2007 Banner of Truth Pastor’s Conference details

This year I’m planning to attend two new conferences. The first is the Sovereign Grace Ministries Leadership Conference in April and the other is the Banner of Truth pastors’botconf.jpg conference in May. I’ve heard about them but never seen them for myself. Lord willing, this spring I will attend them both.

As you may have guessed, one of the major reasons I am spending so much time in John Calvin these first months of 2007 is to prepare for the upcoming Banner of Truth Ministers’ Conference entitled “Set Apart for God.” The conference runs between May 29th and 31st on the campus of Messiah College in Grantham, PA. Speakers will include two of my favorites, Derek Thomas and Walt Chantry (Chantry wrote the excellent book, The Shadow of the Cross). I look forward to Dr. Thomas’ trio of presentations on holiness, especially as they relate to Calvin’s Institutes. It is encouraging to see emphasis on Calvin’s understanding of the Christian life (as I think he has much to offer here). Dr. Thomas wrote an excellent book on Calvin’s understanding of the book of Job which has recently become one of my favorites. We’ll look more at this book on Friday.

bot.jpgUPDATE 3/14: Walt Chantry will not be available to speak this year. Instead, Sinclair Ferguson will be taking his place.

But for more information on the pastors’ conference you can download the newly-released conference PDF here and you can register here. Should be a fun time. And from what I’m told, Friends of the Shepherd’s Scrapbook will get an exclusive tour of the Banner of Truth warehouse in Carlise, PA as an added bonus!

Humble Calvinism: (11) The Institutes > Proofs of Scripture’s authenticity (1.8)

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Part 11: Proofs of Scripture’s authenticity (1.8)

As we travel through the Institutes of the Christian Religion by John Calvin (1559 edition) I am amazed by its contemporary significance. We have much to learn and apply to our own churches and evangelism today.
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Through our study, Calvin has recently reminded us that until and unless the Holy Spirit confirms Scripture’s authenticity in our hearts, we will not give our lives and our hopes over to its message. God does this by breaking through and confirming Scripture in our hearts directly, not by indirect proofs (we saw this last time).

Today we see that there are sufficient proofs of Scripture’s authenticity, but we must first have faith to comprehend them. So God must first give us the conviction that Scripture is truly from God before these proofs make sense. This is why Calvin can close the chapter with an evangelistic plea by writing, “those who wish to prove to unbelievers that Scripture is the Word of God are acting foolishly, for only by faith can this be known” (92). We can share the gospel message with any unbeliever, but until Scripture is seen as the place where “divine majesty lives and breathes,” any proofs of Scripture’s authenticity are unfruitful (80). We rest upon the Spirit to work this confirmation into other hearts.

So here is the clarification from the last chapter: There are inherent proofs within Scripture to prove its uniqueness. Most of this chapter is given to this theme. “What wonderful confirmation ensues when, with keener study, we ponder the economy of the divine wisdom, so well ordered and disposed; the completely heavenly character of its doctrine, savoring of nothing earthly; the beautiful agreement of all the parts with one another” (82).

For Calvin, the evidences of divine origin center around the conciseness of its content, its heavenly nature, that it was written by the least expected authors, it carries a consistent theme, and because its message predates all other existing theological systems.

But the proof is also seen in the unflattering accounts Moses writes of his own family. You have the embarrassment of Levi (Gen. 49:5-6) and his brother Aaron and sister Miriam (Num. 12:1). Was Moses speaking “from the feeling of his flesh, or that he is obedient to the command of the Holy Spirit?” (85). Such embarrassment is not published from a desire to elevate Moses’ fame.

Also, the content of Scripture is heavenly. There is a vision of the unseen realities. The prophets are “crammed with thoughts that could not be humanly conceived” (83). And these prophecies are filled with events that would not be fulfilled until after the death of the prophet himself (1.8.7).

But there is an “almost rude simplicity” of Scripture (82). It was written by men like Matthew, Mark, Luke, Peter and John – “all of them rude, uneducated men” (91). It was not ordained with the jewels of ornate eloquence, but its divine truths are communicated in simplicity. For Calvin, a man familiar with literature and philosophy, can say that in comparison the words of God “surpass all gifts and graces of human endeavor, breathe something divine” (82).

And there is Saul, a man filled with rage against the church who was converted asevidence.gif Paul and the writer of much of the New Testament. His change shows that “he was compelled by heavenly authority to affirm a doctrine that he had assailed” (91).

Calvin argues that Scripture’s age, the miracles of Scripture, the preservation of Scripture through eras in which books were commonly burned, and the blood of the martyrs all show Scripture to be more than another book. These arguments comprise the bulk of the chapter.

All of these “secondary aids” confirm scripture’s authenticity only after “the chief and highest testimony” of the Spirit (92). God must supernaturally convince us of Scripture’s authenticity before the secondary “aids” and “props” are convincing (92). So Calvin ends the chapter by warning us not to try and win converts by persuading them with philosophical evidences of Scripture’s authenticity. We must pray that the Spirit would break into the depravity and rebellion of sinners and give them a taste of Scripture’s sweetness. Then they can taste the evidences in Scripture for themselves.

There are proofs, no doubt. But Calvin reminds us to let these proofs follow the Spirit-wrought conviction!

Calvinistic meditations …

1. Faith precedes reason. Anselm (1033-1109) understood well that faith must come before true understanding. In the introduction to Proslogium, the editor summarizes Anselm’s view in this way: “The unbelievers … strive to understand because they do not believe; we, on the contrary, strive to understand because we believe. They and we have the same object in view; but inasmuch as they do not believe, they cannot arrive at their goal, which is to understand the dogma. The unbeliever will never understand. In religion, faith plays the part that experience usually plays in the understanding of the things of this world. The blind man cannot see the light, and therefore does not understand it; the deaf-mute, who has never perceived sound, cannot have a clear idea of sound. Similarly, not to believe means not to perceive, and not to perceive means not to understand.”

Faith is not unreasonable, but faith must come first before the evidence. It is surely hard to grasp in the realm of spiritual truth that confirmation comes before the proof, but that is how Calvin, Anselm and Scripture itself explains this reality. The Spirit must convince us first through His power and then the evidences begin to make sense. Until the Spirit works, there are not enough proofs to cause a faith that reveres and trusts God as the genuine author. Convincing others that Christianity is legitimate is not a process or a seminar, but a point in time when the Sovereign touches a dead heart and causes it to pulse. This is why Jesus can say, “To you it has been given to know the secrets of the kingdom of heaven, but to them it has not been given” (Matt. 13:11). The evangelist, apologist and preacher all center their messages around the gospel, waiting patiently for the life-giving blood to begin pulsing in others at the sovereign timing of God. More about this in a moment.

2. Our understanding of God and the Gospel are the fruit of His “gracious will.” Our understanding of the divine mysteries has everything to do with a Sovereign God (Matt. 11:25-26 see also Matt. 16:17; Mark 4:11; Luke 8:10; John 7:17; 1 Cor. 2:9-10, 14; 2 Cor. 4:4; Col. 1:26-27; 1 John 2:27). That we understand anything is merely from His “gracious will” to reveal them to us! What amazing grace, that sinners are given eternal wisdom! If we truly understand the message of the gospel, this fact alone should be a powerful means of humility in us. To truly grasp Calvinism is to be a very Humble Calvinist. All divine light comes from God’s gracious sovereignty.

3. The message is the method. Not only is the gospel the message of salvation, but it is also the “the power of God for salvation” (Rom. 1:16). The Old Testament prophets understood this, too. “Is not my word like fire, declares the LORD, and like a hammer that breaks the rock in pieces?” (Jer. 23:29). God’s Word is a living and active force, piercing and discerning our hearts (Heb. 4:12). But specifically, Paul understands the life-changing power in the message of the Cross. That is why Paul can say the gospel is “the power of God for salvation” (Rom. 1:16), that “faith comes from hearing, and hearing through the word of Christ” (Rom. 10:17), and that “the word of the cross is folly to those who are perishing, but to us who are being saved it is the power of God” (1 Cor. 1:18). So it’s no wonder Paul fights for the clarity of the gospel (2 Cor. 10:4-5; Gal. 1:6-2:21). The clear and accurate gospel message of the Cross is where both the message and the Spirit’s effectual power to save sinners from hell reside!

So don’t try to change lives through gimmicks. The power of God is not introduced to sinners through props and proofs and philosophy and arguments and seeker-sensitive devices. Place your trust in God. He alone displays His power to awaken sinners through the message of the gospel! Talk about depravity, talk about sin, talk about the wrath of God coming upon all unrepentant sinners, talk of Christ who satisfied the wrath of God and Whose work is our only hope to substitute for our sin and unrighteousness! Seek to center everything about your ministry here on the Cross.

This one gospel is the only self-sustained, self-powered and self-authenticated message to awaken and transform sinners. What glorious freedom is there for the preacher and evangelist who understand Calvinism. Preach with power by preaching Christ and Him crucified (1 Cor. 1:23, 2:2)!

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Click here to access previous posts in the Humble Calvinism index.

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Sermon Notes: The Nature of Man (Anthropology)

Last night I had the honor of preaching/teaching at a youth gathering here near the Twin cities. The group is progressing through a study of systematic theology and I had the opportunity to teach on the nature of man (otherwise known as theological anthropology). I summarized anthropology in this way:

Purpose: We were created in the image of God – as humble dust and eternal spirit – to see God face-to-face.

In the message I traced out the nature of the dust (our bodies) and our need for resurrection. Then on to the image of God in the soul and how God restores this image through conversion, sanctification and glorification. The punch-line is this: God restores our image perfectly (in glorification) so we can once again see God’s glory face-to-face as Adam once did when God walked in the garden in the cool of the day.

Download …

1. The full lesson notes (PDF)
2. The lesson handout (PDF)

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Note to preachers: My biggest preaching challenges come in the context of preaching through systematic theology. In comparison to straight expositional preaching, I seem to amass a greater amount of content as various themes and threads are brought to light from Scripture (handouts like the ones above have become a critical part of preaching systematic theology).

As the systematic themes develop they begin to broaden and so the challenge in systematics is not stepping on the toes of other categories (at least not stepping too far on their toes). A study of the resurrection of the body really belongs in eschatology. The depravity of the soul belongs in harmartiology. The restoration process of the marred image of God believers go through belongs to soteriology and sanctification. But somehow anthropology really reaches out into all these categories.

It seems the demands of doctrinal content, limiting the category, focusing on the Cross, illustrating straight doctrine and keeping it all on a level accessible to a younger audience is a real trick. I seem to over-compensate the increased logos with increased pathos. It’s a fun challenge, but a challenge it remains.

Question for the preachers: Have you preached through systematic theology or a reformed catechism? What did you notice about the difference? Any help would be appreciated! – Tony

Amazingly ‘radical’ Grace in the life of John Newton

Hello everyone. I’m preparing to preach this weekend and don’t have the time for a new post so I’ve brought this recent one back. It was a little overshadowed due to my suprise on-line birthday party but it’s worthy bringing back to the front. These are some amazing thoughts of God’s ‘radical’ grace. See you on Monday! -Tony

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Amazingly ‘radical’ grace in the life of John Newton

We’ve been talking recently about the Gospel and ‘radical’ depravity. Much of the biblical message is radical. It’s radical that sinners need to be rescued from ourselves. That we cannot save ourselves and that God must invade our lives to save us from our ignorance is radical. We are helpless until He initiates our salvation. That too is radical. Well the most famous song in the world was written by a man who was radically saved from himself. This is his story…

“Although we all sing the hymn ‘Amazing Grace,’ it amazes few. Why? Because grace cannot amaze until we feel the judgment we deserve… This grace amazed John Newton [1725-1807]. This is why he wrote the hymn ‘Amazing Grace.’ Newton became a Christian in his late twenties. Prior to his conversion, he had been a slave trader in West Africa and was a godless, ruthless man.

For example, he kept a black slave as a mistress. When he caught her in a sexual relationship with a black man, he beat the man to death with his shovel only to find out later that he was her husband.

On the long voyages across the Atlantic, he and his mates raped the women being transported to their North American masters. Though many arrived pregnant with his seed, he was hard and indifferent to the fate of these women and their children.

This is why, after his conversion, Newton looked at the cross with amazement. There he saw grace – Christ suffering the agony of God’s wrath in his place, so that God could reward him with eternal life. The grace of God stunned him, and he never got over it.

Our sins may be different from those of John Newton, but God’s grace works the same way for us. When a Christian choral group changed the words in Newton’s hymn from ‘saved a wretch like me’ to ‘saved a person like me’ I knew that grace had sprouted wings and flown away. Grace appears most perfectly in the knowledge of our sin revealed at the cross. Only cross-centered Christians find grace amazing.”

– Wm. P. Farley, Outrageous Mercy: Rediscover the Radical Nature of Christianity (Baker: Grand Rapids, MI) 2004. Page 52.

Humble Calvinism: (10) The Institutes > The self-authenticated Word (1.7)

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Part 10: The self-authenticated Word (1.7)

Sinners are in bad shape. We neglect as much of God’s glory as we can and the unmistakable evidence we do see is quickly suppressed and ignored. We want to live autonomously. We want to be independent from God, making our own decisions and choosing what we think is good for us. We are not merely ignorant of God, we are01spurgeoncalvin1.jpg enemies of God (Rom. 5:10). We let our worldly, temporal appetites guide our lives and become enemies of the Cross in the process (Phil. 3:18-19). We are not ignorant biology students needing more information, we are sinners actively resisting truth and rebelling against God.

So when the Roman Catholic catechism of 1997 (π 154) teaches, “Trusting in God and cleaving to the truths he has revealed is contrary neither to human freedom nor to human reason” I can only shake my head. It contradicts both depraved bondage and a mind that suppresses truth like a boot suppresses an empty pop can.

The big question of the day is this: For the sinner to give the Word of God the full weight of her reverence and obedience, God must first burn these convictions supernaturally into her heart. For the Word of God to truly impact our lives, God must abduct us! He must convince us of the authenticity of His Word. He must convince us that His words are “sweeter than honey to my mouth” (Ps. 119:103). We must be given “the mind of Christ” (1 Cor. 2:16).

Once again, it goes back to the sovereign intervention of God. He alone can cause His elect to submit to the full authority of the Word by convincing them of the authenticity of the Word. This is exactly what God does.

The church and religious authority are insufficient (1.7.1-3)

The church does not have the authority to authenticate the Word. In Calvin’s day (and to our day), Roman Catholicism believed the authority of Scripture was authenticated via the authority of the papacy. This is impossible. According to Ephesians 2:20 the Word of God’s authority and authenticity preceded the church! No church ruler, pope, cardinal or pastors can authenticate the Word because the Word preceded the church.

In fact, no human authority can authenticate the Word. Calvin writes, “what will happen to the miserable conscience seeking firm assurance of the eternal life if all promises of it consist in and depend solely upon the judgment of men?” (75). It is absurd to think that the authenticity of Scripture rests upon council or decree.

Here’s the punch line: “Scripture exhibits fully as clear evidence of its own truth as white and black things do of their color, or sweet and bitter things do of their taste” (76). Scripture is self-authenticated!

Where “divine majesty lives and breathes” (1.7.4-5)

No sinner gives their life to the biblical God and the doctrines and truths contained in the Word until they are “persuaded beyond doubt that God is its Author” (78). And later, “For even if it wins reverence for itself by its own majesty, it seriously affects us only when it is sealed upon our hearts through the Spirit” (80). In other words, you can take the “Bible as Literature” course in college and be amazed at the literary styles and structure of the Bible and yet never be changed by the eternal truths contained within. God must sovereignly burn the authenticity of the Word into our hearts. He must authenticate in our own rebellious hearts that God is the Author. He must give us spiritual eyes and tongues to see and taste that God’s Word is what it claims.

Calvin references Isaiah 43:10: “’You are my witnesses,’ declares the LORD, ‘and my servant whom I have chosen, that you may know and believe me and understand that I am He.’”

We must rest upon a divine power stronger than rational evidence and scientific proofs because even if the Word is authenticated by rationalism and proofs we will “ever waver among many doubts.” Rather, “those whom the Holy Spirit has inwardly taught truly rest upon Scripture, and that Scripture indeed is self-authenticated; hence, it is not right to subject it to proof and reasoning” (80). The authenticating power of the Spirit is “more excellent than all reason” (79).

By not resting in proofs and human reasoning, the authority and authenticity of Scripture rest upon something higher and stronger. “We seek no proofs, no marks of genuineness upon which our judgment may lean; but we subject our judgment and wit to it as to a thing far beyond any guesswork” (80). When the Holy Spirit confirms Scripture in our hearts “we feel that the undoubted power of his divine majesty lives and breathes there. By this power we are drawn and inflamed, knowingly and willingly, to obey him, yet also most vitally and more effectively than by mere human willing or knowing!” (80).

In summary, Calvin teaches us that Scripture is self-authenticated (Gk. autopiston). Its authenticity rests in the truth that Scripture is where God’s “divine majesty lives and breathes” (80). And every sinner God chooses to invade, abduct, and transform will experience the burning authenticity of the Spirit.

This does not mean there are no proofs and reasons for the authenticity of Scripture. There are, and Calvin will give us many to ponder in the next chapter. But proofs are not enough to convince spiritually dead enemies of God. Humble Calvinism teaches it that if I am going to understand God and obey His Word, He must invade my heart and burn a conviction of its truth into my heart.

Calvinistic meditations …

1. Watch your evangelism. How do we prove the authority and authenticity of God’s Word to sinners? We don’t. This truth will radically impact our evangelism. As you probably know, there is a tremendous pressure in our church culture to use rational proofs and arguments to “convince” sinners of the truth of Scripture. If this is your evangelistic strategy, you and your audience will always be haunted by the next ‘proofs’ and ‘arguments’ of the opposing views. Christianity is a call for sinners to believe in eternal things. There is no proof. How do you prove the perfect righteousness and resurrection to one who wants scientific data? As A.W. Tozer once said, “To seek proof is to admit doubt, and to obtain proof is to render faith superfluous” (Knowledge of the Holy, p. 19). Press sinners to embrace mystery, preach the gospel and let God take the responsibility of burning this truth upon sinner’s hearts. Your main concern is with presenting biblical truth accurately. The gospel – not proofs or rationalism – is the power of God to save depraved sinners (Rom 1:16).

2. Remember the depravity of our hearts. Churches that attempt to convince sinners of the truth with rationalism have fundamentally misunderstood our depravity so clearly stated in Romans and Ephesians. We need to ever remind ourselves of the state of the sinful human heart. Evidence can demand a verdict from sinners suppressing the truth in unrighteousness, but such verdict will never come (Rom. 1:18).

3. Expect rejection. Some preachers hide behind rationalism and human wisdom to avoid being rejected by sinners. Rejection and acceptance is not your responsibility – preaching the whole counsel of God is! If your audience is split over the gospel – some see it as the power of God and some see the gospel as foolishness – you are probably doing something right (1 Cor. 1:18-2:16). Keep boasting in the Cross! Some sinners will rest their hopes in signs and wonders alone, and they will never have signs or wonders enough. Some will want wisdom and proof and they will always waiver and struggle. But we are called to “preach Christ crucified, a stumbling block to Jews and folly to Gentiles, but to those who are called, both Jews and Greeks, Christ the power of God and the wisdom of God” (1 Cor. 1:23-25). If we are running from rejection we will mold church methods with fatal flaws and replace the gospel with something less foolish.

“For who knows a person’s thoughts except the spirit of that person, which is in him? So also no one comprehends the thoughts of God except the Spirit of God. Now we have received not the spirit of the world, but the Spirit who is from God, that we might understand the things freely given us by God. And we impart this in words not taught by human wisdom but taught by the Spirit, interpreting spiritual truths to those who are spiritual. The natural person does not accept the things of the Spirit of God, for they are folly to him, and he is not able to understand them because they are spiritually discerned” (1 Cor. 2:11-14).

So when you speak to other sinners, speak the truth in love. Pray that God would give them spiritual eyes to see that the “undoubted power of His divine majesty lives and breathes” in the Word. Oh, how it burns!

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Click here to access previous posts in the Humble Calvinism index.

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The scope of Calvin’s impact

The scope of Calvin’s impact

“Islam’s triumphant global march was halted by the sudden appearance of the freedom fostered by biblical Christianity in the sixteenth century in Western Europe. This occurred particularly as a result of Calvin’s, not Luther’s, insistence on the church’s freedom from the state and the state’s freedom from the church that in turn also eventually produced disciplined capitalism, science and technology, and economic prosperity. In yet another way, then – in the political freedom the Western nations enjoy now over against what would have possibly been military subjection to an Islamic theocracy – we here in the West are indebted to the providentially-arranged thought and activity of John Calvin.”

– Robert L. Reymond, John Calvin: His Life and Influence (Christian Focus: Great Britain) 2004. Page 143.

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book photo © 2007 Tony Reinke, The Shepherd’s Scrapbook

Title: John Calvin: His Life and Influence
Author: Robert L. Reymond
Boards: paper
Pages: 152
Binding: glue
Paper: good
Topical index: yes
Scriptural index: no (unnecessary)
Text: perfect type
Publisher: Christian Focus
Year: 2004
Price USD: $12.99/$9.99 at Monergism
ISBNs: 1857929667, 9781857929669