11
Oct
2024
Now Available: The 2024 Issue of the Detroit Baptist Seminary Journal
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The newest issue of the Detroit Baptist Seminary Journal is now available online. The 2024 issue contains six peer-reviewed articles and 68 pages of book reviews. This year’s issue, along with all back issues of the DBSJ, can be downloaded for free from our seminary website. Print copies of the journal will be available soon.
30
Sep
2024
The Active Obedience of Christ: An Intrusion into Baptist Life?
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Occasionally, some well-meaning Baptists have asserted that belief in both the active and passive obedience of Christ as the ground of our justification is something foreign to Baptist life—perhaps something picked up from the Gospel Coalition, the now inactive T4G, or some other evangelical organization of recent vintage. But is this true? And more specifically,... Read More
27
Sep
2024
Intoxicating Love: The Greatest Guard Rail Against Infidelity
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The book of Proverbs has, for me in recent years, become a most faithful friend. It encourages and edifies my soul as I meditate on it. I keep one of those ESV journal books with me as a helpful way to read through it and meditate on it. Considering recent events (some in the broader... Read More
23
Aug
2024
Have You Considered Auditing a Course at DBTS this Fall?
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The Fall 2024 semester here at DBTS will begin next Thursday the 29th. The schedule for this fall with links to course descriptions and textbooks, can be found here. While it’s not too late to apply for a degree program, you could also consider auditing a course, receiving the same great content and the opportunity... Read More
19
Aug
2024
Review of How to Read a Book by Andrew Naselli
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This past April, Andrew Naselli’s new volume, How to Read a Book: Advice for Christian Readers, was released by Canon Press. Over the past few months, six of my kids have read it. Most of them had already read Adler’s book with a similar title.[1] They thought Naselli’s book was an extremely helpful resource and,... Read More
12
Aug
2024
Does Proverbs Plagiarize from Egyptian Wisdom?
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Recently, I came across a Reddit thread with a provocative title: “The Bible’s God-inspired book of Proverbs is plagiarized from the Egyptian Teachings of Amenemope.” The thread was of interest because I had recently finished working through the section that allegedly borrows from The Instruction of Amenemope in my work for a forthcoming Proverbs commentary... Read More
5
Aug
2024
Theologically Loaded Catch-Lines, Part 2: What Does It Mean for God to “Be with Us”?
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In this post I resume my series of blogposts on historically/theologically freighted phrases/clauses/mantras that have become cliché in contemporary Christian-speak—lines that are intrinsically innocuous (i.e., the words themselves are unobjectionable) but sometimes mask ideas that are not. The second of these catch-lines is the request for God to be “with us.” This line pops up routinely in... Read More
29
Jul
2024
What to Do After Graduation? Why Not Go Back to Your Home Church
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This post was originally published here on January 21, 2014. Many college and seminary students are either preparing for another semester of school to start or have already begun working on classes. For some, this will be their final semester before graduation. Though some may have already determined the next step, others are still weighing... Read More
8
Jul
2024
Review of 1 Peter (ICC) by Williams and Horrell (Part 2)
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This post continues (see Part 1 here) a review of the new, two-volume commentary in the ICC series by Travis Williams and David Horrell. In this post on Volume 2, we will examine the exegesis of a few debated passages in chapters 3–5, the chapters covered in this volume. We will first explore the authors’... Read More
1
Jul
2024
Theologically Loaded Catch-Lines, Episode 1: What Does It Mean to “Cease Striving”?
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I’ve decided to start a mini-series of blogposts on historically freighted phrases/clauses/mantras that have been detached from their moorings and have become cliché in contemporary Christian-speak. Most of the time these lines are intrinsically innocuous (i.e., the words themselves are unobjectionable), but the ideas they represent are not always so. The goal in this series is... Read More