Colossians 3:2

Archive for the ‘bible’ Category

[five reasons to thank God for john calvin]

In God, bible, calvinism, orthodoxy, politics on July.10.2009 at 9:47 am

Today is the five-hundredth birthday of Reformation pastor and theologian John Calvin. I can think of at least five reasons to thank God for his life and ministry:

5. In the political sphere, Calvin argued for limited government.

I, for my part, am far from denying that the form which greatly surpasses the others is aristocracy, either pure or modified by popular government, not indeed in itself, but because it very rarely happens that kings so rule themselves as never to dissent from what is just and right, or are possessed of so much acuteness and prudence as always to see correctly. Owing, therefore, to the vices or defects of men, it is safer and more tolerable when several bear rule, that they may thus mutually assist, instruct, and admonish each other, and should any one be disposed to go too far, the others are censors and masters to curb his excess. This has already been proved by experience, and confirmed also by the authority of the Lord himself, when he established an aristocracy bordering on popular government among the Israelites, keeping them under that as the best form, until he exhibited an image of the Messiah in David. Institutes, IV.20.viii

4. By writing the Institutes of the Christian Religion, Calvin systematized the teaching of the Reformation. He left us a great example of writing theology that is relentlessly Biblical, not speculative.

3. Calvin’s commentaries on Scripture continue to provide a wealth of insight to students of God’s Word.

2. Calvin’s Geneva gave refuge to English-speaking Protestants during the reign of “bloody Mary.” With the help of Calvin, his successor Theodore Beza, and the Scottish reformer John Knox, these scholars produced the Geneva Bible, the most important translation of the Bible in English before the King James. The Geneva Bible also included many annotations, making it the first “study Bible” of sorts. Bruce Metzger writes,

For about three-quarters of a century the Geneva version was the household Bible of a large section of English-speaking Protestantism. During the reign of Queen Elizabeth I alone, seventy editions of it were published. About 150 editions, either of the whole Bible or of the New Testament alone, were printed between 1560 and 1644…In England the Geneva Bible was the version used by Shakespeare, by John Bunyan, by the men of Cromwell’s army, and was brought to America by the Pilgrims and other early settlers, many of whom would have nothing to do with the more “modern” King James version of 1611…In short, it was chiefly owing to the dissemination of copies of the Geneva version of 1560 that a sturdy and articulate Protestantism was created in Britain, a Protestantism which made a permanent impact upon Anglo-American culture.

1. Calvin points us incessantly, in his life and work, to the glory of God. John Piper writes,

“to set before [man], as the prime motive of his existence, zeal to illustrate the glory of God”. I think this would be a fitting banner over all of John Calvin’s life and work – zeal to illustrate the glory of God. The essential meaning of John Calvin’s life and preaching is that he recovered and embodied a passion for the absolute reality and majesty of God.

[the library]

In God, art, bible, literature, poetry on October.7.2008 at 7:39 pm

On the second floor of a college library,
Between the stacks of dated periodicals
And hopeless microfilm, a man
Flopped on the floor in the narrow aisle,
Bookbag half-open haphazardly leaning
Against the files, flips through fading
Gold-edged pages and wrestles with
The timeless Author of the Universe

[the power of words and the wonder of God]

In Christian life, bible, culture, education, evangelism, humility, literature, love, mortification, music, orthodoxy, philosophy, poetry, psych, sanctification, vocality, warfare, worldview on September.29.2008 at 8:17 pm

Video from the Desiring God national conference this weekend is up here:

Conference Video :: Desiring God

I watched Sinclair Ferguson’s message on James this afternoon, and it was good stuff.

[the grammar of the gospel]

In bible, orthodoxy, sola scriptura on July.24.2008 at 2:24 pm

Let this teaching from Sinclair Ferguson influence the way you read passages like:

For sin will have no dominion over you, since you are not under law but under grace.

Roman 6:14

This is a promise in the indicative mood about what God has done! And:

For freedom Christ has set us free; stand firm therefore, and do not submit again to a yoke of slavery.

Galatians 5:1

“For freedom Christ has set us free” is indicative, telling us truth about what Christ has already actually done. “Stand firm therefore…” is imperative, an exhortation based on the previous promise. We couldn’t stand firm unless Christ had set us free!

HT: desiring God

[uk update 2.5]

In (comm)unity, Christian life, God, bible, humility, orthodoxy, uk update, vocality on July.21.2008 at 5:38 pm

Hey guys! This update is 2.5, because it’s gonna be brief. I wanted to say thank you for all the encouraging comments and for all of your prayers! I’ll post a fuller update sometime this week, but I wanted to get this out there for you guys to be praying for:

Tomorrow night at 7:30 my buddy Drew and I will be hosting our first weekly Bible study. We’ve been advertising over the program list-serv and telling our friends, and we don’t really know who to expect. I’ll be teaching on Isaiah 6:1-8, and we’ll be praying for each other.

I appreciate you lifting us up!

Grace and peace,

Jonathan

[starfire]

In bible, humility, mortification, orthodoxy, poetry, repentance on March.19.2008 at 11:36 pm

“The heavens declare the glory of God…The law of the LORD is perfect, reviving the soul.” Psalm 19

He set their burning light in motion,
The ancient work of flaming fusion;
The singing, starry host of heaven’s
voice is silent in the sky.

The self-same Lord Who fashioned spheres
Of flame to sing in each man’s ears
His praise has brought His burning Word, this
sinful soul to purify.

[new attitude]

In bible, humility, orthodoxy, vocality on March.14.2008 at 10:34 am

I’ll be there! Hope to see you in Kentucky…

[text + context]

In bible, orthodoxy, vocality on March.13.2008 at 7:23 pm

Audio and video from Mark Driscoll and company’s latest conference, Text + Context, is up on the web here.

I watched the first video, ‘Putting Preachers in Their Place’, this afternoon, and it was awesome. A couple of intriguing thoughts from the lecture:

1. God brought the universe into existence by preaching a sermon. His Word is powerful and effective and always accomplishes His purpose!

2. Read through the book of Acts and see how absolutely central the purposeful preaching of the Gospel was to the early church.

3. If the Word is not preached, there is not a credible local manifestation of the Body of Christ.

(HT: Between Two Worlds)

[sound doctrine pt. 2]

In God, bible, music, orthodoxy, philosophy, sound doctrine, worldview on February.22.2008 at 2:17 pm

How can we know anything at all?

How can we know Who God is or who we are or anything about the purpose and progress of history? How do we know the answers we pose to these questions are correct?

We don’t have to guess and hope at these matters because God has revealed Himself. In the order and beauty of creation, the laws of physics that govern motion, the moral truths that we recognize intuitively about the value of human life and private property, God shows His character. But more than this, from the very beginning God has revlealed Himself in language that humans can understand. In the Garden of Eden, He spoke and gave Adam instructions. He gave the Ten Commandments at Sinai. He delivered prophecies throughout the ages.

And He gave His final revelation in His Son, Jesus Christ.

Long ago, at many times and in many ways, God spoke to our fathers by the prophets, but in these last days he has spoken to us by his Son, whom he appointed the heir of all things, through whom also he created the world. He is the radiance of the glory of God and the exact imprint of his nature, and he upholds the universe by the word of his power.” Hebrews 1:1-3a.

We can know God because He has revealed Himself to us in creation, His Word, and the Word made flesh- Jesus Christ.

As the Westminster Shorter Catechism tells us, “The Scriptures principally teach, what man is to believe concerning God, and what duty God requires of man.” There can be no other source for our knowledge about His purpose in history. The Bible is the only foundation for everything in [sound doctrine].

Psalm 19 is one of the most potent statements of the doctrine of God’s self-revelation in Scripture. Let us apply ourselves to the study of the Word. As a pastor of mine once said, “How can you know the God of the Word without the Word of the God?”

For your joy in the God Who reveals Himself,

Jonathan

http://www.mediafire.com/?eydxxectoct

Psalm 19

The heavens declare the glory of God;
The sky proclaims His handiwork.
Day to day pours out speech;
Night to night reveals knowledge.
There is no speech, there are no words
Whose voice is not heard.

Their measuring line goes out through the earth;
Their words go to the end of the world.
In them He set the sun a tent.
It comes out radiant, like a bridegroom,
And runs its course with strength and joy;
From its heat nothing is hidden.

The law of the Lord is perfect,
Reviving the soul.
His testimony is true,
Making wise the simple.
His precepts are right,
Rejoicing the heart.
His commandment is pure,
Enlightening the eyes.
The fear of the Lord is clean,
Enduring forever.
The rules of the Lord are right
And righteous altogether.

Your rules are more precious than gold,
Sweeter than drippings from the honeycomb.
Even more, by them I’m warned.
In keeping them is great reward.
Who can know his errors, Lord?
Declare me innocent, declare me innocent.
Keep me back from willful sin;
Let it not reign over me.
Then I shall be blameless
And innocent of great transgression.
Let the words of my mouth
And my heart’s meditations
Be acceptable in Your sight,
O Lord, my Rock and my Redeemer.

[based on the ESV text]

[c.s. lewis and beating myself up]

In bible, humility, orthodoxy, repentance on December.6.2007 at 2:27 pm

I read C.S. Lewis’ sermon “Transposition” in The Weight of Glory today. The man is brilliant, and there was a word in it that I really needed to hear:

The attempt to discover by introspective analysis our own spiritual condition is to me a horrible thing which reveals, at best, not the secrets of God’s spirit and ours, but their transpositions in intellect, emotion, and imagination, and which at worst may be the quickest road to presumption or despair.

I’m no mystic, but sometimes I have a tendency to really try to “figure out what’s wrong with me.” This usually leads to beating myself up about symptoms rather than repenting over sin. This encouraged me to go the Word, and let the Holy Spirit show me my sin.

[the cross on every page]

In bible, humility, orthodoxy, the cross on November.29.2007 at 9:56 pm

A very lovely post on cross-focused devotion.

http://buzzardblog.typepad.com/buzzard_blog/2007/11/bible-reading-a.html