Monthly Archives: July 2007

Limited Government and Foreign Nation-building

Tune into the next Republican presidential debate, and you will hear the usual rhetoric about limited government, lower taxes and less spending. The same candidates will then propose to expand the military, escalate the Iraq War, and possibly bomb Iran. Finally, they will resolutely defend the decision to invade Iraq.

This raises the question: What do candidates who promote an expansive, expensive, and aggressive foreign policy mean by limited government? Are conservatives (or libertarians) who push for a militantly interventionist foreign policy really conservatives (or libertarians)?

The Bush Administration might not be a particularly good representative of this policy conundrum, since it has greatly increased domestic spending, expanded the welfare state and extended the federal government’s reach. For this administration, philosophy poses no barrier to an activist foreign policy.

Inside Track: War vs. Limited Government, by Doug Bandow: READ THE REST

If this was coming to Saint Louis…

… I would so be there!

The demon-destroying “chosen one” and her evil-fighting team are singing out their deepest, darkest secrets on the big screen, and you can join in. “Once More with Feeling,” the Emmy-nominated musical episode from Joss Whedon’s cult television series “Buffy the Vampire Slayer,” is touring the country as an interactive sing-a-long…(source).

As the end credits roll, series mastermind Joss Whedon, who snuck into a back-row seat right after the program began, strides down the aisle. It’s the first Buffy sing-along he’s ever been to, and he has the sheepish, overwhelmed look of someone who’s just received a massive outpouring of love. (source)

And the great thing is that you don’t need DVDs. You can just get practiced up with youtube. For example:
[kml_flashembed movie=”http://www.youtube.com/v/6xolY4Euxh0″ width=”425″ height=”350″ wmode=”transparent” /]

Hat Tip: Jennifer, who told me about it after she heard it on NPR.

Unbelievable deal at wordmp3: James Jordan, Peter Leithart on Gospel, critique of theonomy, revivalism, democracy

Back in 1991 before anyone in Evangelical world had heard of N. T. Wright or “the Federal Vision,” Jim Jordan of Biblical Horizons and Peter Leithart gave a conference that pointed out the political nature of the Gospel and of Arminianism and revivalism.

The recordings of these lectures are worth a lot more than five bucks.

I’ll start with Mr. James B. Jordan first. At that time Greg Bahnsen had just written his No Other Standard, a response to a rather uneven collection of essays by Seminary professors entitled Theonomy: A Reformed Critique as well as The Shadow of Christ in the Law of Moses by Vern Poythress. Jordan begins his first lecture informing his audience that he had intended to deliver studies on the Noahic law, but had recently received a copy of Bahnsen’s book defending his ideas. So rather than stick with his plan he decided to address Bahnsen’s position against his critics.

Theonomy A Preliminary Theocratic Critique 1

This first recording starts off with a bang by pointing out the obvious fact that the Gospel is inherently theocratic. In fact, both the Great Commission and the preaching in Acts show the Gospel message is that Jesus is the exalted king. It is a theocratic proclamation. This is the lecture that tells you that everything you know is wrong: In the OT individual people were changed but history never changed. In the OT individual people were saved but the world was not saved. Until Now. Now the Gospel proclaims the change in history and the salvation of the world.

(By the way, this was years before N. T. Wright came out with What Saint Paul Really Said, showing that the term, “gospel” designated a royal pronouncement rather than a personal improvement message about spiritual renewal.)

There is also a lot of good study of the OT (this seems to be the theonomic divide: some people wanted to talk about God’s law and others wanted to actuall find out what it was). Jordan’s first point is that there needs to be more reflection on the actual nature of Biblical torah. Jordan raises that the Law in the Bible sounds nothing like what we think of as law. We make it into “law” by abstracting the parts that fit our expectations out of the text.

This is a great lecture that will change your thinking in many ways.

Theonomy A Preliminary Theocratic Critique 2

This lecture continues Jordan’s arguments. I won’t attempt to rehearse them all here. But to give one example, Jordan points out that saying Biblical Law is “binding” is an equivocation. Of course, all revelation is binding, but that doesn’t mean that we are supposed to follow what they actually say (i.e. circumcision). This is not even a distinctive issue faced by us in the Christian era. Converted Gentiles, like those of the ciy of Ninevah, would have had to figure out which dimensions of the Torah really were for them to obey.

Jordan goes on to both deconstruct, and raise exegetical problems with, Bahnsen’s use of Matthew 5.

Theonomy A Preliminary Theocratic Critique 3

Jordan continues to pose questions about Bahnsenian Theonomy and whether it is really derived from Scripture. What makes Jordan’s approach unique is that he is not driven by a need to prove Bahnsen totally wrong, but simply wants Theonomy to give an account for what all of Scripture says.

Calvin & Theocracy

Somewhat like Jordan’s criticism that Theonomy, Peter Leithart shows that Theonomists have been too simplistic in claiming Calvin as a precedent. Of course, the same holds true of the anti-Theonomists. Calvin, like all the Christians of his day and for centuries prior, was a theocrat.

Theocracy, Revivalism, and Democracy

Building on his description of Calvin’s thought, Leithart argues that the rise of revivalism contributed to a significant change in Christian social order. This is an important lecture that should interest many different sorts of Christians (and non-Christians for that matter).

Let me emphasize that point for the entire conference: these lectures are going to be interesting to people who have no interest in “theonomy” debates from the early nineties. Anyone interested in issues of being “missional” or “emergent/ing church” concerns, or in Biblical theology, or in American culture, or in the controversy surrounding N. T. Wright, is going to find a great deal to chew on in these messages.

And each lecture is on sale right now for only a dollar!

(Full disclosure: I have done work for WordMp3.com)

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