FPC’s 52nd annual World Mission Conference begins tomorrow. The Rev. Les Newsom, RUF campus minister at the University of Mississippi, will be the main speaker (pray that he will be able to speak in spite of throat and respiratory problems!). Below is the exhortation I gave last Thursday evening at a well-attended special prayer meeting for the conference. It contains some thoughts on our theme “Do Not Hold Back”.

 “Enlarge the place of your tent, and let the curtains of your habitations be stretched out; do not hold back; lengthen your cords and strengthen your stakes. For you will spread abroad to the right and to the left, and your offspring will possess the nations and will people the desolate cities.”

Isaiah 54:2-3

Before going off to Ceylon [Sri Lanka], William Carey made and mended shoes. He also took a few hours of the day to teach some local school children. The students of William Carey’s geography class sometimes saw their teacher weep as he pointed on the map, marked with shoe black, to distant continents, islands and peoples. “And these are pagans, pagans!” he would say.
2007-logo-tentstake.jpg    On May 31, 1792 in Nottingham, England, Carey preached a sermon which has been called ‘a burning bush of missionary revelation.’ He preached from Isaiah 54:2-3 and uttered a resounding plea that the gospel be proclaimed throughout the world. Carey’s message is summed up in these words: “Expect great things from God. Attempt great things for God.”
Carey was bold, wasn’t he? But he understood the Messianic promises, and he understood how to respond to those promises. The opposition of some who claimed they were being faithful to the doctrines of grace was shameful. Carey said,

‘We are sure that only those who ordained to eternal life will believe, and that God alone can add to the church such as shall be saved. Nevertheless we cannot but observe with admiration that Paul, the great champion for the glorious doctrines of free and sovereign grace, was the most conspicuous for his personal zeal in the work of persuading men to be reconciled to God.’

We need to hear that message once more. We need to see the picture the Lord set forth by Isaiah: the desolate woman bearing children, her tent being enlarged, her descendants spreading in every direction and inhabiting the desolate cities. We are wrong if we see its fulfillment only in the return of the exiles from Babylon. This is a Messianic promise. We need to see that the architect of the expansion of the kingdom is our Maker and that for good reason he is called the God of all the earth.
We need these promises of God’s unfailing love and unconquerable purpose so that we will not be afraid and hold back. Standing on these promises we will not fear our neighbor who needs to hear about Christ. We will not fear the forces that wage war against God and his Word. We will not fear Islam or secularism. We will not count our Savior to be too small and too weak to conquer the world.
Assured that our Maker is our husband, that the Holy One of Israel is our Redeemer, we must go ahead and enlarge the tent, to stretch the canopy wide, to lengthen the ropes and strengthen the stakes. Confident that the Lord Almighty is God of all the earth we must not hold back in our efforts to proclaim his message to all. God is declaring here that we may expect great things from him. Let’s also be ready to ask, “But am I holding back?”
Signature Phillip

Jerry Falwell - The Bayly brothers pass along a great article by John Neuhaus showing a different side of Jerry Falwell.

Tracking the Fires - Mark Lauterbach is the pastor of Grace Church in San Diego.  In addition to his other great blog content, he is posting updates on the fires and how you can pray for him, his church, and San Diego.

I judge a hymnal on “The Newton Scale.” When I look at an unfamiliar hymnal, the first thing I do is thumb my way to the index to see how many (and which) hymns by John Newton are contained therein. It’s a pretty good indicator of the kind of piety the editors want to encourage. Newton’s hymns are, well, let me borrow the words of Kenny Bania, “That’s gold, Jerry! Gold!” Among Newton’s best are:

  • Amazing Grace
  • Let Us Love and Sing and Wonder
  • Day of Judgment! Day of Wonders!
  • How Sweet the Name of Jesus Sounds
  • Glorious Things of Thee Are Spoken
  • Approach My Soul, the Mercy Seat
  • Safely Through Another Week

The old Gadsby Hymnal has many Newton compositions. Certainly, some of these are not of the same calibre as the aforementioned classics (Does anyone remember Harlem Shuffle by the Rolling Stones, for example?). But below is a mighty good one from Newton. It is a prayer for the Spirit’s power to be unleashed in the ordinary means of grace, with 1 Corinthians 12:6-11 and 1:5 as a heading:

1 O thou, at whose almighty word

The glorious light from darkness sprung,

Thy quickening influence afford,

And clothe with power the preacher’s tongue.

2 ‘Tis thine to teach him how to speak;

‘Tis thine to give the hearing ear;

‘Tis thine the stubborn heart to break

And make the careless sinner fear.

3 ‘Tis also thine, Almighty Lord,

To cheer the poor, desponding heart;

To speak the soul-reviving word

And bid the mourner’s fears depart.

4 Thus, while we in the means are found,

We still on thee alone depend

To make the gospel’s joyful sound

Effectual to the promised end.

Thank you, John Newton.

Signature Phillip

After spending days sifting through all the kind comments from my birthday last week, it’s time to get back to blogging…today a book review:

There is a resurgent, muscular, in-your-face brand of atheism running about these days, especially evident on the bookshelves and best-sellers lists, where one can find Christopher Hitchens’ God Is Not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything, Sam Harris’ The End of Faith and Letter to a Christian Nation, and Breaking the Spell: Religion as a Natural Phenomenon by Daniel C. Bennett. But the ideological alpha male amongst today’s atheist authors is Richard Dawkins, whose book The God Delusion has enjoyed a lengthy stay on the New York Times’ Bestsellers List.

Now perhaps you’re not dealing with aggressive atheists in your life right now. I must admit that Kosciusko is no hotbed of such ideas (In fact, at a county ministerial association meeting earlier this week, I discovered that no one at the meeting had even heard of any of the aforementioned books!) . Having said that, let me recommend a short book (125 pages in pocket-sized paperback) that lets you in on the discussion with intelligent, thoughtful Christian responses to the atheistic arguments (specifically interacting with Dawkins’ The God Delusion): David Robertson’s The Dawkins Letters: Challenging Atheist Myths (Ross-shire: Christian Focus, 2007).

dawkins.jpgDavid Robertson is minister of St. Peter’s Free Church, Dundee, Scotland (the same church Robert Murray M’Cheyne pastored in the 19th century). Robertson read The God Delusion and then decided to post an open letter to Richard Dawkins on the St. Peter’s website. Soon Robertson’s letter found its way onto Dawkins’ own website, where it elicited an enormous amount of response. As a result, Robertson expanded his critique into the ten letters which compose The Dawkins Letters.

Each of the ten letters addresses a myth that forms the basis for Dawkins’ appeals. What makes Dawkins’ arguments especially contemptible is that these myths (such as the “cruel” Old Testament God, the inherent evil of religion, the immoral Bible, the conflict between science and religion, higher consciousness among atheists) are presented under the guise of science, rationalism and empirical study. What is presented as reason is actually an appeal to anti-religious prejudice. Again and again Robertson points out the contradictions and hypocrisy evident in the atheists’ claims. Particularly strong is his response to Dawkins’ accusation that the religious education of children is a form of child abuse more harmful than the sexual abuse of children.

The final chapter in the book is a wonderful, serious, and warm-hearted explanation of why he believes that Christianity is true and why you should believe. Reading The Dawkins Letters will open your mind to some current issues and equip you to answer challenges without fear or embarrassment.

You can view a ten-minute video Robertson has produced which summarizes his point of view here.

Signature Phillip

Title: The Gospel and Personal Evangelism
Author: Mark Dever
Forward by: CJ Mahaney
Publisher: Crossway
Binding: Paperback
Pages: 124
Audience: This book is a great resource for laymen of all theological reading levels. There is an appendix especially intended for encouraging pastors.

Mark Dever has written an excellent resource for personal evangelism. I bought this book having heard of Dever’s particular passion for personal evangelism. I was not disappointed. On the other hand, I was a little surprised. My perception of Dever is that of a pastor-scholar excelling at theological argumentation and biblical exegesis. Yet the power of this book is not in it’s scholarship or argumentation. Its peculiar strength comes from how personal, practical, and honest it is written.

Dever fills this book with stories of evangelistic successes and failures. Some of these stories are from Christian history and some are from his own life. He avoids complex theological terminology making this book readily accessible to layman and pastor alike. What is so disarming about the book is how frequently he inserts his own reflections on personal evangelism and even on writing a book about evangelism. At one point he breaks in mid paragraph to write:

“And just to drive this home, as I’ve been writing this, a non-Christian friend called and wanted to talk to me. We chatted for about thirty minutes, the whole time during which I was impatient to get back to writing this book on evangelism! Aargh! Wretched man that I am! Who shall deliver me from this wretched body of indifference? If we would evangelize more, we must love people more.”

When you add together the simple vocabulary, rich stories, personal reflection, and short chapters you get a book that is incredibly easy to read in a single sitting yet profound enough to stick with you for years to come.

This books is also, of course, profoundly Christ-centered. Each chapter repeatedly brings the reader’s attention back to consider the magnificence of the cross of Christ. Why should we evangelize? Consider Christ. What should we say when we evangelize? Consider Christ. What should we do if the response is less than positive? Consider Christ. What is the end goal of evangelism? Christ, Christ, Christ. It is a joy to read this book and join in Dever in his praise for the crucified and risen Lord Jesus Christ.

You will also find in this book helpful discussion on the relationship of God’s sovereignty and personal evangelism. Dever is very concerned to place personal evangelism soundly within the frame of God’s sovereign power in salvation. He does not want people to evangelize out of guilt. He does not want people to rely on their own sales tactics to bring the lost to Jesus. He wants the church to find tremendous encouragement and power in the truth of God’s sovereignty as it related to personal evangelism.

Another aspect of this book which was particularly welcomed was the way Dever addressed common excuses for not evangelizing. He doesn’t pull punches. He doesn’t excuse excuses. In multiple places he completelyannihilates the kind of thinking that leads Christians to live lives of un-evangelism. He leaves no other option to the reader but to say along with him, “It is the responsibility of every Christian to be involved in personal evangelism.”

Lastly, you will find this book very practical. Many of the chapters provide numbered lists of things to do as you prepare in, participate in, and follow up personal evangelism. Dever avoids the pitfall of pretending to provide a flawless step-by-step plan for cookie-cutter evangelism. Instead he provides biblical and practical help for growing in your desire for and skill in personal evangelism.

I highly recommend this book. I also suggest you purchase it and read it as I did. I realized my sinful habit to read about doing personal evangelism rather than actually doing it. I was therefore reluctant to buy this book for fear I would feed my own laziness in personal evangelism. In the end I bought the book but only with this caveat: “I will not read this book without allowing Mark Dever to be my teacher. I refuse to read this book without doing what Jesus calls me to.” To this end I purchased it and it is my prayer that the Lord will bless my further frail attempts at seeking to lead the lost to Christ.

Choice Quotes:

“First, and most basically, there is a certain balance that we want to strive for in our evangelism, a balance of honesty and urgency and joy.”

“Like a collector buying up a collection, we should desire to capture each fleeting hour and to turn it into a trophy for God and his grace.”

“The Bible presents the human problem as one that can never be solved by coercive force or imposition. Therefore, all I can do is present the good news accurately, live a life of love toward unbelievers, and pray for God to convict them of their sins and give them the gifts of repentance and faith.”

Choice Authors Quoted: Calvin, Ryle, Stott, Bunyan, Lloyd-Jones, Spurgeon, Flavel, Augustine

Table of Contents:

  • Foreword
  • Introduction: An Amazing Story
  • 1 Why Don’t We Evangelize?
  • 2 What is the Gospel?
  • 3 Who Should Evangelize?
  • 4 How Should We Evangelize?
  • 5 What Isn’t Evangelism?
  • 6 What Should We Do After We Evangelize?
  • 7 Why Should We Evangelize?
  • Conclusion: Closing the Sale
  • Recommended Reading
  • Appendix: A Word to Pastors
  • Notes

Other books I recommend on evangelism:
Evangelism and the Sovereignty of God
Tell the Truth
The Art of Manfishing
Words to Winners of Souls

Signature Joe

We are not saved because we believe that we are elect; rather, we are saved by grace alone through faith alone in Christ alone. Listen to the counsel of the Second Helvetic Confession:

We therefore find fault with those who outside of Christ ask whether they are elected. And what has God decreed concerning them before all eternity? For the preaching of the Gospel is to be heard, and it is to be believed; and it is to be held as beyond doubt that if you believe and are in Christ, you are elected. For the Father has revealed unto us in Christ the eternal purpose of his predestination, as I have just now shown from the apostle in II Tim. 1:9-10. This is therefore above all to be taught and considered, what great love of the Father toward us is revealed to us in Christ. We must hear what the Lord himself daily preaches to us in the Gospel, how he calls and says: “Come to me all who labor and are heavy-laden, and I will give you rest” (Matt. 11:28). “God so loved the world, that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish, but have eternal life” (John 3:16). Also, “It is not the will of my Father that one of these little ones should perish” (Matt. 18:14).
Let Christ, therefore be the looking glass, in whom we may contemplate our predestination. We shall have a sufficiently clear and sure testimony that we are inscribed in the Book of Life if we have fellowship with Christ, and he is ours and we are his in true faith.

Signature Phillip

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