Book Reviews

Comeback Churches

Ed Stetzer has written a winner in Comeback Churches. Many “how to” books exist to direct pastors and churches how to grow. Stetzer has not written one of those, instead he has written a book that focuses on research of over 300 churches that were either plateaued or in decline and made a turn around. …

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Elders In Congregational Life

The recent surge in reformed theology among evangelicals has also led to an increased interest in a plurality of elders as leaders of the church. This relationship may simply be from the fact that many reformed writers have come from a presbyterian background that emphasizes the plural elder model, or from the community emphasis that accompanies reformed teaching. Regardless of the reason for the interest, it remains that the plural elder model is becoming increasingly popular, even in some Baptist churches.

Phil Newton, in Elders in Congregational Life argues that the plural elder model, though not the norm in Baptist life, has always existed in Baptist life. Quoting current and former Baptist leaders such as John Piper,Mark Dever,Benjamin Keach and W.B. Johnson as well as ancient and modern confessions of faith, Newton convincingly shows that plural elders have always been present in a minority among Baptists. Building on that foundation, the author aims to show that the minority opinion was the correct representation of the New Testament church.

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True Story: A Christianity Worth Believing In

I read about True Story: A Christianity Worth Believing In in Christianity Today this month and had to have it. Choung, an IVP staffer, has created a way to share the gospel through the big picture of redemption history with a series of diagrams that will fit on a napkin. I know that as you …

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Membership Matters

Dr. Chuck Lawless is the dean of the Billy Graham School of Evangelism and Church Growth at The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary. His book, Membership Matters provides an in-depth look into the how and why of creating membership classes and expectations for members in the local church. If you are struggling with getting people involved …

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Five Who Changed The World

Daniel Akin’s book, Five Who Changed The World, is a collection of sermons written and preached by Dr. Akin that incorporate historical recollections of five Baptist missionaries into the exposition and presentation of Scripture. Though only 95 pages, the book is creative. The historical narratives within each sermon serve to illustrate the selected Scripture passages …

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Preaching The Whole Bible As Christian Scripture

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Goldsworthy, Graeme.  Preaching the Whole Bible as Christian Scripture.  Grand Rapids, MI: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, 2000.  272 pp, $25.

 

INTRODUCTION

 

Preaching is one of my greatest passions, and as such, reading on the subject is of great importance to me.  In Preaching the Whole Bible as Christian Scripture, Graeme Goldsworthy has proven himself an apt writer and theologian.  The book is an attempt to show that, on the basis of careful biblical theology, the entire Bible is effective and necessary as a medium through which God speaks to his people.  Goldsworthy shows the absolute importance of preaching the whole Bible through the cross and conversely preaching Christ from the whole Bible.  Through this book, Goldsworthy not only argues for the magnitude of preaching Christ-centered sermons, he also gives concrete examples and references to how that task can and should be accomplished.  Goldsworthy’s commitment to redemptive-historical preaching is a wonderful reminder that the Bible is one Book about one God with one major purpose of redemption in history that is realized in the person of Jesus of Nazareth, the Christ.

 

SUMMARY

 

            Following his introduction, Goldsworthy opens his book with a chapter titled Nothing but Christ and Him Crucified that sets the theme for the entire volume.  Goldsworthy shows a serious commitment to the task and science of biblical theology, but that theology and subsequent preaching with biblical theology as its basis must begin, not in the Garden of Eden, but with Christ.  Goldsworthy gives a reminder that the preacher has the task of communicating the whole counsel of God in light of the gospel, but not in a way that takes away from the historical-redemptive perspective of either the text in hand or the gospel itself.  Goldsworthy notes, “The gospel is central to our thinking in an experiential sense” (5), but that does not mean that the gospel is the only thing we preach.

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Doctrine That Dances

This book review is also found on the Book Review page, but I have found it to be so beneficial to me in my preaching, that I thought it was worth bringing a little extra attention to it here.  I hope you find this brief review helpful. I love to read, but I do not …

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