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God and the Gay Christian? a Response to Matthew Vines
GOD AND THE GAY CHRISTIAN? A RESPONSE TO MATTHEW VINES Edited by R. ALBERT MOHLER JR. GOD AND THE GAY CHRISTIAN? A RESPONSE TO MATTHEW VINES Edited by R. ALBERT MOHLER JR. God and the Gay Christian? A Response to Matthew Vines Copyright © 2014 by SBTS Press. SBTS Press c/o Communications 2825 Lexington Ave. Louisville, KY 40280 SBTS Press is a division of The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopy, recording or otherwise, without the prior permission of the publisher, except as provided by United States copyright law. Printed in the United States of America. Scripture quotations are from The Holy Bible, English Standard Version® (ESV®), copyright © 2001 by Crossway, a publishing ministry of Good News Publishers. Used by permission. All rights reserved. Also from the New American Standard Bible®, Copyright © 1960, 1962, 1963, 1968, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1975, 1977, 1995 by The Lockman Foundation. Used by permission. (www.Lockman.org) CONVERSANT God and the Gay Christian? A Response to Matthew Vines is the first in a series of e-books that engage the current evangelical conversation with the full wealth of Christian conviction. CONTENTS God, the Gospel and the Gay Challenge: A Response to Matthew Vines R. ALBERT MOHLER JR. 9 How to Condone What the Bible Condemns: Matthew Vines Takes on the Old Testament JAMES M. HAMILTON JR. 25 Suppressing the Truth in Unrighteousness: Matthew Vines Takes on the New Testament DENNY BURK 43 What Has the Church Believed and Taught? Have Christians Been Wrong All Along? OWEN STRACHAN 59 Is a ‘Gay Christian’ Consistent with the Gospel of Christ? HEATH LAMBERT 77 ABOUT THE AUTHORS 93 CHAPTER ONE - • - God, the Gospel and the Gay Challenge: A Response to Matthew Vines R. -
Becoming Lutheran: Exploring the Journey of American Evangelicals Into Confessional Lutheran Thought
Concordia Seminary - Saint Louis Scholarly Resources from Concordia Seminary Doctor of Ministry Major Applied Project Concordia Seminary Scholarship 9-23-2013 Becoming Lutheran: Exploring the Journey of American Evangelicals into Confessional Lutheran Thought Matthew Richard Concordia Seminary, St. Louis, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://scholar.csl.edu/dmin Part of the Practical Theology Commons Recommended Citation Richard, Matthew, "Becoming Lutheran: Exploring the Journey of American Evangelicals into Confessional Lutheran Thought" (2013). Doctor of Ministry Major Applied Project. 138. https://scholar.csl.edu/dmin/138 This Major Applied Project is brought to you for free and open access by the Concordia Seminary Scholarship at Scholarly Resources from Concordia Seminary. It has been accepted for inclusion in Doctor of Ministry Major Applied Project by an authorized administrator of Scholarly Resources from Concordia Seminary. For more information, please contact [email protected]. CONCORDIA SEMINARY SAINT LOUIS, MISSOURI BECOMING LUTHERAN: EXPLORING THE JOURNEY OF AMERICAN EVANGELICALS INTO CONFESSIONAL LUTHERAN THOUGHT A MAJOR APPLIED PROJECT SUBMITTED TO THE DEPARTMENT OF DOCTOR OF MINISTRY STUDIES IN CANDIDACY FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF MINISTRY BY REV. MATTHEW R. RICHARD SAINT LOUIS, MISSOURI BECOMING LUTHERAN: EXPLORING THE JOURNEY OF AMERICAN EVANGELICALS INTO CONFESSIONAL LUTHERAN THOUGHT REV. MATTHEW R. RICHARD SEPTEMBER 23, 2013 Concordia Seminary Saint Louis, Missouri Advisor DR. ROBERT -
Attempting to Eschew the Handmaid's Tale: the Interplay of Denominational Politics, Biblical Interpretations, and Women'
University of Tennessee, Knoxville TRACE: Tennessee Research and Creative Exchange Supervised Undergraduate Student Research Chancellor’s Honors Program Projects and Creative Work Spring 5-1999 Attempting to Eschew The Handmaid's Tale: The Interplay of Denominational Politics, Biblical Interpretations, and Women's Ordination in the Southern Baptist Convention Laura E. Stephens University of Tennessee - Knoxville Follow this and additional works at: https://trace.tennessee.edu/utk_chanhonoproj Recommended Citation Stephens, Laura E., "Attempting to Eschew The Handmaid's Tale: The Interplay of Denominational Politics, Biblical Interpretations, and Women's Ordination in the Southern Baptist Convention" (1999). Chancellor’s Honors Program Projects. https://trace.tennessee.edu/utk_chanhonoproj/346 This is brought to you for free and open access by the Supervised Undergraduate Student Research and Creative Work at TRACE: Tennessee Research and Creative Exchange. It has been accepted for inclusion in Chancellor’s Honors Program Projects by an authorized administrator of TRACE: Tennessee Research and Creative Exchange. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Attempting to Eschew The Handmaid's Tale: The Interplay of Denominational Politics, Biblical Interpretations, and Women's Ordination in the Southern Baptist Convention Laura E. Stephens June 2, 1999 Honors Program Senior Project Dr. Mark Hulsether, Advisor Dr. Thomas Broadhead, Honors Program Director 1 In 1984 the Southern Baptist Convention (SBC) passed the following resolution at its annual meeting. As this resolution proves, the gains ofwomen in SBC church leadership have not kept pace with the advances of women in the broader American culture in the aftermath of the women 's movement. This lack of symmetry is in large part the result of a conflict between progressivism and increasingly prevalent conservatism in society, politics, the broader religious landscape, and the SBC in particular. -
The Altar Call Method of Evangelism
THE REFORMED FAITH AND THE ALTAR CALL METHOD OF EVANGELISM The purpose of this tract can be briefly stated: it is to examine the altar-call method in the light of the Biblical system of truth. We say ʻBiblical system of truthʼ be cause it is our conviction that his is what Calvinism really is. “If anyone should ask me what I mean by a Calvinist,” wrote Charles H. Spurgeon over a century ago, “I should reply, ʻHe is one who says, Salvation is of the Lord.ʼ I cannot find in Scripture any other doctrine than this. This is the essence of the Bible. ʻHe only is my rock and my salvation.ʼ Tell me anything contrary to this truth, and it will be heresy; tell me a heresy, and I shall find its essence here— that it was departed from this great, this fundamental, this rock-like truth: ʻGod is my rock and my salvation.ʼ” Anyone who understands the true genius of Calvinism will therefore realize that there is nothing against which it “sets its face with more firmness than every form and degree of auto-soterism.” The simple assertion that man—sinful and fallen man—can do at least some thing to save him self, or to help save himself, or at least prepare himself to be saved, is utterly anathema to the Calvinist. And here in lies the reason for a careful evaluation of the modern altar-call method of evangelism. For, as Spurgeon again has ex pressed it, “ʻ…since we are nothing with out the Holy Spirit, we must avoid in our work any thing which is not of Him. -
Christian Ethics: Responding to Slander
WAYNE GRUDEM | CHRISTIAN ETHICS: RESPONDING TO SLANDER In wrestling with a biblical response to slander, we contacted my favorite seminary professor, Wayne Grudem. He directed me to his book, Christian Ethics, which is endorsed by Al Mohler and also by one of our church member’s from the Deerfield Road campus, John Kilner. “Insightful, encyclopedic, biblical, and distinctively evangelical, this new book from Grudem is a massive contribution to Christian ethics. It will stand as one of the most important and definitive works of this generation.” — R. Albert Mohler Jr., President, The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary “…Grudem’s Christian Ethics is a breath of fresh air. … Where his views are at odds with other views, even within evangelical Christianity, he explains those alternatives to his readers and invites comparisons. Readers are challenged to think and are given the material they need to do so in a God-honoring way.” — John F. Kilner, Director of Bioethics Programs, Trinity International University Here is what Wayne Grudem wrote about responding to slander… — Pastor James MacDonald 2. The Necessity of Responding to Slander. The Westminster Larger Catechism, in further explanation of the ninth commandment, says that it also requires “love and care of our own good name and defending it when need requireth (Question 144). It gives to scripture references in support: A good name is to be chosen rather than great riches, and favor is better than silver or gold. (Prov. 22:1) Jesus answered, “I do not have a demon, but I honor my Father, and you dishonor me.” (John 8:49) The second passage illustrates a general pattern in Jesus's ministry. -
“Altar-Call Evangelism”
“Altar-Call Evangelism” Pastor Kurt M. Smith Altar-Call Evangelism: Is it biblical? “What mean these dispatches from the battle-field? ‘Last night, fourteen souls were under conviction, fifteen were justified, and eight received full sanctification.’ I am weary of this public bragging, this counting of unhatched chickens, this exhibition of doubtful spoils. Lay aside such numberings of the people, such idle pretense of certifying in half a minute that which will need the testing of a lifetime.” This lamentation combined with sage counsel was given over a hundred years ago by Charles Haddon Spurgeon (1834-1892). It was communicated in a public lecture to his ministerial students and then published in his classic book, The Soul Winner. Spurgeon’s grief was over a style of evangelism that was all the rage in his day because of how quickly so-called results could be counted, secured and then reported publicly as a mighty “gospel” success. We know this kind of evangelism today as “altar-call” evangelism. During Spurgeon’s generation this type of evangelism was very novel, but in our day (a hundred plus years later) – it’s the norm. “But not only is it an accepted practice for churches in the 21st century, it is revered as the only sure and sacred means of acquiring conversions to Christ. Or, as one church-goer put it to me several years ago: “Without the altar-call no one will be saved.” In fact, along this same line of thinking, there is even a local pastor I know, who recently said: “Without the altar-call no church will grow in the South Georgia.” For me personally, over the past fourteen years, I have greatly questioned the legitimacy and even integrity of altar-call evangelism. -
The Gospel of Luke 2 4 18 28 50 62 76
Volume 16 · Number 3 Fall 2012 Editor-in-Chief: R. Albert Mohler, Jr. The Gospel of Luke Executive Editor: Russell D. Moore Editorial: Stephen J. Wellum Editor: Stephen J. Wellum 2 Reading Luke’s Passion Narrative in Light of the Whole Story Associate Editor: Brian Vickers Book Review Editor: Gregory A. Wills 4 Douglas S. Huffman Assistant Editors: Daniel L. Patterson Receiving Jesus as Messiah King: A Synoptic Study on Brent E. Parker the Way to Luke’s Triumphal Entry Account Advisory Board: Timothy K. Beougher 18 Robert H. Stein John B. Polhill Jesus, the Destruction of Jerusalem, and the Coming of the Son of Peter J. Gentry Man in Luke 21:5-38 Esther H. Crookshank Mark A. Seifrid 28 John Kimbell Randy Stinson Jesus’ Death in Luke-Acts: The New Covenant Sacrifice Typographer: Daniel Carroll Lee Tankersley Editorial Office & Subscription Services: 50 “Thus It Is Written”: Redemptive History and Christ’s Resurrection SBTS Box 832 on the Third Day 2825 Lexington Rd. Louisville, KY 40280 (800) 626-5525, x 4413 62 Everett Berry The Destruction of Jerusalem and the Coming of the Son: Editorial E-Mail: Evangelical Interpretations of the Olivet Discourse in Luke [email protected] 76 Book Reviews Yearly subscription costs for four issues: $30, individual inside the The Southern Baptist Journal of Theology is published quarterly U. S.; $55, individual outside the U. S.; $45, institutional inside by The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, 2825 Lexington the U. S.; $70, institutional outside the U. S. Opinions expressed in Road, Louisville, KY 40280. Fall 2012. Vol. 16, No. -
Southern Seminary R 3 E 77, Numb E Under Mohler’S Leadership, Southern Seminary Um L Was Once Again Boyce’S Seminary
SoutheRn SeminaRy r 3 E 77, numb E Under Mohler’s leadership, Southern Seminary um L was once again Boyce’s seminary. vo —Greg A. Wills 1 SPECIAL 2009 A Letter from the President eflecting on his years as I am so thankful to all those dedicated a corporate executive, Max servants of Southern Seminary who RDePree once defined a leader as made this day all that it was and for the one who defines reality on the front end great crowd of witnesses who gathered and then says thank you at the other end. with us in the spirit of celebration and That seems just about right as I reflect recommitment. upon Southern Seminary’s sesquicenten- As I reflect upon these days, I am most nial celebration and the incredible events thankful for the fact that God still calls that took place on this historic campus his servants and that Southern Seminary over the past months. has been entrusted with the task more I am thankful that the Southern precious than that assigned to any other Baptist Convention came to Louisville, educational institution – to train, pre- Kentucky for its 2009 annual meeting pare, and educate God-called ministers –- celebrating the 150th anniversary of of the Gospel for more faithful service. the denomination’s oldest institution. Our sesquicentennial year is not yet Thousands of friends and alumni were over, and historic opportunities still able to visit the campus, along with a await. In particular, we look forward good number of Southern Baptists who to Heritage Week 2009 as yet another had never visited their mother seminary. -
From Boy to Man: the Marks of Manhood in the Context of This Confusion, Boys Are Especially Vulnerable
From Boy to Man The Marks of Manhood by R. Albert Mohler Jr. President, The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary When does a boy become a man? That interesting question was recently posed to me, and it raises some of the most important issues facing Christians today. While the world seems increasingly confused about matters as basic as what it means to be male and female, Christians are called to frame our arguments in distinctively biblical terms. All around us, cultural developments and media messages communicate a fog of confusion over questions of gender. In reality, these issues lie right along the fault lines of today’s culture war and its most controversial points of debate. For many years, this society has been experimenting with the most fundamental realities of human existence. The essence of what it means to be male or female has been routinely discounted by a society infatuated with unlimited self-expression and assertions of personal autonomy. Women are now joined by men, who complain that traditional expectations about gender roles are oppressive, limiting and intolerant. An entire generation of young women is trying to find a way to genuine womanhood against the tidal force of ideological feminism. Similarly, boys and young men are desperately looking for models of manhood and answers to their urgent questions of male identity, male responsibility and male roles. Christians understand that God created human beings as male and female – for His glory and for our good. The differences between the sexes are not matters of evolutionary accident, but are clear indications of God’s sublime and perfect design for human happiness. -
The Future of Southern Baptists As Evangelicals
The Future of Southern Baptists as Evangelicals by Steve W. Lemke Provost, New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary for the Maintaining Baptist Distinctives Conference Mid-America Baptist Theological Seminary April 2005 Introduction What is the future of Southern Baptists as evangelical Christians? In order to address adequately my assigned topic, I must attempt to answer two questions. First, do Southern Baptists have a future? And second, what future do Southern Baptists have as evangelicals? However, because Southern Baptists have been increasingly engaged in the evangelical world, these two questions are bound inextricably together. I believe that the major issues that will help shape the future of the Southern Baptist Convention arise in large measure from our interface with other evangelical Christian groups over the past few decades. In this presentation, I’ll be suggesting six issues that I believe will play a large role in the future shape of the Southern Baptist Convention. After I describe why I think these issues are so important to the future of Southern Baptist life, I’ll make a prediction or warning about how I’m guessing Southern Baptists will address these issues in the next couple of decades unless something changes dramatically. Let me begin with a few caveats. First, my purpose: I offer this talk as neither a sermon nor as a typical research paper, but my purpose is primarily to spur discussion and dialogue as we seek to address these issues together. Perhaps these ruminations will spark or provoke a helpful dialogue afterward. Second, the spirit with I which present this paper: I am writing from an unapologetically Southern Baptist perspective. -
Founders Journal from Founders Ministries | Winter/Spring 1995 | Issue 19/20
FOUNDERS JOURNAL FROM FOUNDERS MINISTRIES | WINTER/SPRING 1995 | ISSUE 19/20 SOUTHERN BAPTISTS AT THE CROSSROADS Southern Baptists at the Crossroads Returning to the Old Paths Special SBC Sesquicentennial Issue, 1845-1995 Issue 19/20 Winter/Spring 1995 Contents [Inside Cover] Southern Baptists at the Crossroads: Returning to the Old Paths Thomas Ascol The Rise & Demise of Calvinism Among Southern Baptists Tom Nettles Southern Baptist Theology–Whence and Whither? Timothy George John Dagg: First Writing Southern Baptist Theologian Mark Dever To Train the Minister Whom God Has Called: James Petigru Boyce and Southern Baptist Theological Education R. Albert Mohler, Jr. What Should We Think Of Evangelism and Calvinism? Ernest Reisinger Book Reviews By His Grace and for His Glory, by Tom Nettles, Baker Book House, 1986, 442 pages, $13.95. Reviewed by Bill Ascol Abstract of Systematic Theology, by James Petigru Boyce. Originally published in 1887; reprinted by the den Dulk Christian Foundation, P. O. Box 1676, Escondido, CA 92025; 493 pages, $15.00. Reviewed by Fred Malone The Forgotten Spurgeon, by Iain Murray , Banner of Truth, 1966, 254 pp, $8.95. Reviewed by Joe Nesom Contributors: Dr. Thomas K. Ascol is Pastor of the Grace Baptist Church in Cape Coral, Florida. Mr. Bill Ascol is Pastor of the Heritage Baptist Church in Shreveport, Louisiana. Dr. Mark Dever is Pastor of the Capitol Hill Metropolitan Baptist Church in Washington, DC. Dr. Timothy George is Dean of the Beeson Divinity School in Birmingham, Alabama. Dr. Fred Malone is Pastor of the First Baptist Church in Clinton, Louisiana. Dr. R. Albert Mohler is President of the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Louisville, Kentucky. -
2005-2006 Academic Catalog
2005-2006 Boyce College Academic Catalog 2005-2006 Academic Catalog i 2005-2006 Boyce College Academic Catalog 2005-2006 Boyce College Academic Catalog TABLE OF CONTENTS Message from the President ............................................................................................................... 1 Message from the Dean ..................................................................................................................... 2 About Boyce ..................................................................................................................................3-16 Abstract of Principles .................................................................................................................... 3 The Baptist Faith and Message ...................................................................................................... 5 Mission ....................................................................................................................................... 13 Accreditation ............................................................................................................................... 13 Denominational Affiliation .......................................................................................................... 14 Historical Sketch ......................................................................................................................... 14 Academic Programs ...................................................................................................................