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"Amillennialism 101" -- Audio and On-Line Resources

 

Living in Light of Two Ages

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Entries from June 1, 2008 - June 30, 2008

Thursday
Jun192008

Dueling Bible Parks and Links to Other Stuff Around the Web

links%2011.jpgNow this is ironic.  The owners of the Holy Land Experience in Orlando, FL (TBN) want to build another such themed park in Nashville, TN.  Not to be outdone, a group of developers wants to build "Bible Park USA" in the same city.  Since the Holy Land Experience offers a daily reenactment of the crucifixion, imagine the job boom in Nashville when two Bible theme parks start hiring thin, long-haired young men who look like Jesus and/or disciples.  Can't you just picture the long line of big, swarthy types, auditioning to play Roman soldiers.   This is gonna make it tough for the evangelicals in Nashville.  Where to take the youth group?   Which park does a better job reenacting Jesus' passion?    Click here: Two Bible parks? It's possible | www.tennessean.com | The Tennessean

In a further note of irony, a development group wants to build an evolution museum in Petersburg, KY, directly across the street from the local creation museum.   That ought to be fun.  Jesus fish on cars in one parking lot.  Darwin fish on cars in the other. Click here: Nobel Intent asks: what do you think of an evolution museum?

Tuesday
Jun172008

A Tacky Firing and Links to Other Stuff Around the Web

links%203.bmpIf you are a baseball fan, you've heard all the about the tacky way in which the Mets handled the situation with their manager, Willie Randolph.  Mets management kept telling him one thing, all the while planning to fire him.  Then, for some reason known only to the heartless hacks who own the team, they let Randolph travel all the way to Anaheim (where the Mets are playing the Angels).  Then they fire him and his two most trustworthy assistants at 12:01 AM, (3:00 AM in New York), when hopefully, no one will notice. 

Reading this (I don't care a whit about the Mets, but think highly of Willie from his days with the Yankees) it struck me . . .  Where have I heard this before?  The way in which the Mets owners (the Wilpons) handled this, bears a striking resemblance to the way in which LCMS President Kieschnick and David Strang orchestrated the firing of Todd Wilken and Jeff Schwarz, along with the cancellation of Issues, Etc., on Monday of Holy Week.  As you read Olney's lambaste of the Mets, see if you see the same parallels I do to the bureaucrats running the LCMS.  Click here: ESPN - Buster Olney Blog

Speaking of baseball, baseball fans will rejoice in this great resource,  a concise and seemingly exhaustive set of links to every news story and blog dealing with baseball.  Boy, it would be nice if someone would do this with websites of interest to Reformed Christians.   Everything a baseball fan could ever need is on a single page!  Click here: Baseball

Monday
Jun162008

The Ole Summer Slow-Down

_MG_0013_copy_copy.jpgWell, it is that time of the year when my vacation rolls around, and when the consistory at Christ Reformed grants me some time off from my church duties to write, read and study.

All of that is to say that Rev. Marcelo Souza (Guy de Brasil) will take over my duties at Christ Reformed while I take some time off.  It is nice to be "preached to" for a change and to sit in the pew with my family.

We have a couple of short trips planned, and I'll be attacking the growing pile of books in my study I haven't had time to read.  I'm also working on a series of articles for Tabletalk, as well as preparing for my Spring 2009 stint in the classroom @ Westminster Seminary California (Dr. David VanDrunen is on sabbatical, and I'm teaching one of his courses).  I've also got a chapter due for a book on church planting, and then I have several book proposals to finish.  I'll be plenty busy, but I'll get a break from the pressure that goes with pastoral work.

All of that is to say, blog posts here at the Riddleblog will slow down and be a bit sporadic for much of the summer--I'll still post when I feel like it, or if Zrim needs clobberin'. 

Sorry, I won't be taking any email questions until I resume my pastoral duties again, Lord willing at the end of August. 
 

Monday
Jun162008

Waldron's Response to John MacArthur

Waldron's%20Response%20to%20MacArthur.jpg

Here's the scoop from the publisher:

At the 2007 Shepherds' Conference, Pastor John MacArthur delivered a controversial message entitled, "Why Every Self-Respecting Calvinist is a Premillennialist." In this book, Dr. Sam Waldron addresses the assertions of MacArthur historically, exegetically and theologically. Although his arguments are rigorous, the entire tenor of the book is level-headed and irenic. This "friendly response" grants modern day Amillennialists the opportunity to thoughtfully engage their Dispensational brethren.

With charity, this book exposes the fallacies--historical, exegetical and theological--inherent in Dr. MacArthur's presentation...Thank you, Dr. Waldron, for showing us how a theological refutation may be done with grace and kindness...James M. Renihan, Ph.D.

Samuel Waldron's "friendly response" to John MacArthur's "millennial manifesto" will go a long way toward setting the record straight about what Reformed amillennialists actually believe about the church and Israel...I highly recommend this book to all who are interested in this controversy...Kim Riddlebarger, Ph.D.

Samuel Waldron's response to John MacArthur's controversial sermon, "Why Every Self-Respecting Calvinist Is a Premillennialist," is a gem. In a gentle spirit, and with an awareness of what is at stake, Waldron makes a persuasive case against MacArthur's unlikely claim that true Calvinists must subscribe to the tenets of dispensational premillennialism...Cornelis Venema, Ph.D.
 
For ordering information,  Click here: Reformed Baptist Academic Press
Sunday
Jun152008

Who Said That?

question%20mark.jpg"Obedience is the number one ingredient to Life Eternal; yet, it’s the very least practiced among the religious world.  We will all be sentenced and receive our reward according to our works. Notice first The Book of Yahweh.  Revelation 22:12— And behold, I come quickly, and My Reward is with Me, to give every man according as his work will be."

Leave your guess in the comments section below.  Please no google searches or cheating.   

Sunday
Jun152008

A Sermon on Psalm 84

Psalm%2084.jpgHere is today's morning sermon from Christ Reformed Church on Psalm 84--"A Day in Your Courts"

http://links.christreformed.org/realaudio/KR20080615-Courts.mp3

Saturday
Jun142008

Jesus Is Coming Back on June 12 (Oops!) and Links to Other Stuff on the Web

links%2010.jpgCheck out the chapter introduction to the Book of Revelation from the new ESV Study Bible (coming in October).  This will surely set a new standard for study Bibles.  Now, if only they'd put the Reformed confessions in the back! 
Click here: http://www.esvstudybible.org/images/excerpt-revelation-
intro.pdf
.

Don't you just hate it when you go to all the trouble of setting a date for the Lord's return, and then it doesn't happen?  They've got trailers full of food and everything . . .   You'd think "Buffalo Bill" Hawkins would have learned a thing or two after he made the same prediction back in September, 2006.  Seems like this guy is on cable 24/7.  How can anybody take him seriously?  Wait, I should know that answer to that . . . Click here: ABC News: Texas 'Prophet': Doomsday Begins June 12

I hope this one is a joke.  Supposedly, theologians (Roman Catholic) are preparing for the eventual encounter with a real-live alien, you know, Area 51 stuff.   Klatu!  Verada!  Nikto!    Click here: Christian Theologians Prepare for Extraterrestrial Life

Finally, it looks like the Issues, Etc., crew is getting closer and closer to being on the air again.   Sure will be good to have them back.   Scroll down for pictures of the new facility.   Click here: Augsburg1530

Thursday
Jun122008

The Canons of Dort, First Head of Doctrine, Rejection of Errors, Paragraph Nine

Synod%20of%20Dort.jpgSynod condemns those . . .

IX Who teach that the cause for God's sending the gospel to one people rather than to another is not merely and solely God's good pleasure, but rather that one people is better and worthier than the other to whom the gospel is not communicated.

For Moses contradicts this when he addresses the people of Israel as follows: Behold, to Jehovah your God belong the heavens and the highest heavens, the earth and whatever is in it. But Jehovah was inclined in his affection to love your ancestors alone, and chose out their descendants after them, you above all peoples, as at this day (Deut. 10:14-15). And also Christ: Woe to you, Korazin! Woe to you, Bethsaida! for if those mighty works done in you had been done in Tyre and Sidon, they would have repented long ago in sackcloth and ashes (Matt. 11:21).
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The last major error to be refuted by the Canons (under the first head of doctrine) is that which teaches that the preaching of the gospel and the response to it in a particular time and place, is not ordained by God.  It is not as if the acceptance of the good news came about because some of those nations who heard it are wiser, more noble, or that some particular peoples are more disposed to believe than others, when the gospel first comes to them.   No, Scripture is clear--all people are equally sinful, and equally resistant to the message of God's free grace in Christ.

The error in question opens the door to a number of related problems.  One, which comes to mind, is a subtle form of racism, in which it has been argued that the “heathen nations” are heathen, not because of human sinfulness which effects all peoples and nations equally, but because of the color of a particular people’s skin (the supposed "curse of Ham"), or because of a people’s ethnic derivation (under a national curse), geographical locale (a cursed region), or because of a supposed cultural inferiority (a land which has been pagan).  This kind of thinking led to the view that the nations of Northern Europe during the 17th and 18th centuries, and the United States in the 19th and 20th, were somehow essential (not because of providence, but because of their supposed superior piety) to the advance of the kingdom of God.  Sadly, we vestiges of this today in the “Christian America” notion, in which some of our contemporaries act as though the mission and purpose of the United States is somehow essential to the advance of God's kingdom.  

Of course, God has used the heirs of the Reformation to evangelize much of the world, and those of us with Northern European heritage can indeed testify to the covenant faithfulness of God, as many of us can trace the faith of our fathers back for generations.  But there are two things we must not forget.  The first is that Northern Europe was at one time utterly pagan, until evangelized by Mediterranean peoples in the early centuries of the last millennium.  Second, we must realize that times have changed.  There are nearly as many Reformed Christians in Nigeria as there are in the United States.  There are more Korean-speaking Reformed Christians in Southern California than there are those who can trace their ancestry to the Netherlands and Scotland combined.  Ironically, it is now the nations of Northern Europe and the United Stares that experience more cultural darkness than many of the nations of the third world.  How does this relate to Arminianism?

The Arminian charge has always been that if the Reformed view of election is actually taught in Scripture, then what incentive would there to evangelize the nations or support the cause of missions since God has already decreed who will believe and who will not?  But this objection boomerangs on the Arminian, as the Canons note, because this implies that those who accept the gospel (on the Arminian scheme) are able to use their powers and advantages that God has given them, and that those who do not accept the gospel and who do not take advantage of these powers, must somehow be more wicked, suffer from a greater depravity, or perhaps, suffer from a greater ignorance of the things of God, than do those who do take advantage of these things.  

After all–says the Arminian–believers come to faith, persevere, and then live holy lives, because they saw the need to utilize the grace of God to their advantage when others did not.  Given fallen human nature, it is only natural that this would work its way into western expansionism and manifest destiny, since white Europeans believed in greater numbers than did native Americans, or other non-Europeans.  There is a tendency to see the hope of the gospel as residing in the "goodness" of those who did indeed use what God has given them to the greatest possible advantage.

Not so with the doctrine of election set forth in the Canons.  The Scriptures teach that all the nations of the earth are the fallen children of Adam.  There is no people on earth who ever embraced the gospel because they were somehow in a better position to take advantage of the grace of God, humanly speaking.  People believed the message only because God was gracious unto them by so inclining their hearts and granting them faith!  That is why we have missionaries after all--to go and preach the gospel through which God creates faith and saves his elect.

In those instances where God did this in great numbers, of course, a culture or a nation will receive tremendous benefits as believers in Christ then become salt and light in the city of man.   But the only reason that any have believed and then become salt and light in their own particular culture, is because God graciously and sovereignly rescued them from their sin through the preaching of the gospel! 

As Paul puts it so clearly in Romans 10:12-15, God calls his elect to faith through the preaching of the gospel—“For there is no distinction between Jew and Greek; for the same Lord is Lord of all, bestowing his riches on all who call on him.  For “everyone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved.”  How then will they call on him in whom they have not believed?  And how are they to believe in him of whom they have never heard?  And how are they to hear without someone preaching?  And how are they to preach unless they are sent?  As it is written, “How beautiful are the feet of those who preach the good news!”  Preachers are sent, God grants faith. 

Therefore, God has not only ordained the ends (who will be saved), he has also ordained the means by which his elect will be called to faith (the preaching of the gospel).  In the Reformed view it is  God who receives the glory when people come to Christ (especially in those cases when many in a nation become believers), and not the individuals who come to faith.  This means that no individual or nation can take credit for that which rightly belongs to God. 

What else can we do then, but to take the gospel to the nations so that men and women—God’s elect—will embrace the savior and come to faith?  God has commanded this, and through this he will bring glory and honor to himself!
   

Thursday
Jun122008

A Big Night for the Riddlebargers

DSC_9021_edited-1.jpgThat's my son, Mark Thomas, receiving his high school diploma from Valley Christian High (in Cerritos).  If the setting looks familiar, you must be a closet watcher of the Hour of Power.  Valley Christian (which was founded by RCA and CRC churches in 1935) often holds graduation ceremonies at the Crystal Cathedral.

Although the "Cathedral" is a prominent Orange County landmark, this was the first time I have ever been inside.  I'll grant that it is very impressive--except for the seats, which were cramped and terribly uncomfortable.  I felt like I was flying Southwest!

DSCN2730.JPG My sons, Dave (now 21, and also a Valley grad) and Mark, share a moment parents often don't get to see.  Dave's just finished his third year at Cal-State Long Beach (mechanical engineering), while Mark is headed to Cal-State Fullerton's school of business and economics.  Cal-State Fullerton is known for three things:   1)  It is my alma mater,  2)  Its fine school of business and economics,  3)  Its baseball team.

 

 


DSC_9043_edited-1.jpg When we arrived, we noticed that the organist looked very familiar.  Yup, that's our own Pam "Hazel" Compton (Ph.D. student in sacred music @ USC, and wife of the Rev. Andrew Compton, who was ordained at Christ Reformed last week (Click here: Riddleblog - The Latest Post - A Great Day @ Christ Reformed).

All in all, it was a great night for our family, as well as a major milestone in our lives.  My boys are now fine young Christian men pursuing their vocations, and for that, my heart is filled with gratitude.

Tuesday
Jun102008

Losing the Saved in the Name of Reaching the Lost, and Other Stuff from Around the Web

links5.bmpUSA Today ran a piece on how after a forty-year pattern of sustained growth, the Southern Baptists suddenly have seen church membership and the number of baptisms level off, and then decline.  Much the same holds true for the LCMS, now that they've adopted the Ablaze program for church growth.  The only thing the SBC and the LCMS have in common (besides declining membership) is an institutional commitment to church growth programs.  Mike Horton nailed it.  These church growth types are not reaching the lost (as the claim) but they are quite good at losing the saved (intentionally so).  Click here: Southern Baptists fret over decline as annual meeting begins - USATODAY.com

Gene Veith has a hilarious comparison between young Goths and old Lutherans.  This is something only a Lutheran could say about a Lutheran, but it is funny nonetheless.  Click here: Of Goths and Lutherans — Cranach: The Blog of Veith

Can't wait for the ESV Study Bible (coming in October).  The first page from the Gospel of John has been posted.  When the notes in a study bible for John 1:1 mention Arius and Colwell's rule, I'm excited.  Click here: Home | ESV Study Bible | Crossway (check the features tab).

The nanny state is watching you . . .  Be sure to take off your hat so they get a good look at you on camera.   Click here: Hats banned from Yorkshire pubs over CCTV fears - Telegraph

 Finally, for those of you who have purchased Herman Bavinck's Reformed Dogmatics--if you haven't, you should, this is great stuff--apparently, there's a quality control issue (all in good fun).  Is that cloth, or is it paper?  Hmmm  . . .  Baker is my publisher (and is wonderful to work with), so I'll leave it at that.   Click here: Cloth or Paper...