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Send us a textWhat truly matters when this life is over and we stand before God? Pastor Larry Henderson, who oversees all European missionaries for Assemblies of God World Missions, delivers a soul-stirring message about living with eternal perspective.Having planted churches in the Canary Islands and led a dynamic 3,000-person multicultural congregation in Vienna, Pastor Larry shares powerful stories of lives transformed by the gospel. From a brain-injured man who prioritized his wife's salvation over his own healing to a Syrian refugee who found the supernatural ability to forgive ISIS for killing his entire family, these testimonies reveal how encountering Jesus fundamentally changes what we value.The heart of this message centers on three profound truths. First, people matter immensely to God—Jesus didn't die for buildings or political causes but for human souls. Second, how we live matters—our authentic Christ-like behavior speaks more powerfully than our words in a world skeptical of religion but desperate for genuine spirituality. Finally, eternity matters—what we do today echoes forever in light of Jesus' certain return.Pastor Larry takes us to war-torn Ukrainian villages where mayors testify, "The government forgot us, NGOs left, but the church comes every week," revealing how Kingdom Builders giving translates into tangible hope. He challenges us with the urgent words of missiologist Carl Henry: "The gospel is only good news if it gets there in time."As Cornerstone prepares for Kingdom Builders commitments, this message reminds us why giving beyond our tithes to support missionaries matters eternally. The question isn't whether we'll leave a legacy, but what kind of legacy we'll leave. Will you embrace the opportunity to live for what really matters—bringing others with you to heaven?Cornerstonehttps://www.cornerstoneaz.org/Follow Jesushttps://www.cornerstoneaz.org/follow-jesusLife Groups https://www.cornerstoneaz.org/life-groupsGiving https://cornerstoneaz.churchcenter.com/givingChurch Center App - Download then add Cornerstone Christian Center in Avondale, AZiOShttps://itunes.apple.com/us/app/my-church-center/id1357742931?mt=8&ls=1&ign-mpt=uo%3D4Android https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.ministrycentered.churchcenter----Instagram https://www.instagram.com/cornerstoneazFacebookhttps://www.facebook.com/cornerstoneaz.orgTwitterhttps://twitter.com/cornerstoneaz.org
Who was Carl Henry? What part did he play in shaping modern evangelicalism? Today, Stephen Nichols tells us about the tremendous influence that Henry had in his roles as an academic, apologist, author, theologian, and more. Read the transcript: https://www.5minutesinchurchhistory.com/carl-henry/ A donor-supported outreach of Ligonier Ministries. Donate: https://www.ligonier.org/donate/ Explore all of our podcasts: https://www.ligonier.org/podcasts
Si hay un año en que era evidente que la juventud se había vuelto al cristianismo es 1971, según el reportaje que sirvió de portada a la revista Time –el principal semanario de información general en Estados Unidos desde 1923–, bajo el título de “La Revolución por Jesús”. Aunque revistas como “Rolling Stone” observa ya desde el año anterior la continua presencia de “Locos por Jesús” (Jesus Freaks) en todo el país, es ahora cuando el gran público americano se hace consciente de la presencia de los que el editor de “Christianity Today”, Carl Henry, llamó “hippies evangélicos”. 1971 es también el año del fenómeno de “Jesucristo Superstar”, la ópera rock estrenada entonces en Broadway. La obra de Andrew Lloyd Webber fue un intento de aprovechar la popularidad de la Gente de Jesús. La escribe Tim Rice para el teatro, antes de que Norman Jewison hiciera la película en 1973. Se estrenó en Nueva York después de grabarse el disco con Ian Gillan de Deep Purple como cantante. Curiosamente, el protagonista de la obra de teatro Jeff Fenholt (1950-2019) tuvo luego una conversión que recibió mucha publicidad por los tele-evangelistas que lo presentaban como cantante de Black Sabbath, relacionado con el ocultismo. Desde el principio se enfrenta a la oposición de religiosos, tanto cristianos como judíos. Para los primeros, su visión de un Jesús meramente humano fue recibida como blasfema e irreverente, pero para la industria del entretenimiento no hay mala publicidad: “¡Qué hablen de ti, aunque sea mal!” Lo sorprendente es que el evangelista Billy Graham la utilizara para introducir, positivamente, la pregunta de quién es Jesús en sus predicaciones durante las campañas de 1971. Escuchamos la voz del predicador hablando del Superstar en un sermón en Chicago en 1971, después de oír la canción de Judas a la que hace referencia, pero en la versión española de Teddy Bautista. Hablamos también sobre 1971 con el mayor historiador de la Revolución por Jesús, Larry Eskridge, cuya investigación ha publicado la Universidad de Oxford. Los comentarios de José de Segovia tienen la música de fondo de Stanley Turrentine, Bob James e Isaac Hayes. Las canciones son "1971" del grupo actual de alabanza de las comunidades de Silo y "Bienaventurados" del disco del grupo Lazarus en aquel año.
W. Tozer, The Knowledge of the Holy and The Pursuit of God. Blaise Pascal, Pensées, many editions. I prefer the Penguin ed. See also the collection The Mind on Fire. Carl Henry, God, Revelation, and Authority, 6 vols., Confessions of a Theologian. S. Lewis, Mere Christianity, Abolition of Man, Miracles, God in the Dock, Screwtape Letters. Francis Schaeffer, all of his books, but especially The God Who is There, He is there and He is not Silent, How Should We Then Live?, True Spirituality, and Whatever Happened to the Human Race? K. Chesterton, Orthodoxy and The Everlasting Man. Harold Netland, Dissonant Voices, Encountering Religious Pluralism, Christianity and Religious Diversity. Harry Blamires, The Christian Mind. I. Packer, Knowing God and Evangelism and the Sovereignty of God. P. Moreland, Scaling the Secular City and Love Your God With All Your Mind. Discover more Christian podcasts at lifeaudio.com and inquire about advertising opportunities at lifeaudio.com/contact-us.
The Cat in Grandfather's House
Let's Go!John 4:1-421. The Gospel is the good news of redemption.God created Man sinsJesus diedWe Respond“When Jesus said to them, “I am he,” they drew back and fell to the ground. John 18:62. The power of the Gospel changes your life.3. A life changed shares the Gospel with others.Barriers:What are people going to think of me.They know my past.What if I can't answer all their question's.I'm an introvert, not my giftedness.Rebeca Pippert “Being an extrovert isn't essential to evangelism - obedience and love are.Charles spurgeon Oh, my brothers and sisters in Christ, if sinners will be damned, at least let them leap to hell over our bodies; and if they will perish, let them perish with our arms about their knees, imploring them to stay, and not madly to destroy themselves. If hell must be filled, at least let it be filled in the teeth of our exertions, and let not one go there unwarned and unprayed for.The gospel is only good news if it gets there in time.- Carl Henry
Let's Go!John 4:1-421. The Gospel is the good news of redemption.God created Man sinsJesus diedWe Respond“When Jesus said to them, “I am he,” they drew back and fell to the ground. John 18:62. The power of the Gospel changes your life.3. A life changed shares the Gospel with others.Barriers:What are people going to think of me.They know my past.What if I can't answer all their question's.I'm an introvert, not my giftedness.Rebeca Pippert “Being an extrovert isn't essential to evangelism - obedience and love are.Charles spurgeon Oh, my brothers and sisters in Christ, if sinners will be damned, at least let them leap to hell over our bodies; and if they will perish, let them perish with our arms about their knees, imploring them to stay, and not madly to destroy themselves. If hell must be filled, at least let it be filled in the teeth of our exertions, and let not one go there unwarned and unprayed for.The gospel is only good news if it gets there in time.- Carl Henry
The Gospel Coalition published an article last week that brought together every divergent faction of the church to say, “Ick!” While many are discussing the troubling content of the article on social media, the Holy Post crew examines what is says about the troubling state of evangelical publishing. Then, new data finds liberal teens are struggling with depression at higher rates on average than conservative teens. What's the explanation? And Phil talks to professor Christopher Watkin about his book, “Biblical Critical Theory: How the Bible's Unfolding Story Makes Sense of Modern Life and Culture.” Is critical theory really as evil as some culture warriors say it is? Watkin offers a more thoughtful and Christian perspective on how to critique society. Plus, Japan discovers 7,000 new islands. Patreon Bonus: Bonus Interview with Christopher Watkin - https://www.patreon.com/posts/79691495/ Holy Post merch store - https://www.holypost.com/shop Sponsor 0:00 - Sponsor: World Relief Join the Path - https://worldrelief.org/holypost/ 0:44 - Intro 3:46 - Islands found 9:40 - The Article 29:23 - Teen mental health and politics Sponsors 49:40 - Sponsor Hiya Health hiyahealth.com/HOLYPOST to receive 50% off your first order. 50:47 - Interview intro Interview with Christopher Watkin https://christopherwatkin.com/ https://twitter.com/DrChrisWatkin 53:13 - Social contract 56:20 - Christopher's story 1:01:32 - Biblical Critical Theory Biblical Critical Theory: How the Bible's Unfolding Story Makes Sense of Modern Life and Culture - https://amzn.to/3YkH1kJ 1:04:28 - Defining critical theory 1:10:50 - Augustine 1:16:29 - Analyzing culture through the bible 1:21:50 - Eternal destiny and culture 1:24:28 - Diagonalizing 1:35:31 - End Credits Links mentioned in news segment: Japan just found 7,000 islands it didn't know it had - https://www.cnn.com/2023/03/02/asia/japan-islands-double-report-intl-hnk/index.html Please understand that I was the first one who was upset by the bad article - https://mpierce.substack.com/p/please-understand-that-i-was-the Esau McCaulley tweet link - https://twitter.com/esaumccaulley/status/1631380537892806669 Why are young liberals so depressed? - https://www.slowboring.com/p/why-are-young-liberals-so-depressed?utm_source=direct&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web Other resources: The Uneasy Conscience of Modern Fundamentalism by Carl Henry - https://amzn.to/3IRhhH8 Holy Post website: https://www.holypost.com/ Holy Post Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/holypost The Holy Post is supported by our listeners. We may earn affiliate commissions through links listed here. As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases.
This week on the program, the first WHM episode of Listener Request Month peels out as the guys talk about the Sylvester Stallone car racing dud, Driven! Why can't this movie decide on a villain? How terrible are all the CGI sewer covers? Why are those announcers getting so horned up over the car crashes? And guard your ears, this movie has one of the worst soundtracks of all time! PLUS: Does God watch The Eric Szyszka Show? Driven stars Sylvester Stallone, Kip Pardue, Stacy Edwards, Til Schweiger, Gina Gershon, Estella Warren, Cristián de la Fuente, Brent Briscoe, Robert Sean Leonard, and Burt Reynolds as Carl Henry; directed by Renny Harlin. Tickets on sale now for our shows in San Francisco and Los Angeles! Check out the WHM Merch Store featuring new Grab-Ass & Cancer, SW Crispy Critters, MINGO! & WHAT IF Donna? designs! Advertise on We Hate Movies via Gumball.fmUnlock Exclusive Content!: http://www.patreon.com/wehatemoviesSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
This week we (kinda) theme the episode around July the 4th! And we talk about the surprise hearing from the January 6th Committee and how that impacts our faith. All that and more on this week's episode! Question for the week:What does it mean to celebrate independence?Special Guest:Sarah Hedgecock, PhD Candidate in Religion at Columbia UniversityGuest Question:As progressive Christians, we often describe ourselves, our perspectives, and our actions in contrast to evangelical Christianity. But evangelical Christianity also changes and adapts to the times and trends, albeit sometimes in different ways from progressive Christianity. How are we to understand evangelical Christian identity today? And are there any implications for progressive Christians? | Ahmed, Sara. “A Phenomenology of Whiteness.” Feminist Theory 8, no. 2 (August 1, 2007): 149–68. Bielo, James S. Words upon the Word: An Ethnography of Evangelical Group Bible Study. New York: New York University Press, 2009.Bjork-James, Sophie. The Divine Institution: The Politics of White Evangelicalism's Focus on the Family. New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press, 2021.Bowler, Kate. The Preacher's Wife: The Precarious Power of Evangelical Women Celebrities. Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press, 2019.Dochuk, Darren. From Bible Belt to Sunbelt: Plain-Folk Religion, Grassroots Politics, and the Rise of Evangelical Conservatism. New York: W.W. Norton, 2011.Hendershot, Heather. Shaking the World for Jesus: Media and Conservative Evangelical Culture. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2004.Keller, Timothy. “Can Evangelicalism Survive Donald Trump and Roy Moore?” The New Yorker, December 19, 2017. Kerby, Lauren R. Saving History: How White Evangelicals Tour the Nation's Capital and Redeem a Christian America. Where Religion Lives. Chapel Hill: The University of North Carolina Press, 2020.Silliman, Daniel. “An Evangelical Is Anyone Who Likes Billy Graham: Defining Evangelicalism with Carl Henry and Networks of Trust.” Church History 90, no. 3 (September 2021): 621–43.Vaca, Daniel. Evangelicals Incorporated: Books and the Business of Religion in America. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press, 2019.
The Virgin Birth is not just a Christmas story. As theologian Carl Henry wrote, it is the sum and substance of the gospel. In the Virgin Birth account from Luke 1:26-38, we see the Incarnation, God becoming man, before our very eyes. In our post-Enlightenment era world, we must see our need for the Incarnation, have our wonder and amazement fueled by it, and we must respond to it with thankful obedience. For without the Incarnation, there would be no salvation.
Does the church need modern Super Apostles? If you ask some, the American Church's greatest need is to recover and continue the Neo-Evangelical vision of Carl Henry and Billy Graham? Trevin Wax and the folks over at The Gospel Coaltion seem to take this position. At the heart of this vision is the need rediscovery of modern day theological and cultural gatekeepers that follow in the footsteps of Henry and Graham. What are the merits of this vision? Does it work? Will it rescue the conservative evangelicalism from it's current divisions? Tom and Ryan breakdown Trevin's recent article called “Why I'm Not Kissing Evangelicalism Goodbye” along side a response from R. Scott Clark over at the Heidelblog. We hope our assessment is both helpful and fair.
Carl F. H. Henry was a 20th-century American evangelical theologian who provided leadership to the neo-evangelical movement and helped found several influential Christian organizations such as Christianity Today, Evangelical Theological Society, and Fuller Theological Seminary. It is not an understatement to say that every evangelical community has been influenced by Carl Henry. To hear more about his life and his ministry of renewal, hear from Dr. Jesse Payne. Jesse is Senior Pastor of First Baptist Church of Burkburnett and author of the recently published Carl F. H. Henry on the Holy Spirit.
Jim Davis and Mike Aitcheson talk live at TGC's 2021 national conference with Dr. Tim Keller and Dr. Irwyn Ince about a biblical theology of race and justice. The panel explores the similarities of the course 1940s Carl Henry charted between fundamentalism and liberalism, and how maintaining a prophetic witness will be important as we observe the phenomena of dechurching and deconversion.DISCUSSION QUESTIONS:How does Tim Keller define mishpat?How does Irwyn Ince define shalom?What inferences are drawn as to the relationship of mishpat to shalom?As you observe our cultural moment, what things today bring you to a place of lament?As you observe our cultural moment, what things today bring you to a place of encouragement?What are some of the negative consequences of failing to pursue mishpat and shalom in this particular conversation?What does good leadership look like in such difficult and complex conversations?
Host: @iAMDrTamika Guests: Marlene Zoltzman, Linda Marquez, Carl Henry Produced and Engineered by: @OnairwithQ
Carl Henry referred to our current generation as "intellectually uncapped, morally unzippered and volitionally uncurbed." Culture has a way of shedding personal responsibility and worshipping at the alter of autonomy. In today’s message Pastor Ray shows us Peter teaching the scattered first century Christians that they will give account to a God Who loves them and provides for them even in suffering. Our text is 1 Peter 4:16-19. This message is taken from our online worship livestream from October 11, 2020. For the full experience or to see other videos visit: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCljqW_jJwOwv4ouB_NbvWoQ/videos For more information visit: http://internationalbaptistny.org Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/internationa... Give online: http://internationalbaptistny.org/give Music: All Music License through CCLI - https://us.ccli.com/ CCLI Streaming License # CSPL167339
What would Billy Graham and Carl Henry say of Christianity Today, the magazine they founded over 60 years ago? How should Christians think in the face of militant leftism? What is their ultimate source of truth and knowledge? Dr. Owen Strachan joins the Falkirk Center Podcast.
“After everything that guy has said and all the selfish, power-hungry things he's done, you expect me to believe he's a Christian?” “Seems awfully convenient for him to claim to find religion now… he still needs to answer for his past.” “Plus, his political history makes it hard to believe this religious conversion is authentic. It's probably just another ploy of an egomaniac…” Celebrity conversions aren't easy to navigate. In fact, the ongoing reaction to reports that Kanye West has been born again, is serious about his faith, and is even considering seminary, all in association with the title and content of his much-anticipated music project Christ is King, sounded more than vaguely familiar to those of us at the Colson Center. After all, our founder also had a celebrity conversion over four decades ago, and while I don't expect much of anything else about Kanye West to remind us of Chuck Colson, the reactions to this week's news were, shall we say, familiar. Still, of the many celebrity conversions we've seen over the years, this one seems different to me. Maybe it's because it would be hard to identify a bigger, and more notorious, celebrity today than Kanye West. Or maybe it's because part of his notoriety is due to a string of publicity stunts. Is it really that hard to believe that this is just another one? No, it's not. And therein lies the challenge. It wasn't hard for Colson skeptics to note the suspicious timing between his conversion and the Watergate scandal, either. In fact, the Washington Post felt obliged to note their skepticism of Chuck Colson's conversion over thirty-five years later, when they were reporting on his death. There's a world of difference, of course, between a skepticism that comes after three decades of faithfulness, and the concern many of us feel right now for the reputation of Christ and His church. This is definitely a time to be “wise as serpents” and “harmless as doves.” So what might that look like? First, we should be hopeful. No one, no one, is beyond the reach of the Gospel? Any of us concerned about lost friends or family members pray like we believe that's true. And here's why we have this hope: The headline of the Kanye conversion story, and any conversion story, is not the convert but the converter. Not Kanye, but Christ! At the end of the day, I believe Christ can save Kanye for the same reason I believe Christ can save me. Second, we should be grateful. As St. Paul wrote, even if Christ is being proclaimed by someone of whom we are skeptical, Christ is still being proclaimed. And, in this case, it's being proclaimed across popular culture in a way we've not seen in our lifetime. The message of Christ carries its own inherent strength and is not dependent (thank God) on the strength or stability of the messenger. Third, we should be wise. There are two ways Christians have set up celebrity converts for failure. First, is by expecting too much too soon. I can think of more than one professional athlete or musician who came to Christ one week, only to be asked to preach the next week. This foolish embrace of our cultural tendency toward celebrity worship has infected the church in so many ways, as evidenced by a generation of musicians and leaders in the church seeking to be famous and “have a platform” instead of being discipled and educated and obedient. But there's also the mistake of sitting back, waiting, and saying something like, “We'll just see if they make it. If they do, we'll accept them into the church.” The problem of that is, of course, no Christian can survive long without the church. We need the church. Kanye needs the church if his faith is to take root and continue to change his life. One of the underreported but essential chapters in Chuck Colson's story post-conversion, was how he submitted to discipleship, the church, and biblical and theological training: From the earliest days in which believers in Washington D.C. embraced him to being theologically mentored by folks such as Carl Henry and Timothy George, to his lifelong commitment of simply going to church. In the same way, I'm encouraged by early reports of the voices speaking into Kanye and his new faith. Finally, we should expect life change. Chuck Colson's life change was dramatic, and the fruit followed. As he often put it, his entire worldview was changed by Christ. There are early and encouraging indications of changes in Kanye's worldview, as well. My prayer is that these are early indications of what will be a powerful lifelong witness—to the power of the Gospel. And that, like Chuck, Kanye will never be ashamed of it.
Are theology and leadership irrelevant to one another? What challenges do evangelical colleges and seminaries face today? How has theology affected Dockery’s role as University president? What was it like at Southern Seminary during the years of theological liberalism? What role did Carl Henry play in Dockery’s life? How important are friendships to the development of one’s own theology? In this… Download Audio
The answer is yes, and persecution will increase in the days to come.
Gregory Alan Thornbury, Ph.D., serves as the sixth President of The King’s College in New York City – an institution dedicated to faith, free enterprise, and The American Dream. Called “America’s first hipster college president” by The American Spectator, Dr. Thornbury is also a Visiting Professor at the Values and Capitalism initiative of the American Enterprise Institute; a Senior Fellow for The Kairos Journal; a columnist for Townhall.com; and a member of the editorial board of the Salem Media Group. His recent books focus on the relationship between philosophy, theology, and culture. Prior to joining King’s in 2013, he served at Union University in Tennessee as a Professor of Philosophy, Founding Dean of the School of Theology, and Vice President. He has completed graduate work at Southern Seminary in Louisville and the University of Oxford in England. A popular campus speaker and lecturer, he is also a member of the Society of Christian Philosophers.
Beginning with a network of reformed figures that orbited around Billy Graham, from J. Howard Pew’s money to Carl Henry’s passion for cultural esteem, Molly Worthen’s Apostles of Reason: The Crisis of Authority in American Evangelicalism (Oxford University Press, 2014) details the early history of institutions like the magazine Christianity Today, the Evangelical Theological Society, Fuller Theological Seminary and many other academic and cultural meeting grounds for white American protestants who wanted to rehabilitate the intellectual reputation of their traditions and win souls, and the culture, for Christ. With the close of World War II, the Cold War emerging, and battles over ideology commanding center stage in the American imaginary, Christian leaders in reformed protestant denominations set out to reverse the isolationist posture of fundamentalism and actively engaged the elements of western culture they opposed. Negotiating the idea of a “Christian Worldview” into a position of cultural power that laid the groundwork for the moral majority, these champions of a new protestant attitude toward the world outside church doors exerted their first influence on their nearest neighbors: fellow protestants in Mennonite, Methodist, and Pentecostal traditions. As the questions that troubled fundamentalist thinkers made inroads in these communities as well, thoughtful leaders from many American protestant communities came to be united by the struggles that were shared across the differences in history, doctrine, and practice that had previously held them apart. With rare attention to the ways in which the central ideas behind evangelicalism shifted as they were adopted by leaders across protestant faiths, Worthen creates a remarkably clear and nuanced view of the variety of white evangelicalisms. Closing with internal critiques from scholars like Mark Noll on the ways in which history, tradition, and authority are employed in intradenominational politicking and ongoing efforts to expand the borders of evangelicalism through church growth and culture war, Apostles of Reason presents a marvelously deft and cogent intellectual history of a powerful and dynamic force in American life through the twentieth century and to the present. Carl Nellis is an academic editor and writing instructor working north of Boston, where he researches contemporary American community formation around appropriations of medieval European culture. You can learn more about Carl’s work at carlnellis.wordpress.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Beginning with a network of reformed figures that orbited around Billy Graham, from J. Howard Pew's money to Carl Henry's passion for cultural esteem, Molly Worthen's Apostles of Reason: The Crisis of Authority in American Evangelicalism (Oxford University Press, 2014) details the early history of institutions like the magazine Christianity Today, the Evangelical Theological Society, Fuller Theological Seminary and many other academic and cultural meeting grounds for white American protestants who wanted to rehabilitate the intellectual reputation of their traditions and win souls, and the culture, for Christ. With the close of World War II, the Cold War emerging, and battles over ideology commanding center stage in the American imaginary, Christian leaders in reformed protestant denominations set out to reverse the isolationist posture of fundamentalism and actively engaged the elements of western culture they opposed. Negotiating the idea of a “Christian Worldview” into a position of cultural power that laid the groundwork for the moral majority, these champions of a new protestant attitude toward the world outside church doors exerted their first influence on their nearest neighbors: fellow protestants in Mennonite, Methodist, and Pentecostal traditions. As the questions that troubled fundamentalist thinkers made inroads in these communities as well, thoughtful leaders from many American protestant communities came to be united by the struggles that were shared across the differences in history, doctrine, and practice that had previously held them apart. With rare attention to the ways in which the central ideas behind evangelicalism shifted as they were adopted by leaders across protestant faiths, Worthen creates a remarkably clear and nuanced view of the variety of white evangelicalisms. Closing with internal critiques from scholars like Mark Noll on the ways in which history, tradition, and authority are employed in intradenominational politicking and ongoing efforts to expand the borders of evangelicalism through church growth and culture war, Apostles of Reason presents a marvelously deft and cogent intellectual history of a powerful and dynamic force in American life through the twentieth century and to the present. Carl Nellis is an academic editor and writing instructor working north of Boston, where he researches contemporary American community formation around appropriations of medieval European culture. You can learn more about Carl's work at carlnellis.wordpress.com.
Beginning with a network of reformed figures that orbited around Billy Graham, from J. Howard Pew’s money to Carl Henry’s passion for cultural esteem, Molly Worthen’s Apostles of Reason: The Crisis of Authority in American Evangelicalism (Oxford University Press, 2014) details the early history of institutions like the magazine Christianity Today, the Evangelical Theological Society, Fuller Theological Seminary and many other academic and cultural meeting grounds for white American protestants who wanted to rehabilitate the intellectual reputation of their traditions and win souls, and the culture, for Christ. With the close of World War II, the Cold War emerging, and battles over ideology commanding center stage in the American imaginary, Christian leaders in reformed protestant denominations set out to reverse the isolationist posture of fundamentalism and actively engaged the elements of western culture they opposed. Negotiating the idea of a “Christian Worldview” into a position of cultural power that laid the groundwork for the moral majority, these champions of a new protestant attitude toward the world outside church doors exerted their first influence on their nearest neighbors: fellow protestants in Mennonite, Methodist, and Pentecostal traditions. As the questions that troubled fundamentalist thinkers made inroads in these communities as well, thoughtful leaders from many American protestant communities came to be united by the struggles that were shared across the differences in history, doctrine, and practice that had previously held them apart. With rare attention to the ways in which the central ideas behind evangelicalism shifted as they were adopted by leaders across protestant faiths, Worthen creates a remarkably clear and nuanced view of the variety of white evangelicalisms. Closing with internal critiques from scholars like Mark Noll on the ways in which history, tradition, and authority are employed in intradenominational politicking and ongoing efforts to expand the borders of evangelicalism through church growth and culture war, Apostles of Reason presents a marvelously deft and cogent intellectual history of a powerful and dynamic force in American life through the twentieth century and to the present. Carl Nellis is an academic editor and writing instructor working north of Boston, where he researches contemporary American community formation around appropriations of medieval European culture. You can learn more about Carl’s work at carlnellis.wordpress.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Beginning with a network of reformed figures that orbited around Billy Graham, from J. Howard Pew’s money to Carl Henry’s passion for cultural esteem, Molly Worthen’s Apostles of Reason: The Crisis of Authority in American Evangelicalism (Oxford University Press, 2014) details the early history of institutions like the magazine Christianity Today, the Evangelical Theological Society, Fuller Theological Seminary and many other academic and cultural meeting grounds for white American protestants who wanted to rehabilitate the intellectual reputation of their traditions and win souls, and the culture, for Christ. With the close of World War II, the Cold War emerging, and battles over ideology commanding center stage in the American imaginary, Christian leaders in reformed protestant denominations set out to reverse the isolationist posture of fundamentalism and actively engaged the elements of western culture they opposed. Negotiating the idea of a “Christian Worldview” into a position of cultural power that laid the groundwork for the moral majority, these champions of a new protestant attitude toward the world outside church doors exerted their first influence on their nearest neighbors: fellow protestants in Mennonite, Methodist, and Pentecostal traditions. As the questions that troubled fundamentalist thinkers made inroads in these communities as well, thoughtful leaders from many American protestant communities came to be united by the struggles that were shared across the differences in history, doctrine, and practice that had previously held them apart. With rare attention to the ways in which the central ideas behind evangelicalism shifted as they were adopted by leaders across protestant faiths, Worthen creates a remarkably clear and nuanced view of the variety of white evangelicalisms. Closing with internal critiques from scholars like Mark Noll on the ways in which history, tradition, and authority are employed in intradenominational politicking and ongoing efforts to expand the borders of evangelicalism through church growth and culture war, Apostles of Reason presents a marvelously deft and cogent intellectual history of a powerful and dynamic force in American life through the twentieth century and to the present. Carl Nellis is an academic editor and writing instructor working north of Boston, where he researches contemporary American community formation around appropriations of medieval European culture. You can learn more about Carl’s work at carlnellis.wordpress.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Beginning with a network of reformed figures that orbited around Billy Graham, from J. Howard Pew’s money to Carl Henry’s passion for cultural esteem, Molly Worthen’s Apostles of Reason: The Crisis of Authority in American Evangelicalism (Oxford University Press, 2014) details the early history of institutions like the magazine Christianity Today, the Evangelical Theological Society, Fuller Theological Seminary and many other academic and cultural meeting grounds for white American protestants who wanted to rehabilitate the intellectual reputation of their traditions and win souls, and the culture, for Christ. With the close of World War II, the Cold War emerging, and battles over ideology commanding center stage in the American imaginary, Christian leaders in reformed protestant denominations set out to reverse the isolationist posture of fundamentalism and actively engaged the elements of western culture they opposed. Negotiating the idea of a “Christian Worldview” into a position of cultural power that laid the groundwork for the moral majority, these champions of a new protestant attitude toward the world outside church doors exerted their first influence on their nearest neighbors: fellow protestants in Mennonite, Methodist, and Pentecostal traditions. As the questions that troubled fundamentalist thinkers made inroads in these communities as well, thoughtful leaders from many American protestant communities came to be united by the struggles that were shared across the differences in history, doctrine, and practice that had previously held them apart. With rare attention to the ways in which the central ideas behind evangelicalism shifted as they were adopted by leaders across protestant faiths, Worthen creates a remarkably clear and nuanced view of the variety of white evangelicalisms. Closing with internal critiques from scholars like Mark Noll on the ways in which history, tradition, and authority are employed in intradenominational politicking and ongoing efforts to expand the borders of evangelicalism through church growth and culture war, Apostles of Reason presents a marvelously deft and cogent intellectual history of a powerful and dynamic force in American life through the twentieth century and to the present. Carl Nellis is an academic editor and writing instructor working north of Boston, where he researches contemporary American community formation around appropriations of medieval European culture. You can learn more about Carl’s work at carlnellis.wordpress.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Beginning with a network of reformed figures that orbited around Billy Graham, from J. Howard Pew’s money to Carl Henry’s passion for cultural esteem, Molly Worthen’s Apostles of Reason: The Crisis of Authority in American Evangelicalism (Oxford University Press, 2014) details the early history of institutions like the magazine Christianity Today, the Evangelical Theological Society, Fuller Theological Seminary and many other academic and cultural meeting grounds for white American protestants who wanted to rehabilitate the intellectual reputation of their traditions and win souls, and the culture, for Christ. With the close of World War II, the Cold War emerging, and battles over ideology commanding center stage in the American imaginary, Christian leaders in reformed protestant denominations set out to reverse the isolationist posture of fundamentalism and actively engaged the elements of western culture they opposed. Negotiating the idea of a “Christian Worldview” into a position of cultural power that laid the groundwork for the moral majority, these champions of a new protestant attitude toward the world outside church doors exerted their first influence on their nearest neighbors: fellow protestants in Mennonite, Methodist, and Pentecostal traditions. As the questions that troubled fundamentalist thinkers made inroads in these communities as well, thoughtful leaders from many American protestant communities came to be united by the struggles that were shared across the differences in history, doctrine, and practice that had previously held them apart. With rare attention to the ways in which the central ideas behind evangelicalism shifted as they were adopted by leaders across protestant faiths, Worthen creates a remarkably clear and nuanced view of the variety of white evangelicalisms. Closing with internal critiques from scholars like Mark Noll on the ways in which history, tradition, and authority are employed in intradenominational politicking and ongoing efforts to expand the borders of evangelicalism through church growth and culture war, Apostles of Reason presents a marvelously deft and cogent intellectual history of a powerful and dynamic force in American life through the twentieth century and to the present. Carl Nellis is an academic editor and writing instructor working north of Boston, where he researches contemporary American community formation around appropriations of medieval European culture. You can learn more about Carl’s work at carlnellis.wordpress.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Beginning with a network of reformed figures that orbited around Billy Graham, from J. Howard Pew’s money to Carl Henry’s passion for cultural esteem, Molly Worthen’s Apostles of Reason: The Crisis of Authority in American Evangelicalism (Oxford University Press, 2014) details the early history of institutions like the magazine Christianity Today, the Evangelical Theological Society, Fuller Theological Seminary and many other academic and cultural meeting grounds for white American protestants who wanted to rehabilitate the intellectual reputation of their traditions and win souls, and the culture, for Christ. With the close of World War II, the Cold War emerging, and battles over ideology commanding center stage in the American imaginary, Christian leaders in reformed protestant denominations set out to reverse the isolationist posture of fundamentalism and actively engaged the elements of western culture they opposed. Negotiating the idea of a “Christian Worldview” into a position of cultural power that laid the groundwork for the moral majority, these champions of a new protestant attitude toward the world outside church doors exerted their first influence on their nearest neighbors: fellow protestants in Mennonite, Methodist, and Pentecostal traditions. As the questions that troubled fundamentalist thinkers made inroads in these communities as well, thoughtful leaders from many American protestant communities came to be united by the struggles that were shared across the differences in history, doctrine, and practice that had previously held them apart. With rare attention to the ways in which the central ideas behind evangelicalism shifted as they were adopted by leaders across protestant faiths, Worthen creates a remarkably clear and nuanced view of the variety of white evangelicalisms. Closing with internal critiques from scholars like Mark Noll on the ways in which history, tradition, and authority are employed in intradenominational politicking and ongoing efforts to expand the borders of evangelicalism through church growth and culture war, Apostles of Reason presents a marvelously deft and cogent intellectual history of a powerful and dynamic force in American life through the twentieth century and to the present. Carl Nellis is an academic editor and writing instructor working north of Boston, where he researches contemporary American community formation around appropriations of medieval European culture. You can learn more about Carl’s work at carlnellis.wordpress.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
How did Carl Henry shape the modern evangelical movement? And what would he say to the movement today? My friend Dr. Matthew Hall joins me on the podcast today to discuss Henry, the importance of studying church history, and the contemporary evangelical movement. Dr. Hall serves as the Vice President for Academic Services at the…
How did Carl Henry shape the modern evangelical movement? And what would he say to the movement today? My friend Dr. Matthew Hall joins me on the podcast today to discuss Henry, the importance of studying church history, and the contemporary evangelical movement. Dr. Hall serves as the Vice President for Academic Services at the…
A lot has changed since the day when evangelical Protestants were faulted for being other-worldly, detached from politics and social issues. Today they seem to be one of the most publicly active groups in America. One of the most important figures in leading this change was Carl Henry. A founder the National Association of Evangelicals, of Fuller Theological Seminary, and later of Christianity Today, Henry was something of an archbishop, if not a pope, in the new evangelicalism that arose across the 1950s and ‘60s, and he made it clear that Christian social engagement was a biblical command. Yet the social engagement that Henry called for was quite partial and inadequate. That, at least, is the charge Lewis Smedes leveled in his article “Evangelicals and the Social Question,” which appeared in the Reformed Journal in February 1966.
EL DJ Loco Show March 2012 Week 1 Tracklist: 01. Snow Tha Product - Drunk Love 02. Azizz feat. Ray J. - Show You 03. Justina - Hard to the body 04. Cassie - What I Do 05. Ciara - Take Me Wit U 06. T. Plezya and Cloud Nein - Better Than Me 07. Avery Storm Feat Nelly - Supermodel 08. Lil SNS - Yellow Diamonds 09. Bobby V ft Meek Mill and 2 Chainz - Drop 10. Lore'l - Shut It Down 11. Guyana ft Ice Berg - In Love With A Boss 12. DJ Rapture ft Rikk Reighn - Bam Bam Bigelow 13. Gunplay - Jumpout 14. Pretty Gunz ft DJ Dysfunkshunal - Turn Headz (prod by Luviuz) 15. Fred The Godson ft Diddy, Meek Mill and Cory Gunz - Gettin' Money Part.2 16. Far East Movement ft Redman - Drop It Down 17. DJ Noodles ft Pitbull, Fella, Billy Blue - Everyday Allday 18. DJ Rapture ft LB - Turn Up 19. Carl Henry ft Vado - All That I Know 20. Ray J ft DJ Nasty Naz and Lambo Lux - VIP 21. Poni - I'm like rah 22. Booba ft Ryan Leslie - Fast life 23. Twiceshot - Jvois ke tu kiff ca
EL DJ Loco Show March 2012 Week 1 Tracklist: 01. Snow Tha Product - Drunk Love 02. Azizz feat. Ray J. - Show You 03. Justina - Hard to the body 04. Cassie - What I Do 05. Ciara - Take Me Wit U 06. T. Plezya and Cloud Nein - Better Than Me 07. Avery Storm Feat Nelly - Supermodel 08. Lil SNS - Yellow Diamonds 09. Bobby V ft Meek Mill and 2 Chainz - Drop 10. Lore'l - Shut It Down 11. Guyana ft Ice Berg - In Love With A Boss 12. DJ Rapture ft Rikk Reighn - Bam Bam Bigelow 13. Gunplay - Jumpout 14. Pretty Gunz ft DJ Dysfunkshunal - Turn Headz (prod by Luviuz) 15. Fred The Godson ft Diddy, Meek Mill and Cory Gunz - Gettin' Money Part.2 16. Far East Movement ft Redman - Drop It Down 17. DJ Noodles ft Pitbull, Fella, Billy Blue - Everyday Allday 18. DJ Rapture ft LB - Turn Up 19. Carl Henry ft Vado - All That I Know 20. Ray J ft DJ Nasty Naz and Lambo Lux - VIP 21. Poni - I'm like rah 22. Booba ft Ryan Leslie - Fast life 23. Twiceshot - Jvois ke tu kiff ca
EL DJ Loco Show February 2012 Week 2 Tracklist: 01. Missy Elliott - Partytime (Produced By Timbaland) 02. Gwen Stefani - Hollaback Girl 03. Diam's ft Kennedy - Parce que le monde 04. Wouilo ft Black V-Ner - On est trop jeunes 05. BOSS All stars - Freestyle 06. Psy4 de la rime - Block party 07. Factor X - Questions 2 08. Monsieur R ft Akon - Rebel Musik 09. Ray J ft DJ Nasty Naz and Lambo Lux - VIP 10. Carl Henry ft. Vado - All That I Know 11. Fred The Godson ft Diddy - Daddy Gettin Money 12. MIMS - I'm Busy 13. Romano DAKING ft Matt Houston - Appelle les pompiers 14. Rapture ft LB - Turn up 15. Big E - Transition 16. Big Sean - DANCE (A$$) 17. Drake ft Lil Wayne - The Motto 18. Tom G - Motto Freestyle 19. M.O. - Chosen One 20. Mann - Buzzin 21. Yung Berg ft YG and Mula Izzy - Back It Up (Break Em Off) 22. Bei Maejor ft J-Cole - Trouble 23. Jadakiss ft Emanny - Hold U Down 24. R.O.D. - Can't Stand You RMX 25. Noel Gourdin - Beautiful 26. Kelly Rowland ft Big Sean - Lay It On Me
EL DJ Loco Show February 2012 Week 2 Tracklist: 01. Missy Elliott - Partytime (Produced By Timbaland) 02. Gwen Stefani - Hollaback Girl 03. Diam's ft Kennedy - Parce que le monde 04. Wouilo ft Black V-Ner - On est trop jeunes 05. BOSS All stars - Freestyle 06. Psy4 de la rime - Block party 07. Factor X - Questions 2 08. Monsieur R ft Akon - Rebel Musik 09. Ray J ft DJ Nasty Naz and Lambo Lux - VIP 10. Carl Henry ft. Vado - All That I Know 11. Fred The Godson ft Diddy - Daddy Gettin Money 12. MIMS - I'm Busy 13. Romano DAKING ft Matt Houston - Appelle les pompiers 14. Rapture ft LB - Turn up 15. Big E - Transition 16. Big Sean - DANCE (A$$) 17. Drake ft Lil Wayne - The Motto 18. Tom G - Motto Freestyle 19. M.O. - Chosen One 20. Mann - Buzzin 21. Yung Berg ft YG and Mula Izzy - Back It Up (Break Em Off) 22. Bei Maejor ft J-Cole - Trouble 23. Jadakiss ft Emanny - Hold U Down 24. R.O.D. - Can't Stand You RMX 25. Noel Gourdin - Beautiful 26. Kelly Rowland ft Big Sean - Lay It On Me
EL DJ Loco Show January 2012 Week 2 Tracklist: 01. Intro - Champagne shower 02. LaRue - Hands in the air 03. Famous - Typical girl 04. Joe Budden ft Young Chris - Connect 4 05. Fred The Godson ft Diddy, Meek Mill and Cory Gunz - Gettin' Money Part.2 06. Far East Movement ft Redman - Drop It Down 07. DJ Noodles ft Pitbull, Fella, Billy Blue - Everyday Allday 08. DJ Rapture ft LB - Turn Up 09. Carl Henry ft Vado - All That I Know 10. Ray J ft DJ Nasty Naz and Lambo Lux - VIP 11. Dakeo - Red Bone 12. Bobby V - Good Girls 13. K-Major ft. Lil Chuckee - Put It On Me 14. Diggy - Copy,paste 15. JC ft Yung Joc - Hello Goodnight 16. Trevante - Be My Girl 17. AdELA Ft Lil Wayne - Just Feel It 18. Paula Campbell - The Boss 19. Keri Hilson ft. Nelly - Lose Control 20. Nikki Grier - Broke my heart 21. Rantz Davis - Yelling Out (Rough) 22. Pretty Ricky feat. Snoop Dogg and Trick Daddy - Topless 23. Jacob Latimore feat. Issa - Like 'Em All
EL DJ Loco Show January 2012 Week 2 Tracklist: 01. Intro - Champagne shower 02. LaRue - Hands in the air 03. Famous - Typical girl 04. Joe Budden ft Young Chris - Connect 4 05. Fred The Godson ft Diddy, Meek Mill and Cory Gunz - Gettin' Money Part.2 06. Far East Movement ft Redman - Drop It Down 07. DJ Noodles ft Pitbull, Fella, Billy Blue - Everyday Allday 08. DJ Rapture ft LB - Turn Up 09. Carl Henry ft Vado - All That I Know 10. Ray J ft DJ Nasty Naz and Lambo Lux - VIP 11. Dakeo - Red Bone 12. Bobby V - Good Girls 13. K-Major ft. Lil Chuckee - Put It On Me 14. Diggy - Copy,paste 15. JC ft Yung Joc - Hello Goodnight 16. Trevante - Be My Girl 17. AdELA Ft Lil Wayne - Just Feel It 18. Paula Campbell - The Boss 19. Keri Hilson ft. Nelly - Lose Control 20. Nikki Grier - Broke my heart 21. Rantz Davis - Yelling Out (Rough) 22. Pretty Ricky feat. Snoop Dogg and Trick Daddy - Topless 23. Jacob Latimore feat. Issa - Like 'Em All
EL DJ Loco Show November 2011 Week 3 Tracklist: 01. YG ft Yung Berg and Mula Izzy - Back It Up (Break Em Off) 02. Knightstalker - Countdown 03. Skillz ft Joe Tann - Love'N Hip Hop 04. The Game - Born In The Trap - clean 05. French Montana - Shot Caller(DJ Big Jeff Remix) 06. Willy Northpole - Take it to the Head 07. Tyga ft Travis Porter - Ayy Ladies 08. Tyrese ft Ludacris - Too Easy 09. Kelly Rowland ft Big Sean - Lay It On Me 10. Mazarati - LA LA LAnd 11. Slim-E ft Kevin Cossom - Runway Girl 12. Fred The Godson ft Diddy, Meek Mill and Cory Gunz - Gettin' Money Part.2 13. Far East Movement ft Redman - Drop It Down 14. DJ Noodles ft Pitbull, Fella, Billy Blue - Everyday Allday 16. Carl Henry ft Vado - All That I Know 17. Ray J ft DJ Nasty Naz and Lambo Lux - VIP 18. Black Rob - Sand To The Beach 19. Bobby Tinsley ft Malo - I feel good 20. Twice Shot - Jvois ke tu kiff ça 21. Cali Swag District - Kickback 22. Winston Warrior - Bad 4 U
EL DJ Loco Show November 2011 Week 3 Tracklist: 01. YG ft Yung Berg and Mula Izzy - Back It Up (Break Em Off) 02. Knightstalker - Countdown 03. Skillz ft Joe Tann - Love'N Hip Hop 04. The Game - Born In The Trap - clean 05. French Montana - Shot Caller(DJ Big Jeff Remix) 06. Willy Northpole - Take it to the Head 07. Tyga ft Travis Porter - Ayy Ladies 08. Tyrese ft Ludacris - Too Easy 09. Kelly Rowland ft Big Sean - Lay It On Me 10. Mazarati - LA LA LAnd 11. Slim-E ft Kevin Cossom - Runway Girl 12. Fred The Godson ft Diddy, Meek Mill and Cory Gunz - Gettin' Money Part.2 13. Far East Movement ft Redman - Drop It Down 14. DJ Noodles ft Pitbull, Fella, Billy Blue - Everyday Allday 16. Carl Henry ft Vado - All That I Know 17. Ray J ft DJ Nasty Naz and Lambo Lux - VIP 18. Black Rob - Sand To The Beach 19. Bobby Tinsley ft Malo - I feel good 20. Twice Shot - Jvois ke tu kiff ça 21. Cali Swag District - Kickback 22. Winston Warrior - Bad 4 U
EL DJ Loco Show November 2011 Week 2 Tracklist: 01. B.O.B ft Lil Wayne - Strange Clouds 02. J.Cole ft Jay-Z - Mr nice watch 03. Carl Henry ft Vado - All that I know 04. Tory Lanez ft Bun B - Slept On You 05. Belly ft Snoop Dogg - I Drink I Smoke 06. Chronik 2H - DK STORY 07. Candice Pillay ft Shawnna - Dirty Diana 08. Slim-E ft Kevin Cossom - Runway Girl 09. Famous ft Melanie Durrant - This Chick Is Crazy 10. DJ Rapture ft LB - Turn up 11. Fred The Godson ft Diddy,Meek Mill and Cory Gunz - Gettin Money Pt. II 12. YG ft Yung Berg and Mula Izzy - Back It Up (Break Em Off) 13. Roscoe Dash - Good good night 14. Big Sean ft Nicki Minaj - Dance 15. Tyga ft Travis Porter - Ayy Ladies 16. Ray Lavender ft Lil Chuckee - Summertime Love 17. Papoose - Like That (prod by Ron Browz)
EL DJ Loco Show November 2011 Week 2 Tracklist: 01. B.O.B ft Lil Wayne - Strange Clouds 02. J.Cole ft Jay-Z - Mr nice watch 03. Carl Henry ft Vado - All that I know 04. Tory Lanez ft Bun B - Slept On You 05. Belly ft Snoop Dogg - I Drink I Smoke 06. Chronik 2H - DK STORY 07. Candice Pillay ft Shawnna - Dirty Diana 08. Slim-E ft Kevin Cossom - Runway Girl 09. Famous ft Melanie Durrant - This Chick Is Crazy 10. DJ Rapture ft LB - Turn up 11. Fred The Godson ft Diddy,Meek Mill and Cory Gunz - Gettin Money Pt. II 12. YG ft Yung Berg and Mula Izzy - Back It Up (Break Em Off) 13. Roscoe Dash - Good good night 14. Big Sean ft Nicki Minaj - Dance 15. Tyga ft Travis Porter - Ayy Ladies 16. Ray Lavender ft Lil Chuckee - Summertime Love 17. Papoose - Like That (prod by Ron Browz)
EL DJ Loco Show October 2011 Week 3 Tracklist: 01. Larue - Hands in the air 02. Nappy Roots ft Samuel Christian - Hey Love 03. YG ft Yung Berg and Mula Izzy - Back It Up (Break Em Off) 04. Twiceshot - Fvois ke tu kiff ca 05. Sté Strausz ft Pegguy Tabu - Fidèle à Moi Même 06. Disiz - Bête De Bombe 4 07. Monica ft Rick Ross and Lil Kim - Anything (To Find You) 08. Mazarati - LA LA LAnd 09. T.I. ft B.o.B - We Don't Get Down Like Y'all 10. Glacierz Da'ViLLe ft N.O.R.E - YIKEZ! 11. French Montana - Shot Caller(DJ Big Jeff Remix) 12. Nikki Grier - I Need Some Help 13. Maino - That Could Be Us 14. 50 Cent ft Mary J. Blige - All Of Me 15. Famous ft Melanie Durrant - This Chick Is Crazy 16. Rick Ross - I love my b 17. Roscoe Dash - Good good night 18. OL'kainry and Jango Jack ft Youssoupha, Dany Dan and Tito Prince - Sachez le 19. Carl Henry ft Vado - All That I Know 20. Tory Lanez ft Bun B - Slept On You
EL DJ Loco Show October 2011 Week 3 Tracklist: 01. Larue - Hands in the air 02. Nappy Roots ft Samuel Christian - Hey Love 03. YG ft Yung Berg and Mula Izzy - Back It Up (Break Em Off) 04. Twiceshot - Fvois ke tu kiff ca 05. Sté Strausz ft Pegguy Tabu - Fidèle à Moi Même 06. Disiz - Bête De Bombe 4 07. Monica ft Rick Ross and Lil Kim - Anything (To Find You) 08. Mazarati - LA LA LAnd 09. T.I. ft B.o.B - We Don't Get Down Like Y'all 10. Glacierz Da'ViLLe ft N.O.R.E - YIKEZ! 11. French Montana - Shot Caller(DJ Big Jeff Remix) 12. Nikki Grier - I Need Some Help 13. Maino - That Could Be Us 14. 50 Cent ft Mary J. Blige - All Of Me 15. Famous ft Melanie Durrant - This Chick Is Crazy 16. Rick Ross - I love my b 17. Roscoe Dash - Good good night 18. OL'kainry and Jango Jack ft Youssoupha, Dany Dan and Tito Prince - Sachez le 19. Carl Henry ft Vado - All That I Know 20. Tory Lanez ft Bun B - Slept On You
EL DJ Loco Show September 2011 Week 3 Tracklist: Special Guest DJ Bobo BXL (add him on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/people/Deejay-Bobo-Bxl/1374168185 ) 01. Carl Henry ft Vado - All that I know 02. DJ Nasty Naz ft Ray - VIP 03. Ray J ft Rico Love - Bananas 04. Fred The Godson ft Diddy - Gettin money 05. MIMS - I'm busy 06. Roscoe Dash - Good night 07. Ray Lavender ft Lil Chuckee - Summertime love 08. Lil Wayne - Megaman 09. Meek Mill ft Rick Ross - I'm a boss 10. Chris Brown - Crazy 11. Fred godson ft Diddy and Meek Mill - Gettin Money 2 12. Lil Wayne ft Birdman - I got some money on me 13. Fabolous ft Trey songs - Sicker than your average 14. Red Cafe ft Omarion - We get it on 15. Travis porter ft Tyga - Ayy Ladies 16. Jadakiss ft akon - Freaky 17. Tyrese ft ludacris - Too easy 18. Jay-z ft Kanye west - Welcome to the jungle 19. Swiss Beatz ft EVE - everday coolin' 20. Estelle ft swiss beats,busta rhymes - 21. J- valentine ft chris brown and pleasure P - Up (RNB rmx) 22. Kelly Rowland ft Big Sean - Lay it on me 23. Wale ft J.Holiday - Ambicious Girl part2 24. Lil wayne ft Drake -She Will 25. Jalil ft Rick Ross and Dj Khaled - America's most wanted
EL DJ Loco Show September 2011 Week 3 Tracklist: Special Guest DJ Bobo BXL (add him on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/people/Deejay-Bobo-Bxl/1374168185 ) 01. Carl Henry ft Vado - All that I know 02. DJ Nasty Naz ft Ray - VIP 03. Ray J ft Rico Love - Bananas 04. Fred The Godson ft Diddy - Gettin money 05. MIMS - I'm busy 06. Roscoe Dash - Good night 07. Ray Lavender ft Lil Chuckee - Summertime love 08. Lil Wayne - Megaman 09. Meek Mill ft Rick Ross - I'm a boss 10. Chris Brown - Crazy 11. Fred godson ft Diddy and Meek Mill - Gettin Money 2 12. Lil Wayne ft Birdman - I got some money on me 13. Fabolous ft Trey songs - Sicker than your average 14. Red Cafe ft Omarion - We get it on 15. Travis porter ft Tyga - Ayy Ladies 16. Jadakiss ft akon - Freaky 17. Tyrese ft ludacris - Too easy 18. Jay-z ft Kanye west - Welcome to the jungle 19. Swiss Beatz ft EVE - everday coolin' 20. Estelle ft swiss beats,busta rhymes - 21. J- valentine ft chris brown and pleasure P - Up (RNB rmx) 22. Kelly Rowland ft Big Sean - Lay it on me 23. Wale ft J.Holiday - Ambicious Girl part2 24. Lil wayne ft Drake -She Will 25. Jalil ft Rick Ross and Dj Khaled - America's most wanted
EL DJ Loco Show September 2011 Week 1 Tracklist: 01. Mann - Buzzin 02. Yung Berg ft YG and Mula Izzy - Back It Up (Break Em Off) 03. Bei Maejor ft J-Cole - Trouble 04. Jadakiss ft Emanny - Hold U Down 05. R.O.D. - Can't Stand You RMX 06. Noel Gourdin - Beautiful 07. Kelly Rowland ft Big Sean - Lay It On Me 08. D-Pryde - Mr. Prizzy 09. Cristion Dior ft Remo The Hitmaker - Are You Ready 10. Brielle Pogue - My Ish Is Hot 11. Keri Hilson ft Nelly - Lose Control 12. Styles P ft Jadakiss - It's Ok 13. T. Neal ft Teairra Mari and Rico Love - It's All Me 14. Ray Lavender ft Lil Chuckee - Summer Time love 15. Estelle ft Swizz Beatz - DJ Play the beat 16. Six Reasons - Hello Goodbye 17. MIMS - I'm Busy 18. Acafool - DUI (Duweey) 19. Ray J ft Rico Love - Bananas 20. Karina Bradley ft Meek Mill - Never Mind Love 21. Fred The Godson ft Diddy, Meek Mill and Cory Gunz - Gettin' Money Part.2 22. Far East Movement ft Redman - Drop It Down 23. DJ Noodles ft Pitbull, Fella, Billy Blue - Everyday Allday 24. DJ Rapture ft LB - Turn Up 25. Carl Henry ft Vado - All That I Know 26. Ray J ft DJ Nasty Naz and Lambo Lux - VIP
EL DJ Loco Show September 2011 Week 1 Tracklist: 01. Mann - Buzzin 02. Yung Berg ft YG and Mula Izzy - Back It Up (Break Em Off) 03. Bei Maejor ft J-Cole - Trouble 04. Jadakiss ft Emanny - Hold U Down 05. R.O.D. - Can't Stand You RMX 06. Noel Gourdin - Beautiful 07. Kelly Rowland ft Big Sean - Lay It On Me 08. D-Pryde - Mr. Prizzy 09. Cristion Dior ft Remo The Hitmaker - Are You Ready 10. Brielle Pogue - My Ish Is Hot 11. Keri Hilson ft Nelly - Lose Control 12. Styles P ft Jadakiss - It's Ok 13. T. Neal ft Teairra Mari and Rico Love - It's All Me 14. Ray Lavender ft Lil Chuckee - Summer Time love 15. Estelle ft Swizz Beatz - DJ Play the beat 16. Six Reasons - Hello Goodbye 17. MIMS - I'm Busy 18. Acafool - DUI (Duweey) 19. Ray J ft Rico Love - Bananas 20. Karina Bradley ft Meek Mill - Never Mind Love 21. Fred The Godson ft Diddy, Meek Mill and Cory Gunz - Gettin' Money Part.2 22. Far East Movement ft Redman - Drop It Down 23. DJ Noodles ft Pitbull, Fella, Billy Blue - Everyday Allday 24. DJ Rapture ft LB - Turn Up 25. Carl Henry ft Vado - All That I Know 26. Ray J ft DJ Nasty Naz and Lambo Lux - VIP
EL DJ Loco Show August 2011 Week 3 Tracklist: 01. Dakeo - Red Bone 02. Bobby V - Good Girls 03. K-Major ft. Lil Chuckee - Put It On Me 04. Diggy - Copy,paste 05. JC ft Yung Joc - Hello Goodnight 06. Trevante - Be My Girl 07. AdELA - Just Feel It Ft Lil Wayne 08. Paula Campbell - The Boss 09. Keri Hilson ft. Nelly - Lose Control 10. Nikki Grier - Broke my heart 11. Rantz Davis - Yelling Out (Rough) 12. Pretty Ricky feat. Snoop Dogg and Trick Daddy - Topless 13. YG ft Yung Berg and Mula Izzy - Back It Up (Break Em Off) 14. Bobby Tinsley ft. Malo - I feel good 15. Winston Warrior - Bad 4 U 16. Pleasure P - Hush 17. Lupe Fiasco - Out Of My Head Ft. Trey Songz 18. ROD - Cant Stand You 19. KGB - Rockstar barbie 20. Brielle Pogue - My Ish Is Hot 21. Monica ft. Rick Ross and Lil Kim - Anything (To Find You) 22. Ray J ft DJ Nasty Naz and Lambo Lux - VIP 23. Carl Henry ft. Vado - All That I Know 24. Fred The Godson ft Diddy - Daddy Gettin Money 25. MIMS - I'm Busy 26. Romano DAKING ft Matt Houston - Appelle les pompiers 27. Rapture ft LB - Turn up
EL DJ Loco Show August 2011 Week 3 Tracklist: 01. Dakeo - Red Bone 02. Bobby V - Good Girls 03. K-Major ft. Lil Chuckee - Put It On Me 04. Diggy - Copy,paste 05. JC ft Yung Joc - Hello Goodnight 06. Trevante - Be My Girl 07. AdELA - Just Feel It Ft Lil Wayne 08. Paula Campbell - The Boss 09. Keri Hilson ft. Nelly - Lose Control 10. Nikki Grier - Broke my heart 11. Rantz Davis - Yelling Out (Rough) 12. Pretty Ricky feat. Snoop Dogg and Trick Daddy - Topless 13. YG ft Yung Berg and Mula Izzy - Back It Up (Break Em Off) 14. Bobby Tinsley ft. Malo - I feel good 15. Winston Warrior - Bad 4 U 16. Pleasure P - Hush 17. Lupe Fiasco - Out Of My Head Ft. Trey Songz 18. ROD - Cant Stand You 19. KGB - Rockstar barbie 20. Brielle Pogue - My Ish Is Hot 21. Monica ft. Rick Ross and Lil Kim - Anything (To Find You) 22. Ray J ft DJ Nasty Naz and Lambo Lux - VIP 23. Carl Henry ft. Vado - All That I Know 24. Fred The Godson ft Diddy - Daddy Gettin Money 25. MIMS - I'm Busy 26. Romano DAKING ft Matt Houston - Appelle les pompiers 27. Rapture ft LB - Turn up
#42. The disappointing draw with Sunderland a fortnight ago, Wayne Rooney's ongoing problems and Glazernomics. We discuss Owen Hargreaves' mooted comeback and look forward to the upcoming fixtures with West Bromwich Albion and Bursaspor. Finally, the pod sides with former Dipper Danny Murphy as we talk Nigel de Jong, Carl Henry and dirty tacklers of the Premier League.No Question About That is available on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Stitcher, Spotify, YouTube, Amazon Music and all good podcast apps. We really appreciate your support. Please hit that subscribe button, leave a rating and write us a review! Talk to us on Twitter and Instagram. No Question About That is produced by the award-winning Tom Jenkins. If you are interested in supporting the show and accessing some cool rewards, check out our crowdfunding page and become a Patron!
We are in the second week of our study of the book of Hebrews. And last week we looked at the beginning of the book and at the end of the book to get an understanding of what exactly this book is and why it plays such a strategic role in biblical theology, in the structure and in the layout of the New Testament, in the context of Scripture. And we looked at the beginning and the end, looking at this incredible Christological, doxological, theological way the book begins and then its pastoral application at the end. But now we're going to go back to the very first verse. And as we go through the book verse by verse, we're reminded that we do that because we don't want to miss anything. Now, when we say don't want to miss anything, that doesn't mean that any study or any teacher can plum the infinite depths of this book. It does mean that we want to encounter every word, we want to take seriously every verse, we want to put it in its context and we want to take a section of Scripture every time we are together, that allows us to walk through the book in such a way that we are reminded that it has a beginning and an end, even as one book, that it fits within the total context of the New Testament, the total context of Scripture, so that we put each verse, indeed, each word, in its proper biblical context. We begin reading in Hebrews chapter 1 verse 1. “Long ago...” That's interesting. You know, some of the books of the Bible begin with ways we can easily understand chronologically, “In the beginning”—Genesis, John. And you understand that a Gospel like Matthew begins with a very important chronological beginning. So does, after a greeting, the Gospel of Luke. But what we have here in the book of Hebrews is a reminder from the very first verse that the writer of the book of Hebrews, inspired by the Holy Spirit, is going to put this story, the truth about Jesus Christ, in a context. It's going to begin somewhere, and it doesn't begin in Bethlehem. Not yet. It doesn't begin in Jerusalem. Not yet. It begins long ago. “Long ago, at many times and in many ways, God spoke to our fathers by the prophets”. Now immediately, this puts the context in a very interesting light. The writer of the book of Hebrew says, if you're going to understand the story of Jesus, if you're going to understand the meaning of the cross of Christ, if you're going to understand the Gospel, you're going to have to understand that it comes in a context of God having spoken and now speaking. This is not God's first word. The Gospel does not come in a vacuum. It doesn't come out of the blue. The Gospel has a history. The Gospel has a period of preparation. The Gospel is God speaking, after He has already been speaking. What we now have in Christ, we're going to come to understand, is the definitive final word, but God has spoken before. Now, we were reminded as we began our study of the book of Hebrews, and we looked at the context, that the book Hebrews has the name Hebrews for more than one reason. One reason is that it is at great pains to help Christians to understand the relationship between the Gospel and the Old Testament. How do we understand the relationship between Christ and the prophets? How do we understand the relationship between the Gospel and the law? How do we understand what is new without understanding it terms of what was old, long ago? It's an indefinite chronological reference here. It is pointing backwards and it's pointing backwards a long way, centuries. Where? To win, and “many times and in many ways, God spoke to our fathers by the prophets.” Now here, the writer of the book of Hebrews does something very subtle and we need to catch it very quickly. He uses two terms here that to the Jewish mind are absolutely essential, absolutely essential—the fathers and the prophets. If you were in Judaism in the first century, and you were going to make any kind of argument that was theological in any way, your point of reference, your authority, those whom you would cite by individual reference, by specific text, and by general authority, would be the fathers and the prophets.Now the prepositions here are important. God spoke “to our fathers by the prophets”. Well, the first thing we have here encountered face to face directly in this text is the God who speaks. And again and again, we come back to the fact that this is also God's grace to us. When we are asked as Christians, what does the grace of God mean, we immediately go to Christ. We immediately go to salvation. We immediately go to the grace, the unmarried favor that is extended to us in Christ, by the Father. And that, of course, is quintessentially right. But we need to remember that there was grace before Christ, that is before the incarnation. There was grace before the actualization of the Gospel. There was grace in God speaking. You'll remember, my favorite definition of revelation comes from Carl Henry, my late mentor in theology, who always said, “Remember, that revelation is God's gracious”, there's the word, grace, “self-disclosure whereby He forfeits His own personal privacy that we might know Him.” It's an act of generosity that God speaks. It's an act of grace that God speaks. If God did not speak, we could not find Him, we could not know Him. If God did not speak, we would be in darkness rather than light. If God did not speak, we would be left in ignorance rather than knowledge. If God did not speak, we would be absolutely hopeless. And God spoke “Long ago”, as the writer of the book of Hebrews begins, “at many times”, not just one time, “at many times and in many ways”. And there were lots of ways. The forms of God's revelation are many, as Paul makes very clear in Romans chapter 1. Before you even get to God speaking, in terms of special revelation or direct revelation, you have God's disclosure of Himself, even in what we would call general revelation or in nature, God speaks even in nature. But as Paul makes very clear, even though in nature, He has revealed even His invisible attributes, because of our sinfulness we cannot see it. We'll distort it. We are natural born idolators. We'll take that knowledge that God gave us in creation, and we'll turn it into a form of, as Paul says, worshiping the creature rather than the Creator. That's not just about someone else, that's about all of us. We are natural born idolators. That is what we see in the mirror—a would be idolator, but for the grace of God.But the speaking that the writer book of Hebrews is talking about here is not in nature. This is special revelation he's talking about. This is direct revelation. This is verbal revelation. This is God speaking to the fathers, as to the patriarchs. God spoke to the patriarchs, “to the fathers by the prophets”. The prophets were those to whom God spoke. The prophets were those who were the human vessels of God's self-revelation. God spoke in many ways. As we recall, He spoke through Balaam's donkey. He spoke through a bush that burned and was not consumed. He spoke through a mountain that shook with fire and was surrounded by smoke. He spoke through words, written on tablets of stone. But quintessentially He spoke through the prophets. And in Israel, in Judaism, in the first century, the authority of the law and the prophets, these were absolute. The writer of the book of Hebrews authorizes, immediately confirms, God's revelation through the prophets. It was a true revelation. It was an authentic revelation. It was an inerrant and totally true and trustworthy revelation. But, as consummate as is the authority of the prophets, as clear as was their message, as authoritative as was this revelation, it was not the final word. It was pointing—all prophecy was pointing, all the prophets were pointing towards the definitive word. And thus, you have the turn, “Long ago, at many times and in many ways, God spoke to our fathers by the prophets, but in these last days he has spoken to us by his Son, whom he appointed the heir of all things, through whom also he created the world.” Now, in one sense, what we have here, much like in Genesis 1:1, or in John 1:1, here in Hebrews 1:1 we have an entire biblical theology. It's all right here. Did you notice how much is in there? We have incarnation, we have revelation, we have beginning, we have the creation, as we shall see, that Christ is the one through whom the world was created. He is now the heir of all things. But the crucial turn comes with the word “but”—“But in these last days”. So you have two different periods of time contrasted here. You have the long ago, and in these last days. “Long ago…” We wouldn't know how to tell the story of Jesus without long ago. We wouldn't know where to start. It wouldn't make a whole lot of sense, would it, if we just pointed to Bethlehem and said, “That's where it started.” We don't know how the world came to be. We don't have a clue how all this happened. We don't even why He needed to come, but He came. That's good news. Well, it would be good news, but we would not understand the good news. We understand the Gospel in the context of what came before. We understand God speaking through Christ, the Son, in the context of how God spoke through the prophets. The biblical theology that we need to always have in mind is very, very simple. It's promise and fulfillment. You have two words. If you understand those two words, you really have a very important and substantial biblical theology. The two words are simply promise and fulfillment. The Old Testament promise, the New Testament fulfillment. The prophets' promise, Christ fulfillment. The law promise, Gospel fulfillment. These things happened, says Matthew, in order that the Scriptures might be fulfilled—promise and fulfillment. “These are they,” said Christ “that testify of Me.” Promise and fulfillment. And here you have it in Hebrews chapter 1 verse 1, “Long ago,” there's one time, “but in these last days”, this is the new time. There's a new age, a decisive break in history. It's the dividing line between what was promised and now what is realized. The interesting phrase “in these last days” comes about in Scripture again and again. There's a sense in which we are all Latter-day Saints, in the sense that we are living in these last days, these latter days, these recent days, these new days. There's a quickening of history now with the incarnation, We're rooted in the old, we are the inheritors of the old. As Paul says in Romans, we are the branch, we Gentiles, who are grafted onto this tree. But we are in the new. One of the tensions of the Christian life is understanding what it means to live out of the context of the old, but in the context of the new, to live in the context of promise that is now fulfilled. We don't live in the law, but the Gospel comes only in the context of fulfilling the law. We don't live only by the prophets, but we're instructed by the prophets even to understand how we are to understand Christ. “In these last days he has spoken to us by his Son.” This is a decisive difference. This is quintessential. This is the writer of the book of Hebrew saying, “Yes, absolutely. God spoke through the prophets. He spoke through the prophets in many ways, at many times, to our fathers.” This is the complete legitimation of the Old Testament. This is the complete authorization, the recognition of the authority of the prophets and of the patriarchs. This is the writer of the book of Hebrews saying, “This is our story. This is Christ's story.” Christ's story is not new as in having no connection to the old, but at the same time, it is absolutely new.“In these last days.” God is not speaking merely through the prophets, He's speaking through a Son. Now that phrase “a Son”, with the singular, is to set the category difference. It's not to imply there is more than one Son—that's definitively answered in Scripture. It's just to say, there's a difference between a prophet and a Son. It's a qualitative difference that we can immediately understand. And in this case, what we're going to find in the first few verses of Hebrews chapter one, is that this Son is defined in a way no human son can be defined, in reference to the Father. It's a categorical change. He is no longer... The Father is no longer merely speaking through the prophets in many times and in many ways, He is now speaking through a son, His Son, the Son. As John says, μονογενής, the only one of His kind, the only Son. You know, speaking through a Son. Of course, Jesus tells a parable about a distant landowner who sends emissaries to those who are keeping his vineyard. And then finally he sends his son. And, of course, the wicked vineyard workers kill him. It's a categorical difference between a servant and a son. It's a categorical difference between a prophet and a son. “He has spoken to us by his Son.” Now look at these next phrases, “whom he appointed the heir of all things”. Now that's important. The relationship between a father and a son is one of the most easily understandable relationships. The son's identity is derived from his father. It is from the father that the son receives his name. He is, and always ever will be, his father's son. But one of the blessings of sonship is being the heir of the father. And in this case, this infinite Father has one Son. He is “the heir of all things”. And this is very important because the writer of the book of Hebrews, at the very beginning, is using traditional understandings that his primarily Hebrew Jewish first audience would easily understand. This Son is invested with everything. He is invested with full authority. This is where the singular is very important too—a Son. This is not a Father with many sons of this category. Only one, the only one of His kind. If you're going to do business with this Father, you're going to do business with this Son. And indeed, as we come to understand, if you're going to know this Father, you're going to know this Father through His Son. “In these last days he has spoken to us by his Son, whom he appointed the heir of all things.”The next phrase, “through whom also he created the world.” Now this is something again, that would come… It comes familiar to us because we're so familiar with this. It comes with the ring of what we expect. We know that “In the beginning was the Word … and the Word was God.” We know the full text. “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.” We come to understand from John chapter one, verse one, as it ties back to Genesis one, verse one, that He is the one who created all things, nothing that came to be came to be except by His creation. You know, one of the most essential parts of promise and fulfillment, we have to keep in mind, essential to a biblical theology, and that is why the doctrine of creation is so important. Hear me on this. If we do not have the right doctrine of creation, we will not have the right doctrine of redemption. Creation and Gospel are inextricably linked. The God who creates is the God who redeems. They aren't two different gods—they are one God.The Son who redeems is also the Son who creates. The world is His. “He came unto his own,” says John. This is His world. He was the agent of creation. We are told in Genesis that God spoke and it happened—verbal creation. And then we have in John one, the recognition that Christ is the Logos. He is the speech of God. And what we have here, He is the Word. He is the agent through whom the world was made. Not only is He the heir of all things, it is through the Son that the Father created the cosmos, the world. Now, again, there's an entire biblical theology there. You talk about a promise and fulfillment. Now you have creation and redemption in one agent who is the Son of the Father, the heir of all things. But not only that, what we have as we begin verse three, is an exposition of what this Son, who this Son, how this Son, is all that the Father has for us. “He is the radiance of the glory of God”. Now this idea of radiance, it goes back to the very idea, the shekinah glory of God. God's glory is both visible and invisible, but the visible expression of God's glory is that which burst forth in creation. The creation cannot help but declare the glory of God, even the heavens are telling the glory of God. It is a glory that shines forth and quintessentially it shines forth in special revelations of God, in theophanies, where the brilliance of the glory of God, this blinding brilliance, is just a reminder to us, a sign unto us, of the infinite glory of God, of what it means for God to be absolute light. Radiance is one of those words that then becomes a picture to us. Looking to Christ is to see the radiance of the glory of God. But more than that, He is “the exact imprint of his nature”. You know, if you're talking to someone and you have a pretty good idea that they misunderstand, you're going to be at pains to choose your words very carefully. The writer of the book of Hebrews is aware that as many Hebrews, many Jews, in particular Hellenistic Jews in the first century, are trying to understand the Gospel, they're trying to understand Christ. Well, you can read these opening verses to the book of Hebrews and see there are some misunderstandings that are being corrected here. And you know, one of the things that is sobering to us is that almost every ancient heresy emerges in every generation. Almost every ancient misunderstanding of the Gospel emerges in our own times. Jesus isn't like God. He doesn't merely in some indirect, but helpful way, show us God. When we see Christ, we do not see, please hear me. Evangelical preachers and evangelical Christians often misspake, misspeak—how's that for parable! Evangelical preachers and Christians often misspeak by saying something that sounds almost right. When you see Christ, you see what the Father is like. Fail! The Scripture does not say that. Scripture says, when you see the Son, you see the Father. It is not merely what the Father is like. We do not look to Christ and then draw an inference the Father must be like that. And here is where this divine Son is different than a human son. No human son is the exact representation of his father. Trust me on this. I can prove this as both father and son. No son, no human son, is the exact representation of his father. He's his father's son, but not the exact representation. Christ is the exact representation. A little footnote here. The essential function of the virgin conception of Christ is multiple. But a part of it is in explaining how the Son, this Son, is the exact representation of His Father. He is exactly the Father. You look to Him, you see the Father. Like the opening to Colossians and it's great Christological hymn, He is the Icon, and we don't believe in icons you hang on the wall. We believe in one Icon who was hung on a cross. You look to the Son, you see the Father. Now this must, it indeed must have been stated to make clear where there had been a lack of clarity. Like in Paul's letters, you don't have to scratch very hard on the surface to see where clarification is being made. And we know from both Paul's letters and the general epistles in the context of the New Testament, and from the ministry of Christ Himself was reflected in the Gospels, that there were many people who got pretty close to knowing who Christ was. They had a Christology, they had an understanding of Christ that got them into the neighborhood of who He is. In the neighborhood's not good enough. And almost Orthodox Christology isn't good enough. Believing that Christ is in some way divine, isn't good enough. Believing that He shows us what the Father is like, isn't good enough. No, the Gospel hangs on the fact that He is the Son who is “the radiance of the glory of God and the exact imprint” of the Father's nature. And He's powerful—“he upholds the universe by the word of His power.” Now again, most Christians, most believers, I think, never really come to terms with this. It is repeated in Scripture over and over and over again. The total context of the Bible and the Old and New Testaments is that it is God who brought all things into being, and He is the power who holds all things together. You know, the great holy grail, so to speak, in physics is a unified field theory, a complete theory of how all the forces and energies in the cosmos actually work to hold all things together. Well, here is the short and definitive version of the universal field theory: “In the beginning, God…” He holds all things together by the power of His hand. If God ever ceased to will, that the universe would exist, it would cease to exist. It is He who holds all things together. The power to create is also the power to preserve, the power to control, the power to bring it to its end.But even as we are told, not only in this text, but again, definitively in this text that it is through Christ the world was created, we are also now told that it is Christ who holds all things together. He is the power who holds all things together. “He upholds the universe by the word of his power.” Martin Luther, the great reformer in the 16th century, was once asked a question, and we have so much of this because of his table talk. He was once asked a question by a young theology student and Luther said, “I think an angel would be scared to ask that question, which means you certainly better be!” There's certain questions and we don't ask. There are questions in the inner Trinitarian relationship between the Son and the Father, we don't dare to ask. Even the angels wouldn't dare to ask. It's in that privacy of God is not revealed to us. But what is revealed to us, is that the Father, through the Son, exercises creation and the upholding of the world, By the way, and you've heard me say this before, but as a seminary president, I just have to love it, and as a former seminary student. Luther was once asked by a seminary student, as they were sharing a meal, “Father Martin, what was God doing before He created the heavens and the earth?” And you gotta give Luther credit. He never missed a beat. He said, “I do know He was creating Hell for impetuous theology students!” All right, you gotta love Luther. Christ “is the radiance of the glory of God and the exact imprint of his nature, and he upholds the universe by the word of his power. After making purification for sins…” Isn't that a summary of the Gospel that just comes now out of the blue? Creation, all power, now making purification. Again, a Jewish context—purification is the issue here. That might not be the first word we would think of, but it is the word that fits the Jewish context in terms of promise and fulfillment. Quintessentially here, He has made purification for sins. That is atonement. After making atonement, and much about that is going to be the exposition of the book of Hebrews. “After making purification for sins”—so here you have a timeline—"he sat down at the right hand of the Majesty on high.” As the Apostles Creed said, “He ascended into Heaven, and sitteth at the right hand of God. the Father almighty…” The place of power, the place of privilege, the place of authority. “…having become as much superior to angels as the name he has inherited is more excellent than theirs.” This is interesting. When you read the prologue to the Gospel of John, you're not really dealing with this. You read the prologue to the Scripture and the doctrine of creation and the story of the Bible and Genesis 1, you're not dealing with this. What are we dealing with here? We're dealing here with a theological context that is specifically addressed by the book of Hebrews in a way that is extremely helpful to us. In first entry Judaism, especially in Hellenistic Judaism, there was a huge interest in angels. There was the recognition that angels were messengers of God. There was incredible speculation about how to authorize understanding if it was, indeed, an angel who spoke. There was an incredible attentiveness to what messages might come by an angel. Angels were a focus of such speculation that It was considered that to be an angel, was to have the privilege of reflecting this shekinah glory of God in an infinite and eternal way. There's an understanding that angels were created beings, but they were created beings of incredible spiritual privilege.The angels spend all their time reflecting the glory of God among the bene-Elohim in the throne room of God. They're deputized at times to arrive as God's messenger, and they play, and have played, an essential role. So in first entry Judaism there's a lot of attention to angels.There's a sense in which the angel must be the greatest spiritual being. To be an angel, to be the privileged messenger of God, to be the one who bathes in the glory of God—that must be a special privilege. And yes, it must be. But, as we shall see when we continue this study next time, the writer of the book of Hebrews is at tremendous pains. He goes to extraordinary links to say, “God never said of any angel, what he says of His Son.” The angels do reveal, even as the prophets revealed, but they don't redeem. The Father never said of an angel, “You are my Son.” So, as we begin the study of the book of Hebrews verse by verse and word by word, we come at the end of the first four verses to be told that Christ has inherited, that is He has been given a name, that's “more excellent than theirs,” because He is much superior to angels.It was certainly the case, and we know this from sources outside the book of Hebrews and outside the New Testament, that first century Judaism was focused on the superiority of angels. And along comes the one who is not an angel, but the one whom the angels announce, the one whose birth the angels attend. He is not merely an angel. The difference between getting the identity of Christ right, and almost right, is actually infinite. The writer of the book of Hebrews, inspired by the Holy Spirit, has given us this incredible Christological hymn that begins this book, which is so rich in theological content, lest we misunderstand who Christ is. In our own day, in our own times, there are multiple misunderstandings of who Christ is. And as we come to the end of these first four verses, we are reminded that to get this wrong is to get everything wrong. He is the exact “radiance of the glory of God and the exact imprint of his nature”. He “upholds the universe by the word of his power.” He has made “purification for sins”. He now sits down “at the right hand of the Majesty on high”. And we know this because “Long ago … God spoke to the fathers by the prophets” many times in many ways, but he's now spoken to us by a Son.Let's pray. Our Father, we are so thankful that we can pray this prayer in the name of Jesus Christ, the Son. Father, we're so thankful for this introduction to the book of Hebrews, these first four verses. And as it sets the stage for everything that will follow, Father, we pray that Your Holy Spirit will apply these words to our heart, that we be conformed to the image of your Son, the Lord Jesus Christ, the exact representation of Your nature and the radiance of Your glory. Father, may we live in that glory, to Your glory, this week. We pray in the name of Jesus Christ, our Lord. Amen.You can find Dr. Mohler's other Line by Line sermons here.Follow Dr. Mohler:X | Instagram | Facebook | YouTubeFor more information on The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, go to sbts.edu.For more information on Boyce College, just go to BoyceCollege.com.
Well, this morning, we're beginning our study in the book of Hebrews. And as we begin our study, of the book of Hebrews, some intriguing questions will come immediately to mind. Questions that are unique to this book, and that are different than any set of questions that we address in any other book in the New Testament. There are peculiarities about the book of Hebrews that immediately come to our mind when we ask some basic questions about: for whom it was written, who were the first readers, who wrote it, when exactly was it written, and what was the context of its writing? When you read the letters of the apostle Paul, for example, there's a unique context. There's a discerned audience. There is a clear understanding of how this letter came to be in the life and ministry of the apostle Paul.When we read the gospels, similarly, there is a context. There are Authorial issues. There is the issue of the original audience. We understand this, in the book of Acts, similarly. Certainly, the book of Revelation is used in such a powerful way by John, the apostle, and the vision that he received on the island of Patmos. But in the book of Hebrews, we encounter a book that is so rich with necessary theological biblical data for us, a book that gives us so much of our understanding of the gospel. And we know very little about the book, we know very little about who wrote it or to whom it was first written, or the context of its writing in order to get into those questions. I want us actually to read from the text. This morning, as we begin our study in the book of Hebrews, we're going to do something a bit unusual, and that is we're going to begin and end it in the compress of just a few moments.Actually, I'm sure there are many Sundays out before us in the book of Hebrews. But I want us both to look at the beginning and the end of this book together. So, we'll begin in Hebrews 1:1-4. “Long ago, at many times and in many ways, God spoke to our fathers by the prophets, but in these last days he has spoken to us by his Son, whom he appointed the heir of all things, through whom also he created the world. He is the radiance of the glory of God and the exact imprint of his nature, and he upholds the universe by the word of his power. After making purification for sins, he sat down at the right hand of the Majesty on high, having become as much superior to angels as the name he has inherited is more excellent than theirs.”Those of course are just the first four verses of chapter one of the book of Hebrews. And what we notice immediately is that in the book of Hebrews, we dove right into the deep end of the doctrinal pool. Whereas with Paul's letters we have, in general, as the norm, a greeting, a salutation, some words of encouragement and exhortation, perhaps even an early word of correction. But in the book of Hebrews, we have this immediacy of going into the deepest issues of the Christian faith.As a matter of fact, we are given a clue about the importance of the book of Hebrews in terms of how it begins. We read, “Long ago, at many times and in many ways, God spoke to our fathers.” There's an immediate recognition here that the church has fathers. There is a patrimony here. There is ancestry to the Christian faith. That ancestry is Jewish.We have to look back to Israel and we look back to the Old Testament in order to understand the necessary context for the gospel of the Lord, Jesus Christ. And yet one of the greatest difficulties for the church, one of the greatest difficulties for Christians throughout the ages has been to look to the entirety of scripture. From the Old Testament to the New Testament, Christians look to discover an adequate and faithful understanding of how they are to read and understand the Old Testament.Now, the book is entitled Hebrews, or to the Hebrews. It is identified as a letter in the subscript to the title as is found in the most ancient documents. So, it is an epistle or a letter. It's a letter much like what we would find from the apostle Paul. Although, as we said, it doesn't have the same kind of structure.Well, at least it doesn't have the same kind of structure at the beginning. It does have a very similar structure as we shall see at the end. But at the beginning, there is this dive into the deep, into the pool. When I read the opening verses to the book of Hebrews, my mind immediately goes to two very different books. The first of these is Genesis. We have a chronological reference in Hebrews, “Long ago and many times, and in many ways, God spoke to our fathers.” It's the kind of declaration we find in the very first verse of scripture. “In the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth.” Did you ever notice that the Bible doesn't have a lengthy preface or introduction? That in the book of Genesis we're right into it immediately? Here's the entirety of the truth claim of theism, right here at the very beginning, Genesis 1:1 establishes the truth claims. And the very first few words of the scriptures, that there is a God and that He has created all. That idea is similar to the Prologue of John's Gospel. My mind goes there immediately. John is in many ways, the New Testament twin verse to Genesis 1:1. When we come to John 1:1, we are told, “In the beginning was the Word, and the word was with God, and the word was God.”We are also told that he was the Creator, the agent of creation. “All things were made through him, and without him was not any thing made that was made.”Now we come to Hebrews 1:1. “Long ago, at many times. And in many ways, God spoke to our fathers.” What are we to do with the Old Testament? Christians have struggled with this. We know that there are at least two disastrously wrong ways of understanding how Christians are to read the Old Testament.The first, disastrously wrong way for Christians to read the Old Testament, is to read it as if it's someone else's book. There is the temptation that comes to the church. And as a matter of fact, it sometimes reflects the way we describe ourselves when we describe a Baptist church. When we say, “What are you?” We seek to be a New Testament church. What we mean by that of course, is that we are grounded upon the gospel of Jesus Christ as is revealed in the New Testament. It also means that we're seeking to be a church that is ordered in accordance with the pattern for the church, for our ecclesiology that is set forth in the New Testament. But there's a danger. Anytime we say, “We're a new Testament church,” that can insinuate, that our Bible is the New Testament. It begins with Matthew. But our Bible is not just the New Testament. It begins with Genesis.At the end of the book of Romans in the final chapters, Paul tells us that the Old Testament was given to the church for our encouragement. In our knowledge, there is no way you can understand the gospel of Jesus Christ if you don't understand the Old Testament. There is no way we can come to understand the new covenant unless we understand the old covenant. The first disastrously wrong way, the church has looked at the Old Testament is to dismiss it. To say, “It's not for us. It's not to us. It's not binding upon us. This is a book, a collection of books that is Jewish.”Marcian, one of the most famous heretics of the church said that the God of the Old Testament is not the God of the New Testament. Very early on in the Christian Church, there arose the heresy that the Old Testament isn't addressed to us. That is, it's not our story. And the suggestion is even that there is a severe theological distinction in the presentation of God between the Old Testament and the New Testament. The early church very quickly came to smell the sniff of heresy. This is the aroma of deadly error. But that very idea has come back.You will find theologians today, routinely on the liberal side, dismiss the Old Testament as presenting a crude and rudimentary understanding of God and theology. That's disastrous. Equally disastrous, although less ideological, as the approach taken by many Christians who simply say, “I don't understand the Old Testament. It seems alien to me. I don't know what to do with the old Testament. So, I'll just lean into the New Testament.” That is the first disastrous way Christians look to the Old Testament.There is a Second disastrous way that Christians look to the Old Testament and it's equal and opposite. That is, we assume that we find our primary grounding in the Old Testament. And that is not. So that is the sense in which it's healthy to say, we're a new Testament church. We are New Testament people. We are a new covenant people, but when we look back to the covenant of old, we do not look back with resentment or with a dismissive attitude, but rather we are to look back with gratitude to the realization that the old covenant was a necessary context for the new. As Jesus himself made very clear, our Lord did not repudiate the Old Testament nor the old covenant. Rather he, by his perfect obedience, perfectly fulfilled the old covenant. He perfectly fulfilled the Old Testament and it still speaks to us.So, who were the original recipients of this letter? It's addressed to Hebrews. So, our first thought is it'd be addressed to Jewish people. That doesn't exactly fit the letter. This assumption doesn't exactly fit for a couple of reasons that I will demonstrate as we'll go verse by verse through the book.Early in the church, the suggestion that this might be a letter addressed to those who formerly had been Jewish priests. The audience may have converted as priests from Judaism to Christianity. There were those who were of the tribe of Levi. They were priests. They had their identity and their function in the time of the old covenant as the priests of Israel. So how are they to understand the gospel? Well, what we have in the book of Hebrew is a massive, symphonic display of the fulfillment of the Levitical priesthood in and by Christ. But, you know, as tempting as it is to think, maybe in terms of some of the technicalities, what we have here is a letter to Jewish priests who have now become believers. That's just too unique, and particularly for the audience to fit the totality of this book.There are some interesting clues in this book. It's written obviously to people who have a knowledge of the Old Testament. Not just a little bit of knowledge, but a great deal of knowledge of the Old Testament. These persons have a knowledge of what is called “Hellenistic Judaism”. The references within the book of Hebrews are to the Septuagint, rather than to the Hebrew Old Testament. So, it's likely that this was written to a cosmopolitan audience made up, at least in part, of Jews who were Hellenized, when they were Hellenized. That meant that they had become a part of their Greco-Roman empire. Indeed, Greek was their primary language. And there are only two cities that fit that category. Those two cities are Alexandria in Egypt and Rome.From the very beginning, the church's encounter with the book of Hebrews, the suggestions have come that this was written to Christians living in Alexandria, or in Rome. And one of the clues internally to Alexandria, is that the most famous Hellenized Jew of Alexandria, was a man by the name of Philo. There are unsighted references to Philo within the book of Hebrews. But there are equally valid arguments for why it may well be this addressed to Hellenized Jews who were part of the Christian Church in Rome. The bottom line, however, is that it's given to the church of the Lord Jesus Christ. It's addressed to all of us.It's not just written in order that those who had been Jewish priests can now find their understanding of how the political priesthood is fulfilled, in Christ and by Christ. It's not even just to early Christians who may have had the background of Hellenistic Judaism. Hebrews is given to all of us because it is incumbent upon all of us as Christians to come to an understanding of how we are to read the Old Testament; To understand the Old Testament and the old covenant, and who wrote it.Well, we don't know biblical author. The inerrancy of scripture requires that we affirm the authorship of every book as is attributed within the scriptures. So, we're right to contend for the fact that, for instance, Peter wrote second Peter. The claim is made within the text itself. Similarly, evidence we find in the epistles of the apostle Paul. We see him as the author. Or we find very good reason to understand from the text that it was Luke who wrote both Luke and Acts. We could go book by book. The only book that would lead us to this particular quandary in the entire New Testament, the book of Hebrews, because there is absolutely no claim of authorship.Now, when I am teaching and preaching the book of Hebrews, that there is an inclination, it's kind of just right there. It happened to me before. I know it, I will often accidentally say, “As Paul says here,” but there is no reference to Paul being the author of this letter. As a matter of fact, the Greek structure of grammar and syntax and the expression that's found in the book of Hebrews is not really characteristic of Paul. And I'll tell you, what is characteristic of Paul? Every time Paul wrote something, he made it clear that he wrote it. I is because he was writing on apostolic authority. There's another reason to believe that, almost certainly, Paul is not the writer of the book of Hebrews. That is because the writer of the book of Hebrews assumes second-hand knowledge.In other words, this is what was revealed to the church that the author of Hebrews now affirms as true. The apostle Paul spoke of direct revelation, something very different. The apostle Paul spoke of his apostolic authority. He cites his apostolic authority. He bases his authority to instruct the church on that apostolic authority, which is completely missing here.Other suggestions as to who wrote the book and the history of the church have included Apollos or Barnabas. Now those two men are interesting proposals. Luke also has been offered as a potential author of the books of Hebrews and Luke. However, he comes from a Gentile background. That's a key to understanding both the Gospel of Luke and the book of acts. And so, it doesn't seem natural that Luke would be the author of Hebrews. At the end of the book, there is a reference to Timothy. Which could well be that Luke was one of the reasons why we often, in the history of the church, see references, if not to Paul, then to Barnabas or Apollos or Luke.So clearly, there are links to the Pauline circle, and whoever wrote this knew Timothy intimately and makes reference to him. But, you know, this is where we need to limit our imagination and trust that the Holy Spirit has given us all that we need.Let me give you, a contrasting example. It's important to understand that Paul wrote the book of Romans. It's key to understanding some passages in the book of Romans because it is tied so closely to Paul's spiritual autobiography. If you take Paul out of the book of Romans, it's far more difficult to understand some of what the Holy spirit has revealed to us in the book. Since the Holy Spirit inspired Paul to write that letter to the church in Rome, and Paul wrote it with references to his own experience, his authorship provides necessary background.It follows a certain chronology. Paul refers in the opening chapter of the book of Romans that he has been delayed. He has been prevented from arriving in Rome, even though he intended to go there. This explains the reference to the Macedonian vision in the book of Acts. It all fits together. We understand the context that helps us to understand the book of Romans. We do not have that here. We do not know the original date, although it's clear we believe before the destruction of the temple in 70 AD since there is no reference to it.We don't know the author. We don't know specifically, or for sure, the original recipients, evidently because we are not meant to know. We are not given that data in this book, because if we had that data, presumably we might read the book differently than the Holy Spirit intends for us to read it. The Holy Spirit intends for us to read this book as written to the church. As written to all of us with no general reference to any specific time, any specific author, or any specific context. And that's how we are to read the book of Hebrews; understanding that it is our responsibility to come to terms and to come to a knowledge of how we as Christians are to read the Old Testament.The affirmation we find here at the very beginning of the introduction is poetic. It's beautiful. It's soaring. It gets right to the incredibly high Christology the book of Hebrews contains. We encounter what we do not find in this form elsewhere in the New Testament. This is the symphonic, comprehensive presentation of what it means for Jesus to be the mediator of a new covenant. For Jesus to be our great high priest. Earlier this summer, in the hottest place— I'll say on the record, I think I have ever been to— Palm Springs, California, I spoke to a large Resolved conference. This conference of college students, several thousand of them. It was so hot; my eyeballs were hot.And these college students that come from all over the country to be here for hours and hours and hours of expository preaching, that defies the wisdom of the age. I preached one of my messages on Jesus, the great high priest. I began by saying it to these college students. “I know what you think and what you're thinking is partly right, but it's also very wrong. You think you don't need a priest. When, if we do not have a priest, we are not saved. The reality is we do not believe in an ongoing human priesthood. But, if Jesus is not our great high priest, we have not been cleansed of our sins. The Old Testament has not been fulfilled. The old covenant has not been fulfilled and our sin is still upon us. Oh, we need a priest. And we need a priest, not only because of what Christ did on the cross, but we also need a priest who intercedes for us, right now; who intercedes for us at the right hand of God, the Father Almighty. We need, we are desperately dependent at every single moment in our lives on Jesus. Our great high priest, who is for us, right now. The mediator of a new and better covenant as the writer of the book of Hebrews will make very clear. This is our priest who in the incarnation became so much like us, that he understands us. He was tempted in every way as we are, yet, without sin. The writer of the Hebrews will make clear. This is a priest. Yes, a priest who fulfilled the Levitical priesthood because he entered a tabernacle, not made with human hands. But rather, on the cross he entered the heavenly tabernacle. And when our great high priest performed atonement for us, he did atone as the priests of old, with the blood of a heifer or a lamb. Rather, he shed his blood.”Thus, he has become for us the mediator of a new covenant. Long ago, at many times and in many ways, God spoke to our fathers,” right here at the beginning of Hebrews. We had this absolute affirmation that God did speak through the Old Testament. That was his revelation that he spoke through the prophets that he spoke through the entirety of the Old Testament that he spoke through the sacrifices of old. That he spoke through the priestly ritual of Israel. That he spoke in the tabernacle. That he spoke in the temple. He did speak. He spoke it many times. He spoke in many ways, even a passing familiarity. The Old Testament reminds us of many times and many ways that God spoke.My book on preaching is entitled He is not silent, a title I borrowed from Francis Schaeffer. That is the crucial fact for us; God is, and he speaks. Schaeffer's book was entitled He is there, and He is Not Silent, and it had a such a massive impact on my life, back in the 1970s. I was a teenager. He said, “You see, if there were a God, a silent God, we wouldn't know him. We have no ability to seek him out. We have no ability to come to terms with him. The only way we can know God is because he speaks to us. And this is grace and mercy.” Carl Henry, in so many ways, my theological mentor, a man not given to expression, was an absolute poet when it came to defining revelation. When he defined it this way, he said “That revelation is God's gracious act whereby he forfeits his personal privacy so that his sinful creatures might know him.” Time and time again, various times, and in various ways, the one true and living God forfeited his privacy, that his sinful creatures might know him.He spoke through a bush that burned. It was not consumed. He spoke through prophets. He spoke on a mountain that shook with fire. He spoke through tablets of stone inscribed with these 10 words. He spoke through the graphe, through the writings, the scriptures of the Old Testament. At one point he spoke through Balaam's donkey. He's a speaking God. He spoke to him many times and in many ways, “but in these last days he has spoken to us by his Son…”So the writer of the book of Hebrews, at the very beginning tells, us that the definitive revelation of the speaking God is in his Son. Now, again, we go immediately back to John 1:1. “In the beginning, was the Word and the Word was with God and the Word was God, Logos. Then, the Son is the Logos who created the world. And through the Logos, whom we come to know. Now we are told that God, having spoken to our fathers by the prophets many times, and in many ways in these last days, here's the conclusion. In other words, there is not something else that is coming. That will become very clear through the book of Hebrews, as it lays out symphonically and comprehensively, the deep truths of the gospel. This is it. It is finished.There is no mediation in terms of atonement for sin that is left to be done. There is no sacrifice to be repeated. This is conclusive in these last days; he's spoken to us of whom he appointed him heir of all things.The next time we are together, we'll be following through these verses and looking at the Christology of the book of Hebrews. At the very beginning, we'll come to understand what it means for him to be the radiance of the glory of God, the exact imprint of his nature.God did not send the son in order to show us what he's like. God sent the son in order to show us himself. Jesus isn't like God, he is God. He isn't merely a picture of what God is like. He is the exact representation of his nature. Hebrews chapter one is so rich with Christology. And we will see, verse by verse, word by word, what the writer of the book of Hebrews, inspired by the Holy Spirit, is telling us that we are to know about Christ, before he actually goes back to the Old Testament. Which is another reminder to us that we have to get our Christology right before we can get our Old Testament theology right. And, obviously, it has to be in the conversation because much of what we come to know of who Christ is and what Christ has done for us is revealed against the backdrop of the Old Testament. Christ's fulfillment of the Old Testament. But we come to understand that we now read the Old Testament as Christians. But, we do not read the Old Testament as if we do not have the New Testament. We're not reading the Old Testament as if we do not know how Christ has fulfilled these things. We are reading the Old Testament as believers in the Lord, Jesus Christ. And without apology, we have a Christological interpretation of the scriptures.That's why it's so appropriate that we are now in Hebrews. After having concluded Matthew, of the four gospels, it is Matthew's Gospel, that makes much this same point: placing the life ministry of Jesus within the context of Old Testament prophecy. Matthew writes, “These things happened in order that the scriptures might be fulfilled,” over and over again. We have in the gospel of Matthew, pointed reminders and very clear displays of how Christ has fulfilled the law, the Old Testament, and the prophets. Now we find the same in the book of Hebrews. But as we begin our study, of the book of Hebrews, I want us to look not only at the first four verses but also to look at the last chapter.The book of Hebrews begins with this incredible Christology. This testimony to who Christ is, as we've said. It begins by diving into the deep end of the pool. We're completely wet. There's no introduction to get us ready for the deep stuff. We're in it. But notice how it ends. In particular, look at verses 20 and 21, the benediction to the letter. Thirteen chapters later reads, “Now may the God of peace who brought again from the dead our Lord Jesus, the Great Shepherd of the sheep, by the blood of the eternal covenant, equip you with everything good that you may do his will, working in us that which is pleasing in his sight, through Jesus Christ, to whom be glory forever and ever. Amen.”If that doesn't stir your soul, you're untirable. We have the testimony to God who brought from the dead, our Lord Jesus, the great Shepherd of the sheep.So, we go from Christ, being the exact representation of the nature of God, to Christ being the great Shepherd of the sheep. We have a reference here to the blood of the eternal covenant by which we've been saved. But the prayer is that God through Christ will equip believers with everything good. Why? That we may do his will, working in us that which is pleasing in his sight through Jesus Christ, to whom be glory forever and ever. Amen.I think it's important to begin at the beginning and then to move very quickly to the end. Remember, as we are beginning our study of the book of Hebrews, to be recognize that we are studying the book of Hebrews not merely that we would come to a deeper understanding of the things of God. Not merely so that we can have in our minds a better intellectual doctrinal and theological framework for understanding the New Testament and the fulfillment of the Old Testament in Christ. Not merely so that we would be better armed, better equipped to understand the gospel. But, our study book of Hebrews should be in the background of the prayer that God will use this study in order that we may be equipped for every good thing. To do his will, which is pleasing in his sight.This is rich theological material; incredible biblical material. It's exhilarating. The study of the book of Hebrews is like looking through lenses, a set of binoculars, and realize when you put it into focus, things are a lot clearer.But the ultimate reason we study not only the book of Hebrews, but scripture is in order that the Holy Spirit will work within us. That which is pleasing to the Father, and to the great shepherd of the sheep. in order that we would work his will.Let's pray together. Our Father, we are so thankful that you have given us this book. We're thankful that you have given it to us just as you've given it to us without reference to place, without reference to context, without reference to the author, without reference to date. Father, may the absence of those things remind us emphatically that this is for your whole church throughout all the ages. It is to be read as addressed to all of us from the beginning until now. And Father, we pray that by our study of this book, we will indeed be able in a way we otherwise would not be able, by your grace and to your glory, to do your will. That which is pleasing in your sight. And we pray this as we begin this study in the name of the great Shepherd of the sheep, even Jesus Christ, our Lord. Amen.You can find Dr. Mohler's other Line by Line sermons here.Follow Dr. Mohler:X | Instagram | Facebook | YouTubeFor more information on The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, go to sbts.edu.For more information on Boyce College, just go to BoyceCollege.com.