A Theological Conversation worth having: Al Mohler’s response to Brian McLaren
“…a recent essay by Brian McLaren helps us all to understand what is at stake in the controversy over Rob Bell’s new book, Love Wins.
Beyond this, his argument reveals a great deal about the actual beliefs and trajectories of what has become known as the emerging church. As such, his essay is a welcome addition to this important conversation.”
– Albert Mohler responds to Brian McLaren’s critique of Mohler’s review of Rob Bell’s new book. (Photo: brianmclaren.net)
Three free hymns
Keith and Kristyn Getty are giving free downloads of three of their hymns — Behold the Lamb, The Power of the Cross, and Come, People of the Risen King — up until 31 March. (h/t Tim Challies.)
Jesus: The Only Way to God — free audiobook
John Piper’s book “Jesus: The Only Way to God — Must You Hear the Gospel to be Saved?” is especially relevant given the publicity surrounding Rob Bell’s latest publication.
The people at Christian Audio are giving away an audiobook version through their website for the next week (ends March 31 2011). (h/t Justin Taylor.)
NSW Votes
The NSW State elections are just days away.
While not endorsing or recommending any particular party, the Australian Christian Lobby has collected resources and links which may be helpful in considering how to vote.
Their site is nswvotes.org.au.
And their videos of both the Premier and the Leader of the Opposition addressing Christian leaders are at Vimeo, where they can be downloaded.
Anglican Entropy
“The second law of thermodynamics tells us that as energy is expended over time, order in the universe inexorably gives way to disorder. The fundamental physical truth behind the cycles of birth and death is that things fall apart, leading ultimately to a static and random state known as entropy.
In the spiritual realm, there is no such necessity. St Paul affirms that ‘Though our outer nature is wasting away, our inner nature is being renewed day by day.’ (2 Corinthians 4:16), yet entropy irresistibly comes to mind as a metaphor following Dr William’s Lent Letter to the Primates and Moderators of the Anglican Communion.
Here we have carefully crafted verbal camouflage for what is actually one more step in Lambeth Anglicanism’s descent into spiritual and institutional entropy…”
– Charles Raven writes at SPREAD.
The local church and evangelism
“Back in 1974 Donald Robinson (second from the left in this photograph of the four most recent Archbishops of Sydney) addressed a conference on evangelism with a paper entitled ‘The Doctrine of the Church and its Implications for Evangelism’ (Selected Works, II, 103–113).
I was too young at the time to know whether or not it caused a stir among evangelicals in Sydney and elsewhere (though I later learnt there was a subsequent correspondence between Francis Foulkes and Donald Robinson on the subject in the AFES journal Interchange). However I do suspect that its argument, if taken seriously, would certainly cause a stir today. Patterns of thinking and church practice have developed which move in an entirely different direction and I am not at all sure that these have been as well thought-out theologically as Robinson’s article back in the 1970s…”
– Read all of Mark Thompson’s article at Theological Theology.
Charles Raven on the Theology of Rowan Williams
Charles Raven, from SPREAD, and author of Shadow Gospel, spoke at the Mere Anglicanism Conference in January, on the Theology of Rowan Williams.
Anglican TV has now posted his address and also an interview with Kevin Kallsen. Worth watching.
Rich detail in life of college founder
Archbishop of Sydney Peter Jensen has written to commend Peter Bolt’s book, “A Portrait in his Actions: Thomas Moore of Liverpool 1762-1840. Part 1”.
“[Peter Bolt] has done more than produce an ecclesiastical biography. He has set Moore into the context of early Sydney (and its world) and contributed significantly to our knowledge of what occurred in this town in its earliest days. He has uncovered sources hitherto unknown or unused. He has begun to explain how it is that one as humble as Moore in background and education could make provision for the founding of what amounted to Australia’s first tertiary educational institution.”
Read more at SydneyAnglicans.net – and you can order the book here.
Free PDF: The Lord’s Supper in Human Hands – Epilogue
The Australian Church Record and the Anglican Church League published ‘The Lord’s Supper in Human Hands – Epilogue’ just before last year’s meeting of Sydney Synod.
“Sydney’s discussion of lay and diaconal administration of the Lord’s Supper has occurred for some forty years. After a related legal question was referred to it, the Appellate Tribunal handed down its opinion in August 2010. This legal opinion needs to be set within its proper context, and the biblical-theological discussion about the issue needs to continue.
This booklet is an epilogue to The Lord’s Supper in Human Hands (2008), updating the discussion on the eve of Sydney Synod, October 2010.”
Chapters are:
The Minority Report – Peter Bolt
Diaconal Administration of the Lord’s Supper and The 2010 Opinion of the Appellate Tribunal – Glenn N. Davies
The Constitution, the Appellate Tribunal and other things – Robert Tong
The theological necessity of lay administration – Mark Thompson.
The ACR is making the Epilogue available as a free download. It’s a 2.4MB PDF file.
(Printed copies of the Epilogue and the original ‘Lord’s Supper in Human Hands’ from 2008 are still available from the ACR.)
God is still holy and what you learned in Sunday School is still true: A review of ‘Love Wins’
“Instead of summoning sinners to the cross that they might flee the wrath to come and know the satisfaction of so great a salvation, Love Wins assures people that everyone’s eternity ends up as heaven eventually. The second chances are good not just for this life, but for the next. And what if they aren’t?
What if Jesus says on the day of judgment, “Depart from me, I never knew you” (Matt. 7:23)? What if at the end of the age the wicked and unbelieving cry out, “Fall on us and hide us from the face of him who sits on the throne, and from the wrath of the Lamb” (Rev. 6:16)? What if outside the walls of the New Jerusalem “are the dogs and sorcerers and the sexually immoral and murderers and idolaters, and everyone who loves and practices falsehood” (Rev. 22:15)? What if there really is only one name “under heaven given among men by which we must be saved” (Acts 4:12)? And what if the wrath of God really remains on those who do not believe in the Son (John 3:18, 36)?”
– Kevin DeYoung has written a comprehensive and very helpful review of Rob Bell’s Love Wins. Read it at his Gospel Coalition blog, or as a PDF file.
Proclamation Trust Preachers Weekend 2011
The Proclamation Trust has made available videos from its 2011 Preachers Weekend.
Vaughan Roberts and Adrian Reynolds taught and modelled preaching. See the talks at Vimeo.
A Prayer for Japan
John Piper has posted ‘A Prayer for Japan’ at the Desiring God blog.
(General prayer resources for Japan at Operation World.)
‘Love Wins’ – A review of Rob Bell’s new book
“Questions matter. They can help you to grow deeper in your knowledge of the truth and your love for God—especially when you’re dealing with the harder doctrines of the Christian faith. But questions can also be used to obscure the truth. They can be used to lead away just as easily as they can be used to lead toward. Ask Eve.
Enter Rob Bell, a man who has spent much of the last seven years asking questions in his sometimes thought-provoking and often frustrating fashion. And when he’s done asking, no matter what answers he puts forward, it seems we’re only left with more questions. This trend continues in his new book, Love Wins: A Book About Heaven, Hell, and the Fate of Every Person Who Ever Lived, where Bell poses what might be his most controversial question yet:
Does a loving God really send people to hell for all eternity?
The questions you probably want answers to as you read this review are these: Is it true that Rob Bell teaches that hell doesn’t exist? Is it true that Rob Bell believes no one goes to hell? You’ll just need to keep reading because, frankly, the answers aren’t that easy to come by…”
– Respected Canadian blogger Tim Challies has read Bell’s book. This review is essential reading.
Related: Denny Burk’s post, “Rob Bell Outs Himself” gives clear, biblical answers to the questions Rob Bell asks in his promotional video.
An Exposition of the Theses — 3
“I turn now to the third of the twelve theses which I posted as a way of giving shape to a new reformation of the Anglican Communion.
If the Anglican Communion is to be reformed again it needs to hear and heed these crucial truths:
3. The most urgent and important need of every human being is to be reconciled to God. We are all naturally God’s enemies (Rms 5:10) with the result that we stand under the wrath of the God who loves us (Rms 1:18; Eph. 2:1–3). Our natural disposition is to insist on our own autonomy, to repeat the folly of the Garden of Eden where the goal was to determine right and wrong without reference to God and the word he had given (Gen. 3:4–6). If we are to be reconciled to God, then the cconsequences of our rebellion against him — our guilt, corruption, enslavement to sinful thinking and behaviour, and death — must all be dealt with in their entirety. A gospel which does not explain this most basic need is no gospel at all.…”
– Read Mark Thompson’s full post at Theological Theology. (Part 2, Part 1, ‘Theses for a new reformation in the Anglican Communion’.)
Do you treasure God’s Word?
This ten minute video is a wonderful challenge to the apathy of many western Christians towards reading the Bible.
(h/t Justin Taylor and many others.)


