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Type of bind: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 270.83
EAN num: 9781433501180
ISBN number: 143350118X
Label: Crossway Books
Manufacturer: Crossway Books
Quantity: 1
Page Count: 304
Printing Date: September 30, 2008
Publishing house: Crossway Books
Sale Popularity Level: 32600
Studio: Crossway Books
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Thirteen Reformed scholars take on postmodern evangelicals and provide a solid, biblical critique of their ideas.
While self-described “post-conservative evangelicals” enjoy increasing influence in the evangelical world, they represent a significant challenge to biblical faith. Popularizers like Brian McLaren (of Emergent Church fame) trade on the work of scholars like Stan Grenz, John Franke, and Roger Olson, whose “innovations” represent a major makeover of traditional and historic evangelical theology. This is especially the case with the doctrines of Scripture, the atonement, and the character of God—all of which stand at the center of evangelical Christianity.
In Reforming or Conforming?, scholars such as John Bolt, Scott Clark, Paul Helm, and Paul Helseth join editors Gary Johnson and Ron Gleason in analyzing and critiquing the ideas of those who promote postmodernism as a positive force in theology. Pastors, laymen, and college students will find this book a helpful resource in understanding and refuting postmodern evangelicalism. Includes a foreword by David F. Wells.
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Rated by buyers
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The book is better than most emerging church critiques that sit on my shelf. I enjoyed reading it and will review it on my tallskinnykiwi.com blog when i get the chance.
Best chapters are by Phil Johnson and Ron Gleason who both have some knowledge of the EC. Many of the suggestions are good and the authors quoted in the book such as Chris Wright, DH Williams, NT Wright, offer good direction for the emerging church.
But it does have some serious drawbacks:
The book only really deals with authors connected with Emergent Village, which is one of the emerging church movements in the USA. It ignores leaders who have not published, ignores those movements outside of USA (Pete Rollins excepted). It deals with many books and authors that are not accepted widely inside the emerging church (Burke's "Heretic's Guide" for example) It doesn't deal with the the criticisms pointed at Reformed church stream and it doesn't really offer a better way of doing ministry. The book hints at the missional emphasis of emerging church but fails to define it properly. It also makes the emerging church movement seem like a theological movement which is not the case.
It also focuses on the subject of postmodernism which was quite relevant a decade ago but it would have been better to deal with cultural factors that emerging church people are dealing with (and Carl Raschke is writing about these days) such as emergent theorgy, network theory, complexity, globalization and the impact of new media on church and mission in the global emerging culture.
However, it is still one of the best and well thought through books on the subject and I hope it is read and responded to.
"Faith Undone" by Roger Oakland is probably a more perceptive book although Oakland's conclusions are a long way from my own, as well as the authors of this book which is more scholarly and at least appreciative of the emerging church's endeavor to be faithful to the gospel.
Rated by buyers
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David F Wells, Foreword
'The Reformed have always been uneasy about the post-WWII evangelical alliance that brought together so many ministries and viewpoints into a working relationship around a small core of commonly held beliefs. The church set about selling itself and its gospel...and the major casualty was biblical truth.'
I have eagerly anticipated another book edited by Gary L W Johnson for some time now, the reason being that much of what he addresses is current and, in some cases, well-timed advance warning. Purpose driven by the popular motives of personal well-being and self-image, emerged a pomo (post-modern) 'gospel' that many unassumingly have been duped into, exempt of sacrifice, personal or divine, and which at some point in time, must still contend with the gospel of historic Christianity. Johnson presents the magnitude of the problem in his Introduction.
Apologetics, as the exceptional B B Warfield presented it, has to do with evidences that unbelievers are faced with in their coming to terms with salvation and a sovereign God. These authors direct their attention not to such, but to so-called 'believers' and 'emergent' leaders within the Western church and therefore classical apologetics must be adapted to redress error within the church, through use of polemics (another Warfield forte), inviting a degree of difference. Under Johnson's leadership, differ they most certainly will!
Paul Wells, The Doctrine Of Scripture
'The question is as to whether postmodernism, whatever that might be, is of such a nature to require of evangelicals a new paradigm for this doctrine, different from the one called for by the results of Enlightenment rationalism. We think not.' pg 27 'Post-conservative' evangelicals ought to be denied their demand for a radicalized Schleiermachian evangelicalism, especially given their disengagement with the doctrine of Scripture - but are they? In our times the entourage of errantists hold 'the Bible is described as a mediate, not a direct, source of revelation, a position very different from that of Warfield, who made inspiration the final act of revelation.' pg 43
John Bolt, Sola Scriptura As An Evangelical Theological Method?
Meanwhile, 'Calvin includes no discusion of philosophical or metaphysical prolegomena - he simply begins with the twofold knowledge of God as confessed by Scripture and the Christian doctrinal tradition.' pg 76 Here, Bolt makes a brilliant case for the indispensability of prolegomena as fundamental to informing and forming a correct Christian worldview. (I prefer Warfield's apologetic to Bavinck's metaphysic.)
Paul Helm, Review Of Franke's 'Character of Theology'
The non-foundationalist scheme lays heavy emphasis on reworking everything theological in an endeavor to come up with their own results, desperately hoping their distinctives are able to rise above old Princeton presuppositions. Senior Reformed spokesman, Paul Helm, brings commanding Christian scholarship to bear as he sets out to deconstruct John R Franke's 'instable' paradigm shift: 'In common with many contemporary Christian revisionists, Franke turns his back on foundationalism.' pg 94 After scrutinizing Franke's confused jargon, one is sorely reminded of the apostle Paul's assertion: 'the world did not know God through wisdom', whereby the apostle surely meant a point in redemptive history BEFORE Christ, after redemption only to see wisdom as 'the foundational character of God's revelation in Jesus Christ.' pg 100 Blatant anti-confessionalism as Franke advocates, assumes too much to be accurate in his acrimony, and his modifying the content of the historic gospel sends a strong message that Franke is a modern false prophet with 'another' gospel.
Paul Kjoss Helseth, The Mythical Evangelical Magisterium Reconsidered
Old Princeton's opposition to the rise of theological liberalism has often been misrepresented as an unwillingness to remain teachable. The worst maligning charge laid at the Reformed church's door is often construed to be that the Holy Spirit is not present in our meets. But do these charges ring true, or does it only serve the ends of those who promote the openness of personal experiences over objective revealed truth, due to their inferior epistemology of the Holy Spirit? '...for there to be faith, liberals conceived of doctrines as little more than expressions of an ineffable religious experience for a particular time and place.' pg 131 The feelings and postmodern beliefs of Franke are weighed against the 'details soundly discovered' of the great Warfield - and found wanting of credible historical substance. Helseth asserts: 'when the Spirit takes believers ever more deeply into the objective contents of God's Word, the history of Christian thought continues to unfold.' pg 134
Greg D Gilbert, Brian McLaren's Approach To The Doctrine Of Hell
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