What Constitutes a Blog

“What makes a blog a blog is the interaction between the writer and the reader.” This is a definition that I have seen a number of times regarding the nature of what constitutes a “blog.” It is not one that I personally buy into. Lest I be accused of desiring to create my own meaning for a word, I refer to Hugh Hewitt’s Blog: Understanding the Information Reformation that’s changing your world (Nelson, 2005)—the very book that got me into blogging—where Hewitt says that “blog” is simply short for “weblog, an online site that is update by its author(s) frequently” (p.xv). Nothing there about interaction between author(s) and reader(s).

Of course, this has a personal dimension! I have not activated the link that allows for comments on my various blog entries. The reason for this is not because I think myself above criticism. Hardly that! How do I expect to grow? For a Christian, growth is often a corporate experience. No, it is simply because I do not have the time to answer even the few comments that might come my way because of my blogging. My profile gives an e-mail link that enables people to contact me if they really want to.

In my opinion, then, responding back and forth to comments about a blog does add another dimension to blogging, but it does not define its essence.

How to Interpret a Famous Carol

George Grant has a simple response to those who see the famous carol “The Twelve Days of Christmas” as a secret means of teaching the Christian faith. Grant dispels this “urban legend” and interprets it as a folk song “just intended to generally and joyously portray throughout the Yuletide season the abundant Christian life, the riches of the Church’s covenantal inheritance, and the Gospel’s ultimate promise of heaven. Sing, therefore, with new gusto and zeal. For, “every good and perfect gift comes from above.” Even partridges, pear trees, and leaping lords!”

Check it out at: The Twelve Days of Christmas.

Pray for Don Whitney

Please remember brother Don Whitney who announces on his website that he has colon cancer. Please be in prayer that God would grant Don a speedy and complete recovery. He faces his operation tomorrow. Specifically Don asks us to pray:

  • For God to be glorified in all these matters.
  • That the cancer will be entirely removed.
  • That no colostomy will be required.
  • That no infection will set in.
  • That the Lord will give me grace through the initial recovery period, particularly with the pain and the mental fog.
  • That no further treatment—including radiation and chemotherapy—will be needed.
  • For his wife Caffy, daughter Laurelen, and his Mother. As you can imagine, they will each have their own set of special needs as well.
  • For my/our witness to the medical personnel—to two in particular.
  • That I will be home for Christmas (this is especially important to Laurelen, who will also turn twelve the day after Christmas).
  • That this will not affect my ability to travel to long-scheduled speaking engagements in the last half of January nor my return to the classroom at the end of January.
  • For the Lord’s provision in the aftermath of major surgery, several days in the hospital, etc.
  • That this will cause me—and my family—to love and prize Jesus more, and be more like Him.

Nineteenth Century Baptist Posts

Being away for any length of time means that, while it was relatively easy to access my blog and those I normally read, it was not as easy to be writing up new blogs. I would like to note some entries at Nineteenth Century Baptist, the blog of Nathan Finn, that are worth reading. Check out these three: More on Baptist Confessionalism I recently came a..., Elias Keach on a True Gospel Church Elias Keach w..., William Carey’s View of History When I have the p...

A Brief Reformed Look at Mediaeval Monasteries

Loving the Christian tradition is a sign of spiritual health. But we must read the past with discernment. Just as a malnourished individual must eat wholesome food and not simply anything he can lay his hands on simply because it is food, so must we be when it comes to the past. I suspect it is due to a malnourished involvement with the past that some recent authors are enthusing about some elements of Church History that our Evangelical and Reformed forebears threw overboard because of their dissonance from the standpoint of Scripture. A good example has to be this recent post, “It Takes a Monk to Save a Civilization” by Ben House. This blog is building upon Thomas Cahill’s How the Irish Saved Civilization, which is a good read no doubt—especially for someone like myself with an Irish parent—but has some definite flaws from a historiographical vantage-point. For example, House states, “For a time, about all that stood between the preservation of European civilization or its descent into a true dark age was a hardy band of Irish monks who were dedicated to copying books and evangelizing people.” But what of the entire structure of the Byzantine Empire and its libraries and scholars?

Then, at the end of the post, House cites a couple of historians of the mediæval era like Christopher Dawson about the blessings of mediæval monasteries. Reading these quotes I hardly recognized the institutions that John Wycliffe (d.1384) and the early Reformers so heavily declaimed against.

The quote from Dawson’s The Making of Europe, runs thus: “The greatest names of the age are the names of monks—St. Benedict and St. Gregory, the two Columbas, Bede and Boniface, Alcuin and Rabanus Maurus, and Dunstan, and it is to the monks that the great cultural achievements of the age are due, whether we look at the preservation of ancient culture, the conversion of new peoples or the formation of new centres of culture in Ireland and Northumbria and the Carolingian Empire.”

For a Roman Catholic historian like Dawson, the list of names in this quote can remain undifferentiated. They are all heroes of the faith in the Roman pantheon. But it will not do at all for a Reformed historian to cite such a list without making differentiation between, for example, the Celts and the Anglo-Celtic supporters of the Church of Rome.

House has a good point in his post that churches must function like beacons of light in our collapsing culture as monasteries once did in late antiquity. But that point must be made with care lest we forget what the monasteries came to represent in mediæval Europe.

Travel

This past week I have been in England and N. Ireland. It was a privilege to preach at Whiddon Valley Evangelical Church in Barnstaple, Devon, attend the Westminster Conference in London, and visit Queen’s University Belfast, and most importantly, enjoy sweet fellowship with some of the people of God. And surely one of the best things about going away has got to be coming home. It’s not the journey that is so precious but the destination.

One of the other sweet things about travel is being able to read and reflect in airport lounges and on buses and so on. I thank God for a batch of a good books that I read on this recent trip.

Staying Humble & near to God

I have been reading Daniel Webber’s William Carey and the Missionary Vision (Banner of Truth Trust, 2005). It is a fairly easy read at about 50 or so pages of textual introduction to Carey’s An Enquiry into the Obligations of Christians to Use Means for the Conversion of the Heathens (1792), a classic defense of missions, and Andrew Fuller’s The Instances, the Evil Nature, and the Dangerous Tendency of Delay, in the Concerns of Religion (1791), which played a vital role in garnering support for Carey’s vision as laid out in the Enquiry. Found this great piece of advice by Fuller to Carey when certain of their friends were clamouring for a likeness of Carey to be made. “Eight hundred guineas have been offered for Dr Carey’s likeness!,” Fuller wrote to Carey in India. Fuller rightly feared such fame might go to their heads and he gave this advice to his friend as well as to himself: “if we be kept humble and near to God, we have nothing to fear” (p.41). It is noteworthy that the first clause is in the passive. Fuller’s prayer to God for himself and Carey was: “Lord, keep us humble and near to Thee.”

Though we must use the means of grace to stay in the place of humility and use those same means to cleave to our God, ultimately this is his great work. If we are kept humble and near to him—then truly we have nothing to fear.

Early Johnny Cash & the Early Augustine

In this lively response to Scott McKnight’s take on Russ Moore’s review of the movie Walk the LineMcKnight, McLaren, and McAuthenticity—Moore compares the early Cash after his conversion to the early Augustine [presumably prior to the earth-shattering illumination that came when, in the mid-390s, Augustine realized that the entire Christian life is sheer gift] and Brian McLaren to Arius. A good read and response!

Reading Augustine

I have been immersing myself in recent weeks in Augustine’s thought—partly because of two courses I have been teaching on the North African theologian and also because of a major paper I have to give on his masterpiece The City of God (412-427) and its theology of history next week in London, England. It is exactly thirty years ago that I first read this work in detail for a Master’s thesis. It has been said that if you get into Augustine there is the possibility you will never get out. But never to have read him—that is to miss one of the Church’s greatest gems. The Ancient Church has bequeathed to the Church of Christ five treasures:

  • The canon of the New Testament
  • The doctrine of the Trinity as hammered out by Athanasius and the Cappadocians in particular
  • Chalcedonian Christology
  • The early martyrs
  • And the theology of Augustine

Read Augustine, you will never regret it. Begin with the Confessions (397-401) and then move on to his City of God. His work on Trinitarian doctrine, On the Trinity (399-413) is also a must. Of course, there will be stuff you disagree with. But you will be joining a discussion circle that has involved some of the greatest minds in the history of the Church—Anselm and Bernard of Clairvaux, Luther and Calvin, Owen and Warfield, to name just a few.

Anyway if blogging is rare in the next few days it is because I am focused on finishing this paper and then away in the UK from Dec 9 to 16.

On Quotations–Some Principles

A great quote from Edmund Burke (1729-1797) has been posted here by Kirk Wellum. Reading this quote led me to think of that other famous quote often attributed to Burke, which runs something like this: “All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing.” I say “something like” because it turns out there are dozens of variants of this quote!

For a thoughful study of these variants, see Martin Porter, “ ‘All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing’ (or words to that effect): A study of a Web quotation” (January 2002; http://www.tartarus.org/~martin/essays/burkequote.html). Porter actually concludes after an exhaustive study that Burke never said this second quote about the triumph of evil and good men doing nought! In this essay and a follow-up one (“Four Principles of Quotation: Being a follow up to A study of a Web quotation” (March 2002; http://www.tartarus.org/~martin/essays/burkequote2.html), Porter rightly argues that for a quote to be used correctly it must be cited exactly from the source and something of the context knowable.

He therefore gives four principles regarding making quotations—this is a must for students of history and those aspiring to be historians.

Principle 1 (for readers): Whenever you see a quotation given with an author but no source assume that it is probably bogus.

Principle 2 (for readers): Whenever you see a quotation given with a full source assume that it is probably being misused, unless you find good evidence that the quoter has read it in the source.

Principle 3 (for quoters): Whenever you make a quotation, give the exact source.

Principle 4 (for quoters): Only quote from works that you have read.  

PS I would wholeheartedly affirm Principles 1 and 3. Principle 2 seems to engender too much skepticism. And Principle 4 seems to be a little narrow.

Free St. George’s–A Treasure Trove of Scottish Reformed Christianity

I love what is going on at this blog, Free St. George’s. My wife is Scottish born and I have developed a keen interest over the years in many things Scottish. I was born in England, but in my “wilder”—or should I say “saner”?—moments I have wished I had been born a Scot! But providence being what it is, I had no choice over that! But having a Scottish wife—with relatives connected to the Free Church and now the Free Church Continuing—has made me probe into my children’s rich Scottish Christian roots. And Free St. George’s is well on its way to becoming a treasure-trove of reflection on Scottish Reformed Christianity and its various highways and byways.

Keep up the good work, brother!