For His Renown

That the glory of the Lord might cover the dry land as the waters cover the sea

Archive for October, 2007

Interview on Contextualization with Dr. Paige Patterson

Posted by jimhamilton on October 26, 2007

Dr. Paige Patterson serves as President of Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary. He and Judge Paul Pressler are the heroes of the conservative resurgence in the Southern Baptist Convention. There is more to him, however, than that colossal battle, and in this interview we want to focus on the days before the big brouhaha in the convention.

I posed a number of questions to Dr. Patterson, and he was gracious enough to answer them all. I thought about breaking this interview up into a series of posts, but Dr. Patterson’s answers are so gripping and instructive and challenging and fun to read that I thought it best to keep them all together. So while the interview is long, I trust that you’ll relish every word.

Enjoy!

Dr. Patterson, thank you so much for joining us in this interview. There’s a lot of talk about the contextualization of the gospel today. I’ve heard stories that indicate that you were into contextualization before it was cool. Could you describe for us the ministries you were involved in while a student at New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary, and then maybe what you did with the students at the University of Arkansas (my alma mater) in Fayetteville, Arkansas?

Always I have believed that the church has to get outside of its doors and take the gospel to the world. The venue that is chosen will depend upon the times and places where one serves. While in New Orleans, three of our churches went together with street evangelist, Leo Humphrey, to establish a coffee house ministry in the French Quarter. This was in the wild 60s when runaway kids were coming from all over America. We sent kids home to all fifty states at one time or another. The coffee house ministry provided us a great opportunity for evangelizing and provided us an opportunity to work with runaway kids, prostitutes, biker gangs, the earliest development of the gay revolution, and with other drop-outs from society. In addition there was direct ministry to members of the Louisiana mafia. The church I served as Pastor, Bethany Baptist Church, was one of the three churches involved with this ministry. In addition, we did street preaching on a regular basis and worked with Richard Land who was Pastor of the Vieux-Carre Baptist Church or French Quarter Baptist Church.

In Fayetteville, Arkansas, First Baptist Church was just a few blocks away from the campus of the University of Arkansas. Several of the unusual ministries that we developed there included a coffee house ministry for college students called The EAR. It stood for “Entering Another Realm” and the way into the basement of the old warehouse where we set up was to walk through a huge ear, which we had manufactured in the place of a front door. Through that we saw many students come to Christ. While in Fayetteville, I also operated a bar ministry. I would take a layman and go to every bar in town. I would simply leave my card with the owner or manager and say, “You’re going to have someone who is talking about taking his life or is otherwise upset or causing problems. Just call me and I will come take care of them.” Eventually, we led the family of one of those bartenders to Christ. Another thing we did at the University of Arkansas was to have a Thursday night Lion’s Den in our home. This was scheduled for 10:00 p.m. every Thursday night. We told the students, “When you’re tired of studying and you want to have some homemade refreshments,” which Mrs. Patterson prepared, “come to the house and we’ll do Bible study together and have refreshments.” Normally students stayed, asking questions until well after midnight. We usually ran between thirty and a hundred of these students. In addition to that, I had a Saturday morning Table Talk session with all of my young men called into the ministry. They would bring their own lunches and the church provided their soft drinks. We sometimes talked about theology, sometimes about evangelism; sometimes we would fill the baptistry and let them practice on each other. Other times we would go to the hospital and learn how to do hospital visitation—all of the things that are involved in pastoral ministries. Eventually all of these young people became the regular preachers for Wednesday night prayer meeting and got invaluable experience doing that, although I also asked my deacons to preach occasionally on Wednesday night. In addition to that, the young people and the deacons assisted me with funerals and even weddings.

So did you own the New Orleans coffee shop or were you on friendly terms with the management? How did all that come together?

No we did not own our own coffee shop. The Way, as we called it, was in rented facilities and because it was as successful as it was, we found ourselves continually closed down by the city for failing to meet some aspect of the fire code. Of course nothing in the French Quarter met fire code, but we were targeted because we were the antithesis of what else was going on. However, even though we had to move a couple of times and come up to fire code frequently, we still managed to run the ministry for the better part of three years with some pretty amazing results.

Was there a formal relationship between the coffee shop ministry and a particular local church? Do you have thoughts on how local churches and parachurch ministries can or should relate to one another?

As I indicated above there were three of our local churches that participated officially in The Way. Evangelist Leo Humphrey, one of the greatest personal witnesses whom I ever knew, is now in heaven, having departed this present life about a year and a half ago. He was the catalyst and although there were three churches that were officially involved, many others periodically contributed anything from peanut butter and jelly sandwiches, to coffee, tea, soft drinks, and other necessities. We didn’t really see it as a parachurch ministry, although I suppose in one sense it was. We saw it as the ministry of the local churches reaching out to people who sought entertainment in the French Quarter.

What steps did you take to “become all things to all men” as you sought to share the gospel in those contexts? In particular, how did it affect your clothing and your hairstyle? Was there a difference between what you did in New Orleans as compared to Fayetteville?

Regarding the contextualization of the gospel as it concerns clothing and hairstyle, I have never felt that had much to do with the success of the gospel. Most lost people I’ve known are looking for someone who is real, who has integrity, and who they thought they could trust. Your hairstyle or your dress didn’t matter much. I usually didn’t go down to the French Quarter to work in the coffee house in coat and tie, although occasionally I found it unavoidable. I never felt that I needed to apologize for that, and I was not conscious of anybody turning away because of it. Of course, it was a much more informal atmosphere, so more often than not, I was down there in my jeans, western shirt, cowboy hat, and boots, which has sort of been my signature dress as a Texan. That probably attracted a certain amount of attention, especially when people came through from the west and thought they had found somebody who shared a bit of their background. But again I say that there is nothing like integrity of spirit and a genuine love and friendliness to break through barriers. Dress just doesn’t have much to do with it one way or the other.

Do you think that certain style issues can lead to people crossing the lines of what is appropriate? For instance, how would you counsel someone today thinking about getting a tattoo in order to pursue contextualization? Are there other factors we should consider today as we think about what clothes to wear or how to style our hair?

Yes there is no question in my mind that there are style issues that can lead people to cross the line for what is appropriate for a believer. I have been accused of being the opponent of contemporary music. That one always strikes me as strange, since by definition that would mean I was opposed to anyone writing music in the present era. Of course, I’m happy to have good contemporary music and I’m opposed to bad music, whether it’s from the Middle Ages, fifty years ago, or contemporary. But when I go to some churches and watch a performance on the platform that is not infrequently tainted by rather “physical displays” that elicit anything but an attitude of holiness, then I suspect the line has been crossed. Regarding tattoos, I cannot imagine that any Christian would believe that it was necessary for him to get a tattoo in order to blend in to the group to whom he wishes to witness. From the sixties to the present, I have worked with biker gangs and a host of other people who were often covered with tattoos, and the fact that I didn’t have one of any kind seemed not to be problematic. Again, almost everyone responds to genuine friendliness, love, the sense that the person with whom they are talking is real. I have my doubts as to whether a very good case can be made from Scripture for the use of tattoos, and in fact I think that a case could be made against them. I am not hung up in any legalism. I just don’t think that you have to act like the world acts in order to have a witness to the world.

Related to the last question, how did the efforts to reach people in New Orleans and Fayetteville influence the music you listened to personally? Was there music playing in/at the coffee shop? How should we think about the appropriateness or inappropriateness of music when we think about reaching people where they are?

My experience with music has been a rather eclectic one. I grew up listening to the metropolitan opera on Saturday morning because my sister, who was nine years older than I, was deeply into opera. At first, I didn’t like it, but I reached the place that I loved it, and until this day I love opera and symphonies. On the other hand, partly because of where I grew up and partly because it is a unique genre to the American outback and partly because it’s brim full of sermon illustrations, I love country-western music. In fact, I have noted that there is really no difference between country music and opera except a small difference in the genre of the music. It’s all “crying, loving, and leaving.” Nevertheless, country music regularly illustrates the bankruptcy of the human soul and the desperate need that we all have for Christ.

As for the appropriateness or inappropriateness of music, I am again concerned that the music we use in church meets three standards. First, it has to be theologically orthodox. Second, it should be singable, and third it should be memorable. Much of contemporary music doesn’t meet that standard for one or all of those reasons. However, some of the music we used to sing in church as kids would not either, and so I don’t blame it on the present generation but on inadequate attention to such issues on the part of the leaders in the church. On the other hand, in the coffee house ministries in both New Orleans and Fayetteville, some modern churchmen would not have been happy with what they would have heard there. We watched it pretty carefully to be sure that it was never music that would lead to immoral thought or action in any way, and we tried to be sure that it reflected orthodox theology, but it certainly made heavy use of guitars, trap sets, and other things that would be common to those venues. I actually think that you can use music there that you wouldn’t want to use in the regular worship of the church. In church, the choice of music needs to reflect the needs of the entire congregation.

Did you have children in those years? How do you recommend we balance the importance of family time, the demands of being a student, and the feeling of urgency that comes from knowing that every day lost people are dying?

Yes, I did have children in those years. They were very young. If a person intends to be in the ministry, he must make time for his family. The idea that “I spend quality time with my family even though I don’t spend a large quantity of time” is absurd. You need both quantity and quality to make it work. This was particularly difficult for me because I’ve always, in addition to the local church ministry, been asked to speak widely in distant places. I don’t know why that is, but I took it to be an area that God had opened to me for ministry. In order to do that, I had to make special provision for time with my wife and my family. We have been a lot poorer than we would have been otherwise, but I used a fair amount of the money I made on outside speaking to guarantee that my wife could go with me as much as possible. Not only that, but no matter where I am in the world, if I am away from her, I call her every single night. You could probably count less than 50 times when I have been in a situation where I could not do so. It was just my way of telling her that she was on my mind and my heart. As for my children, I found special things to do with them. Often they traveled with us. While my son was playing football I was frequently preaching revivals and I’m certain that some would think it a worldly deed, but I informed the church that if they wanted me to come, they would have to get a substitute for Friday night. I wouldn’t be there. I would fly home at my expense to see my son play football and fly back on Saturday morning. I wasn’t doing that just because I love football, although I certainly do. I was doing that to build a bridge with my son, which has continued until the present time.

As you ministered to people in New Orleans and Fayetteville in those years, did you find that people were aware of their guilt before God, or, as seems to be the case today, was the concept of sin separated from the idea of offending God’s holiness?

Personally, for the most part, I have seldom found people who were profoundly aware of their guilt before God. The attitude I usually get from people is that if they are not in prison it must be that they’re good people, and any sense of the holiness of God and the tragic depravity of the human heart is far removed. I suppose this is one reason why I love doing the Sportsmen banquets. Most of the lost men who come to these sportsmen’s banquets may have never thought about it in terms of holiness and depravity, but they don’t take much convincing to admit that they are twenty-one karat sinners. I have found it unnecessary to spend a lot of time convincing them of such. You just tell them and they see it quickly. That’s quite different than most of polite society where we tend to evaluate our acceptability to God on whether or not we are of a somewhat philanthropic and eleemosynary spirit. Of course, post-modern influence has only worsened this problem.

What do you find most helpful to keep in mind as you seek to share the gospel? Is there an aspect of it that you think should be particularly emphasized in our cultural context today? Or, is it only the messenger who needs to be contextualized, while the message itself is what we might describe as trans-contextual?

The message of the gospel never changes. The messenger of the gospel may need to be contextualized to some degree; but if the message needs to be changed itself, then that can only mean that God failed to figure out a way to be universally communicative to a lost world. If that’s the case, then He really isn’t qualified to be God. We won the battle for the inerrancy and the infallibility of the Scripture, I fear, only to have lost the battle on the question of the sufficiency of the Scripture. There is an approach that I have found myself utilizing more and more. Looking at the disastrous results of much of the shallow evangelism that I have seen, I have come to the conclusion that one of the most important passages of Scripture in God’s Word is 2 Corinthians 7:10, which says “Godly sorrow works repentance unto salvation.” I really do not believe that anyone can ever experience the new birth until he is ashamed and sorrowful about his sin. Only the Holy Spirit can bring about that sense of shame, but it is my belief that He is willing to do so if the hearer is willing to contemplate the situation honestly. Unless a person experiences that shame for his sin, then he does not come to repentance and if he does not come to repentance, he cannot come to faith. I don’t mean to assign temporal order to those events since I believe they often occur virtually simultaneously, I just mean to say that one of the reasons we have so much of the world in the church today is that we have so many lost people who are part of the church who have never been ashamed of their sins and hence have never genuinely repented or exercised actual faith in Christ.

If you were striking out in our culture today, would you go for a coffee shop ministry or some other venue? What creative outreach strategies would you recommend for the current scene?

In addition to pulpit and personal witnessing, my particular major evangelistic outreach right now has been the Outdoorsmen’s banquets for men and boys. It scratches where I itch. It enables me to present a hard line evangelistic message and appeal and at the same time address the problem of the absent father from so many American homes. I still think there is probably a place for a coffee house ministry, especially in University settings like across the street from the University of Houston, or the University of Texas or Texas A&M. I know some pastors who do an annual banquet based on collecting old automobiles. Several others are doing NASCAR rallies. On a more sophisticated note, in the past Larry Dyke has been successful in exhibiting his artwork in public places and using that as a venue for evangelism. There is no doubt in my mind that churches can find such venues. I have always believed that genuinely New Testament churches maintained outreach ministries to people who nobody else loves. It seems to me that every genuinely New Testament church ought to have a jail ministry, a ministry to the hearing impaired, a ministry to the blind, or a special education ministry of some kind. Some years ago Nelson Price, pastor in Atlanta, Georgia wrote a little book that I thought never did get as much attention as it deserved. It is entitled, “I’ve Got to Play on Their Court.” This book simply took note of the fact that a good basketball team doesn’t play all its games on the home court. It has to play half of them on the road; and if it’s going to be a great basketball team, it has to be able to win on the road. By the same token, some people find the Lord coming to church but just as many and maybe more, find the Lord because we meet them somewhere in a context in which they are comfortable and in which we can provide constructive witness.

Thank you so much for answering all these questions. Here’s the last one for this interview: The triumph of the gospel is always encouraging, and in their own way, stories of the ways the Lord sustains his people through discouraging aspects of ministry can be encouraging. Could you bless us with some of the sorrows and triumphs from your time in New Orleans and Fayetteville?

Regarding sorrows and triumphs in New Orleans and Fayetteville: The sorrows pale with the passing of the years as they always do, and the triumphs remain significant in your mind as the gracious acts of God honoring the witness that you give. In New Orleans, we faced regular physical threats of various kinds from inebriated or drugged individuals and periodically from racists who took exception to the fact that we welcomed people from all ethnic backgrounds. There were also the disappointments when people who made professions of faith and you thought were going to do very well, seemingly “fell away.” Although we know that what actually happened is, as the Scripture says, “They went out from us because they were never really a part of us.” The triumphs however, were far more vivid. I remember kids who were hooked on drugs or alcohol or had been sexually abused or become prostitutes coming to Christ on a regular basis. Some biker gang members from the Rancid Riders, the Banditos, or the Glory Stompers, who found the Lord, had their lives significantly changed. First Baptist, Fayetteville, was a church of the aristocracy with more than seventy faculty members from the University of Arkansas. Most everybody that wasn’t Dr. Somebody was President of a bank, a physician, an attorney, or a manager of a major facility of some kind. Consequently it was a little like trying to drive a whole herd of jack rabbits across an open prairie. I was so young at the time—twenty six years old—when I went to the church to be as sympathetic as I should have been with the senior citizens. I frankly don’t think I was a very good pastor to them, and they sometimes gave indication of that by being less than happy with me. Looking back on it from the years, I fault myself a great deal more than I do them. Nevertheless it hurt and it bothered me that I was never able to get the First Baptist Church of Fayetteville, Arkansas, to get into a significant growth pattern that I’d hoped I would see. On the other hand, all of that pales into insignificance in that in a five-year ministry more than fifty of our young people accepted the call of God to church-related vocations and better than half of them are still in such ministries until this day. In addition to that, using our high school young people and a Continental Trailways Silver Eagle that we bought, we were able to establish new churches—one in New York City and about seven in three different provinces of Canada. Of course there were the ministries to which I already alluded. One of the most unusual things I remember in Fayetteville was my morning Bible Study, which I did for awhile for pagans. No Christian was allowed. You had to be a confessing pagan to be allowed to come to it. In a way, it was funny because whenever somebody would be saved they would have to stand in front of the group and explain this and tell them how much they had enjoyed being a part of it, but now they were going to move on into the church and so they wouldn’t be coming to the group any more. Those are the kinds of blessings from God that you always remember and can never forget.

———-

Hearty thanks to Dr. Patterson for taking the time to bless us all with this interview!

Posted in Uncategorized | 6 Comments »

Northbrook Conference 9Marks Audio Available

Posted by jimhamilton on October 26, 2007

Eric Schumacher writes:

Northbrook Baptist Church recently hosted a 9Marks Workshop, led by Matt Schmucker and Jonathan Leeman of 9Marks.

I can honestly say that it was one of the best and most worthwhile events that I have attended as a pastor. I would highly recommend visiting the schedule page on their website and planning to attend a 9Marks Workshop.

9Marks has graciously allowed us to post the audio from the six sessions online, for you to listen to for free. Enjoy attending a “virtual-workshop” here:

May the Lord be glorified in the health of His church!

Posted in Sermon Audio | No Comments »

Built upon the Rock now available for Pre-Order

Posted by jimhamilton on October 24, 2007

A revised version of a paper I presented at the Tyndale Fellowship Conference Biblical Theology Study Group in July 2005, “The Virgin Will Conceive: Typology in Isaiah and Fulfillment in Matthew”, will appear in a forthcoming book from Eerdmans titled Built upon the Rock, edited by Dan Gurtner and John Nolland.

The editors, contributors, and contents of the book are as follows:

Editors:

John Nolland, Ph.D. Academic Dean and Lecturer in New Testament Studies, Trinity College, Bristol (UK)

Daniel M. Gurtner, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of New Testament, Bethel Theological Seminary, St Paul MN (USA)

Contributors:

Armin D. Baum, Ph.D. Lecturer of New Testament, Freie Theologische Akademie, Gießen (Germany). “Matthew’s Sources - Oral or Written? A Rabbinic Analogy and Empirical Insights.”

Stephanie L. Black, Ph.D. Ethiopian Graduate School of Theology, Addis Ababa (Ethiopia). “How Matthew Tells the Story: Greek Grammatical Features in Matthew’s Narrative.”

Jeannine K. Brown, Ph.D. Associate Professor of New Testament and Associate Academic Dean. Bethel Theological Seminary, St Paul MN (USA). “The Rhetoric of Hearing: The Use of the Isaianic Hearing Motif in Matt 11:2-16:20.”

Roland Deines, Dr.theol. Privatdozent, Eberhard Karls-University of Tübingen (Germany); Researcher for New Testament and Early Jewish Literature, Friedrich Schiller-University of Jena (Germany); Guest Lecturer, Ben Gurion-University, Beer-Sheva (Israel). “Torah and Righteousness in the Gospel of Matthew: An Ongoing Debate.”

Mervyn Eloff, D.Th. George Whitefield College and University of Stellenbosch (South Africa) Apo heos and Salvation History in Matthew’s Gospel.”

R. T. France, Ph.D. (Retired) Principal of Wycliffe Hall, Oxford. “Matthew and Jerusalem.”

Daniel M. Gurtner, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of New Testament. Bethel Theological Seminary, St Paul MN (USA). “Matthew’s Theology of the Temple and the ‘Parting of the Ways’: Christian Origins and the First Gospel”

Donald A. Hagner, Ph.D. George Eldon Ladd Professor of New Testament, Fuller Theological Seminary, Pasadena, California (USA). “Holiness and Ecclesiology: The Church in Matthew.”

James Hamilton, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Biblical Studies, Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary (USA). “The Virgin will Conceive: Typological Fulfillment in Matthew 1:18-23.”

David Instone-Brewer, Ph.D. Senior Research Fellow in Rabbinics and the New Testament, Tyndale House, Cambridge (UK). “Balaam-Laban as the Key to the Old Testament Quotations in Matthew 2.”

John Nolland, Ph.D. Academic Dean and Lecturer in New Testament Studies, Trinity College, Bristol (UK). “Matthew and Anti-Semitism.”

David Wenham, Ph.D. Vice Principle of Wycliffe Hall, Oxford (UK). “The Rock on Which to Build: Some Mainly Pauline Observations about the Sermon on the Mount.”

You can pre-order it from Amazon or from Eerdmans. Enjoy!

Posted in Bible and Theology, Books | 3 Comments »

Article on Family Integrated Churches in the Texan

Posted by jimhamilton on October 23, 2007

I recently posted a series of responses to questions posed to me on Family Integrated Churches. The article by Bonnie Pritchett has appeared in the Southern Baptist Texan and is available online here.

Posted in Bible and Theology, Cultural Engagement, Ecclesiology, History, Ministry | No Comments »

Tyndale House Newsletter, Autumn 2007

Posted by jimhamilton on October 22, 2007

Friends of Tyndale House will be glad to see the PDF of the latest newsletter. If you’re not familiar with Tyndale House, you should check out this vital ministry across the pond. I was recently asked in an email about Tyndale House, and this is what I said:

Tyndale House is truly remarkable for the way it holds together scholarly rigor and discipline, genuine community, and God-honoring piety. The conversations one shares over coffee and tea are fruitful and instructive, the long days of labor are restful and productive, and the treasure-trove of books hardly needs to be mentioned. It’s a little surprising that cherubim don’t guard the way to the place! 

Posted in Bible and Theology, Cultural Engagement, Ministry | No Comments »

Review of C. John Collins, Genesis 1-4

Posted by jimhamilton on October 19, 2007

C. John Collins, Genesis 1–4: A Linguistic, Literary, and Theological Commentary. Phillipsburg: P&R, 2006. 318pp. $17.99, paper.

Passionate discussion is once again taking place in the evangelical academy regarding the nature of Scripture and what is meant by inerrancy. Much of this discussion has been generated by Peter Enns’ book Inspiration and Incarnation and Greg Beale’s rigorous interaction with some of Enns’s troubling claims. A good portion of the disagreement centers on the extent to which the OT reflects ancient Near Eastern assumptions and how the world picture the Bible generates should be conceived given what modern science tells us about the universe. John Collins did not intend to engage the Enns-Beale debate, but his book is nevertheless a timely contribution to the discussion.

Collins is uniquely suited to write this volume, having a background in science with an S.M. from MIT. Now a professor of Old Testament at Covenant Seminary in St. Louis, Collins addresses linguistic, literary, historical, and scientific questions in this thorough study of Genesis 1–4. Collins’ first two chapters set out his methodology and rationale, aiming at “ancient literary competence.” The reader is introduced to “A Discourse-Oriented Literary Approach,” which is how Collins describes the method he employs in analyzing the text as well as the criteria he uses to evaluate interpretative options.

Having set forth his methodology, Collins first takes up Genesis 1–4 in its literary context, then discusses the creation week (Gen 1:1–2:3), the garden of Eden (2:4–25), the fall (3:1–24), and what takes place after Eden (4:1–26). This section of the book is a commentary on the text—not arguing a thesis but discussing the text according to the methodology Collins set forth. Interspersed into these discussions are extra notes on many points of interest, such as the nature of death in Genesis 2:17, the location of Eden, and whether Genesis 3:15 is a protoevangelium (Collins says yes). Collins also helpfully traces reverberations of these texts through the Old Testament and into the New. Having thoroughly discussed Genesis 1–4, Collins turns to the question of the sources for this material, its unity, and who wrote it. He concludes that literary and historical features of the text comport best with the conclusion that whatever sources may have been employed, Genesis 1–11 is a unified composition that fits best with the ancient claim of Mosaic authorship.

Collins then argues in chapter 9 that the communicative purpose of Genesis 1–4 is to set forth the worldview that undergirds the religion of the Pentateuch (244). Chapter 10 takes up historical and scientific issues, and it is here that Collins’ work contributes to the Enns-Beale discussion. Collins writes, “the worldview is intended to be normative, while the world picture need not be; by this distinction I, as a modern who accepts contemporary cosmology as part of my world picture, can share a worldview with some ancient whose world picture involved a stationary earth with an orbiting sun” (262). At the same time, Collins emphasizes the importance of understanding phenomenological language and suggests that the world picture described in the Bible might not be as different from our own as some, such as Peter Enns and Paul Seely, suggest. Collins argues against the view that “the water under the earth” (Exod 20:4) refers to a subterranean ocean (264), and he asserts, “There is no evidence that the ‘expanse’ . . . must be describing a solid canopy as a physical entity; it is enough to take it as if the sky were such” (264, emphasis his). For Collins, “it may well be that some biblical statements reflect a world picture that we cannot share—say, on the size of the earth, or that the moon is a lamp rather than a reflector. But this does not mean that the world picture is part of the message being communicated” (265). These considerations are significant contributions to the ongoing discussion of the relationship between the inerrancy of the Bible and modern science.

This book is a solid contribution to our understanding of Genesis 1–4, and those wrestling with the relationship between science and the Bible will benefit from what Collins says in this and other volumes. The reader of this volume will be spurred to greater rigor in interpretive method, as Collins carefully articulates the Discourse-Oriented Literary Approach he pursues. Meanwhile, those who are attentive to the conclusions Collins draws will also see that he appreciates more traditional exegesis. Hopefully books like this one can lead us to understand how to appropriate and utilize the strengths of both newer (discourse analysis) and older (traditional exegesis) hermeneutical practices. The importance of the subject matter, the quality of Collins’ work, and the timeliness of this contribution make this a valuable volume for which we express our gratitude to its author.  

Posted in Bible and Theology, Books | 2 Comments »

The Seed of the Woman and the Blessing of Abraham

Posted by jimhamilton on October 18, 2007

In March of 2006 I presented a paper titled “The Seed of the Woman and the Blessing of Abraham” at the Southwest Regional Meeting of the Institute for Biblical Research, which was held in Dallas, TX.

The basic argument is that the blessing of Abraham in Genesis 12:1-3 answers the curses of Genesis 3:14-19 point for point.

This argument about what is happening in Genesis 3 and 12 lays the groundwork for seeing the one in whom the blessings of Abraham are fulfilled as the one who overcomes the curses of Genesis 3, in particular fulfillment of Genesis 3:15.

I think this is exactly what Paul is talking about in Galatians 3:14, when he refers to the blessing of Abraham coming to the Gentiles in Messiah Jesus.

Thus, I would argue, with Thomas R. Schreiner, G. K. Beale, Richard B. Hays, and others, that Paul has rightly understood the Old Testament and presents powerful, indeed overwhelming arguments that all the promises of God are Yes in Jesus (2 Cor 1:20). Flowing from this, of course, would be the idea that we should learn how to read the OT from Paul and the other NT authors. After all, Jesus taught them how to read the OT (Luke 24:25-26, 44-49).

A revised version of the paper that I presented will appear in the next issue of Tyndale Bulletin, and you can read the summary of the essay here. Two years from now Tyndale Bulletin will allow me to post a PDF of the article. Until then, you’ll have to subscribe, visit a library with a subscription to Tyndale Bulletin, or check out the earlier version that I presented.

———

For related studies, see the following essays:

The Messianic Music of the Song of Songs: A Non-Allegorical Interpretation,” Westminster Theological Journal 68 (2006) 331-45.

The Skull Crushing Seed of the Woman: Inner-Biblical Interpretation of Genesis 3:15,” The Southern Baptist Journal of Theology 10.2 (2006), 30-54.

Paper Presented at the Tyndale Fellowship Conference Biblical Theology Study Group, July 2005: “The Virgin Will Conceive: Typology in Isaiah and Fulfillment in Matthew.” (this essay will appear in a forthcoming book from Eerdmans titled Built upon the Rock, ed. Dan Gurtner and John Nolland.

Posted in Bible and Theology, Gospel, History | 3 Comments »

Review of Richard B. Hays, The Conversion of the Imagination

Posted by jimhamilton on October 16, 2007

Richard B. Hays, The Conversion of the Imagination: Paul as Interpreter of Israel’s Scripture. Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2005. 213pp. $20.00, paper.

My enthusiasm over this volume has caused me to repeatedly defer writing this review. Both the church and the academy will benefit from the approach to interpretation advocated in this book. Richard B. Hays is well known for stimulating vigorous discussion of two topics. One of these was catalyzed by his remarkably influential dissertation, The Faith of Jesus Christ, and the other by his book Echoes of Scripture in the Letters of Paul. The collection of essays now grouped under the title The Conversion of the Imagination, as the subtitle indicates, carries forward the thesis of Echoes of Scripture.

In the opening paragraph of the introduction Hays articulates the three theses advanced here: “(1) the interpretation of Israel’s Scritpure was central to the apostle Paul’s thought; (2) we can learn from Paul’s example how to read Scripture faithfully; (3) if we do follow his example, the church’s imagination will be converted to see both Scripture and the world in a radically new way” (viii). The first and third of these flow from the second, from which controversy erupts.

Those who follow Hays and pursue what he articulates in the introduction, “Learning from Paul How to Read Israel’s Scripture,” will find their reading of the OT revolutionized. Against the view that Paul uses proof texts from the OT without regard to the original contexts of the statements he quotes, Hays argues that Paul has read the OT carefully, sees it typologically prefiguring Christ and the church, and, perhaps most significantly, resurrection lenses focus his eyes on the text of the OT. According to Hays, in his reading of the OT, Paul has undergone a “conversion of the imagination.”

Hays has refined his earlier discussion of helpful criteria for discerning the presence of OT “echoes” in NT texts, and this appears in chapter 2. He also sets forth an exciting and persuasive case for the view that “Christ Prays the Psalms” (the title of the 6th chapter). This interpretation develops the implications of Romans 15:3, where Paul—without comment—“attributes the words of the Psalm directly to Christ” (102–103). Hays shows that the same technique is used elsewhere in the NT (e.g., John 2:17; 19:28; Mark 15:24; Heb 2:10–12; 10:5–7), and explains that “the earliest church read the psalms as the Messiah’s prayer book . . . . because they read all the promises of an eternal kingdom for David and his seed typologically” (110). Further, “‘David in these psalms becomes a symbol for the whole people and—at the same time—a prefiguration of the future Anointed One” (111).

A number of prominent scholars responded to Echoes of Scripture in a special session on the book at SBL in 1990, and Hays’s response on that occasion is valuably included as chapter 9, allowing those of us who were in high school at that time to catch up on what we missed. The gathered implications of these essays are brought together in chapter 10, “A Hermeneutic of Trust.” In this profoundly encouraging chapter Hays argues that “Our minds must be transformed by grace, and that happens nowhere more powerfully than through reading Scripture receptively and trustingly with the aid of the Holy Spirit” (198). Against the hermeneutics of skepticism and suspicion so prevalent in the academy Hays cites the words of his colleague at Duke, Frank Lentricchia, which bear repeating here:

It is impossible, this much is clear, to exaggerate the heroic self-inflation of academic literary criticism. . . . The fundamental, if only implied, message of much literary criticism is self-righteous, and it takes this form: “T. S. Eliot is a homophobe and I am not. Therefore, I am a better person than Eliot. Imitate me, not Eliot.” To which the proper response is: “But T. S. Eliot could really write, and you can’t. Tell us truly, is there no filth in your soul?” (199).

These searching words are to be pondered.

There are aspects of the volume that I do not appreciate so much, such as the lingering endorsement of E. P. Sanders’ now widely questioned conclusions expressed in his Paul and Palestinian Judaism. And I would not put it the way Hays does when he writes, “Cases may arise in which we must acknowledge internal tensions within Scripture that require us to choose guidance from one biblical witness and reject another. Because the witness of Scripture itself is neither simple nor univocal, the hermeneutics of trust is necessarily a matter of faithful struggle to hear and discern” (198). No examples are given, so it is difficult to know what Hays has in mind, but perhaps a word other than “reject” with reference to Scripture could have been chosen. These concerns noted, this reviewer finds the main thesis of The Conversion of the Imagination compelling, exciting, and suggestive.

The author’s style is elegant throughout, and often his language is pleasantly decked with overtones of great literature. Hays has not only soaked his mind in the canon of Scripture, the text is sprinkled with illustrations from the canon of the western literary tradition (see the discussion of the allusions to Augustine’s Confessions in Eliot’s The Waste Land, pp. 32–33). May we join this scholar, who knows how to read and write, in the reading of both canons, and may God convert our imaginations as we learn from Paul how the OT is to be read.

Posted in Bible and Theology, Books | 5 Comments »

Congratulations, Dad!

Posted by jimhamilton on October 14, 2007

God blessed me with a great Dad. My earthly Father, who was such a great Dad to me and my three siblings (see my sister’s post here, and my brother in law’s here), also happens to have been a great athlete. He averaged 30 points and 20 rebounds per game his senior year at Southside High School in Fort Smith, Arkansas. Southside is one of the largest schools in the state and it has a long tradition of competitive teams. After his senior season in High School, he played so well in the State High School All Star game that he was voted the game’s MVP. He was also an All American, and much else could be said about his basketball career. As for baseball, the only reason he wasn’t drafted out of High School was that the scouts knew that his dad wasn’t going to let him sign. He would be the first member of his family to go to college and earn a degree.

This past Friday, October 12, 2007, the college where my Dad played basketball and baseball, Ouachita Baptist University, inducted him into their sports Hall of Fame. Much could be said about the success he had on the court and on the field in college, but I’m going to fast-forward to what happened after he graduated. He went to Florida to play rookie ball in the St. Louis Cardinals organization. I had been born in April, right before he graduated, and my dad made what I am convinced was absolutely the right choice.

When he ran out of money, he hung up the spikes and the dreams, came home to me and my mom, and got a coaching job, becoming a great husband to my mom and a great Dad to me. He left the chance for glamor and took the humble course to true greatness. That’s heroic! That’s unspeakably better than taking steroids, hitting more home runs in the big leagues than Babe Ruth, and being miserable and booed and hated and mean. Praise God for my dad!

The video below depicts the part of the ceremony that honored my Dad by inducting him into the OBU Sports Hall of Fame. My remarks are pasted below the video.

Congratulations, Dad!

Induction of James M. Hamilton Sr. into the OBU Sports Hall of Fame

Friday, October 12, 2007

Jim Jr., with help from my sister Dayna

A little over 33 years ago a young man who had recently graduated from OBU found that his dreams were not going to come true. He ran out of money and had to go home and get a job. This forced him to give up his dream of playing major league baseball. He wasn’t going to become every little boy’s hero by playing in the big leagues, so he went home and became one little boy’s hero: mine.

We’re here tonight to celebrate his induction into the OBU Sports Hall of Fame because, as my college baseball coach told me, when your dad hit the ball he really put a charge in it. We’re here tonight because he could hit it, because he could throw it, and in basketball, because he could shoot it from the cheap seats with deadly accuracy, because he could sniff out rebounds, and because he knew how to hustle, knew how to work, knew how to train, and loved to compete.

All that’s great. And in our society these things are highly valued. As Paul said, “physical training has some value” (1 Tim 4:8).

But what I want to tell you about has to do with things that may not bring the crowds to their feet here but that have a deeper, longer lasting value.

So he’s going into the OBU Hall of Fame because he could throw and hit, rebound and shoot, but there’s a wife named Jeanne and four kids name Jim, Dayna, Mindy, and David, who have better reasons to put him in our own “Hall of Fame.” He’s in our Hall of Fame because:

  • In an culture where too many men break the vows they made to their wives, he stuck it out with our mom.
  • In a culture where too many men love their careers more than their families, he made tough choices to make sure he would have time for us.

So he goes into our Hall of Fame because:

On Sundays he made sure that our family gathered with the body of Christ to worship.

Almost every morning he made us breakfast.

Almost everywhere he went he took us with him. DZ: Letting us know he wanted to be involved in our lives & spend time w/ us

Almost every Saturday we had do-nuts together.

Almost every one of our games, from T-Ball to High School, he coached.

As he tried to help me and David become pitchers, he caught thousands of fast-balls that weren’t very fast and curve-balls that didn’t curve enough.

As he tried to help us become fielders he hit us thousands of pop-ups, line-drives, and grounders.

As he tried to help us become hitters he threw thousands of fast-balls that could have been thrown a lot faster, curve-balls that could have curved a lot more.

As he tried to help us become better shooters he rebounded thousands of missed (!) shots and threw us thousands of passes.

Dayna Added These:

He passed on a strong work ethic and encouraged us to finish what we started

He took the time to get to know our friends-even now he’s known as ‘everybody’s PawPaw’

He taught us to care for others by including those less fortunate in our family fun

He has cared for countless widows and the fatherless are drawn to him.

We didn’t go looking for love in wrong places b/c we had a loving family at home

We knew he must have been a really good player by the number of people who recognized him and wanted to talk w/ him

He is faithful to pick up the phone to let us know he is thinking about us…even if it is a quick call

He is ready w/ an encouraging word in whatever we’re involved in

As he tried to help us be better students he went over thousands of spelling words.

Long before we could spell, he read thousands of children’s books.

As we grew up, he was always wise and encouraging.

As the two of us who are married approached marriage, he and mom were there to help and support.

As we’ve been blessed with children, his grand-kids, he has loved them the way he loved us when we were little.

In all these ways, Jim Hamilton Sr., my dad, acted like Jesus, who looked not only to his own interests but to the interests of others, who sacrificed his own will to the will of the Father in heaven, who laid down his life to be a blessing to others.

He goes into the OBU Sports Hall of Fame for four years of prowess on the basketball court and baseball field.

He’s in the “Hall of Fame” for his wife and kids because of a lifetime of living out Christ-likeness in the way that he has loved us.

We love you, Dad.

Posted in History | 5 Comments »

Communion with the Triune God, ed. Kapic and Taylor: Another Suggestion for Pastors

Posted by jimhamilton on October 14, 2007

When Kelly Kapic and Justin Taylor’s edition of Owen’s Overcoming Sin and Temptation came out, I suggested that pastors go through this slowly with others they serve with at church. The three of us doing this at Redeemer are still working through Overcoming Sin and Temptation (note the word slowly!–sometimes slower is better), but the book we’ll work through next is already out.

When we finish Overcoming Sin and Temptation, our plan is to charge forward into Communion with the Triune God by John Owen, edited by Kelly M. Kapic and Justin Taylor.

I hope you’ll consider joining us on this journey of discipleship with John Owen. Thanks to Kapic and Taylor, we can all be discipled by the prince of the puritans!

Posted in Bible and Theology, Books, Reformation and Revival, Spiritual Discipline | 1 Comment »