This blog is devoted to discussing the pursuit of eternal life.
Discussion and participation by readers is desired,
but contributions should correlate to the book,
The Race Set Before Us: A Biblical Theology
of Perseverance & Assurance

by
Thomas R. Schreiner
& Ardel B. Caneday



Showing posts with label Announcements. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Announcements. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 29, 2011

ETS Paper Available

The following is from Credo blog.

To start off this week we would like to highlight the ETS paper of A. B. Caneday, who is also a weekly contributor to the Credo blog as well as a contributor to the January issue of Credo Magazine, “In Christ Alone.” Caneday’s paper is titled: “The Advent of God’s Son as Judgment in John’s Gospel-Justification and Condemnation Already.” Ardel Caneday (Ph.D., Trinity Evangelical Divinity School) is Professor of New Testament Studies and Biblical Studies at Northwestern College in St. Paul, Minnesota. He has served churches in various pastoral roles, including senior pastor. He has authored numerous journal articles, many essays in books, and has co-authored with Thomas Schreiner the book The Race Set Before Us: A Biblical Theology of Perseverance and Assurance (Inter-Varsity, 2001).

Caneday begins his paper:

Despite mistakenly construing John’s Gospel against the backdrop of second-century Gnosticism, skewing his interpretation of the Gospel, Rudolf Bultmann correctly identifies divine judgment as an important aspect of Johannine theology. He observes that Jesus’ activity as “Revealer of God,” whose unitary advent (John 3:19; 9:39) and departure (12:31), is the eschatological event, “the judgment of the world.” According to Bultmann, Jesus’ coming cast the whole κόσμος into κρίσις. Yet, this eschatological judgment “is no dramatic cosmic event, but takes place in the response of men to the word of Jesus.” He contends, “Thus the judgement is not a specially contrived sequel to the coming and the departure of the Son. It is not a dramatic cosmic event which is yet to come and which we must still await. Rather the mission of the Son, complete as it is in his descent and exaltation, is the judgement.”

Despite holding significant disagreements with Bultmann, New Testament exegetes do not miss the fact that divine judgment figures prominently in John’s Gospel. So, for example, Köstenberger observes, “in an important sense, God’s judgment was already brought about by the light’s coming into the world in the incarnation of the Son (1:14). This coming of the light into the world, in turn, confronts people everywhere with the decision of whether to embrace the light or to go into hiding and persist in darkness.” All who reject God’s Son incur divine judgment, but all who believe in him “escape judgment already in the here and now (5:24), though the final judgment awaits the end of time (5:28-29).”

True as this is, arguments to counter or to qualify Bultmann’s insistence that John’s Gospel contends for a “realized eschatology” versus the traditional Jewish end-time eschatology tend to overlook important ramifications of the Last Day’s advance arrival with the advent of the Son of God. The exclusive claim of Peter’s proclamation that “there is no other name under heaven given among mortals by which we must be saved” (Acts 4:12) finds expanded expression in the Fourth Gospel.

For God so loved the world, that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish but have eternal life. For God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world, but in order that the world might be saved through him. Whoever believes in him is not condemned, but whoever does not believe is condemned already, because he has not believed in the name of the only Son of God. And this is the judgment: the light has come into the world, and people loved darkness rather than light because their works were evil.

The life of the Age to Come is resident in and mediated through God’s Son, Jesus Christ. Hence, eternal life, which properly belongs to the coming age, is already present with the incarnation of the Word and is now being imparted to all who believe in God’s Son. Noteworthy as is the advance installment of eternal life, signaling resurrection’s encroachment into the present age, of equal significance is the announcement beforehand of God’s Last Day verdict of judgment, all who believe “are not condemned,” but whoever does not believe “is condemned already.”

With his advent, God’s Son already brings forward two correlated acts of God—resurrection and judgment—that belong to the Last Day which consummates the present age and ushers in the Age to Come. The mission of God’s incarnate Son sweeps forward both the wrath of God’s coming judgment now revealed in Christ’s sacrificial death and the gift of God’s resurrection life disclosed in Christ’s glorious resurrection from the dead. Because Jesus is the incarnate Son of God, the Father authorized him to have “life in himself” to bestow this life of the coming age to whomever he desires in advance of the day of resurrection and to set in motion execution of the coming judgment upon both those who believe and those who do not (John 3:16-19; 5:21-29). Johannine scholars affirm these emphases. Yet, lacking within discussions of the Fourth Gospel’s emphasis upon the present arrival of future resurrection and judgment in the person of Jesus Christ is development of John’s doctrine of justification, expressed with neither the verb δικαιόω nor the noun δικαίωσις but through less direct but no less emphatic expressions. In these expressions the affirmative is emphatically stated by negating its opposite so that “are not condemned” and “do not come into condemnation” bear the sense, “most assuredly justified.”

Read Ardel Caneday’s entire ETS paper.

Tuesday, June 21, 2011

"How beautiful are the feet of those who preach the good news!" (Rom. 10:15)

Dear Friends &  Readers,

If the Lord wills, I shall be ministering the gospel in Bangalore, India, in early to mid-August. P. J. Mathai, President of Maranatha Baptist Bible College & Seminary, has invited me to speak at the pastors’ conference to be held August 15-18 at the college and seminary. As I have done in the past (in 2002, 2004, & 2007), I will be ministering with Rev. John Hoeldtke of FLAME MINISTRIES of Everett, Washington. John has made numerous ministry trips to India as well as to several other countries. In 2002 and 2007 we ministered together at Maranatha Baptist Bible College & Seminary from where we traveled to Kathmandu, Nepal, where we ministered to village pastors for a week at another pastors’ conference.

I will be speaking six times during the three day conference. My messages will be shaped thematically on the chapters contained in The Race Set Before Us: A Biblical Theology of Perseverance & Assurance, a book I co-authored with Tom Schreiner. During my sabbatical I have been writing a shortened version of the book with eight corresponding chapters. The working title of the book is Let Us Run With Perseverance: A Training Manual for Endurance unto Eternal Life. So, my six messages will derive from my writing during my sabbatical throughout the past academic year.

Costs for this mission trip are considerable. My travel expenses, including airline tickets, will be at least $2500, which does not include various expenses while in India. In late July others will be traveling with John Hoeldtke to India ahead of me. They will be ministering in other cities and villages prior to arriving in Bangalore where I will join them. The policy of FLAME MINISTRIES is to cover costs of all meetings and conferences in India so as not to be a burden on the indigenous churches and Christian leaders. In fact, FLAME MINISTRIES covers all the costs entailed in hosting conferences, thus alleviating the burden that our Indian hosts would otherwise bear. Total costs for FLAME MINISTRIES to carry out this mission to India in July and August will exceed $17,000.

If you believe the Lord would have you help with the costs of this mission trip, either for my part or for the larger mission or both, please send your contribution to:
FLAME MINISTRIES
PO Box 3333
Everett, WA 98213
Funds are needed by July 18. If you would like to assist with my personal expenses, please make your check payable to FLAME MINISTRIES and indicate on an accompanying slip of paper that it is for “A. B. Caneday Mission Trip.” FLAME MINISTRIES is an approved non-profit corporation. So, a receipt for your tax-deductible gift will be sent to you. For members of Bethlehem Baptist Church, you may make contributions to help allay my expenses by making a contribution through BBC. If you desire to make a contribution through BBC, please send me a note at abcaneday@gmail.com. I will send you a form that will direct you how to submit your gift.

All of us who will travel to India to minister will greatly appreciate both your contributions that will assist us on our way and your prayers for our health, our safety, and our spiritual effectiveness throughout this mission endeavor.

Thank you for considering this invitation to participate in my ministry in India with your monetary gifts and your prayers.

Blessings in Christ!

Ardel B. Caneday



Essay on Historicity of Adam in Paul's Gospel Is Now Published

My absence from the virtual world has been due to the importance of projects in the real world. This entry does not necessarily signal greater frequenting of the blogosphere. I do, however, want to let you know that my essay, "The Language of God and Adam's Genesis & Historicity in Paul’s Gospel" has been published and is the featured essay in the latest issue of The Southern Baptist Journal of Theology. You may want to download it and read it later, since it is fairly lengthy.

I do hope and pray that this essay will be effective and useful for the strengthening of the faith of Christians everywhere. For anyone who may not have yet noticed, when I write essays for publication, I do so with pastoral concerns in mind. I do so for the establishment of Christian faith.

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Book of the Year 2010

Mit Ausharren laufen (The Race Set Before Us) was name Betanien-Buch des Jahres 2010 (Book of the Year 2010).

See here.

Know German? Enjoy!



Peter Voth has been blogging concerning The Race Set Before Us, or actually, Mit Ausharren Laufen. Thus far, Peter has posted four blog entries. Enjoy!

 
It's heartening to see that Thabiti Anyabwile has nicely recommended The Race Set Before Us here.

Tuesday, December 14, 2010

The Race Set Before Us Now into Its 7th Printing

Today, I received word from InterVarsity Press that The Race Set Before Us is now into its seventh printing. With this new printing, InterVarsity has altered the cover slightly, giving the book a fresh look. The face print is crisper and the background is whiter. See the difference.


Wednesday, July 14, 2010

Let Go and Let God? Prepublication Order Opportunity


Keswick theology—one of the most significant strands of second-blessing theology—assumes that Christians experience two “blessings.” The first is getting “saved,” and the second is getting serious. The change is dramatic: from a defeated life to a victorious life, from a lower life to a higher life, from a shallow life to a deeper life, from a fruitless life to a more abundant life, from being “carnal” to being “spiritual,” from merely having Jesus as your Savior to making Jesus your Master. So how do people experience this second blessing? Through surrender and faith: “Let go and let God.”

Second-blessing theology is pervasive because countless people have propagated it in so many ways, especially in sermons and devotional writings. It is appealing because Christians struggle with sin and want to be victorious in that struggle—now. Second-blessing theology offers a quick fix to this struggle, and its shortcut to instant victory appeals to genuine longings for holiness.

This book’s thesis is simple: Keswick theology is not biblically sound. This book tells the story of where Keswick theology comes from, explains what exactly it is, and then refutes it while building a case for a biblical alternative. No other book surveys the history and theology of second-blessing theology like this and then analyzes it from a soteriologically Reformed perspective.

For numerous impressive endorsements by a list of who's who among America's evangelicals, click here.


For endorsements, table of contents, and Tom Schreiner's foreword, click here.


If you would like to get a preview/overview of Andy Naselli's critique of Keswick Theology, you may do so by exploring the following. In March 2008 Andy presented the following materials at Detroit Seminary.


1. Handout (five-page PDF)


2. Power Point presentation as a PDF (eighty slides with lots of pictures) [12.1 MB]


3. MP3s:
Unfortunately, the book will not be published on paper, at least for now. See the explanation here.

For a free core engine for Logos 4, see here.

Saturday, May 08, 2010

Sabbatical Leave for Writing

Our Northwestern College administrators have officially posted the list of faculty members who will be taking sabbaticals during academic years 2010-2011 and 2011-2012. So, I am permitted to announce that I will be taking a full academic year sabbatical for 2010-2011. For the next fifteen months my overwhelming focus will be to complete current writing projects and to begin some new ones in anticipation of completing some of them also. Consequently, I will be significantly reducing the amount of blogging that I will be doing. I plan to keep my new blog ἐξήγησις active. This one, however, I intend to suspend.

Please pray for me as I endeavor to suck out all the marrow of life for the next fifteen months for the purpose of full devotion to writing.

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

Fidelity, a New Occasional Journal

The Center for Cultural Leadership publishes many great resources. Fidelity, an occasional journal, is the CCL's latest undertaking. Above is the cover of the anticipated inaugural issue of Fidelity.

Thursday, April 22, 2010

ἐξήγησις: A New Blog

I am announcing today that I am beginning a new blog. What? Starting a new blog, another blog? Well, yes, but it may be that this new blog will become the focus of all my blogging. For far too many reasons to enumerate or even to begin to express, I am finding that I need to concentrate my energies on fewer matters but especially concerning those things wherein my own skills and abilities will make the most difference.

So, today, I am beginning a new blog titled ἐξήγησις, exegesis for Greek readers. I will endeavor to make it understandable to non-Greek readers, too. The banner indicates that the blog will feature exegetical inquiry concerning the Greek New Testament. It will offer exegetical insights from my own labors in the GNT, but it will also raise concerns, issues, and questions about passages within the GNT over which I puzzle.

Wednesday, January 06, 2010

Trevin Wax interviews N. T. Wright again

As we have come to expect, Trevin Wax provides readers with a wonderful interview with N. T. Wright concerning his latest book, After You Believe: Why Christian Character Matters at "The Rebirth of Virtue: An Interview with N. T. Wright."

For the Love of God Devotionals on-line

If you do not have D. A. Carson's superb devotional either of the two volumes of For the Love of God, or even if you do, you may want to read the daily devotionals at the Gospel Coalition web site.

Sunday, December 13, 2009

The Race Set Before Us in German

Linked from here.

Der Bethanien Verlag wird Mitte November ein Buch über die Heilsgewissheit publizieren:

Thomas R. Schreiner u. Ardel B. Caneday: Mit Ausharren laufen: Gibt es Heilsgewissheit ohne Heiligung?, Paperback, Betanien, 2009, 350 Seiten, 15,50 Euro

Der Verlag schreibt zum Buch:

Disziplin. Ausdauer. Ausharren. Das Neue Testament beschreibt das Leben als Christ oft als einen Wettlauf, bei dem es um einen Preis geht. Was ist dieser Preis? Eine besondere, zusätzliche Auszeichnung für überdurchschnittliche Leistung? Oder geht es um die Errettung selbst? Kann man disqualifiziert werden, scheitern und den Preis verfehlen? Oder ist der Preis jedem sicher, der bei dem Lauf gestartet ist? Was ist mit den biblischen Warnungen vor dem Versäumen des Preises? Kurz: Ist das Heil sicher oder verlierbar und wie hängt es mit dem Ausharren zusammen?Die Autoren bieten in diesem Buch Antworten durch eine gründliche Untersuchung der biblischen Lehre vom rettenden Glauben und zeigen die Folgerungen für das Volk Gottes auf. Diese grundlegende Studie untersucht alle relevanten Texte des Neuen Testaments und lotet deren Bedeutung für das Leben als Christ, für das Heil und für den Dienst in Wortverkündigung, Gemeindeleitung und Seelsorge aus.

Dieser Auszug aus dem Buch zeigt, dass die Lektüre theologischer Bücher zu einem spannenden Erlebnis werden kann: ausharren1-47.pdf.

A Lecture I'd Like to Attend but Cannot Due to Schedule

BCS Special Lecture

Dr. Peter Jensen, the Archbishop of Sydney (Anglican), will be speaking to students and staff in a BCS special lecture on Monday 14 December from 12:30–1:30pm in the sanctuary at the Downtown Campus of Bethlehem Baptist Church. All are welcome to attend.

Dr. Jensen was elected as Archbishop in 2001. His leadership of the Sydney Diocese has been marked by his passion for theological education and his deep commitment to Reformed evangelical theology. Dr. Jensen is the author of a number of books, including The Future of Jesus, a book based on a ABC lecture series aimed at challenging unbelievers to consider the impact of Jesus and, more centrally, to consider the claims of Jesus in the gospels. Audio from Archbishop Jensen, including a conference hosted by The Proclamation Trust where he spoke alongside Pastor John in 2003, is available here.

Archbishop Jensen, alongside Pastor John and evangelical leaders from all over the world, will be meeting at Bethlehem for a series of closed-door meetings the week of 14 December. These 20 evangelical leaders are meeting to compose the guiding document for the Lausanne Conference on World Evangelization which will convene in Capetown, South Africa in October of 2010.

Thursday, October 01, 2009

Seminars on Mourning and Forgiveness

Recently I was contacted by Scott Berry of Queens, New York, concerning the topic of forgiveness with some questions. He read what I had written on the issue of the widely embraced notion of "unconditional forgiveness." He contacted me because he has done considerable work on forgiveness, including writing toward publishing a book.

He has an internet site with a pages devoted to the issue of forgiveness. He even has a couple of tests concerning forgiveness
Scott is a professional musician, but he has delved deeply into Scripture concerning mourning and forgiveness. He offers seminars concerning these.

Saturday, February 21, 2009

Fifth Printing

I just received word that The Race Set Before Us is now into its fifth printing.

Thursday, February 12, 2009

D. A. Carson at Bethlehem in February

Seminar at Bethlehem Baptist Church’s North Campus Friday nights and Saturday mornings, February 20-21 and 27-28.

The God Who Is There: Naming God in a Pluralistic World

By D. A. Carson February 12, 2009

In an essay entitled “Do Christians Have a Worldview?” Graham Cole begins with the following lines as his opening paragraph:

He took the blade. It was bright silver. He loved the way it glistened. It felt good in his hand. He cut deep into her chest again and again. He showed no emotion, no recognition of her humanity. She lay motionless, her life gone. He made no attempt to cover the body. Later that night over a beer he openly talked to a stranger in the bar about what he had done. The stranger felt ill.

What does the paragraph mean? If the words refer to a serial killer boasting about his latest savage triumph, the sentences are pretty ghastly, and the man in the bar should call the police. On the other hand, if the words refer to a forensic pathologist who talks about his autopsy of a particularly interesting corpse, there is no criminality (though there may be a lack of professionalism in talking like this to a stranger). How you interpret the quoted lines depends entirely on the context.

Read the whole piece.

Friday, June 20, 2008

Tom Schreiner at Oak Hill on Perseverance and Warnings

In May, my friend and co-author of The Race Set Before Us, Tom Schreiner, was at Oak Hill College, London, where he gave the 2008 Oak Hill School of Theology lectures titled "Run to Win the Prize: The Nature of Warnings in New Testament Theology." Tom is working on a manuscript for a trade book for a popular readership under the title, Run to Win the Prize. It is interesting, because I have been working on my own manuscript under the same title, which happens to be the original title under which we submitted our manuscript for The Race Set Before Us. Tom also offered a lecture on believers baptism and followed it with questions.

Check out the audio recordings of each lecture below. Or, you may prefer to download the recordings here.

Also, you may find Tom Schreiner's essay, Perseverance and Assurance: A Survey and a Proposal, useful. It is adapted from a series of lectures Tom gave at Midwestern Baptist Theological Seminary in Kansas City, Missouri. It offers a nice summary of the core of our argument in The Race Set Before Us.

Thursday, December 27, 2007

New book: Christians at the Cross

Christians at the Cross: Finding Hope in the Passion, Death, and Resurrection of Jesus, a new title by N. T. Wright, to be published January 7, 2008.

To order from Amazon.com, click on the title above or click here.

The above book appears to have the same content as the UK release on the right, The Cross and the Colliery. Here is a description of the content. "Based on sermons originally delivered by Bishop Tom Wright during Easter 2007, this is a book for Lent that uses the story of a coal-mining town in northern England as a modern parable for loss and rebirth. The background history of the town - the closure of its mine, the subsequent strike and then the regeneration of the area - is given in the introduction, allowing readers to fully appreciate the context of the book, and make the most of its study questions."

Monday, December 24, 2007

Merry Christmas!

καὶ ὁ λόγος σὰρξ ἐγένετο καὶ ἐσκήνωσεν ἐν ἡμῖν καὶ ἐθεασάμεθα τὴν δόξαν αὐτοῦ δόξαν ὡς μονογενοῦς παρὰ πατρός πλήρης χάριτος καὶ ἀληθείας. . . . ὅτι ἐκ τοῦ πληρώματος αὐτοῦ ἡμεῖς πάντες ἐλάβομεν καὶ χάριν ἀντὶ χάριτος. ὅτι ὁ νόμος διὰ Μωϋσέως ἐδόθη ἡ χάρις καὶ ἡ ἀλήθεια διὰ Ἰησοῦ Χριστοῦ ἐγένετο.

And the Word became flesh and tabernacled among us and we beheld his glory, glory as of the unique One from the Father, full of grace and truth. . . . For from his fullness we all received even grace in the place of grace. For the law was given through Moses; grace and thuth came through Jesus Christ.

Merry Christmas!