. I got Tim’s work to editors who our team believed would appreciate and enjoy it; we received a few publication offers, talked through the houses’ visions and proposals, evaluated the pros and cons of each, and settled on Zondervan. I then worked through contract details with Zondervan. Looking ahead, I’ll help Tim as he wants on the manuscript itself, and our team will provide input and guidance on various TNS items like cover design, jacket copy, and the marketing plan when we hit those stages down the road.

In short, no work day is like the previous. Most, however, are quite enjoyable and challenging.

My goal in all of them is to act as a good steward. I believe Tim has some book-worthy, reader-challenging, God-honoring things to communicate – I want to ensure that these messages are delivered to readers with excellence. This entails advising Tim throughout the process, serving as Tim’s advocate, sounding board, and representative, and doing my best to ensure that there’s follow-through and timeliness on all fronts.

On the personal side, I’m married to Chrissy and we have two little girls (Malia is two and Davey is almost four months). Chrissy and I met in the suburbs of Upland, Indiana, at Taylor University. Like lots (most?) folks in the publishing industry, I didn’t study English Lit. Instead I enjoyed Economics/Systems and Philosophy while excelling at intramural athletic mediocrity.

In the time since, we’ve lived in Kansas City (the Kansas side); Fort Wayne, Indiana; Orlando; and Denver. At each stop, we’ve been blessed with solid churches, good friends, wise mentors, and a bit of adventure. We love it here in Denver, and we’ve got parents, siblings, and a nephew close by, a wonderful church (Colorado Community), and good neighbors. The seasons are varied and enjoyable (with lots of sun all year round), the mountains are accessible and beautiful, and the professional sports teams are a pleasant change from my days in Kansas City (though Joe Montana’s years with the Chiefs were nice. And I haven’t really been able to shake my Royals fanhood…it’s slightly weird, rather irrational, postseason-free and fairly painful. However, my favorite NCAA basketball team hasn’t changed and cheering for the Jayhawks is [generally] emotionally rewarding).

In a book like TNS and with an author like Tim, the personal and professional blend for me. That is, I sit squarely in the middle of the target audience for Tim’s books and blog. His writing is of the sort that I’d read even if it weren’t my job. Consequently, I’m thrilled to be a part the project and I look forward to holding the final result and being challenged by the ideas it contains.