Archive for June, 2009

The Southern Baptist Convention- Concerns, Critical Issues, and Observations.

Below I have gathered some helpful links related to the Southern Baptist Convention. I found these to be helpful in summarizing the “big issues” that will be on the minds of the attendees of the National Convention in Louisville, Kentucky over the next few days.

1. Interview with David Dockery on the Identity and Future of the Southern Baptist Convention.

2. Don Dunavant on “GM and the SBC.”

3. Steven McKinion’s three part series on “Third Generation Conservatives in the Southern Baptist Convention”: Part 1- “Distinctives” - Part 2- “Implications” - Part 3- “Misconceptions”

4. J.D. Greear on “The New, Young, Southern Baptist: Orthodox, Connected, Unconventional.”

5. Ed Stetzer on “The Southern Baptist Convention: A Denomination Continuing in its Decline” and “The End of the Beginning.”

6. The Great Commission Resurgence document.

7. Nathan Finn’s six part series on “The Great Commission Resurgence” document: Part 1 - Part 2 - Part 3 - Part 4 - Part 5Part 6.

Also, Finn on “A Commitment to a More Effective Convention Structure.”

8. Four part interview with Daniel Akin on “The Great Commission Resurgence”: A Vision for Missionary Theologians, Turning around the SBC, Great Commission Resurgence, SBC Calvinism and Evangelical Cooperation.

Also, I posted my “Hard Questions for the Southern Baptist Convention” a while back.

If you have any other links or suggestions send them to me and I will check them out!

1 comment June 19, 2009

The Gospel and Evangelical Pietism!

I am currently finishing a book called “Jesus, Made in America.” In this book Stephen J. Nichols traces Jesus in American culture. He shows how Jesus has been shaped by our cultural sensibilities throughout American history. It is a fascinating read.

I am not going to regurgitate the book for you, but I do want to expound on one key point. Nichols points out that the evangelical church champions personal pietism. What is pietism?

Simply put, this strand of pietism places all emphasis on personal experience, champions devotion, focuses on practice- and often times ignores doctrine.

When doctrine is ignored pietism is extremely dangerous. Actually, in my opinion pietism by itself- is anti-gospel.

Nichols writes;

“Pietism leads us to say that imitating Christ is far better than having a right set of beliefs about who Christ is. Pietism leads to viewing Christ primarily from the lens of personal experience rather than the lenses of Gospel pericopies or of theological formulations.”

This is almost humorous. I don’t know how someone can even imitate Christ unless they have a right set of beliefs of who He actually is? Plus, the main aim of the Christian life is not to imitate Christ, but to trust in Christ. My fear is that too many Christians trust in themselves, and even attempt to justify themselves by their “imitation of Christ.”

The gospel is at stake.

The sad thing is that many contemporary Evangelical Christians lean more on their devotion to Christ, rather than Christ Himself. Catch the subtle nuance here- it’s huge.

Leaning on your “devotion to Christ” tells you that your Christian identity and self-worth are based on how hard you work, or how moral you are. This is not the Gospel. This is when personal pietism becomes a deadly idol.

Here is a good post to help you think through this issue in your own life. “The Gospel vs. Religion”- (via Nathan Finn)

1 comment June 14, 2009

Our Decision to Adopt and the Work of God!

Laura and I have decided to begin the adoption process- hoping to adopt a baby from Ethiopia. If you would like, you can follow our journey here. We are very excited!

I truly believe that God has worked in our hearts and lives, individually and together, in showing us the joy and priority of adoption.

For me, the journey began in college. I will never forget when I visited an orphanage in Guatemala City, Guatemala almost 6 years ago. In this specific orphanage there were hundreds of children who had been abandoned by their parents for various reasons.

At one point during the day we were taken into a room lined with cribs, a small room where the workers attempted to care for 20-30 infants. This was a powerful moment that has been seared into my mind. I will never forget it.

I walked through the room with tears streaming down my face- wondering “who will care for these children?” “Who will hold them and let them know that they are loved?” “Who will nurture these children as they grow older?” I can see, and feel it, like it was yesterday. What I did not understand at the time was how God would use this moment later.

Looking back at that experience as a college student in the Guatemalan orphanage, I remembered that I was not only weeping over the abandoned children, but over the fact that there was very little I could do.

The words of Jesus are so powerful here- I wish I could have whispered them to each one of those precious children;

“I will not leave you as orphans; I will come to you.” (John 14:18)

The raw emotion that adoption stirs in my heart has only grown as I have studied the theology of adoption. Adoption one of the metaphors Paul uses in the New Testament to express the multifaceted grace of God shown to us in salvation. (See here)

The very word translated adoption in your New Testament is a compound of two words, “son” and “placing.” Adoption in the New Testament is a term that denotes the legal act of transfer into a new family- “the placing of a son.”

With this transfer come all of the attending privileges and responsibilities of being part of the family. Adoption is a powerful image because the adoptee is taken out of his previous state and placed in a new relationship…thus, the adoptee starts a new life as part of his new family. The new family embraces their adopted son or daughter as their own. (Great resource here)

For the Christian- images of salvation should be so blatant and obvious here because of the Gospel of Jesus Christ.

When Christians are adopted into the family of God- it is through, and only through Jesus Christ. There is no ‘natural tie’ between sinners and a Holy God. Our spiritual adoption is a decision of God. God adopts us, orphans, out of His free love. We are given the rights of sons and daughters- as heirs!

For me, this truth has illuminated the biblical mandate and given me a solid foundation to accompany the emotion I felt six years ago in the Guatemalan orphanage.

I am in total agreement with Russell Moore when he writes;

“The Gospel of Jesus Christ means our families and churches ought to be at the forefront of the adoption of orphans…as we become more attuned to the gospel, we’ll have more of a burden for orphans.” (Adopted for Life, 18)

Pray for us as we begin our adoption journey. Ultimately, pray that we trust in Christ- because he is the one who blazed this trail.

2 comments June 7, 2009


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