Category Archives: My Books

Another resurrection (and commission) in Mark’s Gospel

John Barah posts a fantastic observation on the resurrection theme which Mark laces throughout his Gospel. John shows that when Jesus rose up early in the morning on the first day of the week and his disciples had to hunt for him, that the event is described in ways that foreshadow the resurrection scene in Matthew 16. Jesus wants his disciples to leave and go out elsewhere.

It is an great point and is certainly backed up by the way Mark writes about other events. I argue, for example (following Austin Farrar, of course!) that Herod’s murder of John the baptizer is done in a way that is heavily reminiscent to what happens to Jesus at the hands of Pilate in Jerusalem. And this is all presented as the background for a “Great Commission” in Mark 6.7-13, following immediately on a story about how Jesus was rejected by his own countrymen (Mark 6.1-6).

The relationship is even more comprehensive because that we are explicitly told that when Herod hears the stories of the powers at work in Jesus’ disciples, he believes it is because murdered John is alive again. So even though Mark contains no explicit story of Pentecost, we see that the idea is quite evident in his Gospel that the Righteous One gets forcefully sentenced, as a favor on a feast day, and is killed and rises again to send out followers in the power of the Spirit….

Justification: forging a consensus

This is a pretty interesting article. If you decide to buy the book (which you should) and read my essay (which you might want to do after you read the others), you might compare my take on Turretin to the one found in the article. You will find, I think, a sizable divergence from the same source.

(I also found it odd that he used a Clarkian as a guide to doctrine without warning readers of the problems involved, or that he relied on dust cover blurbs rather than Reformed academic reviews to decide on quality.)

[Note: I’m having second comments on how I phrased my worries below, be sure to read the comments.]

One more serious problem , however: the article actually attempts to lead the careful reader away from the reformed consensus by suggesting that it “helps to avoid considerable confusion over the precise relationship between justification and faith” if we make “objective justification” actually precede faith rather than be instrumentally received by faith:

That justification which takes place objectively within the tribunal of God (active justification) logically precedes faith. This is the basis for passive justification in the heart or conscience of the sinner which logically follows faith. The latter is the normal referent of the Scriptural terminology of justification. This important distinction, absent from Lutheran thought, helps to avoid considerable confusion over the precise relationship between justification and faith. It also helps to explain the difference between the objective fact of justification coram deo (before God) and the subjective and imperfect feeling of grace in the heart of the believer; and to enable a distinction to be made in the application of redemption to adults and children.

I suppose Reymond may have taught this (though I will think better of him until I see it for myself), but I doubt the rest of the writer’s references support his claim. It is, in any case, not the theology of the Westminster Confession of Faith, which affirms one justification, not two, and says this justification before God is by faith. It is, I think, quite significant, that Westminster sets out an easily-understandable explanation for how we receive justification by faith, so they don’t have to, in effect, deny the doctrine.

I’m sure the author is a great pastor and I am not going to make an opinion of him on the basis of one essay. But I have to say what seems self-evident: If you don’t affirm justification by faith then you don’t affirm justification by faith alone. I think the writer needs to put back together what he is separating here.

A Faith That Is Never Alone: A Response to Westminster Seminary California

Buy it Today!

No Nudity and “In all of this the demand of obedience in the Mosaic covenant is principially identical with the same demand in the new covenant of the gospel economy.”

Here is a great excerpt from Norman Sheperd’s essay in the new book, A Faith That Is Never Alone: A Response to Westminster Seminary California. If you’re a Christian who wants to learn more about the Bible, salvation, and be led through the confusion that besets North American fundamentalism regarding the Old and New Testaments, I highly recommend it.

My own contribution, however, unlike the other great essays dealing with the Bible, is simply a historical study. Pure “tradition of the elders” citations and not much more that would be of more use to Christians in general outside my own sociological circle. But don’t let that stop you since I am only a few pages in a book with many great contributions in Biblical scholarship.

I should say, however, that my essay could easily have been much longer. I don’t think I even mentioned John Murray. Yet here is a great essay by Murray that shows he was truly the student of Zacharias Ursinus, Francis Turretin and others whom I discuss in my essay. Murray’s essay could easily have been included in the book. It would fit quite well among the other writings. I highly recommend it.

By the way, when you come to the numbered points and the end of Murray’s essay, you might notice the content sounds really familiar.

3 quickie arguments for baptizing babies

1: Jesus commanded the disciples to batize all the nations. Babies are members of the nations. Babies should be baptized.

2: Jesus commanded all disciples to be bapized into discipleship. Parents are to disciple their children from birth. Their babies should, therefore, be baptized.

    3: God arranged for the Israelites to undergo many cleansings, which the author of Hebrews calls baptisms. There is a contrast between the many washings and our once-and-for-all baptism. All the evidence indicates that Israelite babies could become unclean and need cleansing. So they should instead now be given the once-and-for-all cleansing that is baptism.

    Buy Why Baptize Babies: An Explanation of the Theology and Practice of the Reformed Churches (scroll down). Buy it for yourself or buy it for friends.

    Isn’t there a command to baptize babies?

    book coverIn my book (scroll down), I spend some initial space talking about how we derive conclusions from Scripture.

    One example of a way in which people make uncritical assumptions when dealing with the text, is the common idea that there is no NT command to baptize babies (another problem is assuming there must be a NT command, but let’s forget about that for now).

    Doesn’t the Great Commission tell us to baptize and disciple all the nations? Are not infants included in nations
    True, this only is for those who are disciples, but this doesn’t change anything.  After all, how long do you wait before discipling a child?  How long before you attempt to mold them by a godly example, singing Christian songs, praying model prayers, etc, before them.

    The message in infant baptism is simply that discipleship starts from the beginning.  Baptism can’t come any later.

    Other statements are found calling on people to repent of their paganism or their sinful lifestyle and be baptized.  But surely these people are repenting also of raising their children as pagans.  Shouldn’t they then repent by discipling their children for Jesus from the earliest age?