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Some Pastors and Teachers: Reflecting a Biblical Vision of What Every Minister is Called to Be by Sinclair Ferguson. Banner of Truth. 824 pages. 2017
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Sinclair Ferguson is one of today’s most respected Reformed theologians. In fact the late R.C. Sproul called him his favorite theologian. Anytime Dr. Ferguson publishes a new book it is going to get my attention. This eight-hundred plus page volume is no ordinary book, and will be a welcome addition to any pastor’s library.
The book, which covers many of the themes and tasks of Christian ministry, is broken into five major sections, which include 39 chapters. The major sections are:

  1. Pastors and Teachers: Three Johns
  2. John Calvin: Pastor-Teacher
  3. Puritans: Pastors and Teachers
  4. The Pastor and Teaching
  5. The Pastor and Preaching

The title of the book comes from Paul’s words in Ephesians 4:11. The author tells us that many of these chapters were first published in relatively obscure places in the context of busy pastoral ministry. Now, he sees how the essays seem to self-select and rearrange themselves into a coherent whole. He hopes that these pages will encourage other pastors to stretch themselves beyond their normal pulpit or lectern preparation and accept invitations to study, speak and write on subjects outside of their norm.
He encourages pastors and teachers to utilize their gifts for fellow pastors. He sees this book as representing some of the gifts that the Lord has given him for others who have an interest in and a concern for the ministry of the gospel.
Although this is a massive volume, each chapter is an entity on its own. The author states that readers can enter and leave at any point they choose as no chapter is completely dependent on the previous chapter or any other chapter in the book. Though a seminary graduate, I’m a ruling elder not a preaching pastor. The arrangement of this book will allow me to focus on those sections that focus on teaching, rather than preaching, for example.
I look forward to benefiting from the wisdom contained in these pages for many years. This would be an excellent addition to any minister’s library.

Reading the Bible Supernaturally: Seeing and Savoring the Glory of God in Scripture by John Piper. Crossway. 432 pages. 2017 
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This is volume two of Piper’s projected trilogy of books on the Bible, with the third projected for 2018. This is the first book he tried to write, but he put it aside to write A Peculiar Glory in 2016. That book addressed the question as to whether the Bible was true. He begins by giving a recap of that book for those who haven’t read it. This new book is organized into three parts:

  1. The author addresses what the Bible tells us is the ultimate goal of reading the Bible.
  2. The author works out the inferences from part one that reading the Bible must be a supernatural act if God’s goals for our reading the Bible are to be reached.
  3. The author treats the practical outworking of such a claim in the seemingly ordinary human act of reading, the natural act of reading the Bible supernaturally.

Part 1
Piper writes that the ultimate goal of reading the Bible is that the infinite worth and beauty of God would be exalted in everlasting white-hot worship of the blood-bought bride of Christ from every people, language tribe and nation. Piper discusses the relationship of God’s glory to His holiness, emphasizing the need to see God’s glory in Scripture through careful, reflective reading and to savor this glory for the sake of personal transformation.
He tells us that we “see” the glory of Christ through the eyes of our hearts when reading Scripture. We savor the Word when we move from discipline to yearning and hunger for the Word as we are being transformed.

Part 2
The reading of the Bible is a supernatural act. The author writes that if we have to see the glory of God in Scripture and if we have to savor the glory of God above all things, that is a miracle, because by nature nobody reads the Bible and sees the glory of God and savors it above all things.

Part 3
This section, the most practical of the book, is about the natural act of reading the Bible supernaturally. The author builds a biblical case for why Scripture must be read supernaturally. His aim is to encourage a deep dependence on God in the fullest use of your natural powers in the supernatural act of reading the Bible. He discusses in detail his APTAT acronym – Admit, Pray, Trust, Act and Thank. Within the “P”, he discusses the IOUS acronym – Incline, Open, Unite and Satisfy. He writes about the indispensable role of prayer in reading the Bible supernaturally.

He states that for many Christians Bible reading is often viewed as a duty to be scheduled and fulfilled rather than a feast to be anticipated and enjoyed. He stresses that as we read the Bible, we should seek to discover what the author intended by asking good questions. He recommends two translations of the Bible, the English Standard Version (ESV) and New American Standard Version (NASB).
He states that we should ask how ourselves how we are being changed by what we are reading.
The book contains some familiar themes for those who have read Piper books (“God is most glorified in us when we are most satisfied in Him”, Edwards quotes, joy). This is a serious book, but not a technical book written for scholars. It is a book that I would recommend for both beginning Bible readers and for mature Bible readers. It has changed the way I think about how I read the Bible.

BOOK CLUB – Won’t you read along with us?

The Tech-Wise Family: Everyday Steps for Putting Technology in Its Proper Place by Andy Crouch.  224 pages. 2017

In this important new book, Andy Crouch, author of Culture Making, draws on in-depth original research from the Barna Group, and shows readers that the choices we make about technology have consequences we may never have considered. He takes readers beyond the typical questions of what, where, and when and instead challenges them to answer provocative questions like, Who do we want to be as a family? and How does our use of a particular technology move us closer or farther away from that goal? Anyone who has felt their family relationships suffer or their time slip away amid technology’s distractions will find in this book a path forward to reclaiming their real life in a world of devices.  This week we look at

Chapter 9 Why Singing Matters

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